2021 IIHF World Championship

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2021 IIHF World Championship
2021. gada Pasaules čempionāts hokejā
2021 IIHF World Championship logo.svg
Tournament details
Host country Latvia
Dates21 May – 6 June
Officially opened byEgils Levits
Teams16
Venue(s)2 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg Canada (27th title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg Finland
Third place Bronze medal blank.svg United States
Fourth place Germany
Tournament statistics
Matches played64
Goals scored324 (5.06 per match)
Attendance934 (15 per match)
Scoring leader(s)Canada Connor Brown
(16 points)
MVPCanada Andrew Mangiapane
2020 (cancelled)
2022

The 2021 IIHF World Championship (Latvian: 2021. gada Pasaules čempionāts hokejā) took place from 21 May to 6 June 2021.[1] It was originally to be co-hosted by Minsk, Belarus and Riga, Latvia, as the IIHF announced on 19 May 2017.[2] Their joint bid won by a very tight margin against the Finnish bid with the cities of Tampere and Helsinki.[2] On 18 January 2021, the IIHF decided to remove Belarus as a co-host due to the rising political unrest and COVID-19 pandemic there.[3] On 2 February, the IIHF voted to confirm Latvia as the sole host for the 2021 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship.[4]

This tournament was notable for the number of upsets that occurred in the preliminary round, including Denmark and Belarus' victories over Sweden, Kazakhstan's victory over Finland, Slovakia's victory over Russia, and Latvia's victory over Canada.[5] Sweden did not qualify for the quarterfinals for the first time since the current format was introduced.[6] On the other hand, Kazakhstan recorded their best World Championship result to date, finishing in tenth place.

Canada won their 27th title, after defeating Finland in the final in overtime. Canada was the first team in history to win gold, despite losing four times during the tournament.[7] The United States won the bronze medal game, defeating Germany 6–1.[8]

Venues[]

The Minsk Arena was originally planned to be used for the Championship.

2021 IIHF World Championship is located in Riga
Arena Riga
Arena Riga
Olympic Sports Centre
Olympic Sports Centre
Riga Riga
Arēna Rīga Olympic Sports Centre
56°58′4.5″N 24°7′17″E / 56.967917°N 24.12139°E / 56.967917; 24.12139 (Riga) 56°58′4.4″N 24°7′27″E / 56.967889°N 24.12417°E / 56.967889; 24.12417 (Riga)
Capacity: 10,300 Capacity: 6,200
Arēna Rīga.jpg Elektrum olimpiskais centrs.jpg

COVID-19 restrictions[]

Due to COVID-19 pandemic protocols, the tournament was initially held behind closed doors with no spectators. Prior to the beginning of the tournament, and against objections by Prime Minister Krišjānis Kariņš and Minister of Health Daniels Pavļuts, the Latvian parliament voted in favour of a notion ordering the government to develop a plan for allowing spectators who are either fully vaccinated or otherwise immune due to recent infection.[9]

Spectators were admitted beginning 1 June, and were to present electronic verification that they have either been fully vaccinated no fewer than 14 days prior with the Janssen, Moderna, or Pfizer vaccine, been fully vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine, have received the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine between 22 and 90 days prior, or have recently recovered from COVID-19. Arēna Rīga was capped at 2,660 spectators, and the Olympic Sports Centre at 1,058. Face masks were mandatory.[10]

Belarus hosting controversy[]

Despite similar political opposition in 2014 when Belarus was the sole host of the IIHF World Championship, Belarus was to be the co-host for the 2021 Championship. However, in the wake of the ongoing 2020–2021 Belarusian protests, several political groups, politicians and international entities, including the European Parliament and Krišjānis Kariņš, the Prime Minister of Latvia, which was set to co-host the championship, protested tournament matches being held in Belarus, and called for the country to be stripped of co-hosting duties.[11][12][13][14][15][16] Several sponsors of the tournament reportedly threatened to withdraw from sponsoring the event if it took place in Belarus.[17][18][19]

On 18 January 2021, the IIHF, citing "safety and security issues," decided that the World Championship would not be played in Belarus.[3] Latvia would remain as a co-host for the time being, but the IIHF was considering whether to go with another site, due to COVID-19 constraints and the desirability for single-site travel. Both Denmark and Slovakia (the tournament hosts in 2018 and 2019 respectively) reportedly offered to step in as hosts.[3][20]

Belarus flag controversy[]

Controversial flagpoles of the teams at the 2021 IIHF World Championship in Riga, with the Belarusian flag replaced.

On 24 May 2021, following the Ryanair Flight 4978 incident, Latvian officials replaced the Belarusian state flag in Riga with the former flag faced with the former coat of arms used by opposition groups, including at the 2021 IIHF World Championship display of flags, which was replaced by Mayor of Riga Mārtiņš Staķis and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Latvia Edgars Rinkēvičs. As a result, Belarus expelled the entire Latvian embassy from their country.[21] The IIHF issued a statement protesting the replacement of the flag, and IIHF president René Fasel asked Riga's mayor to remove the IIHF name, its flag and its symbols from such sites, or to restore the flag, insisting that the IIHF is an "apolitical sports organization".[22] In response, Staķis said he would remove the IIHF flags.[23][24] On 28 May 2021, Belarus opened a criminal case against Staķis and Rinkēvičs, accusing them of fuelling "national enmity".[25]

Participants[]

Map of the countries participating at the 2021 IIHF World Championship

Qualified as host

Automatic qualifier after the cancellation of the 2020 IIHF World Championship

1 Pursuant to a December 2020 ruling by the Court of Arbitration for Sport on doping sanctions, Russian athletes and teams are prohibited from competing under the Russian flag or using the Russian national anthem at any Olympic Games or world championships through 16 December 2022, and must compete as "neutral athlete[s]."[26] For IIHF tournaments, the Russian team will play under the name "Russian Olympic Committee" (ROC).[27] Instead of the Russian national anthem being played at the 2021 World Championship, Piano Concerto No.1 by Pyotr Illych Tchaikovsky was played.[28]

Seeding[]

The seedings in the preliminary round are based on the 2020 IIHF World Ranking, as of the end of the 2019 IIHF World Championship, using the serpentine system with a swap between Canada and ROC to "accommodate special organizational needs".[29]

Rosters[]

Each team's roster consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 25 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All 16 participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a "Long List" no later than two weeks before the tournament, and a final roster by the Passport Control meeting prior to the start of the tournament.

Match officials[]

18 referees and linesmen were announced on 7 April 2021.[30][31]

Referees Linesmen

Mascot[]

Spiky, the Hedgehog on the 2021 stamp of Latvia

The official mascot of the tournament was revealed in February 2020 by the IIHF. His name is Spiky the Hedgehog and he was voted by the fans in Belarus and Latvia. The hedgehog is a very popular animal in the hosting countries and it represents the fighting spirit and determination of the Belarus and Latvian national hockey teams.[32]

Preliminary round[]

The groups were announced on 20 May 2020.[29] The schedule was released on 5 February 2021.[33]

Group A[]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  ROC 7 5 1 0 1 28 10 +18 17 Quarterfinals
2   Switzerland 7 5 0 0 2 27 17 +10 15
3  Czech Republic 7 3 2 0 2 27 18 +9 13
4  Slovakia 7 4 0 0 3 17 22 −5 12
5  Sweden 7 3 0 1 3 21 14 +7 10
6  Denmark 7 2 1 1 3 13 15 −2 9
7  Great Britain 7 1 0 1 5 13 31 −18 4[a]
8  Belarus 7 1 0 1 5 10 29 −19 4[a]
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Belarus 3–4 Great Britain
21 May 2021
ROC  4–3  Czech Republic
Belarus  2–5  Slovakia
22 May 2021
Denmark  4–3  Sweden
Great Britain  1–7  ROC
Czech Republic  2–5   Switzerland
23 May 2021
Great Britain  1–2  Slovakia
Sweden  0–1  Belarus
Denmark  0–1   Switzerland
24 May 2021
Slovakia  3–1  ROC
Czech Republic  3–2 (OT)  Belarus
25 May 2021
Great Britain  2–3 (OT)  Denmark
Switzerland   0–7  Sweden
26 May 2021
ROC  3–0  Denmark
Belarus  3–4  Great Britain
27 May 2021
Switzerland   8–1  Slovakia
Sweden  2–4  Czech Republic
28 May 2021
Sweden  4–1  Great Britain
Denmark  5–2  Belarus
29 May 2021
Czech Republic  6–1  Great Britain
Switzerland   1–4  ROC
Slovakia  2–0  Denmark
30 May 2021
Belarus  0–6   Switzerland
Sweden  3–1  Slovakia
31 May 2021
Czech Republic  2–1 (GWS)  Denmark
ROC  3–2 (GWS)  Sweden
1 June 2021
Switzerland   6–3  Great Britain
Slovakia  3–7  Czech Republic
ROC  6–0  Belarus

Group B[]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  United States 7 6 0 0 1 21 8 +13 18 Quarterfinals
2  Finland 7 4 2 1 0 19 10 +9 17
3  Germany 7 4 0 0 3 22 14 +8 12
4  Canada 7 3 0 1 3 19 18 +1 10[a]
5  Kazakhstan 7 2 2 0 3 22 18 +4 10[a]
6  Latvia (H) 7 2 0 3 2 15 16 −1 9
7  Norway 7 2 1 0 4 17 21 −4 8
8  Italy 7 0 0 0 7 11 41 −30 0
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
(H) Host
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Kazakhstan 2–4 Canada
21 May 2021
Germany  9–4  Italy
Canada  0–2  Latvia
22 May 2021
Norway  1–5  Germany
Finland  2–1  United States
Latvia  2–3 (GWS)  Kazakhstan
23 May 2021
Norway  4–1  Italy
Kazakhstan  2–1 (GWS)  Finland
Canada  1–5  United States
24 May 2021
Latvia  3–0  Italy
Germany  3–1  Canada
25 May 2021
United States  3–0  Kazakhstan
Finland  5–2  Norway
26 May 2021
Kazakhstan  3–2  Germany
Canada  4–2  Norway
27 May 2021
United States  4–2  Latvia
Finland  3–0  Italy
28 May 2021
Kazakhstan  2–4  Canada
Latvia  3–4 (GWS)  Norway
29 May 2021
Italy  3–11  Kazakhstan
Norway  1–2  United States
Germany  1–2  Finland
30 May 2021
Italy  1–7  Canada
Finland  3–2 (OT)  Latvia
31 May 2021
United States  2–0  Germany
Norway  3–1  Kazakhstan
1 June 2021
Canada  2–3 (GWS)  Finland
Italy  2–4  United States
Germany  2–1  Latvia

Playoff round[]

Pairings[]

Quarter-finalists were paired according to their positions in the groups: the first-place team in each preliminary-round group played the fourth-place team of the other group, while the second-place team played the third-place team of the other group.[34]

Semi-finalists are paired according to their seeding after the preliminary round, which is determined by the following criteria: 1) position in the group; 2) number of points; 3) goal difference; 4) number of goals scored for; 5) seeding number entering the tournament. The best-ranked semi-finalist plays against the lowest-ranked semi-finalist, while the second-best ranked semi-finalist plays the third-best ranked semi-finalist.[34]

Rank Team Grp Pos Pts GD GF Seed
1  United States B 1 18 +13 21 6
2  ROC A 1 17 +18 28 2
3  Finland B 2 17 +9 19 3
4   Switzerland A 2 15 +10 27 8
5  Czech Republic A 3 13 +9 27 5
6  Germany B 3 12 +8 22 7
7  Slovakia A 4 12 −5 17 9
8  Canada B 4 10 +1 19 1

Bracket[]

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
 
          
 
3 June
 
 
2B
 Finland
1
 
5 June
 
3A
 Czech Republic
0
 
3
 Finland
2
 
3 June
 
6
 Germany
1
 
2A
  Switzerland
2
 
6 June
 
3B
 Germany (GWS)
3
 
3
 Finland
2
 
3 June
 
8
 Canada (OT)
3
 
1B
 United States
6
 
5 June
 
4A
 Slovakia
1
 
1
 United States
2
 
3 June
 
8
 Canada
4 Third place
 
1A
 ROC
1
 
6 June
 
4B
 Canada (OT)
2
 
1
 United States
6
 
 
6
 Germany
1
 

Final[]

6 June 2021
20:15
Finland 2–3 OT
(1–0, 0–1, 1–1)
(OT: 0–1)
 CanadaArena Riga, Riga

Final standings[]

Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 B  Canada 10 4 2 1 3 28 23 +5 17 Champions
2 B  Finland 10 6 2 2 0 24 14 +10 24 Runners-up
3 B  United States 10 8 0 0 2 35 14 +21 24 Third place
4 B  Germany 10 4 1 0 5 27 24 +3 14 Fourth place
5 A  ROC 8 5 1 1 1 29 12 +17 18 Eliminated in
Quarter-finals
6 A   Switzerland 8 5 0 1 2 29 20 +9 16
7 A  Czech Republic 8 3 2 0 3 27 19 +8 13
8 A  Slovakia 8 4 0 0 4 18 28 −10 12
9 A  Sweden 7 3 0 1 3 21 14 +7 10 Eliminated in
Group stage
10 B  Kazakhstan 7 2 2 0 3 22 18 +4 10
11 B  Latvia (H) 7 2 0 3 2 15 16 −1 9
12 A  Denmark 7 2 1 1 3 13 15 −2 9
13 B  Norway 7 2 1 0 4 17 21 −4 8
14 A  Great Britain 7 1 0 1 5 13 31 −18 4
15 A  Belarus 7 1 0 1 5 10 29 −19 4
16 B  Italy 7 0 0 0 7 11 41 −30 0
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) position in the group; 2) number of points; 3) goal difference; 4) goals scored; 5) seeding before tournament.[34]
(H) Host

Statistics[]

Scoring leaders[]

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
Canada Connor Brown 10 2 14 16 +8 2 F
United States Conor Garland 10 6 7 13 +6 6 F
Canada Andrew Mangiapane 7 7 4 11 +6 0 F
Canada Adam Henrique 10 6 5 11 +6 0 F
Slovakia Peter Cehlárik 8 5 6 11 +5 6 F
United Kingdom Liam Kirk 7 7 2 9 −6 4 F
United States Trevor Moore 10 5 4 9 +7 4 F
United States Jason Robertson 10 4 5 9 +8 10 F
Switzerland Grégory Hofmann 8 6 2 8 0 0 F
Denmark Nicklas Jensen 7 5 3 8 −2 2 F

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalties in Minutes; POS = Position
Source: IIHF.com

Goaltending leaders[]

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.

Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
United States Cal Petersen 417:14 9 1.29 193 95.34 2
Sweden Adam Reideborn 299:44 7 1.40 129 94.57 1
Russia Alexander Samonov 364:39 8 1.32 142 94.37 2
Finland Juho Olkinuora 431:26 10 1.39 174 94.25 1
Kazakhstan Nikita Boyarkin 370:00 14 2.27 198 92.93 0

TOI = time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = shots against; GA = goals against; GAA = goals against average; Sv% = save percentage; SO = shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

Awards[]

The awards were announced on 6 June 2021.[35]

Individual awards[]

Position Player
Goaltender United States Cal Petersen
Defenceman Germany Moritz Seider
Forward Slovakia Peter Cehlárik

Media All Stars[]

Position Player
Goaltender Finland Juho Olkinuora
Defenceman Germany Moritz Seider
Defenceman Germany Korbinian Holzer
Forward Canada Andrew Mangiapane
Forward United States Conor Garland
Forward United Kingdom Liam Kirk
MVP Canada Andrew Mangiapane

Broadcasting rights[]

These are the broadcasters for the tournament.[36]

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