1934–35 Serie A (ice hockey) season: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
*1/25: '''HC Milano''' - Ritten Sport 2:1 | *1/25: '''HC Milano''' - Ritten Sport 2:1 | ||
*2/15: HC Milano - HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano 3:3 (1:1, 1:2, 1:0) | *2/15: HC Milano - HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano 3:3 (1:1, 1:2, 1:0) - FPG Cup and Podesta Cup | ||
*2/20: '''HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano''' - HC Milano 5:0 (2:0, 2:0, 1:0) | *2/20: '''HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano''' - HC Milano 5:0 (2:0, 2:0, 1:0) - " | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 00:04, 14 January 2024
The 1934-35 Serie A season was the ninth season of the Serie A, the top level of ice hockey in Italy. Three teams participated in the league, and HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano won the championship. SG Cortina was supposed to participate in the competition, but withdrew.
Regular season
The competition took place in Milan from March 2-4. The championship had been originally scheduled to be played in Cortina from February 27-March 1. After it was moved to Milan, Cortina forfeited their participation.
- Results
- HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano - HC Milano II 2:0 (2:0, 0:0, 0:0)
- HC Milano - HC Milano II 11:0 (3:0, 4:0, 4:0)
- HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano - HC Milano 2:1 (0:0, 1:1, 1:0)
Club | GP | W | T | L | GF-GA | Pts | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4:1 | 4 |
2. | Hockey Club Milano I | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 12:2 | 2 |
3. | Hockey Club Milano II | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0:13 | 0 |
Littoriali
- First round
- Torino - Pisa 12:0[1]
- Padova - Genova 8:1[1]
- Caserta - Ferrara 4:0[1]
- Milano - Trieste 50:0[1]
- Napoli - Camerino 5:0 Forfeit[1]
- Roma - Firenze 6:0[1]
- Pavia - Bologna 2:1 - Bologna filed complaint and game was ordered replayed[1]
- Venezia - Bari 12:1[2]
- Bologna - Pavia 5:0 Forfeit[3]
- Quarterfinals
- Padova - Caserta 3:0 (3:0, 0:0, 0:0)[4]
- Torino - Napoli 6:0 (1:0, 0:0, 5:0)[4]
- Roma - Venezia 11:0 (3:0, 5:0, 3:0)[4]
- Milano - Bologna 2:1 (2:0, 0:0, 0:1)[4]
- Semifinals
- Final
- Padova - Roma 2:1 OT[6]
- 3rd place
Torino and Milano declined to play off, and shared third.[6]
- Classification games
- Pisa - Camerino 5:0 Forfeit[3]
- Genova - Ferrara 2:0 (1:0, 1:0, 0:0)[4]
- Firenze - Bari 13:0 (2:0, 6:0, 5:0)[4]
- Ferrara - Bari 7:0[7]
- Caserta - Napoli 2:0(0:0, 1:0, 1:0)[7]
- Bologna - Venezia 11:2 (6:1, 1:0, 4:1)[7]
- Genova - Pisa 6:0[7]
- Firenze - Trieste 8:0 (Littoriale had 4:1)[7]
- Bologna - Caserta 1:0 OT[7]
- Pisa - Trieste 3:1[7]
- Venezia - Napoli 3:1[5]
- Genova - Firenze 5:0[5]
Other games
Unlike in the championship, foreign players were allowed to participate in friendly matches.
- 1/25: HC Milano - Ritten Sport 2:1
- 2/15: HC Milano - HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano 3:3 (1:1, 1:2, 1:0) - FPG Cup and Podesta Cup
- 2/20: HC Diavoli Rossoneri Milano - HC Milano 5:0 (2:0, 2:0, 1:0) - "
References
- Season on hockeytime.net
Serie A seasons |
---|
1924–25 · 1925–26 · 1926–27 · 1929–30 · 1930–31 · 1931–32 · 1932–33 · 1933–34 · 1934–35 · 1935–36 · 1936–37 · 1937–38 · 1940–41 · 1946–47 · 1947–48 · 1948–49 · 1949–50 · 1950–51 · 1951–52 · 1952–53 · 1953–54 · 1954–55 · 1956–57 · 1957–58 · 1958–59 · 1959–60 · 1960–61 · 1961–62 · 1962–63 · 1963–64 · 1964–65 · 1965–66 · 1966–67 · 1967–68 · 1968–69 · 1969–70 · 1970–71 · 1971–72 · 1972–73 · 1973–74 · 1974–75 · 1975–76 · 1976–77 · 1977–78 · 1978–79 · 1979–80 · 1980–81 · 1981–82 · 1982–83 · 1983–84 · 1984–85 · 1985–86 · 1986–87 · 1987–88 · 1988–89 · 1989–90 · 1990–91 · 1991–92 · 1992–93 · 1993–94 · 1994–95 · 1995–96 · 1996–97 · 1997–98 · 1998–99 · 1999–00 · 2000–01 · 2001–02 · 2002–03 · 2003–04 · 2004–05 · 2005–06 · 2006–07 · 2007–08 · 2008–09 · 2009–10 · 2010–11 · 2011–12 · 2012–13 · 2013-14 · 2014-15 · 2015-16 · 2016-17 · 2017-18 · 2018-19 · 2019-20 · 2020-21 · 2021-22 · 2022-23 · 2023-24 |