Ukraine men's national ice hockey team
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Association | Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine |
---|---|
Most games | Vasily Bobrovnikov (182) |
Most points | Vitaly Litvinenko (105) |
IIHF code | UKR |
IIHF ranking | 27 |
Highest IIHF ranking | 11 (2003, 2005) |
Lowest IIHF ranking | 28 (2022) |
Team colors | |
First international | |
Kazakhstan 5–1 Ukraine (Saint Petersburg, Russia; 14 April 1992) | |
Biggest win | |
Ukraine 37–2 Belgium (Bled, Slovenia; 13 March 1993) | |
Biggest defeat | |
Finland 9–0 Ukraine (Helsinki, Finland; 3 May 2003) | |
IIHF World Championships | |
Appearances | 30 (first in 1993) |
Best result | 9th (2002) |
Olympics | |
Appearances | 1 (first in 2002) |
International record (W–L–T) | |
167–180–27 |
main
The Ukrainian national ice hockey team (Ukrainian: Збірна України з хокею з шайбою) is the national ice hockey team of Ukraine, and is controlled by the Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine, a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation. As part of the Soviet Union, Ukraine played internationally from 1954 to 1991, and made their international debut as an independent country in 1992.
Ukraine has played at the Winter Olympics once, in 2002. The team's top finish was at the 2002 World Championships when they finished in ninth place. Following the 2007 World Championship, Ukraine was relegated to Division I.
Tournament record
Olympic Games
- 2002 – Finished in 10th place
World Championship
- 1954–1991 – Participated as part of the Soviet Union national ice hockey team
- 1993 – Finished in 18th place (2nd in Pool C)
- 1994 – Finished in 23rd place (3rd in Pool C)
- 1995 – Finished in 23rd place (3rd in Pool C)
- 1996 – Finished in 22nd place (2nd in Pool C)
- 1997 – Finished in 21st place (1st in Pool C)
- 1998 – Finished in 17th place (1st in Pool B)
- 1999 – Finished in 14th place
- 2000 – Finished in 14th place
- 2001 – Finished in 10th place
- 2002 – Finished in 9th place
- 2003 – Finished in 12th place
- 2004 – Finished in 14th place
- 2005 – Finished in 11th place
- 2006 – Finished in 12th place
- 2007 – Finished in 16th place
- 2008 – Finished in 19th place (2nd in Division I Group B)
- 2009 – Finished in 20th place (2nd in Division I Group B)
- 2010 – Finished in 19th place (2nd in Division I Group A)
- 2011 – Finished in 21st place (3rd in Division I Group B)
- 2012 – Finished in 22nd place (6th in Division I Group A)
- 2013 – Finished in 23rd place (1st in Division I Group B)
- 2014 – Finished in 20th place (4th in Division I Group A)
- 2015 – Finished in 22nd place (6th in Division I Group A)
- 2016 – Finished in 23rd place (1st in Division I Group B, promoted to Division I Group A)
- 2017 – Finished in 22nd place (6th in Division I Group A, relegated to Division I Group B)
- 2018 – Finished in 26th place (4th in Division I Group B)
- 2019 – Finished in 27th place (5th in Division I Group B)
- 2020 – Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[1]
- 2021 – Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[2]
- 2022 – Finished in 24th place (3rd in Division I Group B)
- 2023 – Finished in 24th place (2nd in Division I Group B)
- 2024 – Finished in 23rd place (1st in Division I Group B, promoted to Division I Group A)
References
- ↑ "IIHF cancels Division I tournaments". iihf.com. 17 March 2019. https://www.iihf.com/en/events/2020/wmia/news/18320/iihf-cancels-division-i-tournaments.
- ↑ "IIHF – IIHF Council announces more cancellations". International Ice Hockey Federation. https://www.iihf.com/en/news/23178/iihf-council-announces-more-cancellations.
External links