2017–18 Liiga season

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The 2017–18 Liiga season was the 43rd season of the SM-liiga (branded simply as "Liiga"), the top level of ice hockey in Finland, since the league's formation in 1975. Tappara was the season as a defending champion. This season included a record number of matches played on Fridays and Saturdays. In autumn, there was a national team break from 5 November until 13 November.

The specialties of the season included, for the first time in Liiga history, double games between KooKoo and Vaasan Sport. Teams met twice in October in consecutive evenings in Kouvola and in February twice in succession in Vaasa. In December, HIFK and Kärpät met in the hockey outdoor show at Kaisaniemi, Helsinki.

In 2018, the Liiga continued on Wednesday, 3 January. 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea's Pyeongchang start with the Finland men's national ice hockey team on February 14, 2018. In Liiga, a full round was played on Saturday 17 February, after which the Olympic Games started. Liiga games resumed on Tuesday, February 27.

Kärpät won the championship by winning Tappara in the final series 4-2.

Regular season

Top six advance straight to quarter-finals, while teams between 7th and 10th positions play wild card round for the final two spots. The Liiga is a closed series and thus there is no relegation.

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final Result
1 Kärpät 60 33 8 8 11 195 134 +61 123 Advance to Quarterfinals
2 TPS 60 30 7 8 15 187 147 +40 112
3 Tappara 60 25 14 7 14 165 130 +35 110
4 JYP 60 32 4 4 20 187 145 +42 108
5 HIFK 60 26 8 9 17 163 128 +35 103
6 KalPa 60 26 7 7 20 144 136 +8 99
7 SaiPa 60 21 11 8 20 153 163 −10 93 Advance to Wild-card round
8 Ässät 60 23 7 5 25 163 177 −14 88
9 Lukko 60 21 8 6 25 141 142 −1 85
10 Pelicans 60 20 7 9 24 165 175 −10 83
11 Ilves 60 21 5 8 26 162 190 −28 81
12 HPK 60 20 7 4 29 145 157 −12 78
13 Jukurit 60 16 5 9 30 133 170 −37 67
14 KooKoo 60 14 5 10 31 142 198 −56 62
15 Sport 60 12 7 8 33 153 206 −53 58

Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) 3-point wins 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals scored; 5) Head-to-head points.[1]

Playoffs

Bracket

  Wild-card round (best-of-3) Quarter-finals (best-of-7) Semi-finals (best-of-7) Finals (best-of-7)
                                     
    1  Kärpät 4  
7  SaiPa 2     8  Ässät 1    
  1  Kärpät 4  
10  Pelicans 1    
  5  HIFK 3    
2  TPS 4
   
  7  SaiPa 2  
    1  Kärpät 4
  3  Tappara 2
  3  Tappara 4    
6  KalPa 2    
  2  TPS 0
8  Ässät 2  
  3  Tappara 4  
9  Lukko 0     4  JYP 2
 
    5  HIFK 4  
3rd place game
  • HIFK - TPS 3:2 OT

Final rankings

Gold medal icon.png Kärpät
Silver medal icon.png Tappara
Bronze medal icon.png HIFK
4 TPS
5 JYP
6 KalPa
7 SaiPa
8 Ässät
9 Lukko
10 Pelicans
11 Ilves
12 HPK
13 Jukurit
14 KooKoo
15 Sport

References

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).