1988 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

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1988 IIHF World U20 Championship
WJC 1988 logo.gif
Tournament details
Host nation  Soviet Union
Dates December 26 - January 4
Teams 8
Champions  Canada (3 titles)
Tournament statistics
Games played 28
Goals scored 247  (8.82 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of Soviet Union Alexander Mogilny (18 points)

The 1988 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 12th edition of the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships and was held in Moscow, Soviet Union. Canada and the Soviet Union won the gold and silver medals respectively as the two nations redeemed themselves following their mutual disqualification in the 1987 tournament as a result of the Punch-up in Piestany. Finland won the bronze medal.

Final standings

The 1988 tournament was a round-robin format, with the top three teams winning gold, silver and bronze medals respectively.

Rank Team GP W L T GF GA PTS
Gold medal icon.png  Canada 7 6 0 1 37 16 13
Silver medal icon.png  Soviet Union 7 6 1 0 44 18 12
Bronze medal icon.png  Finland 7 5 1 1 36 20 11
4  Czechoslovakia 7 3 3 1 36 23 7
5  Sweden 7 3 3 1 36 24 7
6  United States 7 1 6 0 28 46 2
7  West Germany 7 1 6 0 18 47 2
8  Poland 7 1 6 0 12 53 2

Poland was relegated to Pool B for 1989.

Results

December 26, 1987 Canada  4 – 2
 Sweden
December 26, 1987 Soviet Union  6 – 4
 Czechoslovakia
December 26, 1987 Finland  6 – 0
 West Germany
December 26, 1987 Poland  4 – 3
 United States
December 28, 1987 Canada  4 – 2
 Czechoslovakia
December 28, 1987 Sweden  13 – 0
 Poland
December 28, 1987 Soviet Union  6 – 2
 Finland
December 28, 1987 United States  6 – 4
 West Germany
December 29, 1987 Finland  4 – 4
 Canada
December 29, 1987 Sweden  5 – 1
 West Germany
December 29, 1987 Czechoslovakia  6 – 1
 Poland
December 29, 1987 Soviet Union  7 – 3
 United States
December 31, 1987 Canada  5 – 4
 United States
December 31, 1987 Czechoslovakia  7 – 4
 West Germany
December 31, 1987 Soviet Union  4 – 2
 Sweden
December 31, 1987 Finland  9 – 1
 Poland
January 1, 1988 Canada  3 – 2
 Soviet Union
January 1, 1988 West Germany  6 – 3
 Poland
January 1, 1988 Czechoslovakia  5 – 5
 Sweden
January 1, 1988 Finland  8 – 6
 United States
January 3, 1988 Canada  8 – 1
 West Germany
January 3, 1988 Finland  5 – 2
 Sweden
January 3, 1988 Soviet Union  7 – 2
 Poland
January 3, 1988 Czechoslovakia  11 – 1
 United States
January 4, 1988 Canada  9 – 1
 Poland
January 4, 1988 Soviet Union  12 – 2
 West Germany
January 4, 1988 Finland  2 – 1
 Czechoslovakia
January 4, 1988 Sweden  7 – 5
 United States

Pool B

Eight teams contested the second tier this year in Sapporo Japan from March 12 to 21. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games.

Standings
Rank Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Flag of Norway Flag of Romania Flag of Switzerland Flag of Japan Flag of France Flag of Yugoslavia Flag of Netherlands Flag of Austria
1  Norway 7 5 2 0 38 18 10 8 - 0 3 - 2 3 - 4 8 - 2 6 - 7 5 - 1 5 -2
2  Romania 7 5 2 0 24 27 10 0 - 8 4 - 2 3 - 2 3 - 6 5 - 4 3 - 1 6 - 4
3  Switzerland 7 4 2 1 34 23 9 2 - 3 2 - 4 1 - 1 6 - 5 6 - 5 9 - 2 8 - 3
4  Japan 7 3 2 2 34 27 8 4 - 3 2 - 3 1 - 1 7 - 1 6 - 8 4 - 4 10 - 7
5  France 7 4 3 0 31 36 8 2 - 8 6 - 3 5 - 6 1 - 7 7 - 6 7 - 5 3 - 1
6  Yugoslavia 7 3 3 1 37 36 7 7 - 6 4 - 5 5 - 6 8 - 6 6 - 7 2 - 2 5 - 4
7  Netherlands 7 0 4 3 20 35 3 1 - 5 1 - 3 2 - 9 4 - 4 5 - 7 2 - 2 5 - 5
8  Austria 7 0 6 1 26 42 1 2 - 5 4 - 6 3 - 8 7 - 10 1 - 3 4 - 5 5 - 5

Norway was promoted to Pool A and Austria was relegated to Pool C for 1989.

Pool C

Eight teams contested the third tier this year in Belluno and Feltre, Italy from March 18 to 27. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games. The North Korean juniors debuted this year.

Standings
Rank Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Flag of Denmark Flag of Italy Flag of Bulgaria Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Spain Flag of Hungary Flag of North Korea Flag of Belgium
1  Denmark 7 7 0 0 59 11 14 6 - 2 3 - 2 9 - 2 19 - 0 4 - 2 5 - 3 13 - 0
2  Italy 7 6 1 0 27 17 12 2 - 6 4 - 1 6 - 4 4 - 2 3 - 2 3 - 2 5 - 0
3  Bulgaria 7 5 2 0 39 16 10 2 - 3 1 - 4 7 - 3 8 - 1 10 - 0 8 - 4 3 - 1
4  Great Britain 7 3 3 1 21 27 7 2 - 9 4 - 6 3 - 7 4 - 1 3 - 1 2 - 2 3 - 1
5  Spain 7 2 4 1 19 45 5 0 - 19 2 - 4 1 - 8 1 - 4 6 - 2 5 - 5 4 - 3
6  Hungary 7 2 5 0 14 28 4 2 - 4 2 - 3 0 - 10 1 - 3 2 - 6 4 - 1 3 - 1
7  North Korea 7 1 4 2 20 29 4 3 - 5 2 - 3 4 - 8 2 - 2 5 - 5 1 - 4 3 - 2
8  Belgium 7 0 7 0 8 34 0 0 - 13 0 - 5 1 - 3 1 - 3 3 - 4 1 - 3 2 - 3

Denmark was initially promoted to Pool B for 1989, however because they used an ineligble player, a challenge series with Italy was played the following December to determine promotion.[1]

References

World Junior Championships
IIHF World U20 Championship (1974-)

Soviet Union 1974 - Canada 1975 - Finland 1976 - Czechoslovakia 1977 - Canada 1978 - Sweden 1979 - Finland 1980 - West Germany 1981 - United States 1982 - Soviet Union 1983 - Sweden 1984 - Finland 1985 - Canada 1986 - Czechoslovakia 1987 - Soviet Union 1988 - United States 1989 - Finland 1990 - Canada 1991 - Germany 1992 - Sweden 1993 - Czech Republic 1994 - Canada 1995 - United States 1996 - Switzerland 1997 - Finland 1998 - Canada 1999 - Sweden 2000 - Russia 2001 - Czech Republic 2002 - Canada 2003 - Finland 2004 - United States 2005 - Canada 2006 - Sweden 2007 - Czech Republic 2008 - Canada 2009 - Canada 2010 - United States 2011 - Canada 2012 - Russia 2013 - Sweden 2014 - Canada 2015 - Finland 2016 - Canada 2017 - United States 2018 - Canada 2019 - Czech Republic 2020 - Canada 2021 - Canada 2022 - Canada 2023

IIHF World U18 Championship (1999-)

Germany 1999 - Switzerland 2000 - Finland 2001 - Slovakia 2002 - Russia 2003 - Belarus 2004 - Czech Republic 2005 - Sweden 2006 - Finland 2007 - Russia 2008 - United States 2009 - Belarus 2010 - Germany 2011 - Czech Republic 2012 - Russia 2013 - Finland 2014 = Switzerland 2015 - United States 2016 - Slovakia 2017 - Russia 2018 - Sweden 2019 - United States 2020 - United States 2021 - Germany 2022 - Switzerland 2023

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