The Ice Hockey World Championships is an annual event held by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). It was preceded by the European Championship which was held from 1910 to 1932. The first World Championship tournament was decided at the 1920 Summer Olympics. Subsequently, ice hockey was featured at the Winter Olympic Games, where the World Championship was decided when the two events occurred concurrently, until the 1968 Winter Olympics. The first three championships were contested at the Olympics, while the first World Championships that were an individual event were held in 1930.[1]

The gold medal-winning Winnipeg Falcons (representing Canada), pictured en route to the 1920 Olympics, which were counted as the first ice hockey World Championships
IIHF World Championship Cup
IIHF third place trophy

The modern format for the World Championship features 16 teams in the championship group, 12 teams in Division I and 12 teams in Division II. If there are more than 40 teams, the rest compete in Division III. The teams in the championship play a preliminary and qualifying round, then the top eight teams play in the playoff medal round and the winning team is crowned World Champion. From the 1920 Olympics until the 1976 World Championships, only athletes designated as "amateur" were allowed to compete in the tournament. Because of this, players from the National Hockey League and its senior minor-league teams were not allowed to compete, while the Soviet Union was allowed to use permanent full-time players who were positioned as regular workers of an aircraft industry or tractor industry employer that sponsored what would be presented as an after-hours amateur social sports society team for their workers. In 1970, after an agreement to allow just a small number of its professionals to participate was rescinded by the IIHF, Canada withdrew from the tournament.[2] Starting in 1977, professional athletes were allowed to compete in the tournament and Canada re-entered, using some NHL players from those teams that were not good enough to reach the Stanley Cup playoffs.[3]

As of 2024, 87 tournaments have been staged. From 1920 to 1930, the Winter Olympic Games Ice Hockey Tournaments held counted as the World Championships and no tournaments in between were held. No championships were held from 1940 to 1946 due to World War II, nor during the Olympic years 1980, 1984 and 1988, nor in 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic.[4] Ten national teams[a] have won a gold medal at the World Championships, five more national teams[b] have won medals. Canada has won 53 medals overall and 28 gold, the most of any nation. The Soviet Union, which began competing in the year of 1954 and last competed in 1991, captured a medal in each of 34 tournaments they entered.[1] In winning the 2006 World Championships, Sweden became the first nation in ice hockey history to win an Olympic gold as well as a separate World Championship in the same season.[5] In 2022, Finland repeated this achievement by winning the World Championships at home.

Champions

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Key
  †  The Summer Olympic Games Ice Hockey Tournament held that year counted as the World Championships (1 edition).
  *   The Winter Olympic Games Ice Hockey Tournament held that year counted as the World Championships (10 editions).
(#) Number of times when national team has reached corresponding place at the time (or number of tournaments hosted by city / country at the time).
(#/#) Second number indicates cumulative number of times when successor country and its predecessor per IIHF (Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia or unified Germany) has reached corresponding place at the time (or cumulative number of tournaments hosted by successor country and its predecessor at the time).
Year Gold Silver Bronze 4th place Host city / cities Host country / countries
1920   Canada (1)   United States (1)   Czechoslovakia (1)   Sweden (1) Antwerp (1)   Belgium (1)
1924 *   Canada (2)   United States (2)   Great Britain (1)   Sweden (2) Chamonix (1)   France (1)
1928 *   Canada (3)   Sweden (1)    Switzerland (1)   Great Britain (1) St. Moritz (1)   Switzerland (1)
1930   Canada (4)   Germany (1)    Switzerland (2)   Austria (1) Chamonix (2)
Berlin (1)
Vienna (1)
  France (2)
  Germany (1)
  Austria (1)
1931   Canada (5)   United States (3)   Austria (1)   Poland (1) Krynica (1)   Poland (1)
1932 *   Canada (6)   United States (4)   Germany (1)   Poland (2) Lake Placid (1)   United States (1)
1933   United States (1)   Canada (1)   Czechoslovakia (2)   Austria (2) Prague (1)   Czechoslovakia (1)
1934   Canada (7)   United States (5)   Germany (2)    Switzerland (1) Milan (1)   Italy (1)
1935   Canada (8)    Switzerland (1)   Great Britain (2)   Czechoslovakia (1) Davos (1)   Switzerland (2)
1936 *   Great Britain (1)   Canada (2)   United States (1)   Czechoslovakia (2) Garmisch-Partenkirchen (1)   Germany (2)
1937   Canada (9)   Great Britain (1)    Switzerland (3)   Germany (1) London (1)   Great Britain (1)
1938   Canada (10)   Great Britain (2)   Czechoslovakia (3)   Germany (2) Prague (2)   Czechoslovakia (2)
1939   Canada (11)   United States (6)    Switzerland (4)   Czechoslovakia (3) Zürich (1) and Basel (1)   Switzerland (3)
1940–
1946
Competitions not held because of World War II
1947   Czechoslovakia (1)   Sweden (2)   Austria (2)    Switzerland (2) Prague (3)   Czechoslovakia (3)
1948 *   Canada (12)   Czechoslovakia (1)    Switzerland (5)   United States (1) St. Moritz (2)   Switzerland (4)
1949   Czechoslovakia (2)   Canada (3)   United States (2)   Sweden (3) Stockholm (1)   Sweden (1)
1950   Canada (13)   United States (7)    Switzerland (6)   Great Britain (2) London (2)   Great Britain (2)
1951   Canada (14)   Sweden (3)    Switzerland (7)   Norway (1) Paris (1)   France (3)
1952 *   Canada (15)   United States (8)   Sweden (1)   Czechoslovakia (4) Oslo (1) and Drammen (1)   Norway (1)
1953   Sweden (1)   West Germany (1/2)    Switzerland (8)   Italy (1) Zürich (2) and Basel (2)   Switzerland (5)
1954   Soviet Union (1)   Canada (4)   Sweden (2)   Czechoslovakia (5) Stockholm (2)   Sweden (2)
1955   Canada (16)   Soviet Union (1)   Czechoslovakia (4)   United States (2) Krefeld (1), Dortmund (1)
and Cologne (1)
  West Germany (1/3)
1956 *   Soviet Union (2)   United States (9)   Canada (1)   Sweden (4) Cortina d'Ampezzo (1)   Italy (2)
1957   Sweden (2)   Soviet Union (2)   Czechoslovakia (5)   Finland (1) Moscow (1)   Soviet Union (1)
1958   Canada (17)   Soviet Union (3)   Sweden (3)   Czechoslovakia (6) Oslo (2)   Norway (2)
1959   Canada (18)   Soviet Union (4)   Czechoslovakia (6)   United States (3) Prague (4), Bratislava (1)
and Ostrava (1)
  Czechoslovakia (4)
1960 *   United States (2)   Canada (5)   Soviet Union (1)   Czechoslovakia (7) Squaw Valley (1)   United States (2)
1961   Canada (19)   Czechoslovakia (2)   Soviet Union (2)   Sweden (5) Geneva (1) and Lausanne (1)   Switzerland (6)
1962   Sweden (3)   Canada (6)   United States (3)   Finland (2) Colorado Springs (1) and Denver (1)   United States (3)
1963   Soviet Union (3)   Sweden (4)   Czechoslovakia (7)   Canada (1) Stockholm (3)   Sweden (3)
1964 *   Soviet Union (4)   Sweden (5)   Czechoslovakia (8)   Canada (2) Innsbruck (1)   Austria (2)
1965   Soviet Union (5)   Czechoslovakia (3)   Sweden (4)   Canada (3) Tampere (1)   Finland (1)
1966   Soviet Union (6)   Czechoslovakia (4)   Canada (2)   Sweden (6) Ljubljana (1)   Yugoslavia (1)
1967   Soviet Union (7)   Sweden (6)   Canada (3)   Czechoslovakia (8) Vienna (2)   Austria (3)
1968 *   Soviet Union (8)   Czechoslovakia (5)   Canada (4)   Sweden (7) Grenoble (1)   France (4)
1969   Soviet Union (9)   Sweden (7)   Czechoslovakia (9)   Canada (4) Stockholm (4)   Sweden (4)
1970   Soviet Union (10)   Sweden (8)   Czechoslovakia (10)   Finland (3) Stockholm (5)   Sweden (5)
1971   Soviet Union (11)   Czechoslovakia (6)   Sweden (5)   Finland (4) Bern (1) and Geneva (2)   Switzerland (7)
1972   Czechoslovakia (3)   Soviet Union (5)   Sweden (6)   Finland (5) Prague (5)   Czechoslovakia (5)
1973   Soviet Union (12)   Sweden (9)   Czechoslovakia (11)   Finland (6) Moscow (2)   Soviet Union (2)
1974   Soviet Union (13)   Czechoslovakia (7)   Sweden (7)   Finland (7) Helsinki (1)   Finland (2)
1975   Soviet Union (14)   Czechoslovakia (8)   Sweden (8)   Finland (8) Munich (1) and Düsseldorf (1)   West Germany (2/4)
1976   Czechoslovakia (4)   Soviet Union (6)   Sweden (9)   United States (4) Katowice (1)   Poland (2)
1977   Czechoslovakia (5)   Sweden (10)   Soviet Union (3)   Canada (5) Vienna (3)   Austria (4)
1978   Soviet Union (15)   Czechoslovakia (9)   Canada (5)   Sweden (8) Prague (6)   Czechoslovakia (6)
1979   Soviet Union (16)   Czechoslovakia (10)   Sweden (10)   Canada (6) Moscow (3)   Soviet Union (3)
1980 Competition not held during 1980 Olympics
1981   Soviet Union (17)   Sweden (11)   Czechoslovakia (12)   Canada (7) Gothenburg (1) and Stockholm (6)   Sweden (6)
1982   Soviet Union (18)   Czechoslovakia (11)   Canada (6)   Sweden (9) Helsinki (2) and Tampere (2)   Finland (3)
1983   Soviet Union (19)   Czechoslovakia (12)   Canada (7)   Sweden (10) Düsseldorf (2), Dortmund (2)
and Munich (2)
  West Germany (3/5)
1984 Competition not held during 1984 Olympics
1985   Czechoslovakia (6)   Canada (7)   Soviet Union (4)   United States (5) Prague (7)   Czechoslovakia (7)
1986   Soviet Union (20)   Sweden (12)   Canada (8)   Finland (9) Moscow (4)   Soviet Union (4)
1987   Sweden (4)   Soviet Union (7)   Czechoslovakia (13)   Canada (8) Vienna (4)   Austria (5)
1988 Competition not held during 1988 Olympics
1989   Soviet Union (21)   Canada (8)   Czechoslovakia (14)   Sweden (11) Stockholm (7) and Södertälje (1)   Sweden (7)
1990   Soviet Union (22)   Sweden (13)   Czechoslovakia (15)   Canada (9) Bern (2) and Fribourg (1)   Switzerland (8)
1991   Sweden (5)   Canada (9)   Soviet Union (5)   United States (6) Turku (1), Helsinki (3) and Tampere (3)   Finland (4)
1992   Sweden (6)   Finland (1)   Czechoslovakia (16)    Switzerland (3) Prague (8) and Bratislava (2)   Czechoslovakia (8)
1993   Russia (1/23)   Sweden (14)   Czech Republic (1/17)   Canada (10) Dortmund (3) and Munich (3)   Germany (3/6)
1994   Canada (20)   Finland (2)   Sweden (11)   United States (7) Bolzano (1), Canazei (1) and Milan (2)   Italy (3)
1995   Finland (1)   Sweden (15)   Canada (9)   Czech Republic (1/9) Stockholm (8) and Gävle (1)   Sweden (8)
1996   Czech Republic (1/7)   Canada (10)   United States (4)   Russia (1/1) Vienna (5)   Austria (6)
1997   Canada (21)   Sweden (16)   Czech Republic (2/18)   Russia (2/2) Helsinki (4), Turku (2) and Tampere (4)   Finland (5)
1998   Sweden (7)   Finland (3)   Czech Republic (3/19)    Switzerland (4) Zürich (3) and Basel (3)   Switzerland (9)
1999   Czech Republic (2/8)   Finland (4)   Sweden (12)   Canada (11) Oslo (3), Lillehammer (1) and Hamar (1)   Norway (3)
2000   Czech Republic (3/9)   Slovakia (1)   Finland (1)   Canada (12) Saint Petersburg (1)   Russia (1/5)
2001   Czech Republic (4/10)   Finland (5)   Sweden (13)   United States (8) Cologne (2), Hanover (1)
and Nuremberg (1)
  Germany (4/7)
2002   Slovakia (1)   Russia (1/8)   Sweden (14)   Finland (10) Gothenburg (2), Karlstad (1)
and Jönköping (1)
  Sweden (9)
2003   Canada (22)   Sweden (17)   Slovakia (1)   Czech Republic (2/10) Helsinki (5), Tampere (5) and Turku (3)   Finland (6)
2004   Canada (23)   Sweden (18)   United States (5)   Slovakia (1) Prague (9) and Ostrava (2)   Czech Republic (1/9)
2005   Czech Republic (5/11)   Canada (11)   Russia (1/6)   Sweden (12) Innsbruck (2) and Vienna (6)   Austria (7)
2006   Sweden (8)   Czech Republic (1/13)   Finland (2)   Canada (13) Riga (1)   Latvia (1)
2007   Canada (24)   Finland (6)   Russia (2/7)   Sweden (13) Moscow (5) and Mytishchi (1)   Russia (2/6)
2008   Russia (2/24)   Canada (12)   Finland (3)   Sweden (14) Halifax (1) and Quebec City (1)   Canada (1)
2009   Russia (3/25)   Canada (13)   Sweden (15)   United States (9) Kloten (1) and Bern (3)   Switzerland (10)
2010   Czech Republic (6/12)   Russia (2/9)   Sweden (16)   Germany (3/3) Cologne (3), Mannheim (1)
and Gelsenkirchen (1)
  Germany (5/8)
2011   Finland (2)   Sweden (19)   Czech Republic (4/20)   Russia (3/3) Bratislava (3) and Košice (1)   Slovakia (1)
2012   Russia (4/26)   Slovakia (2)   Czech Republic (5/21)   Finland (11) Helsinki (6)
Stockholm (9)
  Finland (7)
  Sweden (10)
2013   Sweden (9)    Switzerland (2)   United States (6)   Finland (12) Stockholm (10)
Helsinki (7)
  Sweden (11)
  Finland (8)
2014   Russia (5/27)   Finland (7)   Sweden (17)   Czech Republic (3/11) Minsk (1)   Belarus (1)
2015   Canada (25)   Russia (3/10)   United States (7)   Czech Republic (4/12) Prague (10) and Ostrava (3)   Czech Republic (2/10)
2016   Canada (26)   Finland (8)   Russia (3/8)   United States (10) Moscow (6) and Saint Petersburg (2)   Russia (3/7)
2017   Sweden (10)   Canada (14)   Russia (4/9)   Finland (13) Cologne (4)
Paris (2)
  Germany (6/9)
  France (5)
2018   Sweden (11)    Switzerland (3)   United States (8)   Canada (14) Copenhagen (1) and Herning (1)   Denmark (1)
2019   Finland (3)   Canada (15)   Russia (5/10)   Czech Republic (5/13) Bratislava (4) and Košice (2)   Slovakia (2)
2020 Competition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[6]
2021   Canada (27)   Finland (9)   United States (9)   Germany (4/4) Riga (2)   Latvia (2)
2022   Finland (4)   Canada (16)   Czechia (6/22)   United States (11) Tampere (6) and Helsinki (8)   Finland (9)
2023   Canada (28)   Germany (2/3)   Latvia (1)   United States (12) Tampere (7)
Riga (3)
  Finland (10)
  Latvia (3)
2024   Czechia (7/13)    Switzerland (4)   Sweden (18)   Canada (15) Prague (11) and Ostrava (4)   Czechia (3/11)
2025 Stockholm (11)
Herning (2)
  Sweden (12)
  Denmark (2)
2026 Zürich (4) and Fribourg (2)   Switzerland (11)
2027 Düsseldorf (3) and Mannheim (2)   Germany (7/10)
2028 Paris (3) and Lyon (1)   France (6)

Medal table

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National teams in italics no longer compete at the World Championships.[7]

Rank National team[c] Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Canada 28 16 9 53
2   Soviet Union[d] /   Russia[e] 27 10 10 47
3   Czechoslovakia[f] /   Czechia[g] 13 13 22 48
4   Sweden 11 19 18 48
5   Finland 4 9 3 16
6   United States 2 9 9 20
7   Great Britain 1 2 2 5
8   Slovakia[h] 1 2 1 4
9    Switzerland 0 4 8 12
10   West Germany[i] /   Germany[j] 0 3 2 5
11   Austria 0 0 2 2
12   Latvia 0 0 1 1
Totals (15 nations) 87 87 87 261

Finals

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Since the introduction of play-off rounds in 1992, the following national teams have made the finals.

Country Gold Silver Total finals
  Canada 9 7 16
  Czechia 7 1 8
  Sweden 6 6 12
  Russia[e] 5 3 8
  Finland 4 9 13
  Slovakia 1 2 3
   Switzerland 0 3 3
  Germany 0 1 1
Total 32 32 64

Most successful players

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Boldface denotes active ice hockey players and highest medal count among all players (including these who not included in these tables) per type. "Position" denotes player position on the hockey rink (D – defenceman; F – forward; G – goaltender).[8][9][10][11]

Multiple gold medalists

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Rank Player Country Position From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Vladislav Tretiak   Soviet Union G 1970 1983 10 2 1 13
2 Alexander Ragulin   Soviet Union D 1961 1973 10 1 1 12
3 Alexander Maltsev   Soviet Union F 1969 1983 9 2 1 12
4 Vladimir Petrov   Soviet Union F 1969 1981 9 1 1 11
5 Vyacheslav Starshinov   Soviet Union F 1961 1971 9 1 10
6 Vitali Davydov   Soviet Union D 1963 1971 9 9
7 Valeri Kharlamov   Soviet Union F 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Vladimir Lutchenko   Soviet Union D 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Boris Mikhailov   Soviet Union F 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Valeri Vasiliev   Soviet Union D 1970 1982 8 2 1 11

Multiple medalists

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The table shows players who have won at least 11 medals in total at the World Championships.

Rank Player Country Position From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Vladislav Tretiak   Soviet Union G 1970 1983 10 2 1 13
2 Jiří Holík   Czechoslovakia F 1964 1977 3 6 4 13
3 Alexander Ragulin   Soviet Union D 1961 1973 10 1 1 12
4 Alexander Maltsev   Soviet Union F 1969 1983 9 2 1 12
5 Vladimir Petrov   Soviet Union F 1969 1981 9 1 1 11
6 Valeri Kharlamov   Soviet Union F 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Vladimir Lutchenko   Soviet Union D 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Boris Mikhailov   Soviet Union F 1969 1979 8 2 1 11
Valeri Vasiliev   Soviet Union D 1970 1982 8 2 1 11
10 Sergei Makarov   Soviet Union F 1978 1991 8 1 2 11
11 Viacheslav Fetisov   Soviet Union D 1977 1991 7 1 3 11
12 Veniamin Alexandrov   Soviet Union F 1957 1968 6 3 2 11
13 Ivan Hlinka   Czechoslovakia F 1970 1981 3 5 3 11
Oldřich Machač   Czechoslovakia D 1968 1978 3 5 3 11
Vladimír Martinec   Czechoslovakia F 1970 1981 3 5 3 11

Best performers by country

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Here are listed most successful players in the history of each of 15 medal-winning national teams – according to the gold-first ranking system and by total number of World Championships medals (one player if he holds national records in both categories or few players if these national records belongs to different persons). If the total number of medals is identical, the gold, silver and bronze medals are used as tie-breakers (in that order). If all numbers are the same, the players get the same placement and are sorted by the alphabetic order.

Country Player Position From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
  Soviet Union Vladislav Tretiak G 1970 1983 10 2 1 13
  Czechia David Výborný F 1996 2006 5 1 2 8
  Czechoslovakia Jiří Holík F 1964 1977 3 6 4 13
  Sweden Jonas Bergqvist
(by the gold-first ranking system)
F 1986 1998 3 3 1 7
Sven "Tumba" Johansson
(by total number of medals)
F 1952 1965 3 2 4 9
  Russia Alexander Ovechkin F 2005 2019 3 2 4 9
  Canada Eric Brewer
(by the gold-first ranking system)
D 2003 2007 3 3
Shane Doan &
Dany Heatley
(by total number of medals)
F 2003 2009 2 3 5
  Finland Atte Ohtamaa
(by the gold-first ranking system)
D 2014 2022 2 3 5
Ville Peltonen
(by total number of medals)
F 1994 2008 1 4 3 8
  Great Britain Gordon Dailley F/D 1935 1938 1 2 1 4
Gerry Davey
  Slovakia Miroslav Šatan F 2000 2012 1 2 1 4
  United States John Garrison &
John Mayasich
(by the gold-first ranking system)
D/F
F/D

1932
1956

1936
1962

1
1

1
1

1
1

3
3

Allen Van
(by total number of medals)
D 1939 1952 3 1 4
   Switzerland Reto Berra,
Roman Josi &
Nino Niederreiter
(by the gold-first ranking system)
G
D
F

2013


2024





3





3

Richard "Bibi" Torriani
(by total number of medals)
F 1928 1948 1 5 6
  Germany Gustav Jaenecke F/D 1930 1934 1 2 3
Walter Leinweber G
Erich Römer D/F
  West Germany 16 players[k] D, F, G 1953 1953 1 1
  Austria Fritz Demmer F 1931 1947 2 2
  Latvia 27 players[l] D, F, G 2023 2023 1 1

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Canada, United States, Great Britain, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, the Soviet Union, Russia, Finland, Czech Republic and Slovakia.
  2. ^ Switzerland, Germany, Austria, West Germany and Latvia.
  3. ^ The IIHF medal table is grouped by its member associations.
  4. ^ Soviet Union won 22 gold medals, 7 silver medals and 5 bronze medals (34 medals in total).
  5. ^ a b Russia succeseded the Soviet Union in IIHF competitions, both of which were governed by the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia. Russia won 5 gold medals, 3 silver medals and 5 bronze medals (13 medals in total). Russia is currently banned from participating in international tournaments due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  6. ^ Czechoslovakia won 6 gold medals, 12 silver medals and 16 bronze medals (34 medals in total).
  7. ^ Czechia (also known as the Czech Republic) assumed the IIHF membership of the Czech Ice Hockey Association following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, and have won 7 gold medals, 1 silver medal and 6 bronze medals (14 medals in total) since 1993. The Slovak Ice Hockey Federation was founded in 1993 and their medal totals do not include those won by Czechoslovakia as per the IIHF.
  8. ^ The Slovak Ice Hockey Federation was founded in 1993, and admitted as a member of the IIHF in the same year. As per the IIHF, their medal totals do not include those won by the Czech Ice Hockey Association represented by national team of Czechoslovakia.
  9. ^ West Germany succeeded Germany in IIHF competitions, both of which were governed by the German Ice Hockey Federation. From 1949 until reunification of country in 1990, West Germany won 1 silver medal.
  10. ^ Germany won 2 silver medals and 2 bronze medals (4 medals in total).
  11. ^ Martin Beck, Anton Biersack, Karl Bierschel, Otto Brandenburg, Markus Egen, Karl Enzler, Georg Guggemos, Bruno Guttowski, Alfred Hoffmann, Ulli Jansen, Walter Kremershof, Dieter Niess, Fritz Poitsch, Hans Rampf, Kurt Sepp and Xaver Unsinn.
  12. ^ Rodrigo Ābols, Toms Andersons, Rūdolfs Balcers, Uvis Balinskis, Oskars Batņa, Arvils Bergmanis, Rihards Bukarts, Roberts Bukarts, Oskars Cibuļskis, Kārlis Čukste, Kaspars Daugaviņš, Andris Džeriņš, Mārtiņš Dzierkals, Ralfs Freibergs, Georgs Golovkovs, Kristers Gudļevskis, Miks Indrašis, Jānis Jaks, Ronalds Ķēniņš, Renārs Krastenbergs, Dans Ločmelis, Roberts Mamčics, Ivars Punnenovs, Kristiāns Rubīns, Artūrs Šilovs, Deniss Smirnovs and Kristaps Zīle.

References

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  1. ^ a b "International hockey timeline". IIHF. Archived from the original on 14 July 2018. Retrieved 12 May 2008.
  2. ^ MacSkimming 1996, p. 8.
  3. ^ "IIHF World Men's Championship". Hockey Canada. Archived from the original on 19 August 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2008.
  4. ^ "All Medalists: Men: IIHF World Championships". IIHF. Archived from the original on 26 November 2009. Retrieved 2 March 2010.
  5. ^ "Sweden Completes 'Double' at IIHF Worlds". The Sports Network. Associated Press. 21 May 2006. Archived from the original on 2008-05-19. Retrieved 12 May 2008.
  6. ^ Steiss, Adam. "2020 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship cancelled". iihf.com. IIHF. Archived from the original on 21 March 2020. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  7. ^ "IIHF - Medallists". Archived from the original on 2021-12-27. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  8. ^ "Ice Hockey / World Championships". AllCompetitions. 28 May 2023. Archived from the original on 29 April 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  9. ^ "Olympians Who Won a Medal at the World Ice Hockey Championships". Olympedia. 8 December 2023. Archived from the original on 29 April 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  10. ^ "Elite Prospects – Players' Statistics". Eliteprospects. 28 February 2024. Archived from the original on 29 April 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  11. ^ "Eurohockey – Players' Statistics". Eurohockey. 9 June 2023. Archived from the original on 29 April 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.

General

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