Kazakhstan men's national junior ice hockey team: Difference between revisions
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| Badge_size = 125px | | Badge_size = 125px | ||
| Association = [[Kazakhstan Ice Hockey Federation]] | | Association = [[Kazakhstan Ice Hockey Federation]] | ||
| Most games = | | Most games = Sergei Alexandrov (23) | ||
| Top scorer = | | Top scorer = | ||
| Most points = Roman Fadin (30) | | Most points = Roman Fadin (30) | ||
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| Largest loss = <small>{{ihj|CAN}} 15–0 {{ihj-rt|KAZ}} <br> ([[Ottawa]], Canada; 28 December 2008)</small> | | Largest loss = <small>{{ihj|CAN}} 15–0 {{ihj-rt|KAZ}} <br> ([[Ottawa]], Canada; 28 December 2008)</small> | ||
| World champ2 name = [[IIHF World U20 Championship]] | | World champ2 name = [[IIHF World U20 Championship]] | ||
| World champ2 apps = | | World champ2 apps = 29 | ||
| World champ2 first = [[1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|1993]] | | World champ2 first = [[1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|1993]] | ||
| World champ2 best = 6th ([[1999 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|1999]]) | | World champ2 best = 6th ([[1999 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|1999]]) | ||
| Record = | | Record = | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Kazakh men's national under 20 ice hockey team''' is the national under-20 [[ice hockey]] team in [[Kazakhstan]]. The team represents Kazakhstan at the [[International Ice Hockey Federation]]'s [[IIHF World U20 Championship|World Junior Hockey Championship Division I]]. They have played in the championship level | The '''Kazakh men's national under 20 ice hockey team''' is the national under-20 [[ice hockey]] team in [[Kazakhstan]]. The team represents Kazakhstan at the [[International Ice Hockey Federation]]'s [[IIHF World U20 Championship|World Junior Hockey Championship Division I]]. They have played in the championship level 8 times (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2019 and 2020) | ||
==History== | |||
Kazakhstan was promoted out of Pool B into Pool A for 1998. In Helsinki, Finland, the Kazakhs defeated Slovakia 5–2 to earn a spot in the quarter-finals. However, a devastating 14–1 loss to eventual gold-medalists Finland sent Kazakhstan to the placement games, where they defeated Canada 6–3 to finish 7th. It still stands as Kazakhstan's biggest win at the U20 level. | Kazakhstan was promoted out of Pool B into Pool A for 1998. In Helsinki, Finland, the Kazakhs defeated Slovakia 5–2 to earn a spot in the quarter-finals. However, a devastating 14–1 loss to eventual gold-medalists Finland sent Kazakhstan to the placement games, where they defeated Canada 6–3 to finish 7th. It still stands as Kazakhstan's biggest win at the U20 level. | ||
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Kazakhstan boosted plenty of returning players from 2008 upon coming to Ottawa, Canada, to compete in the 2009 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Kazakhstan scored only 4 goals during the entire tournament and was relegated back to Division I after a 7–1 loss to Latvia. | Kazakhstan boosted plenty of returning players from 2008 upon coming to Ottawa, Canada, to compete in the 2009 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Kazakhstan scored only 4 goals during the entire tournament and was relegated back to Division I after a 7–1 loss to Latvia. | ||
In 2018, after nine years in the Group I of Divisions A, Kazakhstan finished in first place. This victory allowed to take a place in the Top Division for 2019, held in Vancouver and Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. | |||
On January 2, 2019, Kazakhstan defeated Denmark 4–3 in the relegation series, winning their first game in the top division in over a decade. They then defeated Denmark again, 4–0, which allowed them to compete in the top division for the 2020 tournament. | |||
In the 2020 tournament, Kazakhstan failed to win any of their games in the preliminary round, and were relegated to Division IA for the 2021 tournament after losing the relegation series 2–1 to Germany. | |||
==Results== | ==Results== | ||
*[[1993 IIHF World U20 Championship|1993]]. Finish: 2nd in Pool C qualification group 2 (not ranked) | *[[1993 IIHF World U20 Championship|1993]]. Finish: 2nd in Pool C qualification group 2 (not ranked) | ||
*[[1994 IIHF World U20 Championship|1994]]. Finish: 3rd in Pool C qualification (25th overall) | *[[1994 IIHF World U20 Championship|1994]]. Finish: 3rd in Pool C qualification (25th overall) | ||
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*[[2003 IIHF World U20 Championship|2003]]. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (15th overall) | *[[2003 IIHF World U20 Championship|2003]]. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (15th overall) | ||
*[[2004 IIHF World U20 Championship|2004]]. Finish: 5th in Division I Group A (19th overall) | *[[2004 IIHF World U20 Championship|2004]]. Finish: 5th in Division I Group A (19th overall) | ||
*[[2005 IIHF World U20 Championship|2005]]. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group A (13th overall) | *[[2005 IIHF World U20 Championship|2005]]. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group A (13th overall) | ||
*[[2006 IIHF World U20 Championship|2006]]. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (13th overall) | *[[2006 IIHF World U20 Championship|2006]]. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (13th overall) | ||
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*[[2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2015]]. Finish: 1st in Division I Group B (17th overall) | *[[2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2015]]. Finish: 1st in Division I Group B (17th overall) | ||
*[[2016 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2016]]. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (13th overall) | *[[2016 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2016]]. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (13th overall) | ||
* [[2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2017]] – 14th overall (4th in [[2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I|Division IA]]) | |||
* [[2018 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2018]] – 11th overall (1st in [[2018 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I|Division IA]]) | |||
* [[2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2019]] – 9th overall | |||
* [[2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2020]] – 10th overall | |||
* [[2021 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2021]] – Cancelled | |||
* [[2022 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2022]] – 14th overall (4th in [[2022 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I|Division IA]]) | |||
* [[2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2023]] – 12th place (2nd in [[2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I|Division IA]]) | |||
* [[2024 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships|2024]] – 11th place (1st in [[2024 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I|Division IA]]) | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 16:37, 7 August 2024
Association | Kazakhstan Ice Hockey Federation |
---|---|
Most games | Sergei Alexandrov (23) |
Most points | Roman Fadin (30) |
IIHF code | KAZ |
Team colors | |
First international | |
Kazakhstan 4–0 Belarus (Riga, Latvia; 10 November 1992) | |
Biggest win | |
Kazakhstan 18–0 Yugoslavia (Tallinn, Estonia; 2 January 1995) | |
Biggest defeat | |
Canada 15–0 Kazakhstan (Ottawa, Canada; 28 December 2008) | |
IIHF World U20 Championship | |
Appearances | 29 (first in 1993) |
Best result | 6th (1999) |
main
The Kazakh men's national under 20 ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team in Kazakhstan. The team represents Kazakhstan at the International Ice Hockey Federation's World Junior Hockey Championship Division I. They have played in the championship level 8 times (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2019 and 2020)
History
Kazakhstan was promoted out of Pool B into Pool A for 1998. In Helsinki, Finland, the Kazakhs defeated Slovakia 5–2 to earn a spot in the quarter-finals. However, a devastating 14–1 loss to eventual gold-medalists Finland sent Kazakhstan to the placement games, where they defeated Canada 6–3 to finish 7th. It still stands as Kazakhstan's biggest win at the U20 level.
Nikolai Antropov became the 7th Kazakh player drafted into the National Hockey League when selected in the first round by the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1998. Antropov would captain the Kazakhstan team at the 1999 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Winnipeg, Canada. Kazakhstan tied Belarus 2–2 and defeated Switzerland 3–0 to finish third place in Group B and went on to play Canada in the quarter-finals. Canada won 12–2. Nikolai Zarzhitskiy scored both Kazakhstan goals and got player-of-the-game award. Kazakhstan finished 8th and avoided relegation.
Kazakhstan was without Antropov when he decided to stay with the Maple Leafs for the 1999–2000 NHL season. Kazakhstan was demolished 14–1 by Russia on 25 December 1999. Kazakhstan's only win was a 5–2 win over Ukraine to qualify for the quarter-finals. Kazakhstan lost to the Czech Republic 6–3.
Kazakhstan's four-year stay at the World Junior Hockey Championships ended in 2001 when the Kazakhs went winless and lost their fight to avoid relegation to Belarus.
Kazakhstan spent six years in Division I and nearly came close to being promoted back to the top level. In 2007, Kazakhstan was finally promoted by edging Norway 3–2 in an IIHF U20 Division I tournament in Torre Pellice, Italy.
Kazakhstan played in the 2008 World Junior Hockey Championships in Liberec, Czech Republic. The Kazakhs wore only their white nike swift jerseys during the tournament because blue jerseys were not available. Kazakhstan was up 2–0 against Russia, but lost 5–4. They also lost to the United States by a score of 4–2. Kazakhstan went on to defeat Switzerland 3–1 and defeated Denmark 6–3 to finish 8th.
Yakov Vorobyov became only the third Kazakh player to play in the Canadian Hockey League. Vorobyov played for the Ottawa 67's, but was released shortly after. Vadim Sozinov played for the Ottawa 67's in 2000–01 and Konstantin Pushkaryov played for the Calgary Hitmen in 2004–05.
Kazakhstan boosted plenty of returning players from 2008 upon coming to Ottawa, Canada, to compete in the 2009 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. Kazakhstan scored only 4 goals during the entire tournament and was relegated back to Division I after a 7–1 loss to Latvia.
In 2018, after nine years in the Group I of Divisions A, Kazakhstan finished in first place. This victory allowed to take a place in the Top Division for 2019, held in Vancouver and Victoria in British Columbia, Canada.
On January 2, 2019, Kazakhstan defeated Denmark 4–3 in the relegation series, winning their first game in the top division in over a decade. They then defeated Denmark again, 4–0, which allowed them to compete in the top division for the 2020 tournament.
In the 2020 tournament, Kazakhstan failed to win any of their games in the preliminary round, and were relegated to Division IA for the 2021 tournament after losing the relegation series 2–1 to Germany.
Results
- 1993. Finish: 2nd in Pool C qualification group 2 (not ranked)
- 1994. Finish: 3rd in Pool C qualification (25th overall)
- 1995. Finish: 1st in Pool C2 (25th overall)
- 1996. Finish: 1st in Pool C (19th overall)
- 1997. Finish: 1st in Pool B (11th overall)
- 1998. Finish: 7th
- 1999. Finish: 6th
- 2000. Finish: 8th
- 2001. Finish: 10th
- 2002. Finish: 5th in Division I (15th overall)
- 2003. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (15th overall)
- 2004. Finish: 5th in Division I Group A (19th overall)
- 2005. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group A (13th overall)
- 2006. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (13th overall)
- 2007. Finish: 1st in Division I Group B (11th overall)
- 2008. Finish: 8th
- 2009. Finish: 10th
- 2010. Finish: 4th in Division I Group B (17th overall)
- 2011. Finish: 4th in Division I Group B (18th overall)
- 2012. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (18th overall)
- 2013. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (18th overall)
- 2014. Finish: 2nd in Division I Group B (18th overall)
- 2015. Finish: 1st in Division I Group B (17th overall)
- 2016. Finish: 3rd in Division I Group A (13th overall)
- 2017 – 14th overall (4th in Division IA)
- 2018 – 11th overall (1st in Division IA)
- 2019 – 9th overall
- 2020 – 10th overall
- 2021 – Cancelled
- 2022 – 14th overall (4th in Division IA)
- 2023 – 12th place (2nd in Division IA)
- 2024 – 11th place (1st in Division IA)
External links
- Kazakhstan at IIHF.com
Junior National teams | |
Armenia - Australia - Austria - Belarus - Belgium - Bosnia and Herzegovina - Bulgaria - Canada - China - Chinese Taipei - Croatia - Czech Republic - Denmark - Estonia - Finland - France - Germany - Great Britain - Greece - Hungary - Iceland - India - Ireland - Indonesia - Israel - Italy - Jamaica - Japan - Kazakhstan - Kuwait - Kyrgyzstan - Latvia - Lithuania - Luxembourg - Malaysia - Mexico - Mongolia - North Korea - Norway - New Zealand - The Netherlands - Philippines - Poland - Puerto Rico - Romania - Russia - Serbia - Slovakia - Slovenia - South Africa - South Korea - Spain - Sweden - Switzerland - Thailand - Turkey - Ukraine - United Arab Emirates - United States Defunct teams: CIS - Czechoslovakia - Serbia and Montenegro - U.S.S.R.- Yugoslavia |
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