2011 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
2011 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia
2011 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Logo.png
Tournament details
Host nation  Japan
Dates November 11 – November 14, 2010
Teams 3
Venue(s) (in 1 host city)
Champions  Japan (1 title)
Tournament statistics
Games played 4
Goals scored 26  (6.5 per game)
Attendance 605  (151 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of Japan Yurie Adachi

The 2011 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia was the 2nd Women's IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, an annual international ice hockey tournament. It took place between 11 November, 14 November 2010 in Japan.[1] The games were played in the Kirifuri Arena, Nikko.[1] The Chinese team was the defending champion, having won the 2010 championship.[2]

The tournament was won by Japan, who claimed the first title by defeating China 3–1 in the final. Japan's Yurie Adachi and Azusa Nakaoku were the tournament's leading scorer and goaltender in save percentage respectively.

Standings

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA GDF PTS
 Japan 2 1 0 1 0 13 2 +11 4
 China 2 1 1 0 0 9 1 +8 5
 South Korea 2 0 0 0 2 0 19 –19 0


Fixtures

All times local.

November 11, 2010
18:00
Japan  12 – 0
(5–0, 6–0, 1–0)
 South Korea Kirifuri Arena
Attendance: 110
November 12, 2010
18:00
China  7 – 0
(2–0, 1–0, 4–0)
 South Korea Kirifuri Arena
Attendance: 55
November 13, 2010
16:00
China  2 – 1 SO
(1–0, 0–0, 0–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
 Japan Kirifuri Arena
Attendance: 190

Gold medal game

November 14, 2010
15:00
China  1 – 3
(0–1, 1–0, 0–2)
 Japan Kirifuri Arena
Attendance: 250

References

External links


IIHF Asia and Oceania Championship
Men's tournaments

2008 - 2009 - 2010 - 2011 - 2012 - 2013 - 2014 (Div. I) - 2015 (Div. I) - 2016 (Div. I) - 2017 (Div. I) - 2018 (Div. I) - 2019 - 2020

Women's tournaments

2010 - 2011 - 2012 - 2013 - 2014 (Div. I) - 2015 (Div. I) - 2016 (Div. I) - 2017 - 2018 (Div. I) - 2019 (Div. I) - 2020 (Div. I) - 2023

University/U20 tournaments

2010 - 2011 - 2012 - 2013 - 2014 - 2015-2017 - 2018 - 2019 (Div. I) - 2020 (Div. I) - 2022

U18 tournaments

2012 - 2023

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).