1950 World Ice Hockey Championships
1950 World Ice Hockey Championships | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Host nation | Great Britain |
Dates | 13–22 March |
Teams | 9 |
Venue(s) | Wembley Arena, Empress Hall and Harringay (in 1 host city) |
Champions | Canada (13 titles) |
Tournament statistics | |
Games played | 27 |
Goals scored | 302 (11.19 per game) |
Attendance | 127,700 (4,730 per game) |
The 17th Ice Hockey World Championships and 28th European Hockey Championships were held from 13 to 22 March 1950 in London, England. In a format similar to the 1949 championships, in the initial round, the nine teams participating were divided into three groups with three teams each. In the second round, the top two teams in each group advanced to the medal pool (for positions 1 through 6) with the remaining three teams advancing to the consolation pool for places 7 through 9. Canada won its 13th World Championship and Switzerland won its fourth European Championship. Both teams benefited from the absence of the defending champion, Czechoslovakia.
Officially, the defending champions Czechs did not arrive in London because two of their journalists did not receive their visas.[1] However, based on lingering suspicions about the previous year's six disappearing players, and the defection of star Jaroslav Drobný, several players were arrested in Prague, while awaiting their delayed flight to the tournament.[2] On 7 October 1950, the players appeared in court charged with espionage and were named, "state traitors." At issue was the claim that in 1948 several players on LTC Praha (comprising much of the national team) had discussed defection in Davos following the Spengler Cup. On that trip, Miroslav Slama and two other players did in fact defect, along with one of the heads of the delegation.[2] All were convicted, with sentences ranging from eight months, to 15 years. Bohumil Modry, no longer a member of the national team, was the one to receive the fifteen-year sentence, as he was mysteriously cast as the "main figure" in the potential defection plan.[2]
World Hockey Championships (in London, England)
Preliminary round
Group A
13 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | France | 9:0 (4:0,3:0,2:0) | |
14 March 1950 | London, England | Norway | – | France | 11:0 (7:0,2:0,2:0) | |
15 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | Norway | 2:0 (0:0,0:0,2:0) |
Standings
Pos. | Team | G.P | Wins | Ties | Losses | Goals | Goal diff. | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Great Britain | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 11: 0 | +11 | 4:0 |
2 | Norway | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 11: 2 | + 9 | 2:2 |
3 | France | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0:20 | -20 | 0:4 |
Group B
13 March 1950 | London, England | Switzerland | – | Belgium | 24:3 (5:1,7:1,12:1) | |
14 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | Switzerland | 13:2 (5:1,4:1,4:0) | |
15 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | Belgium | 33:0 (14:0,10:0,9:0) |
Standings
Pos. | Team | G.P | Wins | Ties | Losses | Goals | Goal diff. | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Canada | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 46: 2 | +44 | 4:0 |
2 | Switzerland | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 26:16 | +10 | 2:2 |
3 | Belgium | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3:57 | -54 | 0:4 |
Group C
13 March 1950 | London, England | Sweden | – | USA | 8:3 (5:2,0:0,3:1) | |
14 March 1950 | London, England | Sweden | – | Netherlands | 10:0 (3:0,1:0,6:0) | |
15 March 1950 | London, England | USA | – | Netherlands | 17:1 (7:0,2:0,8:1) |
Standings
Pos. | Team | G.P | Wins | Ties | Losses | Goals | Goal diff. | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sweden | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 18: 3 | +15 | 4:0 |
2 | USA | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 20: 9 | +11 | 2:2 |
3 | Netherlands | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1:27 | -26 | 0:4 |
Second round
Consolation pool – places 7 to 9
20 March 1950 | London, England | Belgium | – | France | 7:1 (3:0,1:0,3:1) | |
21 March 1950 | London, England | Netherlands | – | France | 4:2 (1:0,3:1,0:1) | |
22 March 1950 | London, England | Belgium | – | Netherlands | 4:2 (2:1,1:0,1:1) |
Standings
Pos. | Team | G.P | Wins | Ties | Losses | Goals | Goal diff. | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Belgium | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 11: 3 | +8 | 4:0 |
2 | Netherlands | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6: 6 | 0 | 2:2 |
3 | France | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3:11 | -8 | 0:4 |
Medal pool – places 1 to 6
17 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | Norway | 4:3 (1:0,2:2,1:1) | |
17 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | Switzerland | 11:1 (2:0,3:1,6:0) | |
17 March 1950 | London, England | Sweden | – | USA | 2:4 (1:0,1:2,0:2) | |
18 March 1950 | London, England | Switzerland | – | Norway | 12:4 (3:3,6:0,3:1) | |
18 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | USA | 5:0 (0:0,1:0,4:0) | |
18 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | Sweden | 5:4 (0:0,1:2,4:2) | |
20 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | USA | 2:3 (2:1,0:0,0:2) | |
20 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | Norway | 11:1 (3:0,4:1,4:0) | |
20 March 1950 | London, England | Sweden | – | Switzerland | 2:3 (2:1,0:0,0:2) | |
21 March 1950 | London, England | USA | – | Switzerland | 10:5 (3:0,1:3,6:2) | |
21 March 1950 | London, England | Sweden | – | Norway | 6:1 (2:0,3:0,1:1) | |
21 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | Canada | 0:12 (0:5,0:3,0:4) | |
22 March 1950 | London, England | USA | – | Norway | 12:6 (5:0,4:3,3:3) | |
22 March 1950 | London, England | Great Britain | – | Switzerland | 3:10 (1:4,2:3,0:3) | |
22 March 1950 | London, England | Canada | – | Sweden | 3:1 (1:0,2:0,0:1) |
Standings
Final rankings – World Championship
Pos. | Team |
---|---|
1 | Canada |
2 | USA |
3 | Switzerland |
4 | Great Britain |
5 | Sweden |
6 | Norway |
7 | Belgium |
8 | Netherlands |
9 | France |
Final rankings – European Championships
Pos. | Team |
---|---|
1 | Switzerland |
2 | Great Britain |
3 | Sweden |
4 | Norway |
5 | Belgium |
6 | Netherlands |
7 | France |
European Champions 1950
Switzerland
Team rosters
Place | Team | Player |
---|---|---|
1 | Canada | Goaltenders: Jack Manson, Wilbur Delaney. Defensemen: Alan Purvis, John Davies, Pete Wright, James Kilburn, Donald Gauf. Forwards: Doug Macauley, Harry Allen, William Dawe, Marsh Darling (C), Donald Stanley, Robert Watt, Hassie Young, Ab Newsome, Leo Lucchini, Robert David. Coach: Jimmy Graham. |
2 | United States | Goaltenders: Bernie Burke, Richard Desmond. Defensemen: James 'Bud' Frick, John Gallacher, Allen Van (C), Bob Graizinger, John Pleban. Forwards: Jim Troumbly, Milt 'Prince' Johnson, Russ 'Buzz' Johnson, Bruce Gardner, John McIntyre, Sam Poling, Robert Rompre, Patrick Byrne. Coach: Jim Pleban |
3 | Switzerland | Goaltenders: Hans Bänninger, Martin Riesen. Defensemen: Heinrich Boller, Emil Handschin, Hans Heierling, Silvio Rossi, Emile Golaz, Othmar Delnon. Forwards: Gebhard Poltera, Ulrich Poltera (C), Hans-Martin Trepp, Alfred Bieler, Walter Dürst, Reto Delnon, Werner Härter, Wilhelm Pfister, Alfred Streun. Coach: Richard Torriani. |
4 | Great Britain | Goaltenders: Harold Smith, Stan Christie. Defensemen: Ray Hammond, Lawson Neil, Bill Sneddon, Tom "Tuck" Syme, Jim "Tiny" Syme. Forwards: Kenneth Nicholson (C), Bert Smith, Ian Forbes, Roy Harnett, Johnny Carlyle, John Rolland, John Murray, Pete Ravenscroft, Dave McRae, Johnny Quales. Coach: Lou Bates. |
5 | Sweden | Goaltenders: Arne Johansson, Lars Svensson. Defensemen: Ake Andersson (C), Rune Johansson, Ake Lassas, Börje Löfgren, Sven Thunman. Forwards: Hans Adrian, Göte Blomqvist, Stig Carlsson, Rolf Eriksson-Hemlin, Erik Johansson, Gösta Johansson, Stig Jönsson, Holger Nurmela, Rolf Pettersson, Hans Öberg. Coach: Frank Trottier. |
6 | Norway | Goaltenders: Per Dahl, Lorang Wifladt. Defensemen: Johnny Larntvedt (C), Carl Rasmussen, Gunnar Kroge, Odd Hansen. Forwards: Roar Bakke Pedersen, Björn Gulbrandsen, Oivind Solheim, Per Voigt, Jan Erik Adolfsen, Leif Solheim, Per Moe, Ragnar Rygel, Annar Petersen, Ragnar Edvardsen. Coach: Johan Narvestad. |
7 | Belgium | Goaltenders: Henri Heirman, Charel Heylen. Defensemen: Roland Dumon, Jimmy Graeffe, Percy Lippit, Jef Lekens. Forwards: Leon van Eeckhout (C), Robert Waldschmidt, Andre Elsen, Andre Waldschmidt, Gentil Noterman, Hubert Anciaux, Jacques Moris, Luc Verstrepen, Georges Hartmeyer, Albert Dupre, Jules Dupre. Coach: Jacques Contzen. |
8 | Netherlands | Goaltenders: Jan van der Heyden, Joost van Os. Defensemen: Kappie Taconis (C), Arie Klein, Frans Vaal, Johan van Rhede van der Kloot, Piet Bierensbroodspot. Forwards: Dolf Overakker, Piet van Heeswijk, Cor Schwencke, Alfons de Laat, Jacques Feenstra, Rijk Loek, Dick Groenteman, Nico Kremers, Theo Dietz, Rolf von den Baumen, Jan Dinger. Coach: Andy Andreola. |
9 | France | Goaltenders: Rolland Willaume, Bruno Ranzoni. Defensemen: Jean Lacome, Francois Charlet, Hubert Nivet, Marcel Claret. Forwards: Jean Pepin, Claude Risler, Pierre Lluis, Serge Renault, Jacques Heylliard, Guy Volpert, Marcel Carrier, Jacques de Mezieres (C), Michel Mrozek, Michel le Bas, Andre Longuet. Coach: Louis Bourdereau. |
Team Photos
Citations
- ↑ Tournament Summary
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Duplacey p. 462
References
- Complete results
- Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports, 462–3, 498–528. ISBN 0-8362-7114-9.
- Podnieks, Andrew (2010). IIHF Media Guide & Record Book 2011. Moydart Press, 132–3.
- O'Coughlin, Seamus (2001). Squaw Valley Gold: American Hockey's Olympic Odessey. Writer's Showcase. pp. 148.
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Notes
Information based upon German version at http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eishockey-Weltmeisterschaft_1950
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