From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1985 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country  Finland
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
DatesDecember 23, 1984 – January 1, 1985
Teams8
Final positions
Champions    Canada (2nd title)
Runner-up    Czechoslovakia
Third place    Soviet Union
Fourth place  Finland
Tournament statistics
Games played28
Goals scored230 (8.21 per game)
Attendance61,023 (2,179 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Finland Esa Keskinen (20 points)
←  1984
1986 →

The 1985 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (1985 WJHC) was the 9th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship and was held mainly in Turku and Helsinki, Finland. Canada won the gold medal, its second championship, Czechoslovakia silver and the Soviet Union bronze.

Final standings

The 1985 tournament was a round-robin format, with the top three teams winning gold, silver and bronze medals respectively.

Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1   Canada 7 5 0 2 44 14 +30 12
2   Czechoslovakia 7 5 0 2 32 13 +19 12
3   Soviet Union 7 5 2 0 38 17 +21 10
4   Finland 7 4 1 2 42 20 +22 10
5   Sweden 7 3 4 0 32 26 +6 6
6   United States 7 2 5 0 23 37 −14 4
7   West Germany 7 0 6 1 9 44 −35 1
8   Poland 7 0 6 1 10 59 −49 1
Source: [ citation needed]

Poland was relegated to Pool B for 1986.

Results

December 23, 1984 Canada 8 – 2  Sweden Helsinki
December 23, 1984 Soviet Union 10 – 0  Poland Vantaa
December 23, 1984 Finland 9 – 0  West Germany Turku
December 23, 1984 Czechoslovakia 9 – 1  United States Turku
December 25, 1984 Canada 12 – 1  Poland Turku
December 25, 1984 Soviet Union 12 – 1  West Germany Vantaa
December 25, 1984 Czechoslovakia 4 – 3  Sweden Helsinki
December 25, 1984 Finland 7 – 4  United States Turku
December 26, 1984 Canada 6 – 0  West Germany Helsinki
December 26, 1984 Czechoslovakia 6 – 2  Poland Espoo
December 26, 1984 Finland 5 – 3  Sweden Turku
December 26, 1984 Soviet Union 4 – 2  United States Turku
December 28, 1984 Canada 7 – 5  United States Turku
December 28, 1984 Soviet Union 5 – 1  Sweden Turku
December 28, 1984 Czechoslovakia 7 – 3  West Germany Vantaa
December 28, 1984 Finland 11 – 2  Poland Helsinki
December 29, 1984 Canada 5 – 0  Soviet Union Turku
December 29, 1984 Sweden 11 – 0  Poland Turku
December 29, 1984 Czechoslovakia 1 – 1  Finland Helsinki
December 29, 1984 United States 2 – 1  West Germany Helsinki
December 31, 1984 Finland 4 – 4  Canada Helsinki
December 31, 1984 Sweden 5 – 1  West Germany Turku
December 31, 1984 Czechoslovakia 3 – 1  Soviet Union Turku
December 31, 1984 United States 6 – 2  Poland
January 1, 1985 Canada 2 – 2  Czechoslovakia Helsinki
January 1, 1985 Poland 3 – 3  West Germany Vantaa
January 1, 1985 Soviet Union 6 – 5  Finland Helsinki
January 1, 1985 Sweden 7 – 3  United States Vantaa

Scoring leaders

Rank Player Country G A Pts
1 Esa Keskinen   Finland 6 14 20
2 Esa Tikkanen   Finland 7 12 19
3 Brian Bradley   Canada 9 5 14
4 Peter Andersson   Sweden 4 10 14
5 Mikko Mäkelä   Finland 11 2 13
6 Michal Pivoňka   Czechoslovakia 9 4 13
7 Adam Creighton   Canada 8 4 12
8 Sergei Novosyolov   Soviet Union 3 9 12
9 Alexander Semak   Soviet Union 7 4 11
10 Ravil Khaidarov   Soviet Union 6 3 9

Tournament awards

IIHF Directorate Awards Media All-Star Team
Goaltender Canada Craig Billington Finland Timo Lehkonen
Defencemen Finland Vesa Salo Canada Bobby Dollas
Soviet Union Mikhail Tatarinov
Forwards Czechoslovakia Michal Pivoňka Czechoslovakia Michal Pivoňka
Finland Esa Tikkanen
Finland Mikko Mäkelä

Pool B

Eight teams contested the second tier this year in Sapporo Japan from March 15 to 24. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games.

Standings
Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1    Switzerland 7 7 0 0 58 22 +36 14 5–4 5–3 20–7 6–1 7–1 8–6 7–0
2   Netherlands 7 5 1 1 47 14 +33 11 4–5 4–4 8–1 5–1 7–1 7–1 12–1
3   Japan 7 4 2 1 34 23 +11 9 3–5 4–4 10–3 3–1 5–2 3–5 6–3
4   Austria 7 3 3 1 30 53 −23 7 7–20 1–8 3–10 5–5 3–2 7–6 4–2
5   Norway 7 2 4 1 23 28 −5 5 1–6 1–5 1–3 5–5 1–2 7–1 7–6
6   Italy 7 2 5 0 14 28 −14 4 1–7 1–7 2–5 2–3 2–1 5–3 1–2
7   Romania 7 1 5 1 27 42 −15 3 6–8 1–7 5–3 6–7 1–7 3–5 5–5
8   France 7 1 5 1 19 42 −23 3 0–7 1–12 3–6 2–4 6–7 2–1 5–5
Source: [ citation needed]

Switzerland was promoted to Pool A and France was relegated to Pool C for 1986.

Pool C

This tournament took place in Belgium from February 22 to 27. It was played in Brussels, Heist-op-den-Berg, Liège, Geel, Deurne and Antwerp.

Standings
Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1   Bulgaria 5 5 0 0 28 17 +11 10 3–2 11–9 5–1 4–1 5–4
2   Hungary 5 4 1 0 35 12 +23 8 2–3 6–1 10–2 11–2 6–4
3   Belgium 5 2 2 1 32 27 +5 5 9–11 1–6 5–5 11–1 6–4
4   Denmark [A] 5 2 2 1 20 24 −4 5 1–5 2–10 5–5 8–1 4–3
5   Great Britain 5 1 4 0 10 37 −27 2 1–4 2–11 1–11 1–8 5–3
6   Spain 5 0 5 0 18 26 −8 0 4–5 4–6 4–6 3–4 3–5
Source: [ citation needed]

Bulgaria was promoted to Pool B for 1986.

^ A. While Total Hockey lists Denmark in their standings, passionhockey.com states that this was a Netherlands team that does not count in the standings. The IIHF encyclopedia does not include Denmark in the 1985 standings.

References

  • Podnieks, Andrew (1998). Red, White, and Gold: Canada at the World Junior Championships 1974–1999. ECW Press. ISBN  1-55022-382-8.
  • World Junior Hockey Championships History: 1985 - Helsinki, Finland at TSN
  • Results at Passionhockey.com
  • Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports. ISBN  0-8362-7114-9.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1985 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country  Finland
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
DatesDecember 23, 1984 – January 1, 1985
Teams8
Final positions
Champions    Canada (2nd title)
Runner-up    Czechoslovakia
Third place    Soviet Union
Fourth place  Finland
Tournament statistics
Games played28
Goals scored230 (8.21 per game)
Attendance61,023 (2,179 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Finland Esa Keskinen (20 points)
←  1984
1986 →

The 1985 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (1985 WJHC) was the 9th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship and was held mainly in Turku and Helsinki, Finland. Canada won the gold medal, its second championship, Czechoslovakia silver and the Soviet Union bronze.

Final standings

The 1985 tournament was a round-robin format, with the top three teams winning gold, silver and bronze medals respectively.

Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1   Canada 7 5 0 2 44 14 +30 12
2   Czechoslovakia 7 5 0 2 32 13 +19 12
3   Soviet Union 7 5 2 0 38 17 +21 10
4   Finland 7 4 1 2 42 20 +22 10
5   Sweden 7 3 4 0 32 26 +6 6
6   United States 7 2 5 0 23 37 −14 4
7   West Germany 7 0 6 1 9 44 −35 1
8   Poland 7 0 6 1 10 59 −49 1
Source: [ citation needed]

Poland was relegated to Pool B for 1986.

Results

December 23, 1984 Canada 8 – 2  Sweden Helsinki
December 23, 1984 Soviet Union 10 – 0  Poland Vantaa
December 23, 1984 Finland 9 – 0  West Germany Turku
December 23, 1984 Czechoslovakia 9 – 1  United States Turku
December 25, 1984 Canada 12 – 1  Poland Turku
December 25, 1984 Soviet Union 12 – 1  West Germany Vantaa
December 25, 1984 Czechoslovakia 4 – 3  Sweden Helsinki
December 25, 1984 Finland 7 – 4  United States Turku
December 26, 1984 Canada 6 – 0  West Germany Helsinki
December 26, 1984 Czechoslovakia 6 – 2  Poland Espoo
December 26, 1984 Finland 5 – 3  Sweden Turku
December 26, 1984 Soviet Union 4 – 2  United States Turku
December 28, 1984 Canada 7 – 5  United States Turku
December 28, 1984 Soviet Union 5 – 1  Sweden Turku
December 28, 1984 Czechoslovakia 7 – 3  West Germany Vantaa
December 28, 1984 Finland 11 – 2  Poland Helsinki
December 29, 1984 Canada 5 – 0  Soviet Union Turku
December 29, 1984 Sweden 11 – 0  Poland Turku
December 29, 1984 Czechoslovakia 1 – 1  Finland Helsinki
December 29, 1984 United States 2 – 1  West Germany Helsinki
December 31, 1984 Finland 4 – 4  Canada Helsinki
December 31, 1984 Sweden 5 – 1  West Germany Turku
December 31, 1984 Czechoslovakia 3 – 1  Soviet Union Turku
December 31, 1984 United States 6 – 2  Poland
January 1, 1985 Canada 2 – 2  Czechoslovakia Helsinki
January 1, 1985 Poland 3 – 3  West Germany Vantaa
January 1, 1985 Soviet Union 6 – 5  Finland Helsinki
January 1, 1985 Sweden 7 – 3  United States Vantaa

Scoring leaders

Rank Player Country G A Pts
1 Esa Keskinen   Finland 6 14 20
2 Esa Tikkanen   Finland 7 12 19
3 Brian Bradley   Canada 9 5 14
4 Peter Andersson   Sweden 4 10 14
5 Mikko Mäkelä   Finland 11 2 13
6 Michal Pivoňka   Czechoslovakia 9 4 13
7 Adam Creighton   Canada 8 4 12
8 Sergei Novosyolov   Soviet Union 3 9 12
9 Alexander Semak   Soviet Union 7 4 11
10 Ravil Khaidarov   Soviet Union 6 3 9

Tournament awards

IIHF Directorate Awards Media All-Star Team
Goaltender Canada Craig Billington Finland Timo Lehkonen
Defencemen Finland Vesa Salo Canada Bobby Dollas
Soviet Union Mikhail Tatarinov
Forwards Czechoslovakia Michal Pivoňka Czechoslovakia Michal Pivoňka
Finland Esa Tikkanen
Finland Mikko Mäkelä

Pool B

Eight teams contested the second tier this year in Sapporo Japan from March 15 to 24. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games.

Standings
Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1    Switzerland 7 7 0 0 58 22 +36 14 5–4 5–3 20–7 6–1 7–1 8–6 7–0
2   Netherlands 7 5 1 1 47 14 +33 11 4–5 4–4 8–1 5–1 7–1 7–1 12–1
3   Japan 7 4 2 1 34 23 +11 9 3–5 4–4 10–3 3–1 5–2 3–5 6–3
4   Austria 7 3 3 1 30 53 −23 7 7–20 1–8 3–10 5–5 3–2 7–6 4–2
5   Norway 7 2 4 1 23 28 −5 5 1–6 1–5 1–3 5–5 1–2 7–1 7–6
6   Italy 7 2 5 0 14 28 −14 4 1–7 1–7 2–5 2–3 2–1 5–3 1–2
7   Romania 7 1 5 1 27 42 −15 3 6–8 1–7 5–3 6–7 1–7 3–5 5–5
8   France 7 1 5 1 19 42 −23 3 0–7 1–12 3–6 2–4 6–7 2–1 5–5
Source: [ citation needed]

Switzerland was promoted to Pool A and France was relegated to Pool C for 1986.

Pool C

This tournament took place in Belgium from February 22 to 27. It was played in Brussels, Heist-op-den-Berg, Liège, Geel, Deurne and Antwerp.

Standings
Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1   Bulgaria 5 5 0 0 28 17 +11 10 3–2 11–9 5–1 4–1 5–4
2   Hungary 5 4 1 0 35 12 +23 8 2–3 6–1 10–2 11–2 6–4
3   Belgium 5 2 2 1 32 27 +5 5 9–11 1–6 5–5 11–1 6–4
4   Denmark [A] 5 2 2 1 20 24 −4 5 1–5 2–10 5–5 8–1 4–3
5   Great Britain 5 1 4 0 10 37 −27 2 1–4 2–11 1–11 1–8 5–3
6   Spain 5 0 5 0 18 26 −8 0 4–5 4–6 4–6 3–4 3–5
Source: [ citation needed]

Bulgaria was promoted to Pool B for 1986.

^ A. While Total Hockey lists Denmark in their standings, passionhockey.com states that this was a Netherlands team that does not count in the standings. The IIHF encyclopedia does not include Denmark in the 1985 standings.

References

  • Podnieks, Andrew (1998). Red, White, and Gold: Canada at the World Junior Championships 1974–1999. ECW Press. ISBN  1-55022-382-8.
  • World Junior Hockey Championships History: 1985 - Helsinki, Finland at TSN
  • Results at Passionhockey.com
  • Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports. ISBN  0-8362-7114-9.

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