1958 World Ice Hockey Championships
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1958 World Ice Hockey Championships | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Host nation | Norway |
Dates | 28 February–9 March |
Teams | 8 |
Venue(s) | 1 (in 1 host city) |
Champions | Canada (17 titles) |
Tournament statistics | |
Games played | 28 |
Goals scored | 257 (9.18 per game) |
Attendance | 73,786 (2,635 per game) |
Scoring leader(s) | Connie Broden 19 points |
The 1958 Ice Hockey World Championships were held between February 28 and March 9, 1958 in Oslo, Norway at the Jordal Amfi arena. The Whitby Dunlops represented Canada, winning the World Championship for the 17th time. The Soviets lost the final game to the Canadians four to two, settling for both silver and their fourth European Championship. Scoring leading Connie Broden holds the distinction of being the only player ever to win the Stanley Cup and the World Championship in the same year.[1][2]
Standings
Rank | Team | GP | W | T | L | GF | GA | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Canada | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 82 | 6 | 14 |
2 | Soviet Union | 7 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 44 | 15 | 11 |
3 | Sweden | 7 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 46 | 22 | 10 |
4 | Czechoslovakia | 7 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 21 | 21 | 8 |
5 | United States | 7 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 29 | 33 | 7 |
6 | Finland | 7 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 9 | 51 | 3 |
7 | Norway | 7 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 12 | 44 | 2 |
8 | Poland | 7 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 14 | 65 | 1 |
Final round
28 February | United States | 12–4 |
Poland |
28 February | Czechoslovakia | 5–1 |
Finland |
28 February | Norway | 0–9 |
Sweden |
1 March | Sweden | 5–2 |
Finland |
1 March | Norway | 2–10 |
Soviet Union |
1 March | Canada | 14–1 |
Poland |
2 March | Soviet Union | 10–0 |
Finland |
2 March | Norway | 0–12 |
Canada |
3 March | Czechoslovakia | 7–1 |
Poland |
3 March | Canada | 24–0 |
Finland |
4 March | Soviet Union | 4–4 |
Czechoslovakia |
4 March | Sweden | 8–3 |
United States |
5 March | Norway | 1–6 |
United States |
5 March | Finland | 2–2 |
Poland |
6 March | Canada | 10–2 |
Sweden |
6 March | Czechoslovakia | 2–2 |
United States |
6 March | Soviet Union | 10–1 |
Poland |
6 March | Norway | 1–2 |
Finland |
7 March | Canada | 6–0 |
Czechoslovakia |
7 March | Sweden | 12–2 |
Poland |
7 March | Soviet Union | 4–1 |
United States |
8 March | Norway | 0–2 |
Czechoslovakia |
8 March | Soviet Union | 4–3 |
Sweden |
8 March | Canada | 12–1 |
United States |
9 March | United States | 4–2 |
Finland |
9 March | Sweden | 7–1 |
Czechoslovakia |
9 March | Norway | 8–3 |
Poland |
9 March | Canada | 4–2 |
Soviet Union |
European Championship medal table
Soviet Union | |
Sweden | |
Czechoslovakia | |
4 | Finland |
5 | Norway |
6 | Poland |
Team rosters
Place | Team | Player |
---|---|---|
1 | Canada | Goaltenders: Roy Edwards, John Henderson. Defensemen: Alf Treen, Harry Sinden, Ted O’Connor, Jean-Paul Lamirande. Forwards: Sidney Smith, Conrad Broden, John McKenzie, Robert Attersley, Bus Gagnon, Tom O’Connor, Gordon Myles, Sandy Air, Charles Burns, George Samolenko, George Gosselin. |
2 | Soviet Union | Goaltenders: Nikolai Puchkov, Yevgeni Yerkin. Defensemen: Nikolay Sologubov, Ivan Tregubov, Henrich Sidorenko, Dmitry Ukolov, Alfred Kuchevski. Forwards: Yuri Pantyukhov, Alexei Guryshev. Nikolay Khlystov, Konstantin Loktev, Veniamin Alexandrov, Alexander Cherepanov, Yuri Krylov, Yuri Kopilov, Vladimir Yelisarov, Valentin Bistrov. Coaches: Anatoli Tarasov, Vladimír Yegorov. |
3 | Sweden | Goaltenders: Thord Flodqvist, Rune Gudmundsson. Defensemen: Lars Björn, Gert Blomé, Vilgot Larsson, Roland Stoltz, Hans Svedberg. Forwards: Sigurd Bröms, Karl-Sören Hedlund, Erling Lindström, Lars-Eric Lundvall, Nisse Nilsson, Ronald Pettersson, Sven Tumba Johansson, Gösta Westerlund, Carl-Göran Öberg, Hans Öberg. Coach: Ed Riegle. |
4 | Czechoslovakia | Goaltenders: Vladimír Nadrchal, Jiří Kulíček. Defensemen: Karel Gut, František Tikal, Stanislav Bacílek, Jan Kasper, Stanislav Sventek. Forwards: Ján Starší, Slavomír Bartoň, Václav Pantůček, Miloslav Šašek, František Schwach, Miroslav Vlach, Jaroslav Volf, Václav Frölich, Jaroslav Jiřík, František Vaněk. Coach: Bohumil Rejda. |
5 | United States | Goaltenders: Donald Rigazio, Willard Ikola. Defensemen: Dan McKinnon, Jack Petroske, Ed Miller, Larry Lawman. Forwards: Dick Meredith, John Mayasich, Weldon Olson, Gord Christian, William Christian, Roger Christian, Edward Zifcak, Paul Johnson, Oscar Mahle, Jack Kirrane. Coach: Cal Marvin. |
6 | Finland | Goaltenders: Esko Niemi, Juhani Lahtinen. Defensemen: Matti Lampainen, Erkki Koiso, Mauno Nurmi, Pasi Vuorinen. Forwards: Raimo Kilpiö, Heino Pulli, Teppo Rastio, Yrjö Hakala, Pertti Nieminen, Eino Pollari, Jorma Salmi, Voitto Soini, Esko Luostarinen, Kari Aro, Erkki Hytönen. Coach: Aarne Honkavaara. |
7 | Norway | Goaltenders: Lorang Wilfladt, Frank Steinbo. Defensemen: Roar Bakke, Per Brattas, Egil Bjerklund, Thor Gundersen, Christian Petersen. Forwards: Per Voigt, Georg Smefjell, Ragnar Nilsen, Terje Hellerud, Olav Dalsören, Einar Bruno Larsen, Annar Petersen, Willy Walbye, Henrik Petersen, Per Skjerwen Olsen. Coach: Johnny Larntvedt. |
8 | Poland | Goaltenders: Edward Koczab, Józef Waclaw. Defensemen: Kazimierz Chodakowski, Stanislaw Olczyk, Henryk Regula, Augustyn Skorski, Marian Zawada. Forwards: Józef Kurek, Rudolf Czech, Bronislaw Gosztyla, Roman Pawelczyk, Sylvester Wilczek, Karol Burek, Jerzy Ogorczyk, Kazimierz Bryniarski, Kazimierz Malysiak, Stanislaw Jonczyk. Coaches: Andrzej Wolkowski, Wladyslaw Wiro-Kiro. |
Citations
- ↑ Duplacey p.504
- ↑ Broden passes away
References
- Championnat du monde 1958 (Archived 2009-05-04) sur hockeyarchives.info (French)
- Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports, 498–528. ISBN 0-8362-7114-9.
- Podnieks, Andrew (2010). IIHF Media Guide & Record Book 2011. Moydart Press, 135–6.
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