Estonia men's national floorball team

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Estonia
ArenaTTÜ Sports Hall
Capacity1,000[1]
Manager
CoachEstonia
Captain
First game1–7, vs. Hungary
(14 May 1995)
Largest win18–4, vs. Austria
(7 December 2010)
Largest defeat1–21, vs. Sweden Sweden
(4 December 2010)

The Estonia men's national floorball team is the national floorball team of Estonia, and a member of the International Floorball Federation. Estonia has competed in 7 out of 12 World Championships (1996, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016 and 2018). Their best result is 7th place in 2010.[2]

Players[]

Current roster[]

Roster for the 2020 WFC Qualifiers:[2]

# Player Club Pos. Grip Age Birthplace
4 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts D L 22 Estonia
5 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F L 20 Estonia
6 Sweden AIK Innebandy D R 28 Sweden
7 Switzerland Ad Astra Sarnen D L 37 Estonia
8 Sweden Djugardens IF IBS F L 30 Sweden
9 Latvia FBK Valmiera F L 20 Estonia
10 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F L 30 Estonia
20 Estonia Jogeva SK Tahe G R 32 Estonia
21 Sweden Djugardens IF IBS F L 39 Sweden
22 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts D L 23 Estonia
26 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F L 23 Estonia
27 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F R 22 Estonia
39 Sweden Team Thorengruppen SK D L 30 Sweden
44 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F L 28 Estonia
51 Sweden FBI Tullinge F L 29 Sweden
77 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts F R 26 Estonia
87 Estonia Aasmae SK F L 25 Estonia
88 Estonia Sparta Spordiselts D L 24 Estonia
90 Sweden KAIS Mora IF G L 33 Sweden

World Championships[]

Year Hosting Country Rank
1996 Sweden Sweden 11th place
2008 Czech Republic Czech Republic 8th place
2010 Finland Finland 7th place
2012 Switzerland Switzerland 9th place
2014 Sweden Sweden 8th place
2016 Latvia Latvia 8th place
2018 Czech Republic Czech Republic 10th place

References[]

  1. ^ "Tallinna Tehnikaülikooli spordihoone" (in Estonian). Eesti Spordiregister. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Estonia Men". International Floorball Federation. Retrieved 2020-12-16.

External links[]


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