2004 World Cup of Hockey

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2004 World Cup of Hockey
2004 World Cup of Hockey logo.svg
Tournament details
Host countries Canada
 United States
 Finland
 Sweden
 Czech Republic
 Germany
DatesAugust 30 – September 14, 2004
Teams8
Venue(s)7 (in 7 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg Canada (1st title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg Finland
Tournament statistics
Matches played19
Goals scored104 (5.47 per match)
Attendance303,630 (15,981 per match)
Scoring leader(s)Sweden Fredrik Modin (8 pts)
MVPCanada Vincent Lecavalier
1996
2016

The 2004 World Cup of Hockey was an international ice hockey tournament. It was the second installment of the National Hockey League (NHL)-sanctioned competition, eight years after the inaugural 1996 World Cup of Hockey. It was held from August 30 to September 14, 2004, and took place in various venues in North America and Europe. Canada won the championship, defeating Finland in the final, held in Toronto.

The tournament directly preceded the NHL lockout, as the NHL announced they were locking out players during 2004–05 season two days after the tournament final was played, pending the adoption of a new Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Team participants[]

North American pool European pool
 Canada (roster, statistics)  Czech Republic (roster, statistics)
 Russia (roster, statistics)  Finland (roster, statistics)
 Slovakia (roster, statistics)  Germany (roster, statistics)
 United States (roster, statistics)  Sweden (roster, statistics)

Venues[]

North American pool and quarterfinals, semifinals and final
European pool and quarterfinals

Pre-tournament games[]

  • Russia–Germany 3–3 (Cologne)
  • Sweden–Slovakia 2–0 (Bratislava)
  • Finland–Czech Republic 1–1 (Prague)
  • Canada–United States 1–3 (Columbus)
  • Finland–Sweden 1–2 OT (Stockholm)
  • Czech Republic–Germany 7–4 (Cologne)
  • United States–Canada 1–3 (Ottawa)
  • Germany–Finland 2–4 (Helsinki)
  • Sweden–Czech Republic 3–5 (Prague)
  • Russia–United States 0–2 (Columbus)
  • Slovakia–Canada 2–2 (Ottawa)
  • Slovakia–Russia 0–0 (Ottawa)

Preliminary round[]

North American pool[]

Team GP W L T GF GA GDF PTS
 Canada 3 3 0 0 10 3 +7 6
 Russia 3 2 1 0 9 6 +3 4
 United States 3 1 2 0 5 6 −1 2
 Slovakia 3 0 3 0 4 13 −9 0

All times are local (UTC-5 / UTC-4).

31 August 2004
19:00
United States 1–2
(0–1, 1–1, 0–0)
 CanadaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 21,273
1 September 2004
19:00
Canada 5–1
(2–0, 1–0, 2–1)
 SlovakiaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 21,273
2 September 2004
19:00
Russia 3–1
(0–0, 1–1, 2–0)
 United StatesXcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 18,064
3 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia 1–3
(1–2, 0–0, 0–1)
 United StatesXcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 17,104
4 September 2004
19:00
Russia 1–3
(0–0, 0–2, 1–1)
 CanadaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,226
5 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia 2–5
(1–1, 0–2, 1–2)
 RussiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,115

European pool[]

Team GP W L T GF GA GDF PTS
 Finland 3 2 0 1 11 4 +7 5
 Sweden 3 2 0 1 13 9 +4 5
 Czech Republic 3 1 2 0 10 10 0 2
 Germany 3 0 3 0 4 15 −11 0

All times are local (UTC+2 / UTC+3).

30 August 2004
20:00
Czech Republic 0–4
(0–1, 0–0, 0–3)
 FinlandHartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 11,407
31 August 2004
19:00
Germany 2–5
(1–1, 1–4, 0–0)
 SwedenGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 12,133
1 September 2004
19:00
Czech Republic 3–4
(0–1, 0–3, 3–0)
 SwedenGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 13,850
2 September 2004
19:30
Finland 3–0
(1–0, 1–0, 1–0)
 GermanyKölnarena, Cologne
Attendance: 12,975
3 September 2004
19:00
Germany 2–7
(0–0, 0–5, 2–2)
 Czech RepublicSazka Arena, Prague
Attendance: 11,944
4 September 2004
20:00
Sweden 4–4 (OT)
(3–3, 0–1, 1–0, 0–0)
 FinlandHartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 12,948

Playoff round[]

Bracket[]

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
E1  Finland 2
E4  Germany 1
E1  Finland 2
NA3  United States 1
NA3  United States 5
NA2  Russia 3
E1  Finland 2
NA1  Canada 3
NA1  Canada 5
NA4  Slovakia 0
NA1  Canada 4
E3  Czech Republic 3
E3  Czech Republic 6
E2  Sweden 1

Quarter-finals[]

All times are local (UTC+3 / UTC+2 / UTC-5 / UTC-4).

6 September 2004
20:00
Germany 1–2
(0–0, 0–1, 1–1)
 FinlandHartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 8,650
7 September 2004
19:00
Czech Republic 6–1
(2–0, 1–0, 3–1)
 SwedenGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 11,957
7 September 2004
18:00
United States 5–3
(1–0, 1–1, 3–2)
 RussiaXcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 17,218
8 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia 0–5
(0–0, 0–4, 0–1)
 CanadaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,786

Semi-finals[]

All times are local (UTC-5 / UTC-4).

10 September 2004
18:00
United States 1–2
(0–0, 1–0, 0–2)
 FinlandXcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 18,064
11 September 2004
18:30
Czech Republic 3–4 (OT)
(0–0, 1–2, 2–1, 0–1)
 CanadaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,273

Final[]

Time is Eastern Daylight-Saving Time (UTC-4).

14 September 2004
19:00
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Finland 2–3
(1–1, 1–1, 0–1)
 Canada 1st place, gold medalist(s)Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,370

Ranking and statistics[]

 


 2004 World Cup of Hockey Winners 

Canada
1st title

Tournament awards[]

Final standings[]

1  Canada
2  Finland
3  Czech Republic
4  United States
5  Sweden
6  Russia
7  Slovakia
8  Germany

[1]

Scoring leaders[]

Player GP G A Pts PIM
Sweden Fredrik Modin 4 4 4 8 2
Canada Vincent Lecavalier 6 2 5 7 8
United States Keith Tkachuk 5 5 1 6 23
Czech Republic Martin Havlat 5 3 3 6 2
Canada Joe Sakic 6 3 3 6 2
Finland Kimmo Timonen 6 1 5 6 2
United States Mike Modano 5 0 6 6 0
Sweden Daniel Alfredsson 4 0 6 6 2
Czech Republic Milan Hejduk 5 3 2 5 2
Czech Republic Patrik Elias 5 3 2 5 10

Leading goaltenders[]

Player MIP GA GAA SVS%
Canada Martin Brodeur 300 5 1.00 0.961
United States Rick DiPietro 60 1 1.00 0.941
Finland Miikka Kiprusoff 365 9 1.50 0.939
Sweden Tommy Salo 60 2 2.00 0.895
Russia Ilya Bryzgalov 180 7 2.34 0.897
United States Robert Esche 238 10 2.53 0.909
Canada Roberto Luongo 64 3 2.82 0.925
Czech Republic Tomas Vokoun 302 15 2.98 0.881
Russia Maxim Sokolov 60 3 3.01 0.893
Germany Olaf Kolzig 180 10 3.34 0.905

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ podnieks p. 20
  • Podnieks, Andrew (2010). IIHF Media Guide & Record Book 2011. Moydart Press.

External links[]

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