2014 Bandy World Championship

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2014 Bandy World Championship
XXXIVth Bandy World Championship
Logo 2014 Bandy World Championship.png
Tournament details
Host country Russia
Dates26 January – 2 February
Teams17
Venue(s)4 (in 2 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg Russia (8th title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg Sweden
Third place Bronze medal blank.svg Kazakhstan
Fourth place Finland
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Christoffer Edlund
(12 goals)
2013
2015

The 2014 Bandy World Championship was held between 26 January and 2 February 2014, in Irkutsk and Shelekhov, Russia. 17 nations participated in the tournament, playing in two divisions partitioned into two subdivisions.[1] A team representing Somalia took part, the first squad from Africa to play in the Bandy World Championship.[2]

Participating teams[]

Participating countries in the Bandy World Championship 2014.
Blue: Division A
Red: Division B
Green: members of the Federation of International Bandy not participating in this year's World Championship

Venues[]

Division A[]

  • After drawn games in the group stage, a penalty shootout is held to determine final placings in the event of teams finishing on equal points

Preliminary round[]

Group A[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1  Russia 3 2 1 0 19 5 +14 5[a]
2  Sweden 3 2 1 0 22 5 +17 5[a]
3  Kazakhstan 3 1 0 2 10 24 −14 2
4  Finland 3 0 0 3 6 23 −17 0
Source: [3]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) number of points obtained in matches between tied teams 3) after-match penalty goals in matches between tied teams
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Russia won after-match penalties against Sweden 3–1.

All times are local (UTC+8).

Russia 10–1 Kazakhstan
Lomanov Goal 6'51'
Goal 15'
Zakharov Goal 25'
Goal 49'
Goal 62'
Ivanushkin Goal 64'68'
Goal 79'86'
Report Goal 87'
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Christoffer Ajdesjö (Sweden)
Sweden 9–1 Finland
Edlund Goal 19'62'84' (pen)
Nilsson Goal 25' (pen)
Goal 43'69'
Berlin Goal 54'
E. Pettersson Goal 80'82'
Report Goal 67'
Attendance: 8,500
Referee: Nikita Yuklyayevskikh (Russia)
Finland 2–7 Russia
Goal 27'
Goal 72'
Report Goal 17'
Goal 23'
Ivanushkin Goal 29'
Lomanov Goal 68'85'
Ishkeldin Goal 81'
Zakharov Goal 90'
Attendance: 3,000
Referee: Håkan Sjösten (Sweden)
Kazakhstan 2–11 Sweden
Goal 52'
Goal 57'
Report Nilsson Goal 3'24'37'75'
Gilljam Goal 10'
Berlin Goal 17'
Löftstedt Goal 31'79'
Edlund Goal 58'90'
E. Pettersson Goal 69'
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Juha-Matti Kanniainen (Finland)
Kazakhstan 7–3 Finland
Goal 8'12'
Goal 49'75'
Goal 68'
Goal 74'
Goal 79'
Report Goal 6'
Goal 17'
Goal 62'
Attendance: 1,000
Referee: Grigoriy Minaev (Russia)
Russia 2–2 Sweden
Goal 22'
Lomanov Goal 75'
Report Löfstedt Goal 45'
Edlund Goal 51'
Attendance: 8,500
Referee: Petri Kuusela (Finland)

Group B[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1  Norway 3 2 1 0 40 9 +31 5[a]
2  United States 3 2 1 0 19 9 +10 5[a]
3  Belarus 3 1 0 2 13 33 −20 2
4  Canada 3 0 0 3 7 27 −20 0
Source: [4]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) number of points obtained in matches between tied teams 3) after-match penalty goals in matches between tied teams
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Norway won after-match penalties against United States 2–1.
United States 7–4 Belarus
Norway 12–3 Canada
Canada 1–7 United States
Belarus 1–23 Norway
United States 5–5 Norway
Canada 3–8 Belarus

Knockout stage[]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
30 January – Irkutsk
 
 
 Norway2
 
1 February – Irkutsk
 
 Finland9
 
 Finland1
 
30 January – Irkutsk
 
 Russia3
 
 Russia22
 
2 February – Irkutsk
 
 Canada1
 
 Russia3
 
30 January – Irkutsk
 
 Sweden2
 
 Sweden33
 
1 February – Irkutsk
 
 Belarus5
 
 Sweden4
 
30 January – Shelekhov
 
 Kazakhstan3 Third place
 
 United States3
 
2 February – Irkutsk
 
 Kazakhstan11
 
 Finland3
 
 
 Kazakhstan5
 

Quarter-finals[]

Norway 2–9 Finland
Report
Attendance: 250
Referee: Christoffer Ajdesjö (Sweden)
United States 3–11 Kazakhstan
Report
Attendance: 300
Referee: Grigory Minaev (Russia)
Sweden 33–5 Belarus
Report
Attendance: 300
Referee: Juha-Matti Kanniainen (Finland)
Russia 22–1 Canada
Lomanov Goal 2'33'
Goal 6'19'25'72'81'
Goal 13'41'45'52'66'67'
Ivanushkin Goal 18'54'61'79'84'
Goal 31'59'
Ishkeldin Goal 36'
Goal 44'
Report Goal 69'
Attendance: 500
Referee: Christoffer Ajdesjö (Sweden)

Semi-finals[]

Finland 1–3 Russia
Goal 86' Report Vikulin Goal 45'
Goal 56'
Ivanushkin Goal 70'
Attendance: 3,000
Referee: Håkan Sjösten (Sweden)
Sweden 4–3 Kazakhstan
Report
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Grigory Minaev (Russia)

Third place game[]

Finland 3–5 Kazakhstan
Report
Attendance: 1,000
Referee: Håkan Sjösten (Sweden)

Final[]

Russia 3–2 Sweden
Zakharov Goal 5' (p)
Lomanov Goal 40'
Ivanushkin Goal 67'
Report Berlin Goal 3'
Nilsson Goal 48'
Attendance: 15,000
Referee: Juha-Matti Kanniainen (Finland)

Consolation tournament[]

5–8th place semifinals[]

United States 3–2 Belarus
Report(ru)
Norway 7–1 Canada
Report(ru)

7th place game[]

Belarus 7–5 Canada
Report(ru)

5th place game[]

United States 3–6 Norway
Report(ru)

Final standings[]

1.  Russia
2.  Sweden
3.  Kazakhstan
4.  Finland
5.  Norway
6.  United States
7.  Belarus
8.  Canada

Division B[]

  • After drawn games in the group stage, a penalty shootout is held to determine final placings in the event of teams finishing on equal points

Preliminary round[]

Group C[]

Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
 Latvia 3 2 1 0 21 11 5
 Estonia 3 1 2 0 12 10 4
 Hungary 3 1 1 1 12 13 3
 Netherlands 3 0 0 3 7 18 0
27 January 2014
Netherlands  2–4  Hungary
Latvia  4–4
(3–2 penalties)
 Estonia
28 January 2014
Netherlands  3–10  Latvia
Hungary  4–4
(4–3 penalties)
 Estonia
29 January 2014
Estonia  4–2  Netherlands
Latvia  7–4  Hungary

Group D[]

Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
 Japan 4 3 1 0 21 7 7
 Mongolia 4 3 0 1 24 7 6
 Ukraine 4 2 0 2 24 12 4
 Germany 4 1 1 2 30 16 3
 Somalia 4 0 0 4 2 59 0
27 January 2014
Japan  2–1  Ukraine
Somalia  1–22  Germany
Mongolia  2–3  Japan
28 January 2014
Ukraine  13–0  Somalia
Mongolia  3–1  Germany
Japan  12–0  Somalia
Ukraine  2–7  Mongolia
29 January 2014
Germany  4–4
(0–1 penalties)
 Japan
Somalia  1–12  Mongolia
Germany  3–8  Ukraine
  • Matches in Group D are 60 minutes in duration rather than the standard 90 minutes

Knockout phase[]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
30 January –
 
 
 Latvia9
 
31 January –
 
 Germany3
 
 Latvia8
 
30 January –
 
 Japan0
 
 Netherlands2
 
1 February –
 
 Japan3
 
 Latvia8
 
30 January –
 
 Estonia1
 
 Hungary5
 
31 January –
 
 Mongolia4
 
 Hungary2
 
30 January –
 
 Estonia5 Third place
 
 Estonia5
 
1 February –
 
 Ukraine1
 
 Japan2
 
 
 Hungary6
 

Quarterfinals[]

30 January 2014
Latvia  9–3  Germany
Estonia  5–1  Ukraine
Hungary  5–4  Mongolia
Netherlands  2–3  Japan

Match for 7th place (60 mins)[]

31 January 2014
Germany  5–4  Ukraine

Match for 5th place (60 mins)[]

31 January 2014
Mongolia  2–3  Netherlands

Match for 8th place (60 mins)[]

31 January 2014
Ukraine  13–1  Somalia

Semi-finals[]

31 January 2014
Latvia  8–0  Japan
Hungary  2–5  Estonia

Match for third place[]

1 February 2014
Japan  2–6  Hungary

Final[]

1 February 2014
Latvia  8–1  Estonia

Final standings[]

1.  Latvia
2.  Estonia
3.  Hungary
4.  Japan
5.  Netherlands
6.  Mongolia
7.  Germany
8.  Ukraine
9.  Somalia

Sources[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Calendar of games the World championship on bandy". Baikal-bandy.ru. Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  2. ^ "Somali team seeking to be masters of ice sport bandy". BBC News. 3 January 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
  3. ^ http://www.baikal-bandy.ru/p/about/tournament_table[dead link]
  4. ^ http://www.baikal-bandy.ru/p/about/tournament_table[dead link]

External links[]

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