1999 IIHF Women's World Championship

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1999 IIHF World Women's Championship
Tournament details
Host nation  Finland
Dates March 8 - March 14
Teams 8
Venue(s) Espoo, Vantaa (in 2 host cities)
Champions  Canada (5 titles)
Tournament statistics
Games played 20
Goals scored 138  (6.9 per game)
Attendance 25,234  (1,262 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of United States Jenny Schmidgall 12 points

The 1999 IIHF World Women's Championships was held between March 8-March 14, 1999 in the city of Espoo in Finland. Team Canada won their 5th consecutive gold medal at the World Championships defeating the United States in a repeat of the previous four finals. Canada skated to a solid 3-1 victory in the final to take the gold with a solid performance that saw them winning all five games.

Finland picked up their fifth consecutive bronze medal, with a win over Sweden who had their strongest performance since 1992.

Qualification

Main article: 1999 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships Qualification

The 1999 tournament created the format that has remained to the present, as the World Championships was greatly expanded to incorporate the European Championships and the Pacific Qualification Tournaments. There were a series of Qualification Tournaments Held to assign teams places in this first year, with the standard Promotion and Relegation model following after that. The top five nations from the Nagano Olympics were joined by three qualifiers.[1]

World Championship Group A

The eight participating teams were divided up into two seeded groups as below. The teams played each other once in a single round robin format. The top two teams from the group proceeded to the Final Round, while the remaining teams played in the Consolation Round.

First round

     Teams proceed to Final round
     Teams sent to Consolation round

Group A

Standings

Rk. Team GP W T L GF GA DIF PTS
1.  United States 3 3 0 0 27 2 +20 6
2.  Sweden 3 2 0 1 10 12 -2 4
3.  China 3 1 0 2 4 11 -7 2
4.  Russia 3 0 0 3 4 20 -16 0

Results

All times local

March 8, 1999
4:30 pm
United States  10 – 2
( 2 - 2, 4 - 0, 4 - 0)
 Russia Espoo
March 8, 1999
4:30 pm
China  1 – 3
 Sweden Vantaa
March 9, 1999
8:00 pm
Sweden  0 – 11
( 0 - 3, 0 - 4, 0 - 4)
 United States Vantaa
March 9, 1999
4:30 pm
China  3 – 2
 Russia Vantaa
March 11, 1999
4:30 pm
Russia  0 – 7
 Sweden Espoo
March 11, 1999
8:00 pm
United States  6 – 0
( 1 - 0, 2 - 0, 3 - 0)
 China Vantaa

Group B

Standings

Rk. Team GP W T L GF GA DIF PTS
1.  Canada 3 3 0 0 24 0 +24 6
2.  Finland 3 2 0 1 16 1 +15 4
3.  Germany 3 1 0 2 5 26 -21 2
4.  Switzerland 3 0 0 3 4 22 -18 0

Results

All times local

March 8, 1999
8:00 pm
Canada  10 – 0
( 2 - 0 , 6 - 0 , 2 - 0 )
 Switzerland Vantaa
March 8, 1999
8:00 pm
Finland  9 – 0
 Germany Espoo
March 9, 1999
4:30 pm
Germany  0 – 13
( 0 - 4 , 0 - 6 , 0 - 3 )
 Canada Espoo
March 9, 1999
8:00 pm
Finland  7 – 0
 Switzerland Espoo
March 11, 1999
8:00 pm
Switzerland  4 – 5
( 0 - 0 , 1 - 0 , 0 - 0 )
 Germany Vantaa
March 11, 1999
8:00 pm
Canada  1 – 0
 Finland Espoo

Playoff Round

Consolation Round 5-8 Place

March 12, 1999
4:30 pm
Germany  2 – 6
 Russia Vantaa
March 12, 1999
7:30 pm
China  3 – 2
 Switzerland Vantaa

Consolation Round 7-8 Place

March 14, 1999
4:00 pm
Germany  3 – 0
 Switzerland Vantaa

Consolation Round 5-6 Place

March 14, 1999
2:00 pm
Russia  1 – 4
 China Vantaa

Final round

Semifinals

March 13, 1999
2:00 pm
Canada  4 – 1
( 1 - 0 , 1 - 1 , 2 - 0 )
 Sweden Espoo
March 13, 1999
7:30 pm
United States  3 – 1
( 0 - 1 , 2 - 0 , 1 - 0)
 Finland Espoo

Match for third place

March 14, 1999
2:00 pm
Finland  8 – 2
 Sweden Espoo

Final

March 14, 1999
6:00 pm
Canada  3 – 1
 United States Espoo

Champions

 1999 IIHF World Women Championship Winners 

Canada
5th title

Final standings

Rk. Team Notes
Gold medal icon.png  Canada
Silver medal icon.png  United States
Bronze medal icon.png  Finland
4.  Sweden
5.  China
6.  Russia
7.  Germany
8.  Switzerland Relegated to the 2000 World Championships Group B

World Championship Group B

Main article: 1999 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships (Lower Divisions)

In addition to the main World Championships, this year saw the first running of World Championship Group B, which replaced the European Championships. Eight further teams played in this competition, hosted by France in the town of Colmar.  Japan won the tournament defeating  Norway in the final 7-1 to win the competition and to ensure their Promotion to the main World Championship in 2000.

References

  • Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports, 487–9. ISBN 0-8362-7114-9. 
  • Podnieks, Andrew (2010). IIHF Media Guide & Record Book 2011. Moydart Press, 26–7, 230. 

External links


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