North Korea: Difference between revisions

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|IIHF ranking        = 45
|IIHF ranking        = 45
|Top league          = [[North Korean Championship]]
|Top league          = [[North Korean Championship]]
|Champion            = [[Pyongchol]]
|Champion            =  
|}}
|}}
'''North Korea''' is a country in East Asia. Pyongyang is the capital and largest city.
'''North Korea''' is a country in East Asia. Pyongyang is the capital and largest city.
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==Overview==
==Overview==
===National Teams===
===National Teams===
*[[North Korean National Team]]
{{IIHFteams2|North Korea}}
*[[North Korean Junior National Team]]
*[[Women's North Korean National Team]]
===Domestic Teams===
===Domestic Teams===
See [[:Category:Ice hockey teams in North Korea]]
See [[:Category:Ice hockey teams in North Korea]]

Latest revision as of 23:05, 7 August 2024

North Korea
Flag of North Korea.svg.png
Continent Asia
Population 25,000,000
Registered players 1,130
Referees 30
Rinks 24
National teams Men's
Women's
Junior
National federation Ice Hockey Association
of the DPR Korea
IIHF since August 8, 1963
IIHF ranking 45
Top league North Korean Championship


North Korea is a country in East Asia. Pyongyang is the capital and largest city.

Overview

National Teams

Men's · Men's-U20 · Men's-U18 · Women's · Women's-U18

Domestic Teams

See Category:Ice hockey teams in North Korea

Arenas

See Category:Arenas in North Korea

Competitions

Competition Founded Folded Notes
North Korean Championship 1956 - National championship
North Korean Women's Championship - National women's championship

History of hockey in North Korea

Ice hockey in what is now North Korea was first played in the 1930s by students of the Pyongyang Foreign School, the elementary, middle, and high school that served Americans living abroad in the city. They played on the frozen Taedong River, and often faced the Kwangsung School of Pyongyang and the Chosun Christian College of Seoul. In 1933, the Pyongyang Foreign School thrashed Kwangsung 37-0 in their first meeting, and again defeated them 16-2 later in the year. They also beat their counterparts in Seoul, Seoul Foreign School, 8-0, but fell 5-2 to Chosun Christian College.

Kwangsung improved rapidly, and in 1934 they only lost to the Foreign School by scores of 8-1 and 2-0. The Foreign School and Chosun Christian College played to a 0-0 draw in snowy conditions that winter. In 1936, it was noted that “though fighting a hard, and sometimes brilliant game,” Pyongyang Foreign School “succumbed to the superior weight and experience of the [Chosun Christian] college men, and lost by a wide margin.” World War II brought an end to these activities, and the Pyongyang Foreign School closed in 1940.[1]

Hockey was reintroduced in North Korea in the 1950s when Soviet and Chinese workers demonstrated the game in Pyongyang. The Ice Hockey Association of the DPR Korea was founded in 1955, and the country joined the IIHF on August 8, 1963.[2]

The North Korean Championship was first contested in 1956. There were around 30 active North Korean clubs during the mid-1980s, with the top eight competing for the national title. The Pyongyang and Pyongchol teams have dominated the championship over the years.

The men's national team made its international debut at the 1974 World Championship Pool C, finishing in last place. They lost their first game to Italy 11-2, but managed to defeat China 3-2 for their first international win. Their best finish was fifth in Pool C in 1990. North Korea has competed exclusively in the lower pools, winning the Division III tournaments in 2008, 2010, and 2015.[3]

The women's national team first participated in the IIHF World Women's Championships in 1999. They won the Division IIA tournament in 2012. The North Korean women played in the Asian Winter Games in 2003, 2007, and 2011, finishing in fourth place in all three of their appearances. They participated in the IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia in 2010, finishing third. A unified Women's Korean National Team competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics.

The junior national team appeared at the IIHF World U20 Championships for the first time in 1988, finishing seventh in Pool C. Their best finish was eighth in Pool B in 1992. The U18 national team regularly participated in the IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championships, which existed from 1984-2002. They won gold in Division I in 1987 and 2000, and in Division II in 1999.

Images

References

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