1988 Winter Olympics

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1988 Winter Olympics
Ice Hockey
1988 olympics.jpg
Tournament details
Host nation  Canada
Dates February 13–28, 1988
Teams 12
Venue(s) Olympic Saddledome
Stampede Corral
Father David Bauer Olympic Arena (in 1 host city)
Champions  Soviet Union (7 titles)
Tournament statistics
Games played 42
Goals scored 316  (7.52 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of Soviet Union Vladimir Krutov 15 points

The men's ice hockey tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada, was the 16th Olympic Championship. The Soviet Union – in their last Winter Olympics as a unified nation – won its seventh gold medal, surpassing Canada for most in Olympic ice hockey at that point (Canada won its ninth in 2014). The silver medal was won by Finland, marking its first ever Olympic ice hockey medal. Sweden won the bronze medal. Games were held in the Olympic Saddledome, the Stampede Corral, and Father David Bauer Olympic Arena.

The IIHF did not run a championship in Olympic years at this time. Nations that did not participate in the Calgary Olympics were invited to compete in the final Thayer Tutt Trophy.

Qualification

The top eleven nations from the 1987 World Championships (eight from pool A, top three from pool B) qualified directly, while the twelfth ranked nation had to play off against the winner of that year's pool C. France beat Japan 8 goals to 6.[1]

  • April 6, 1987, West Germany
    • France 7–3 Japan
  • April 7, 1987, West Germany
    • France 1–3 Japan

First round

Group A

Pld W L T GF GA Pts
 Finland 5 3 1 1 22 8 7
 Sweden 5 2 0 3 23 10 7
 Canada 5 3 1 1 17 12 7
 Switzerland 5 3 2 0 19 10 6
 Poland 5 0 4 1 9 13 1
 France 5 1 4 0 10 47 0
  • February 14
    • Canada 1–0 Poland
    • Sweden 13–2 France
    • Switzerland 2–1 Finland
  • February 16
    • Canada 4–2 Switzerland
    • Sweden 1–1 Poland
    • Finland 10–1 France
  • February 18
    • Finland 3–1 Canada
    • Poland 6–2 France*
    • Sweden 4–2 Switzerland
  • February 20
    • Canada 9–5 France
    • Finland 3–3 Sweden
    • Switzerland 4–1 Poland
  • February 22
    • Canada 2–2 Sweden
    • Finland 5–1 Poland
    • Switzerland 9–0 France

* The Polish team was stripped of its victory after Jarosław Morawiecki tested positive for testosterone. France was recorded as having a 2-nil win, but received no points in the standings.

Group B

Pld W L T GF GA Pts
 Soviet Union 5 5 0 0 32 10 10
 West Germany 5 4 1 0 19 12 8
 Czechoslovakia 5 3 2 0 23 14 6
 United States 5 2 3 0 27 27 4
 Austria 5 0 4 1 12 29 1
 Norway 5 0 4 1 11 32 1
  • February 13
    • West Germany 2–1 Czechoslovakia
    • Soviet Union 5–0 Norway
    • USA 10–6 Austria
  • February 15
    • West Germany 7–3 Norway
    • Soviet Union 8–1 Austria
    • Czechoslovakia 7–5 USA
  • February 17
    • Austria 1–3 West Germany
    • Czechoslovakia 10–1 Norway
    • Soviet Union 7–5 USA
  • February 19
    • Austria 0–4 Czechoslovakia
    • West Germany 3–6 Soviet Union
    • USA 6–3 Norway
  • February 21
    • Soviet Union 6–1 Czechoslovakia
    • Austria 4–4 Norway
    • West Germany 4–1 USA

Final round

The top three teams from each group play the top three teams from the other group once. Points from previous games against their own group carry over, excluding teams who failed to make the medal round. First place team wins gold, second silver and third bronze.

Pld W L T GF GA Pts
 Soviet Union 5 4 1 0 25 7 8
 Finland 5 3 1 1 18 10 7
 Sweden 5 2 1 2 15 16 6
 Canada 5 2 2 1 17 14 5
 West Germany 5 1 4 0 8 26 2
 Czechoslovakia 5 1 4 0 12 22 2
  • February 24
    • Soviet Union 5–0 Canada
    • Sweden 6–2 Czechoslovakia
    • Finland 8–0 West Germany
  • February 26
    • Canada 8–1 West Germany
    • Czechoslovakia 5–2 Finland
    • Soviet Union 7–1 Sweden
  • February 27
    • Canada 6–3 Czechoslovakia
  • February 28
    • Sweden 3–2 West Germany
    • Finland 2–1 Soviet Union

11th place game

  • February 23
    • France 7–6(SO) Norway

9th place game

  • February 23
    • Austria 3–2 Poland

7th place game

  • February 25
    • United States 8–4 Switzerland

Final ranking

  1.  Soviet Union
  2.  Finland
  3.  Sweden
  4.  Canada
  5.  West Germany
  6.  Czechoslovakia
  7.  United States
  8.  Switzerland
  9.  Austria
  10.  Poland
  11.  France
  12.  Norway

Team Photos

See also

References


Ice hockey at the Olympic Games
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