2017 IIHF World Championship Division I

The 2017 IIHF World Championship Division I was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Group A was contested in Kyiv, Ukraine from 22 to 28 April 2017 and Group B in Belfast, United Kingdom from 23 to 29 April 2017.[1] South Korea and Austria were promoted to the 2018 World Championship. It marked the first time South Korea had earned promotion to the top tier of the World Championship.[2]

2017 IIHF World Championship Division I
Tournament details
Host countries Ukraine
 United Kingdom
Venue(s)2 (in 2 host cities)
Dates22–28 April (Group A)
23–29 April (Group B)
Teams12
← 2016
2018 →

Bids edit

There were two official bids to host Group A Championships.

Ukraine had never hosted these championships, however, they did host an Olympic Pre-Qualification round in 2012. The proposed arena was the Palace of Sports.

The decision on who hosts the tournament was decided on May 20, 2016. The bid from Ukraine gained a majority vote against the Austrian entry.[1]

There were also two official bids to host Group B Championships.

Estonia last hosted these championships in 2006. The proposed arena was Tallinn Arena.
The United Kingdom had never hosted these championships, however, they did play host to the IIHF Group B Championships in 1952, and again in 1993. The proposed arena was the Odyssey Arena.

The decision on who hosts the tournament was decided on May 20, 2016.[1] The bid from the United Kingdom received 18 votes, whilst the Estonia bid received 7.[3]

Venues edit

Group A Group B
Kyiv Belfast
Palace of Sports
Capacity: 7,000
SSE Arena
Capacity: 11,000
   

Group A tournament edit

2017 IIHF World Championship Division I A
 
Tournament details
Host country  Ukraine
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Dates22–28 April
Teams6
Tournament statistics
Games played15
Goals scored70 (4.67 per game)
Attendance51,851 (3,457 per game)
Scoring leader(s)  Nigel Dawes (9 points)
MVP  Thomas Raffl
WebsiteIIHF.com

Participants edit

Team Qualification
  Hungary Placed 15th in the Elite Division and was relegated.
  Kazakhstan Placed 16th in the Elite Division and was relegated.
  Poland Placed 3rd in Division I A the previous year.
  Austria Placed 4th in Division I A the previous year.
  South Korea Placed 5th in Division I A the previous year.
  Ukraine Placed 1st in Division I B the previous year and was promoted.

Match officials edit

7 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.[4]

Standings edit

 
Poland - Ukraine
Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1   Austria (P) 5 4 0 0 1 22 4 +18 12 2018 IIHF World Championship
2   South Korea (P) 5 3 1 0 1 14 11 +3 11[a]
3   Kazakhstan 5 3 1 0 1 13 10 +3 11[a]
4   Poland 5 2 0 1 2 6 17 −11 7
5   Hungary 5 1 0 0 4 8 14 −6 3
6   Ukraine (H, R) 5 0 0 1 4 7 14 −7 1 Relegation to 2018 Division I B
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
(H) Host; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Kazakhstan 2–5 South Korea

Results edit

All times are local (UTC+3).

22 April 2017
13:30
Ukraine  3–5
(1–1, 2–1, 0–3)
  HungaryPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 4,612
Game reference
Eduard ZakharchenkoGoaliesMiklós RajnaReferees:
  Jacob Grumsen
  Roy Stian Hansen
Linesmen:
  Riley Bowles
  Daniel Persson
Kuzmik – 13:481–0
1–114:35 – Bartalis (Erdély, Szirányi)
1–220:20 – Vas (Szirányi)
Butsenko (Katrych) (PP) – 27:332–2
Butsenko (Lyalka) – 38:513–2
3–350:41 – Sarauer (Wehrs, Kóger)
3–452:53 – Dansereau (Sarauer, Wehrs)
3–559:49 – Hári (Galló, Sagert) (PP, ENG)
12 minPenalties12 min
24Shots51
22 April 2017
17:00
South Korea  4–2
(1–0, 1–1, 2–1)
  PolandPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,257
Game reference
Matt DaltonGoaliesPrzemysław OdrobnyReferees:
  Andris Ansons
  Daniel Gamper
Linesmen:
  Artem Korepanov
  Ulrich Pardatscher
Kim K. (Ahn) – 07:511–0
Sin (Park W., Kim Won-jun) – 27:072–0
2–134:40 – Bryk (Pasiut, Wronka) (PP2)
Lee Y. (Swift) – 42:073–1
Kim S. – 46:024–1
4–249:48 – Pociecha (Zapała)
10 minPenalties4 min
22Shots38
22 April 2017
20:30
Austria  2–3
(0–2, 2–0, 0–1)
  KazakhstanPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,819
Game reference
Bernhard StarkbaumGoaliesVitali KolesnikReferees:
  Vladimír Pešina
  Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
  Franco Castelli
  Daniel Hynek
0–108:26 – Dawes (Dallman, St. Pierre) (PP)
0–214:56 – Dawes (Boyd, Bochenski)
Komarek (Raffl, Schlacher) – 24:321–2
Raffl (Hofer, Komarek) – 37:312–2
2–343:38 – Markelov (Savchenko, Starchenko) (PP)
16 minPenalties8 min
24Shots32
23 April 2017
17:00
Kazakhstan  2–5
(1–1, 1–0, 0–4)
  South KoreaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,463
Game reference
Vitali KolesnikGoaliesMatt DaltonReferees:
  Jacob Grumsen
  Roy Stian Hansen
Linesmen:
  Artem Korepanov
  Daniel Persson
Bochenski (Dawes) – 08:011–0
1–115:56 – Ahn (Kim K.)
Dawes (Bochenski, St. Pierre) – 33:252–1
2–245:49 – Plante (Cho, Swift)
2–347:03 – Shin S. (Cho, Lee D.)
2–449:58 – Plante (Kim S., Ahn)
2–551:41 – Kim K (Plante, Kim S.) (PP2)
31 minPenalties6 min
32Shots21
23 April 2017
20:30
Poland  2–1
(1–0, 0–1, 1–0)
  UkrainePalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 5,291
Game reference
Przemysław OdrobnyGoaliesEduard ZakharchenkoReferees:
  Andreas Harnebring
  Vladimír Pešina
Linesmen:
  Franco Castelli
  Maxime Chaput
Malasiński (Pasiut, Wronka) (PP) – 19:561–0
1–138:30 – Blagoy (Kuzmik)
Kapica (Kruczek, Dziubiński) – 46:342–1
10 minPenalties6 min
30Shots38
24 April 2017
20:30
Hungary  1–3
(1–1, 0–0, 0–2)
  AustriaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,861
Game reference
Miklós RajnaGoaliesBernhard StarkbaumReferees:
  Andris Ansons
  Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
  Riley Bowles
  Ulrich Pardatscher
0–103:51 – Raffl (Komarek) (SH)
Dansereau (Erdély, Bartalis) (PP) – 06:231–1
1–244:33 – Hofer (Schumnig, Komarek) (PP)
1–347:21 – Heinrich (Komarek, Schumnig) (PP)
8 minPenalties8 min
29Shots28
25 April 2017
13:30
Kazakhstan  1–0 OT
(0–0, 0–0, 0–0)
OT: (1–0)
  PolandPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 1,536
Game reference
Vitali KolesnikGoaliesPrzemysław OdrobnyReferees:
  Roy Stian Hansen
  Andreas Harnebring
Linesmen:
  Franco Castelli
  Artem Korepanov
Dallman (Dawes) – 61:391–0
4 minPenalties6 min
29Shots30
25 April 2017
17:00
Hungary  1–3
(0–0, 1–1, 0–2)
  South KoreaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,713
Game reference
Bence BálizsGoaliesMatt DaltonReferees:
  Vladimír Pešina
  Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
  Maxime Chaput
  Daniel Hynek
Kóger (Szirányi, Hári) (PP2) – 23:451–0
1–135:43 – Kim K. (Kim S., Ahn)
1–246:31 – Shin S. (Seo, Swift)
1–355:13 – Sin
12 minPenalties10 min
23Shots33
25 April 2017
20:30
Ukraine  0–1
(0–0, 0–1, 0–0)
  AustriaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 5,005
Game reference
Eduard ZakharchenkoGoaliesBernhard StarkbaumReferees:
  Daniel Gamper
  Jacob Grumsen
Linesmen:
  Riley Bowles
  Daniel Persson
0–135:57 – Woger (Schumnig, Hundertpfund) (PP)
18 minPenalties12 min
26Shots43
26 April 2017
20:30
Kazakhstan  4–2
(2–0, 0–2, 2–0)
  UkrainePalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 4,806
Game reference
Vitali KolesnikGoaliesBogdan DyachenkoReferees:
  Andris Ansons
  Daniel Gamper
Linesmen:
  Daniel Hynek
  Ulrich Pardatscher
Dawes (Semyonov, Bochenski) – 03:211–0
St. Pierre (Bochenski, Boyd) (PP) – 19:592–0
2–134:25 – Nimenko (Pobiedonostsev, Lyalka)
2–235:16 – Babynets (Katrych, Varyvoda)
Mikhalis (Starchenko) – 41:593–2
Bochenski (Dawes, Stepavnov) (PP) – 57:044–2
8 minPenalties10 min
47Shots22
27 April 2017
17:00
Poland  2–0
(0–0, 2–0, 0–0)
  HungaryPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,874
Game reference
Przemysław OdrobnyGoaliesBence BálizsReferees:
  Daniel Gamper
  Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
  Franco Castelli
  Daniel Hynek
Zapała (Malasiński, Bryk) – 25:011–0
Malasiński (SH) – 25:502–0
14 minPenalties16 min
27Shots25
27 April 2017
20:30
Austria  5–0
(3–0, 1–0, 1–0)
  South KoreaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 3,511
Game reference
Bernhard StarkbaumGoaliesMatt Dalton
Park Sung-je
Referees:
  Andreas Harnebring
  Vladimír Pešina
Linesmen:
  Maxime Chaput
  Ulrich Pardatscher
Haudum – 12:091–0
Lebler (Ganahl, Hundertpfund) – 12:572–0
Heinrich (Lebler, Ganahl) – 16:263–0
Komarek (Heinrich, Raffl) – 24:364–0
Strong (Schlacher) – 49:095–0
4 minPenalties6 min
36Shots25
28 April 2017
13:30
Hungary  1–3
(1–2, 0–0, 0–1)
  KazakhstanPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 2,323
Game reference
Miklós RajnaGoaliesVitali KolesnikReferees:
  Andreas Harnebring
  Vladimír Pešina
Linesmen:
  Maxime Chaput
  Daniel Hynek
0–102:48 – Dallman (Dawes, Boyd)
0–210:25 – Mikhalis (Sagadeyev)
Sagert (Galló) (PP) – 17:341–2
1–359:47 – Dawes (Bochenski) (ENG)
8 minPenalties10 min
32Shots27
28 April 2017
17:00
Poland  0–11
(0–3, 0–4, 0–4)
  AustriaPalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 3,453
Game reference
Przemysław Odrobny
Rafał Radziszewski
GoaliesBernhard StarkbaumReferees:
  Roy Stian Hansen
  Jeremy Tufts
Linesmen:
  Riley Bowles
  Artem Korepanov
0–101:44 – M. Ulmer
0–207:01 – Lebler (Komarek, Hofer)
0–310:02 – Hofer (Raffl, Schumnig)
0–428:36 – Raffl (Heinrich, Schumnig) (PP)
0–529:07 – Haudum (S. Ulmer, Kirchschlager)
0–635:39 – Komarek (Hofer, Schumnig)
0–739:51 – Komarek (Haudum)
0–846:52 – Strong
0–948:27 – Haudum (Heinrich)
0–1050:31 – Lebler (Hundertpfund, Kirchschlager)
0–1155:20 – Lebler
4 minPenalties8 min
26Shots30
28 April 2017
20:30
South Korea  2–1 GWS
(0–0, 1–1, 0–0)
(OT 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
  UkrainePalace of Sports, Kyiv
Attendance: 5,327
Game reference
Matt DaltonGoaliesEduard ZakharchenkoReferees:
  Andris Ansons
  Jacob Grumsen
Linesmen:
  Franco Castelli
  Daniel Persson
Ahn (Sin, Park W.) – 24:591–0
1–133:24 – Babynets
Swift  
Cho  
Shin S.  
Shootout  Butsenko
  Lyalka
6 minPenalties6 min
37Shots23

Awards and statistics edit

Awards edit

 
The match between Poland and Ukraine. Poland won the game 2–1.

Source: IIHF.com

Source: IIHF.com

Scoring leaders edit

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
  Nigel Dawes 5 5 4 9 +5 0 F
  Konstantin Komarek 5 4 5 9 +10 0 F
  Brandon Bochenski 5 2 5 7 +3 4 F
  Thomas Raffl 5 3 3 6 +6 2 F
  Martin Schumnig 5 0 6 6 +8 0 D
  Brian Lebler 5 4 1 5 +7 4 F
  Ahn Jin-hui 5 2 3 5 +5 0 F
  Dominique Heinrich 5 2 3 5 +12 0 D
  Fabio Hofer 5 2 3 5 +7 2 F
  Lukas Haudum 5 3 1 4 +5 2 F
  Kim Ki-sung 5 3 1 4 +3 2 F

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Source: IIHF.com

Goaltending leaders edit

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.

Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
  Bernhard Starkbaum 299:05 4 0.80 137 97.08 3
  Eduard Zakharchenko 242:32 9 2.23 158 94.30 0
  Przemysław Odrobny 260:42 9 2.07 124 92.74 1
  Matt Dalton 269:36 10 2.23 133 92.48 0
  Vitali Kolesnik 301:39 10 1.99 128 92.19 1

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

Group B tournament edit

2017 IIHF World Championship Division I B
 
Tournament details
Host country  United Kingdom
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Dates23–29 April
Teams6
Tournament statistics
Games played15
Goals scored103 (6.87 per game)
Attendance21,208 (1,414 per game)
Scoring leader(s)  Daisuke Obara (10 points)
WebsiteIIHF.com

Participants edit

Team Qualification
  Japan Placed 6th in Division I A and was relegated.
  Great Britain Host, Placed 2nd in Division I B the previous year.
  Lithuania Placed 3rd in Division I B the previous year.
  Croatia Placed 4th in Division I B the previous year.
  Estonia Placed 5th in Division I B the previous year.
  Netherlands Placed 1st in Division II A the previous year and was promoted.

Match officials edit

4 referees and 7 linesmen were selected for the tournament.[5]

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1   Great Britain (H, P) 5 5 0 0 0 32 5 +27 15 Promoted to 2018 Division I A
2   Japan 5 4 0 0 1 22 11 +11 12
3   Lithuania 5 3 0 0 2 18 12 +6 9
4   Estonia 5 2 0 0 3 11 20 −9 6
5   Croatia 5 1 0 0 4 14 17 −3 3
6   Netherlands (R) 5 0 0 0 5 6 38 −32 0 Relegation to 2018 Division II A
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
(H) Host; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Results edit

All times are local (UTC+1).

23 April 2017
12:30
Netherlands  1–6
(0–2, 1–2, 0–2)
  JapanOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 943
Game reference
Fabian SchotelGoaliesYutaka FukufujiReferee:
  Milan Zrnic
Linesmen:
  Ally Flockhart
  Márton Németh
0–105:21 – H. Sato (Furuhashi, Takagi)
0–213:59 – Takagi (Furuhashi, Ushu)
0–324:15 – Furuhashi (Takagi, Ushu)
0–432:31 – Obara (Ueno, Haga)
Mason (Bruijsten, Van Haren) (PP) – 37:021–4
1–541:39 – Obara (Ueno, Hirano)
1–657:20 – Ueno (Obara, Minoshima)
4 minPenalties12 min
21Shots39
23 April 2017
16:00
Croatia  2–4
(0–1, 1–0, 1–3)
  Great BritainOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 1,830
Game reference
Mate TomljenovićGoaliesBen BownsReferee:
  Gergely Kincses
Linesmen:
  David Nothegger
  Alexander Sysuev
0–115:30 – Dowd (Richardson, Farmer) (PP)
Blagus (Brine, Perkovich) (PP) – 28:171–1
1–243:46 – Clarke (Peacock, Dowd)
1–346:45 – Mosey (Dowd)
Brine (Rendulić, Sertich) (PP2) – 54:252–3
2–458:56 – Cowley (Lachowicz, J. Phillips)
10 minPenalties16 min
32Shots35
23 April 2017
19:30
Estonia  0–3
(0–1, 0–2, 0–0)
  LithuaniaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 914
Game reference
Villem-Henrik KoitmaaGoaliesArtur PavliukovReferee:
  Milan Zrnic
Linesmen:
  James Kavanagh
  Mariusz Smura
0–114:28 – Rulevičius (Gintautas)
0–230:18 – Bendžius (Verenis)
0–337:56 – Čižas (Pliskauskas, Bosas)
16 minPenalties12 min
13Shots33
24 April 2017
12:30
Japan  4–2
(2–0, 1–0, 1–2)
  CroatiaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 351
Game reference
Yutaka FukufujiGoaliesVilim RosandićReferee:
  Geoffrey Barcelo
Linesmen:
  James Kavanagh
  Vladimir Suslov
Koizumi (Iwatsuki, Terao) – 08:401–0
S. Sato (Tanaka, H. Sato) (PP) – 16:402–0
Tanaka (S. Sato, Hashimoto) (PP) – 26:413–0
3–145:36 – Sertich (Brine, Vedlin) (PP)
Hirano (Minoshima, Haga) – 46:574–1
4–258:39 – Sertich (Rendulić, Perkovich) (PP2)
16 minPenalties24 min
31Shots31
24 April 2017
16:00
Lithuania  8–0
(2–0, 4–0, 2–0)
  NetherlandsOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 519
Game reference
Artur Pavliukov
Simas Baltrūnas
GoaliesSjoerd Idzenga
Fabian Schotel
Referee:
  Gergely Kincses
Linesmen:
  Ally Flockhart
  David Nothegger
Čypas (Rybakov, Bendžius) – 03:271–0
Rulevičius (Bogdziul, Protcenko) – 14:272–0
Čižas (Bosas, Pliskauskas) – 30:453–0
Krakauskas (Kaleinikovas, Cetvertak) – 34:484–0
Rybakov (Čypas, Verenis) – 35:265–0
Pliskauskas (Čižas, Protcenko) – 36:086–0
Bendžius (Verenis, Protcenko) – 42:357–0
Gintautas (Protcenko, Rulevičius) – 53:528–0
2 minPenalties10 min
48Shots25
24 April 2017
19:30
Great Britain  5–1
(2–0, 0–1, 3–0)
  EstoniaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 1,437
Game reference
Stephen MurphyGoaliesVillem-Henrik KoitmaaReferee:
  Kristijan Nikolic
Linesmen:
  Márton Németh
  Mariusz Smura
Garside (Clarke) – 04:381–0
D. Phillips (Myers, Shields) – 19:192–0
2–129:20 – Andrejev (Lahesalu, Makrov) (PP)
Stewart (Lee, Brooks) – 41:163–1
Clarke (Lee, Dowd) – 44:024–1
Mosey (Myers, Garside) – 44:285–1
10 minPenalties6 min
43Shots22
26 April 2017
12:30
Japan  6–2
(1–0, 3–1, 2–1)
  EstoniaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 575
Game reference
Yutaka Fukufuji
Takuto Onoda
GoaliesRoman ŠumihhinReferee:
  Kristijan Nikolic
Linesmen:
  James Kavanagh
  David Nothegger
Obara (Haga, Ueno) (PP) – 19:061–0
Minoshima (Hirano, Obara) – 20:432–0
Obara (Ueno, Hirano) (PP) – 31:483–0
Nakajima (H. Sato) – 33:294–0
4–134:26 – Embrich (Rooba, Makrov)
4–241:55 – Vasjonkin (Parras, Sorokin)
Ueno (Hirano, Obara) – 42:495–2
Tanaka (Terao, Hashimoto) – 44:136–2
31 minPenalties35 min
31Shots30
26 April 2017
16:00
Netherlands  2–6
(0–4, 1–1, 1–1)
  CroatiaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 703
Game reference
Fabian Schotel
Sjoerd Idzenga
GoaliesMate TomljenovićReferee:
  Milan Zrnic
Linesmen:
  Ally Flockhart
  Mariusz Smura
0–101:59 – Janković (Kanaet, Ljubić)
0–213:29 – Rendulić (Blagus, Jačmenjak) (PP)
0–313:41 – Miličić
0–413:50 – Jarčov (Brine, Perkovich)
0–521:35 – Blagus (Rendulić)
Van der Schuit (Melissant, Verschuren) – 37:251–5
Van der Schuit (Mason, Hermens) (PP2) – 55:252–5
2–658:33 – Rendulić (Šakić) (SH)
16 minPenalties8 min
25Shots47
26 April 2017
19:30
Great Britain  5–2
(4–1, 0–0, 1–1)
  LithuaniaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 1,787
Game reference
Ben BownsGoaliesArtur PavliukovReferee:
  Geoffrey Barcelo
Linesmen:
  Alexander Sysuev
  Vladimir Suslov
Shields (O'Connor, Richardson) (PP) – 01:411–0
1–102:12 – Bosas (Pliskauskas, Kieras) (PP)
J. Phillips (Swindlehurst, Mosey) – 07:262–1
Mosey – 12:553–1
Farmer (O'Connor) (PP) – 16:154–1
4–240:33 – Čižas (Bosas, Kieras)
O'Connor – 47:475–2
14 minPenalties8 min
38Shots30
28 April 2017
12:30
Lithuania  2–6
(0–1, 2–2, 0–3)
  JapanOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 811
Game reference
Artur PavliukovGoaliesYutaka Fukufuji
Takuto Onoda
Referee:
  Gergely Kincses
Linesmen:
  Ally Flockhart
  Alexander Sysuev
0–102:23 – Furuhashi (Hirano, Obara)
Krakauskas (Kaleinikovas) – 21:521–1
1–223:47 – Obara (Hirano)
Kaleinikovas (Katulis, Krakauskas) – 25:162–2
2–332:50 – Takagi (Haga, Obara) (PP)
2–447:13 – Nakayashiki (Iwatsuki, Nishiwaki)
2–547:52 – Takagi (Ushu)
2–654:51 – Tanaka (S. Sato)
16 minPenalties8 min
27Shots42
28 April 2017
16:00
Croatia  3–4
(0–1, 3–2, 0–1)
  EstoniaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 922
Game reference
Mate TomljenovićGoaliesVillem-Henrik KoitmaaReferee:
  Geoffrey Barcelo
Linesmen:
  Márton Németh
  Vladimir Suslov
0–105:04 – Makrov (Lahesalu, Rooba) (PP)
Blagus (Jačmenjak, Rendulić) (PP) – 22:181–1
1–226:45 – Rooba (Novikov, A. Petrov)
1–328:06 – Sibirtsev (Andrejev, Titarenko)
Kanaet (Rendulić, Jačmenjak) – 30:252–3
Rendulić (Blagus) (PP) – 38:013–3
3–440:23 – Makrov (Rooba)
4 minPenalties35 min
35Shots25
28 April 2017
19:30
Great Britain  14–0
(3–0, 5–0, 6–0)
  NetherlandsOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 3,005
Game reference
Stephen MurphyGoaliesSjoerd Idzenga
Fabian Schotel
Referee:
  Milan Zrnic
Linesmen:
  David Nothegger
  Mariusz Smura
Shields (O'Connor, Richardson) (PP) – 04:141–0
J. Phillips – 04:502–0
Duggan (Lachowicz) – 18:393–0
Brooks (Farmer) – 21:344–0
Peacock (Brooks, Weaver) (PP) – 31:025–0
Lachowicz (J. Phillips, Duggan) – 31:236–0
Shields (Myers) – 32:177–0
Duggan (Lachowicz) – 34:518–0
Stewart (Mosey, Shields) – 43:259–0
Dowd (Clarke, Weaver) (PP) – 47:2310–0
Shields (Mosey) – 49:3211–0
Myers (Mosey, Garside) – 53:0012–0
Brooks (Stewart, Farmer) – 54:1613–0
Dowd (Clarke) – 56:1614–0
10 minPenalties12 min
56Shots11
29 April 2017
12:30
Lithuania  3–1
(1–1, 1–0, 1–0)
  CroatiaOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 1,343
Game reference
Artur PavliukovGoaliesVilim RosandićReferee:
  Gergely Kincses
Linesmen:
  Alexander Sysuev
  Vladimir Suslov
0–110:18 – Mikulić (Brenčun, Mirić)
Kieras (Pliskauskas, Bosas) (PP) – 16:411–1
Protcenko (Aliukonis, Rybakov) – 24:232–1
Čižas (Bosas) – 45:133–1
6 minPenalties10 min
26Shots26
29 April 2017
16:00
Estonia  4–3
(1–2, 1–1, 2–0)
  NetherlandsOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 1,608
Game reference
Villem-Henrik KoitmaaGoaliesFabian SchotelReferee:
  Geoffrey Barcelo
Linesmen:
  James Kavanagh
  Mariusz Smura
0–115:12 – Van Nes (Nagtzaam)
0–216:43 – Melissant (Van der Schuit)
Rooba (Ossipov, Makrov) (PP) – 17:541–2
1–328:40 – Bruijsten (Mason, Nagtzaam)
Rooba (Lahesalu, A. Petrov) – 37:082–3
A. Petrov (Makrov, Lahesalu) – 47:583–3
Rooba (Gornostajev, Švarõgin) – 53:384–3
56 minPenalties62 min
35Shots24
29 April 2017
19:30
Japan  0–4
(0–1, 0–3, 0–0)
  Great BritainOdyssey, Belfast
Attendance: 4,460
Game reference
Yutaka FukufujiGoaliesBen BownsReferee:
  Kristijan Nikolic
Linesmen:
  Márton Németh
  David Nothegger
0–117:42 – Dowd (Farmer, O'Connor) (PP2)
0–224:37 – Brooks (Dowd, Clarke) (PP)
0–329:19 – Myers (Shields, D. Phillips)
0–437:55 – Myers (Mosey, Shields)
14 minPenalties6 min
20Shots38

Awards and statistics edit

Awards edit

Source: IIHF.com

Scoring leaders edit

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
  Daisuke Obara 5 5 5 10 +7 4 F
  Robert Dowd 5 4 4 8 +6 4 F
  Colin Shields 5 4 4 8 +9 2 F
  Evan Mosey 5 3 5 8 +10 2 F
  Borna Rendulić 5 3 5 8 +1 16 F
  Robert Rooba 5 4 3 7 −4 25 F
  Yushiroh Hirano 5 1 6 7 +7 2 F
  Matthew Myers 5 3 3 6 +6 4 F
  David Clarke 5 2 4 6 +5 2 F
  Andrei Makrov 5 2 4 6 −2 10 F
  Hiroki Ueno 5 2 4 6 +6 4 F

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Source: IIHF.com

Goaltending leaders edit

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.

Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
  Stephen Murphy 120:00 1 0.50 33 96.97 1
  Ben Bowns 180:00 4 1.33 82 95.12 1
  Yutaka Fukufuji 280:04 11 2.36 140 92.14 0
  Artur Pavliukov 287:42 12 2.50 136 91.18 1
  Villem-Henrik Koitmaa 234:24 14 3.58 135 89.63 0

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Tournaments Assigned". iihfworlds2016.com. 23 May 2016. Archived from the original on 27 April 2017. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  2. ^ Merk, Martin (29 April 2017). "Korea Promoted!". IIHF.com. Archived from the original on 10 May 2018. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Belfast wins bid to host 2017 World Ice Hockey Championship competition". BBC.co.uk. 23 May 2016.
  4. ^ IA Assignsments
  5. ^ IB Assignsments