IIHF World Championship Division I

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IIHF World Championship Division I
Sport Ice hockey
Founded 1951 (Pool B)
2001 (Division I)
No. of teams 12
Most recent champion(s)  Kazakhstan (Group A)
 South Korea (Group B)
Most championship(s)  Poland/ Italy (7)
Official website IIHF.com

The IIHF World Championship Division I is an annual sports event organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The divisional championship is played in two groups.

From 2001 until 2011 the two national teams that lost the relegation round at the IIHF World Championship were relegated to Division I for the following year's World Championships. At the Division I Championship, the winner of each group was promoted to the following year's IIHF World Championship, while the loser of each group was relegated to the Division II. Beginning in 2012, the last place team from each group in the world championship is relegated to Division I A, to be replaced by first and second place in Division I A. Sixth place in I A is relegated (now) to group I B, replaced by its winner, while sixth in I B is relegated to Division II.

The Division I World Championship was formed in 2001 from Pool B and the top four Pool C teams. Beginning in 2012 the two groups became tiered rather than parallel. Group A teams were the nations who either were relegated from the World Championship, or placed 2nd and 3rd in their 2011 groups. Group B was formed from the 4th and 5th placed teams, as well as the teams promoted from Division II. Japan qualified for group A because the IIHF council voted unanimously to allow Japan to maintain their seeded position (3rd) in their respective tournaments for 2012.[1]

Division I

Group A

National Team Ranking^ In 2013
 Italy 18th Elite Division
 Kazakhstan 17th Elite Division
 Japan 21st Division I Group A
 Ukraine 20th Division I Group A
 Hungary 19th Division I Group A
 Poland 24th Division I Group B

Group B

Was played in Eindhoven, Netherlands, from 13 to 19 April 2015.

National Team Ranking^ In 2013
 South Korea 23rd Division I Group A
 Croatia 28th Division I Group B
 Lithuania 26th Division I Group B
 Great Britain 22nd Division I Group B
 Netherlands 25th Division I Group B
 Estonia 29th Division II Group A

^ – World Ranking

Results

Year Promoted Relegated
To Top Division To Division I A To Division I B To Division II
2001  Poland,  Slovenia  Lithuania,  Estonia
2002  Belarus,  Denmark  South Korea,  China
2003  Kazakhstan,  France  Lithuania,  Croatia
2004  Belarus,  Slovenia  Belgium,  South Korea
2005  Norway,  Italy  China,  Romania
2006  Germany,  Austria  Israel,  Croatia
2007  France,  Slovenia  China,  Romania
2008  Hungary,  Austria  Estonia,  South Korea
2009  Italy,  Kazakhstan  Romania,  Australia
2010  Slovenia,  Austria  Croatia,  Serbia
2011  Italy,  Kazakhstan  Spain,  Estonia
2012  Slovenia,  Austria  South Korea  Ukraine  Australia
2013  Italy,  Kazakhstan  Ukraine  Great Britain  Estonia
2014  Slovenia,  Austria  Poland  South Korea  Romania
2015  Kazakhstan,  Hungary  South Korea  Ukraine  Netherlands

Pool B

Champions 1951–2000

Year National team
1951  Italy
1952  Great Britain
1953  Italy
1955  Italy
1956  East Germany
1959  Romania
1961  Norway
1962  Japan
1963  Norway
1965  Poland
1966  West Germany
1967  Poland
1969  East Germany
1970  United States
1971  Switzerland
1972  Poland
1973  East Germany
1974  United States
1975  East Germany
1976  Romania
1977  East Germany
1978  Poland
1979  Netherlands
1981  Italy
1982  East Germany
1983  United States
1985  Poland
1986  Switzerland
1987  Poland
1989  Norway
1990  Switzerland
1991  Italy
1992  Austria
1993  Great Britain
1994  Switzerland
1995  Slovakia
1996  Latvia
1997  Belarus
1998  Ukraine
1999  Denmark
2000  Germany

Summary of participation

54 championships

  • Division I teams (2001–present) are ranked one through twelve, with this chart assessing gold, silver, and bronze to the nations who ranked 17th, 18th, and 19th overall.
Team Times First Last Gold Silver Bronze Total Best finish (first/last) Hosted[N2]
 Australia 3 1962 2012 0 0 0 0 5th (1962) 0
 Austria 32 1951 2014 3 7 5 15 1st (1992/2010) 5
 Belgium 5 1951 2004 0 0 1 1 3rd (1956) 1
 Belarus 4 1996 2004 2 1 1 4 1st (1997/2002) 0
 Bulgaria 4 1970 1993 0 0 0 0 5th (1992) 0
 China 10 1979 2007 0 0 0 0 6th (1982) 1
 Croatia 8 2001 2015 0 0 0 0 8th (2001/2014) 1
 Denmark 14 1949 2002 1 1 0 2 1st (1999) 2
 Spain 1 2011 2011 0 0 0 0 10th (2011) 0
 Estonia 12 1998 2015 0 0 1 1 3rd (1998) 1
 France 18 1951 2007 0 3 4 7 2nd (1951/2007) 4
 Great Britain 27 1952 2015 2 3 2 7 1st (1952/1993) 0
 East Germany 14 1956 1990 6 1 3 10 1st (1956/1982) 1
 Germany[N1] 9 1965 2006 3 2 2 7 1st (1966/2006) 1
 Hungary 23 1959 2015 0 3 4 7 2nd (1959/2015) 5
 Israel 1 2006 2006 0 0 0 0 12th (2006) 0
 Italy 26 1951 2015 5 7 3 15 1st (1951/1991) 2
 Japan 22 1962 2015 1 2 2 5 1st (1962) 4
 Kazakhstan 11 1997 2015 5 2 1 8 1st (2003/2015) 0
 South Korea 8 2002 2015 0 0 0 0 5th (2013) 1
 Latvia 3 1994 1996 1 2 0 3 1st (1996) 0
 Lithuania 12 2001 2014 0 0 1 1 3rd (2006) 2
 Netherlands 37 1951 2015 1 1 3 5 1st (1979) 6
 Norway 27 1956 2005 4 4 4 12 1st (1963/2005) 2
 Poland 37 1961 2015 6 7 6 19 1st (1965/1987) 5
 Romania 29 1959 2014 2 2 2 6 1st (1959/1976) 3
 Serbia 1 2010 2010 0 0 0 0 11th (2010) 0
 Slovenia 10 1998 2014 5 2 1 8 1st (2001/2014) 5
 Switzerland 23 1961 1997 4 5 4 13 1st (1971/1990) 5
 Slovakia 1 1995 1995 1 0 0 1 1st (1995) 1
 Ukraine 8 1998 2015 1 0 2 3 1st (1998) 2
 United States 5 1970 1983 3 2 0 5 1st (1970/1983) 1
 Yugoslavia 21 1951 1992 0 1 3 4 2nd (1974) 5

See also

Citations

External links

References

  • 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. 


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