Canada men's national junior ice hockey team

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Canada
Top scorer Connor Bedard (17)
Most points Connor Bedard (36)
IIHF code CAN
Team colors               
First international
Flag of Canada.svg.png Canada 5 – 4 United States Flag of the United States.svg.png
(Leningrad, Soviet Union; December 27, 1973)
Biggest win
Flag of Canada.svg.png Canada 18 – 2 West Germany Flag of Germany.svg.png
(Kitchener, Ontario, Canada; December 27, 1985)
Flag of Canada.svg.png Canada 16 – 0 Latvia Flag of Latvia.svg.png
(Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; December 26, 2009)
Biggest defeat
Flag of Sweden.svg.png Sweden 17 – 1 Canada Flag of Canada.svg.png
(Tampere, Finland; December 26, 1975)
IIHF World U20 Championship
Appearances 45 (first in 1977)
Best result Gold medal icon.png Gold: 16 – (1982, 1985, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2015, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2023)
International record (W–L–T)
209–60–23

main

Medal record
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place 1982 USA Canada
Gold medal – first place 1985 Finland Canada
Gold medal – first place 1988 Soviet Union Canada
Gold medal – first place 1990 Finland Canada
Gold medal – first place 1991 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 1993 Sweden Canada
Gold medal – first place 1994 Czech Republic Canada
Gold medal – first place 1995 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 1996 USA Canada
Gold medal – first place 1997 Switzerland Canada
Gold medal – first place 2005 USA Canada
Gold medal – first place 2006 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 2007 Sweden Canada
Gold medal – first place 2008 Czech Republic Canada
Gold medal – first place 2009 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 2015 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 2018 USA Canada
Gold medal – first place 2020 Czech Republic Canada
Gold medal – first place 2022 Canada Canada
Gold medal – first place 2023 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 1975 Canada/USA Canada
Silver medal – second place 1976 Finland Canada
Silver medal – second place 1977 Czechoslovakia Canada
Silver medal – second place 1986 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 1999 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 2002 Czech Republic Canada
Silver medal – second place 2003 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 2004 Finland Canada
Silver medal – second place 2010 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 2011 USA Canada
Silver medal – second place 2017 Canada Canada
Silver medal – second place 2021 Canada Canada
Bronze medal – third place 1974 Soviet Union Canada
Bronze medal – third place 1978 Canada Canada
Bronze medal – third place 1983 Soviet Union Canada
Bronze medal – third place 2000 Sweden Canada
Bronze medal – third place 2001 Russia Canada
Bronze medal – third place 2012 Canada Canada

The Canadian men's national under-20 ice hockey team is the ice hockey team representing Canada internationally in under-20 competition. Their primary participation in this age group comes at the International Ice Hockey Federation's World Junior Championship, held annually every December and January. The team also participates in various exhibition matches and occasional exhibition series, such as the 2007 Super Series against their Russian counterparts, an eight-game exhibition series commemorating the 35th anniversary of the 1972 Summit Series .

The national junior team is extremely popular in Canada, even more so than the men's senior team which plays at the World Championships. World Junior events in Canada are often sold out, television ratings are extremely high, and even events in Europe are well attended by a contingent of Canadian fans.

The Canadian junior team is the most successful in the world, having medalled in 34 of 46 events held since 1977, winning a record 20 gold medals. Its success can be traced back to the formation of the Program of Excellence in 1982 by the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, which created the first true national junior team. Since that time, Canada has won 20 of 42 World Junior championships – including five in a row on two occasions, 1993–1997 and 2005–2009.

History

Early tournaments (1974–1981)

The International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) created an invitation-only junior tournament for the top ice hockey nations in the world to be held in late December 1973 and early January 1974 in Leningrad, Soviet Union. It featured six teams: the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, Finland, the United States and Canada. The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) hoped to send the defending Memorial Cup champion Toronto Marlboros to represent Canada, but after they declined, the Peterborough Petes, runner up to Toronto in the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA) standings, was sent.[1] The Petes finished third, despite being the only club team in the tournament[2]

A second tournament was held in 1975, primarily in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The CAHA sent an all-star team made up of players representing the Western Canada Hockey League WCHL as Canada's representative. The team finished in second place with a 4–1 record, their lone loss at the hands of the champion Soviet Union.[3] As the OHA and WCHL had each sent a representative already, the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) sent Canada's entry in the form of the Sherbrooke Beavers for the 1976 tournament. The team finished second despite scoring only 12 goals and giving up 27 in four games[4]

The growing popularity of international competition begun by the 1972 Summit Series and continued with the Canada Cup led the IIHF to formalize the tournament in 1977 as the IIHF World U20 Championship (colloquially the World Junior Hockey Championship).[5] The defending Memorial Cup champion St. Catharines Fincups of the OHA represented Canada at this first official tournament, winning the silver medal, while Dale McCourt was named the tournament's best forward.[6] The 1978 tournament was held in Montreal.[7] It was the first major international tournament for Wayne Gretzky, a 16-year-old phenom whom the Montreal crowd cheered wildly.[8] Though he led the tournament in scoring with 17 points,[7] Canada managed only a bronze medal after losing the final round-robin game to Sweden, 6–5, in which they needed only a tie for silver.[8]

The following three years yielded poor results. The 1979 team was represented primarily by the WHL's New Westminster Bruins and finished in fifth place.[9] The CAHA nearly chose not to send a team in 1980 due to travel costs, but donations from the three major junior leagues ensured Canada's participation. The Peterborough Petes formed the primary core of the team, supplemented by players from other OHA squads. The result, however, was another fifth-place finish.[10] The 1981 tournament was even worse, as the Cornwall Royals, with some additions from other QMJHL teams, finished in seventh place out of eight teams.[11]

Program of Excellence

The CAHA had long hoped to send a true national team to the tournament, but were limited by costs. To assemble such a team in 1981 would have cost four times the amount it spent to send the Cornwall Royals. The CAHA lacked the resources for such a program and preferred not to send a team at all if it couldn't send its best. However, it was in a dispute at the time with Hockey Canada and feared that if it did not send a team, the IIHF would turn to the rival governing body instead.[12] Though the CAHA typically sent the defending Memorial Cup champion, those teams were typically weakened by the loss of graduating players and were often only a shadow of the team which won their championships.[13] Disappointed by frequent complaints from European teams that the Canadian juniors were just "slugs" who couldn't play the game at an elite level, CAHA president Murray Costello finally set out to build a true national team program.[14]

Known as the "Program of Excellence", Costello and the CAHA proposed a multifaceted approach that would see Canada send its top eligible juniors from across the nation. It included the creation of U-17 and U-18 programs to develop younger players and a summer training camp to evaluate potential players for the junior team. The three major-junior leagues were initially reluctant to support the proposal, as it would have required them to surrender their top players for a longer period for the tournament, as well as their younger players for regional development tournaments. The CAHA ultimately gained the support of each league,[15] but not before having to also convince them to allow the organization to also invite eligible players from outside major junior hockey.[16]

The team that was sent to the 1982 Tournament in Rochester, Minnesota was the first true national junior team sent. It was composed of ten players from the WHL, four from the OHL, three from the QMJHL, two playing United States college and one playing professionally in the Finnish league.[17] The team lacked star players, but relied on a balanced offence and strong defence to post a 6–0–1 record in the round robin tournament. Canada defeated the Soviet Union 7–0 in the second-to-last game, the worst defeat the Soviets suffered in the tournament's history.[18] The game was played at the Winnipeg Arena before a rabid crowd, which amazed the players.[19] The Canadians entered the final game, against Czechoslovakia, guaranteed a silver medal, and needed only a tie to win gold. Played at a half-full arena in Rochester, the Czechs entered the third period leading 2–1, and would have had a larger lead if not for goaltender Mike Moffat. Two third-period goals gave Canada the lead before the Czechs tied it. They held on despite a frenzied attack in the final minutes to end with a 3–3 tie, and win Canada's first gold medal in the tournament's history.[19]

The arena either did not have a copy of the Canadian anthem, or had technical difficulty with it, so was unable to follow the IIHF tradition of playing the winning team's anthem following the game. The players themselves chose to sing the anthem, badly off-key, an image that has since become an iconic moment in the junior program's history.[20] The gold medal marked the first international amateur championship for Canada in 20 years,[21] and established the value of the Program of Excellence.[22]

Rivalry with the Soviet Union (1983–1991)

Attempting to repeat as champions in 1983, Canada endured numerous incidents and mind games perpetrated by the host Soviet Union. The Soviets initially refused to grant a sufficient number of visas for the Canadian delegation, then when the team landed in Leningrad, had their clothing and equipment seized immediately by government officials. It was returned three hours later, but only after the team threatened to withdraw from the tournament.[23] Canada's first three games, all wins, were played in a small, empty arena. The fourth game was against the hosts in a larger rink at full capacity, which the team was denied the ability to practice in beforehand. The players struggled to adapt to the new playing conditions, losing 7–3, and even surrendered a goal when they mistook a whistle from somewhere in the crowd for the referees whistle and stopped playing. The Canadians finished with the bronze medal.[24] The game against the Soviets was a much closer affair in the following year, ending in a 3–3 tie. However, Canada needed a win in the game to retain a chance for gold. Left with bronze as the best possibility, the disheartened Canadians lost to Czechoslovakia in the final game of the tournament and finished in fourth place.[25]

Canada and Czechoslovakia entered their contest on the final day of the 1985 tournament in Sweden with identical 5–0–1 records. Playing for the gold medal, the game was dominated by the goaltenders: Craig Billington and Dominik Hašek. It ended in a 2–2 draw and Canada claimed gold in the round-robin tournament as a result of a better goal differential. It was the nation's first World Championship won on European ice in 24 years.[26] With 5–0 records, Canada and the Soviet Union again faced off for the gold medal in their match-up at the 1986 in Hamilton. The Soviets emerged 4–1 victors and won the gold, while Canada finished as silver medalists.[27]

Believing that the Canada-Soviet match-up would again determine who won gold, the Czechoslovak hosts scheduled the two teams to be the final game of the 1987 tournament. It did not turn out that way, as the Soviets struggled and were eliminated from contention. Canada, however, could win silver with a victory, or gold with a victory of more than four goals.[28] Norwegian referee Hans Rønning, assigned based on his neutrality despite his inexperience officiating at the international level,[29] quickly lost control as both teams frequently hacked and slashed each other. Midway through the second period, with Canada leading 4–2, a line brawl broke out that ultimately involved nearly every player for both teams after the Soviets left their bench, closely followed by the Canadians. The melee lasted 20 minutes, ending only when the players were too exhausted to continue fighting.[30] The brawl, which became known as the Punch-up in Piestany, resulted in the disqualification of Canada and the Soviet Union.[29]

Players who were on the 1987 team entered the 1988 tournament in Moscow seeking redemption.[31] They won the gold medal, finishing the tournament at 6–0–1. The 3–2 victory over the Soviet Union was the difference maker, dropping the tournament hosts to the silver medal.[32] Canada would achieve the same feat at the 1990 and 1991 tournaments, capturing back-to-back gold medals for the first time, hinging on crucial wins over the Soviet Union. This ultimately broke the tie in points at the top of the standings each time, leaving the Soviets with silver.

Golden years (1993–1997)

From 1993 through to 1997, Canada won a record five-straight gold medals. The streak started under difficult circumstances beginning at the 1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Sweden, one of the most competitive engagements in tournament history.[33] The host Swedes, led by Peter Forsberg, Markus Naslund, and Niklas Sundstrom, broke scoring records. In 1995 the host Canadians benefited from a squad bolstered by the 1994-95 NHL lockout, resulting in a perfect record on their way to gold.[34] The streak culminated at the 1997 tournament in Switzerland, with excellent defence and goaltending covering for an offence that struggled early in the competition.[35] The run of dominance ended in 1998, when the team buckled under enormous media pressure and lost interest once gold was no longer a possibility, suffering an embarrassing eighth place exit.

Medal streak (1999–2012)

At the 1999 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Canada won silver as hosts in Winnipeg, dropping a 3–2 final in overtime to a powerful, deep Russian team. The tournament set records for attendance.[36] This would also be the start of another unrivaled display of junior hockey by Canada, claiming 14-straight medals from 1999–2012, including their second run of five-straight gold medals from 2005 through to 2009. At the 2009 tournament in Ottawa where Team Canada last captured gold, Canada faced defeat against Russia in the final seconds of their semi-final before Jordan Eberle scored the equalizing goal with 5.4 seconds remaining in the game, forcing overtime. Canada would win in a shootout and go on to rout Sweden 5–1 in the final. John Tavares, the future first overall selection at the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, was named most valuable player of the tournament.[37]

World Junior Championship record

Year GP W L T GF GA Pts Rank
1974 5 3 2 0 17 23 6 1
1975 5 4 1 0 27 10 8 1
1976 4 2 2 0 12 27 4 1
1977 7 5 1 1 50 20 11 1
1978 6 4 2 0 36 18 8 1
1979 5 3 2 0 23 10 6 5th
1980 5 3 2 0 25 18 6 5th
1981 5 1 3 1 26 25 3 7th
1982 7 6 0 1 45 14 13 1
1983 7 4 2 1 39 24 9 1
1984 7 4 2 1 39 17 9 4th
1985 7 5 0 2 44 14 12 1
1986 7 5 2 0 54 21 10 1
1987 6 4 1 1 41 23 9 DSQ
1988 7 6 0 1 37 16 13 1
1989 7 4 2 1 31 23 9 4th
1990 7 5 1 1 36 18 11 1
1991 7 5 1 1 40 18 11 1
1992 7 2 3 2 21 30 6 6th
1993 7 6 1 0 37 17 12 1
1994 7 6 0 1 39 20 13 1
1995 7 7 0 0 49 22 14 1
1996 6 6 0 0 27 8 12 1
1997 7 5 0 2 27 13 12 1
1998 7 2 5+ 0 13 18 4 8th
1999 7 4 2+ 1 30 15 9 1
2000 7 4 1 2 23 14 10 1
2001 7 4 2 1 26 16 9 1
2002 7 5 2 0 40 14 10 1
2003 6 5 1 0 26 11 10 1
2004 6 5 1 0 35 9 10 1
2005 6 6 0 0 42 7 12 1
2006 6 6 0 0 25 6 12 1
2007 6 6* 0 0 20 7 17 1
2008 7 6* 1 0 23 10 17 1
2009 6 6* 0 0 46 12 17 1
2010 6 5† 1+ 0 46 13 15 1
2011 7 5 2‡ 0 39 19 16 1
2012 6 5 1 0 35 11 15 1
2013 6 4 2 0 27 19 12 4th
2014 7 4 3‡ 0 25 20 13 4th
2015 7 7 0 0 39 9 12 1
2016 5 2† 3 0 18 18 5 6th
2017 7 5 2+ 0 35 18 9 1 Silver
2018 7 6 1 0 39 11 19 1 Gold
2019 5 3 2+ 0 24 7 10 6th
2020 7 6 1 0 32 17 18 1 Gold
2021 7 6 1 0 41 6 18 1 Silver
2022 7 7* 0 0 41 14 20 1 Gold
2023 7 6* 1 0 42 15 16 1 Gold
2024 5 3 2 0 23 10 9 5th
The Canadians face off against the Finnish junior team at an exhibition game in Calgary.

The 1974, 1975 and 1976 tournaments were unofficial. The 1974 team was represented by the Peterborough Petes. Canada was ejected from the tournament in 1987 for a bench clearing brawl with the Soviet Union. In 1996, a playoff was added to the tournament (prior to this, it was just a round robin tournament.) Playoff games are included in record. Since 2007, the IIHF has awarded 3 points for a win, 2 points for an overtime win and 1 point for an overtime loss.

† Includes one win in extra time (in the preliminary round)
‡ Includes one loss in extra time (in the preliminary round)
* Includes one win in extra time (in the playoff round)
+ Includes one loss in extra time (in the playoff round)

Super Series

In 2007, the Canadian junior team played the Russian junior team in an eight-game Super Series commemorating the 35th anniversary of the 1972 Summit Series. For the 40th anniversary, the two teams competed in a four-game series in August 2012. The two teams split the series, which was decided on an overtime goal by Ryan Strome after Game 4.[38]

Year GP W L T GF GA Pts Rank
2007 8 7 0 1 39 13 15 Won Series
2012 4 2 2 0 16 16 4 Won Series

References

  1. Podnieks 1998, p. 10
  2. Podnieks 1998, pp. 11–12
  3. Podnieks 1998, pp. 14–15
  4. Podnieks 1998, pp. 17–19
  5. Podnieks 1998, p. 7
  6. Podnieks 1998, p. 20
  7. 7.0 7.1 1977–1981, The Sports Network, http://www.tsn.ca/World_jrs/feature/?fid=3224. Retrieved 2012-01-09 
  8. 8.0 8.1 Podnieks 1998, pp. 39–40
  9. Podnieks 1998, pp. 51–52
  10. Podnieks 1998, pp. 63–64
  11. Podnieks 1998, p. 76
  12. Podnieks 1998, p. 78
  13. Joyce 2011, p. 1
  14. Hornby, Lance (2005-11-08), Costello rebuilt national pride, http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Hockey/News/2005/11/08/1297737-sun.html. Retrieved 2012-01-09 
  15. Joyce 2011, p. 3
  16. Podnieks 1998, p. 92
  17. Podnieks 1998, p. 103
  18. 1982 – Minnesota, USA, The Sports Network, http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=985. Retrieved 2012-01-09 
  19. 19.0 19.1 Joyce 2011, p. 10
  20. Joyce 2011, p. 11
  21. Canadian juniors win 'miracle' gold, 1982-01-04, p. 28, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2FsxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=7KQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2970,1115859. Retrieved 2012-01-09 
  22. Podnieks 1998, p. 107
  23. Podnieks 1998, pp. 109–110
  24. Joyce 2011, pp. 15–17
  25. Joyce 2011, p. 20
  26. Joyce 2011, pp. 22–25
  27. Podnieks 1998, pp. 152–153
  28. Joyce 2006, p. 116
  29. 29.0 29.1 Burns, John F. (1987-01-12), Diplomacy takes hard check, http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE7D61E39F931A25752C0A961948260. Retrieved 2012-01-11 
  30. Joyce 2011, pp. 41–42
  31. Joyce 2011, p. 50
  32. 1988 – Moscow, Russia, The Sports Network, http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=987. Retrieved 2012-01-11 
  33. "1993 – Gavle, Sweden". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=990. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 
  34. "1995 – Red Deer, Canada". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=1045. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 
  35. "1997 – Geneva and Morges, Switzerland". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=1186. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 
  36. "1999 – Winnipeg, Canada". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=3905. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 
  37. "2009 – Ottawa, Canada". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/feature/?fid=11943. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 
  38. "Canada takes Challenge with OT series winner". TSN. http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/story/?id=403114. Retrieved December 10, 2013. 

External links


Junior National teams

Flag of Armenia.svg.png Armenia - Flag of Australia.svg.png Australia - Flag of Austria.svg.png Austria - Flag of Belarus.svg.png Belarus - Flag of Belgium.svg.png Belgium - Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg.png Bosnia and Herzegovina - Flag of Bulgaria.svg.png Bulgaria - Flag of Canada.svg.png Canada - Flag of China.svg.png China - Flag of Chinese Taipei.svg.png Chinese Taipei - Flag of Croatia.svg.png Croatia - Flag of the Czech Republic.svg.png Czech Republic - Flag of Denmark.svg.png Denmark - Flag of Estonia.svg.png Estonia - Flag of Finland.svg.png Finland - Flag of France.svg.png France - Flag of Germany.svg.png Germany - Flag of the United Kingdom.svg.png Great Britain - Flag of Greece.svg.png Greece - Flag of Hungary.svg.png Hungary - Flag of Iceland.svg.png Iceland - Flag of India.svg.png India - Flag of Ireland.svg.png Ireland - Flag of Indonesia.svg.png Indonesia - Flag of Israel.svg.png Israel - Flag of Italy.svg.png Italy - Flag of Jamaica.svg.png Jamaica - Flag of Japan.svg.png Japan - Flag of Kazakhstan.svg.png Kazakhstan - Flag of Kuwait.svg.png Kuwait - Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg.png Kyrgyzstan - Flag of Latvia.svg.png Latvia - Flag of Lithuania.svg.png Lithuania - Flag of Luxembourg.svg.png Luxembourg - Flag of Malaysia.svg.png Malaysia - Flag of Mexico.svg.png Mexico - Flag of Mongolia.svg.png Mongolia - Flag of North Korea.svg.png North Korea - Flag of Norway.svg.png Norway - Flag of New Zealand.svg.png New Zealand - Flag of the Netherlands.svg.png The Netherlands - Flag of the Philippines.svg.png Philippines - Flag of Poland.svg.png Poland - Flag of Puerto Rico.svg.png Puerto Rico - Flag of Romania.svg.png Romania - Flag of Russia.svg.png Russia - Flag of Serbia.svg.png Serbia - Flag of Slovakia.svg.png Slovakia - Flag of Slovenia.svg.png Slovenia - Flag of South Africa.svg.png South Africa - Flag of South Korea.svg.png South Korea - Flag of Spain.svg.png Spain - Flag of Sweden.svg.png Sweden - Flag of Switzerland.svg.png Switzerland - Flag of Thailand.svg.png Thailand - Flag of Turkey.svg.png Turkey - Flag of Ukraine.svg.png Ukraine - Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg.png United Arab Emirates - Flag of the United States.svg.png United States

Defunct teams: CIS - Flag of the Czech Republic.svg.png Czechoslovakia - Flag of Serbia and Montenegro svg.png Serbia and Montenegro - Flag of the Soviet Union.svg.png U.S.S.R.- Flag of Yugoslavia.svg.png Yugoslavia

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