Ukraine men's national junior ice hockey team
Association | Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine |
---|---|
Head coach | Alexander Godynyuk |
Assistants | Mykola Maiko |
Captain | Vsevolod Tolstushko |
Most points | Vitaly Semenchenko (25) |
IIHF code | UKR |
First international | |
Ukraine 20 - 0 Lithuania (Minsk, Belarus; November 10, 1992) | |
Biggest win | |
Ukraine 20 - 0 Lithuania (Minsk, Belarus; November 10, 1992) | |
Biggest defeat | |
Finland 14 - 1 Ukraine (Helsinki, Finland; December 30, 2003) | |
IIHF World U20 Championship | |
Appearances | 20 (first in 1993) |
Best result | 8th (1995) |
International record (W–L–T) | |
57-58-8 |
The Ukrainian men's national junior ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team in Ukraine. The team represents Ukraine at the International Ice Hockey Federation's World Junior Hockey Championship Division I.
History
Ukraine made its first appearance at the top level in 1994, less than five years after gaining independence from the Soviet Union. Ukraine went on to upset the United States, and Ukrainian goaltender Igor Karpenko went on to win top goaltender at the 1995 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Since, there was no relegation round due to the restructuring of the format, Ukraine was not relegated, despite finishing 8th out of 8 teams. Ukraine was relegated to Pool B after finishing 10th in 1996. Four years later, Ukraine made it back to Pool A in 2000, and once again finished 10th. Despite, the relegation, Ukraine didn't lose a game by more than 7 goals. Ukraine earned promotion to top level for 2004 with a one-point differential over Japan, by defeating France 3-0 on the last day. Ukraine experienced troubles in Helsinki, Finland with equipment shortages (ea-sticks, tape), because the country was experiencing economic difficulties. Other teams participating donated sticks, tape, skate laces, and other pieces of equipment to the Ukrainian team. Despite, the generous donations from other teams, Ukraine did not hold up well in the tournament losing to the Czech-Republic (8-0); Switzerland (11-0); Canada (10-0); Finland (14-1). Ukraine went on to lose the relegation round to Sweden (4-0), and tie Austria (2-2). Ukraine has remained at the Division I level since then.
2012 roster
Roster for the 2012 World Junior Championships:
External links
- Ukraine at IIHF.com