1947–48 Estonian SSR Championship

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The 1947-48 Estonian SSR Championship was the third season of the national ice hockey competition in the Estonian SSR. It was contested by four teams, and Tallinna Dunamo won the championship.[1][2]

First round

Group 1

  • Tallinna Spartak - Balti Manufaktuur 16:1
  • Tallinna Dunamo - Tallinna Spartak 8:1
  • Tallinna Kalev - Kalev Haapsalu 11:5
  • Tartu Dunamo - Tallinna Kalev 15:1
  • Tallinna Spartak - Tallinna Kalev 6:4

Group 2

  • Viljandi Spartak - Kalev Viljandi 5:2
  • Viljandi Dunamo I - Viljandi Spartak 10:1
  • Viljandi Dunamo II - Paide Tööjõureservid (Forfeit)
  • Viljandi Dunamo I - Viljandi Dunamo II 17:1

Final round

Club GP W T L Goals Pts
1. Tallinna Dunamo 3 3 0 0 12:0 6
2. Tartu Dunamo 3 2 0 1 11:3 4
3. Tallinna Spartak 3 1 0 2 2:13 2
4. Viljandi Dunamo 3 0 0 3 1:10 0

Team rosters

  • Tallinna Dunamo - Edgar Jürgens, Valentin Kebina, Evald Kree, Georg Krull, Karl Liiv, Kuno Maior, Heldur Ründva, Lembit Rämmal, Olev Rämmal, Harri Sachris, Elmar Saar (player-coach)
  • Tartu Dunamo - Rein Aren, Eldur Hallap, Heino Mägi, Elmar Mölder, Alfred Palu, Julius Raudsepp, Karl Raudsepp, Ilmar Reedre, Friedrich Truuts, Julius Tüür, Valfried Kokk (coach)
  • Tallinna Spartak - Harri Anepaju, Elmar Aun, Uno Grüntal, Ferdinand Link, Endel Piiper, Harri Pilbas, Uno Põllu, Lembit Sepp, Sven Sõgel, Karl-Rudolf Sillak (player-coach)

References

  1. Jääpall / Jäähoki, Kiriastus Eesti Raamat, Tallinn (1977).
  2. First round and roster info courtesy of Ice-Hockey-Stat.com
Estonian SSR Championship seasons
1945–46 · 1946–47 · 1947–48 · 1948–49 · 1949–50 · 1950–51 · 1951–52 · 1952–53 · 1953–54 · 1954–55 · 1955–56 · 1956–57 · 1957–58 · 1958–59 · 1959–60 · 1960–61 · 1961–62 · 1962–63 · 1963–64 · 1964–65 · 1965–66 · 1966–67 · 1967–68 · 1968–69 · 1969–70 · 1970–71 · 1971–72 · 1972–73 · 1973–74 · 1974–75 · 1975–76 · 1976–77 · 1977–78 · 1978–79 · 1979–80 · 1980–81 · 1981–82 · 1982–83 · 1983–84 · 1984–85 · 1985–86 · 1986–87 · 1987–88 · 1988–89 · 1989–90