2009 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

Summary

The 2009 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (2009 WJHC), was the 33rd edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship and was played in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, between December 26, 2008 and January 5, 2009.[1][2] Games were held at the Ottawa Civic Centre and Scotiabank Place.[3] The tournament set a record for WJC attendance at 453,282. Canada won the gold medal for a record-tying fifth consecutive time. No country would win back-to-back gold until the 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships when Canada won the 2022 and 2023 tournaments respectively.[4][5]

2009 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country Canada
CityOttawa
Venue(s)Scotiabank Place and
Ottawa Civic Centre (in 1 host city)
DatesDecember 26, 2008 – January 5, 2009
Teams10
Final positions
Champions  Canada (15th title)
Runner-up  Sweden
Third place  Russia
Fourth place Slovakia
Tournament statistics
Games played31
Goals scored241 (7.77 per game)
Attendance453,282 (14,622 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Canada Cody Hodgson (16 points)
MVPCanada John Tavares
← 2008
2010 →

Bid process edit

Five potential bid groups formally submitted their bids before the March 31, 2006, deadline and made their final presentations to the selection committee in Calgary on April 18, 2006:[6]

On May 3, 2006, Hockey Canada and the Canadian Hockey League announced that Ottawa was chosen to host the 2009 tournament.[7]

Venues edit

Scotiabank Place
Capacity: 19,153
Ottawa Civic Centre
Capacity: 9,862
   
  Canada – Ottawa   Canada – Ottawa

Top Division edit

Preliminary round edit

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Canada 4 4 0 0 0 35 6 +29 12 Semifinals
2   United States 4 3 0 0 1 28 12 +16 9 Quarterfinals
3   Czech Republic 4 2 0 0 2 20 14 +6 6
4   Germany 4 1 0 0 3 12 19 −7 3 Relegation round
5   Kazakhstan 4 0 0 0 4 2 46 −44 0
Source: IIHF
Results

All times are local (Eastern Time ZoneUTC−5).[8]

December 26, 2008
15:30
Germany  2–8
(1–2, 0–3, 1–3)
  United StatesScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,795 (98.1%)
Game reference
Toni Ritter 12:08
Patrick Pohl 53:51
Goals08:23 (PP1) Colin Wilson
17:51 Drayson Bowman
20:20 Jordan Schroeder
32:43 (PP1) James van Riemsdyk
34:27 Tyler Johnson
40:35 James van Riemsdyk
46:26 Drayson Bowman
59:59 Matt Rust
December 26, 2008
19:30
Canada  8–1
(1–0, 4–0, 3–1)
  Czech RepublicScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 19,622 (102.4%)
Game reference
John Tavares (J. Eberle, R. Ellis (PP1) – 19:56
J. Tavares (J. Eberle, C. Hodgson) (PP1) – 22:09
A. Esposito (J. Tavares) – 27:08
R. Ellis (Z. Boychuk, C. Hodgson) – 28:13
T. Ennis (B. Sonne) – 33:33
C. DiDomenico (T. Ennis, Z. Boychuk) – 42:08
Z. Boychuk – 48:18
A. Pietrangelo (R. Ellis, C. DiDomenico) – 51:51
Goals58:00 – J. Káňa (O. Roman)
6 minPenalties10 min
37Shots22
December 27, 2008
15:30
Kazakhstan  0–9
(0–3, 0–4, 0–2)
  GermanyScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,305 (95.6%)
Game reference
Goals04:43 Simon Fischhaber
08:31 Jerome Flaake
18:45 André Huebscher
21:52 Daniel Weiß
22:06 Steven Rupprich
23:16 Gerrit Fauser
27:56 Marco Nowak
51:21 Jerome Flaake
57:15 Conor Morrison
December 28, 2008
15:30
Kazakhstan  0–15
(0–4, 0–5, 0–6)
  CanadaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 19,176 (100.1%)
Game reference
Goals01:29 – J. Eberle (C. Hodgson)
08:48 – (PP1) J. Benn (A. Pietrangelo)
15:53 – (PP2) J. Benn (J. Tavares, C. Hodgson
17:26 – P. Subban (J. Tavares)
21:36 – C. Hodgson (P. Subban)
24:11 – (PP1) C. DiDomenico (T. Hickey, T. Ennis)
24:41 – J. Benn (P. Subban, T. Ennis)
32:32 – (PP1) T. Ennis (J. Benn, C. DiDomenico)
34:52 – (PP1) J. Tavares (C. Hodgson, J. Eberle)
40:50 – E. Kane (P. Cormier, K. Aulie)
51:29 – J. Tavares
52:15 – C. Hodgson (J. Eberle, Z. Boychuk)
54:17 – (PP1) P. Subban (C. Hodgson)
56:02 – (PP1) S. Della Rovere (E. Kane, T. Hickey)
59:17 – (PP2) T. Myers (J. Benn, C. Goloubef)
43 minPenalties2 min
11Shots69
December 28, 2008
19:30
United States  4–3
(1–0, 2–1, 1–2)
  Czech RepublicScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 19,847 (103.6%)
Game reference
J. Schroeder (K. Shattenkirk, C. Wilson) (PP1) – 13:00
M. Rust (J. Blum) – 31:46
J. van Riemsdyk (K. Shattenkirk, J. Schroeder) (PP1) – 38:34
J. Schroeder (J. van Riemsdyk) – 43:43
Goals25:14 – O. Roman (Z. Okál, R. Gudas)
47:02 – M. Parýzek (R. Szturc, T. Kubalík)
56:43 – (PP1) J. Káňa (T. Kundrátek, O. Roman)
14 minPenalties6 min
27Shots27
December 29, 2008
19:30
Germany  1–5
(0–1, 1–1, 0–3)
  CanadaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 19,326 (100.9%)
Game reference
David Wolf (PP1) 28:40Goals07:21 (PP1) Zach Boychuk
25:57 (PP1) Jamie Benn
41:04 Evander Kane
51:25 (PP1) John Tavares
55:57 (PP1) Zach Boychuk
December 30, 2008
15:30
Czech Republic  6–0
(2–0, 1–0, 3–0)
  GermanyScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 17,976 (93.9%)
Game reference
David Štich (PP1) 13:19
Zdeněk Okál (PP1) 15:23
Ondřej Roman 35:58
Tomáš Knotek 44:02
Radko Gudas (PP1) 47:56
Ondřej Roman 49:13
Goals
December 30, 2008
19:30
United States  12–0
(3–0, 5–0, 4–0)
  KazakhstanScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,288 (95.5%)
Game reference
Ian Cole (PP1) 16:27
Aaron Palushaj 17:07
Drayson Bowman 18:59
Colin Wilson 20:52
Colin Wilson 21:11
James van Riemsdyk (PP1) 25:34
Danny Kristo 27:12
Aaron Palushaj (PP1) 32:28
Mike Hoeffel (PP2) 50:08
Jimmy Hayes 53:59
Mitch Wahl 55:02
Matt Rust 59:55
Goals
December 31, 2008
15:30
Czech Republic  10–2
(6–1, 4–0, 0–1)
  KazakhstanScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 17,664 (92.2%)
Game reference
Tomáš Knotek 01:49
Roman Szturc 05:48
Jan Káňa 08:17
Vladimír Růžička 10:14
Vladimír Růžička 12:51
Tomáš Knotek (PP1) 15:51
Zdeněk Okál 25:55
Jan Káňa (PP1) 26:31
Jan Káňa 32:34
Jan Káňa (PP1) 36:00
Goals07:17 Oleg Onichshenko
51:08 (SH1) Konstantin Savenkov
December 31, 2008
19:30
Canada  7–4
(3–3, 2–1, 2–0)
  United StatesScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 20,223 (105.6%)
Game reference
John Tavares (PP1) 14:55
John Tavares 15:43
Jordan Eberle (PP1) 18:10
Zach Boychuk (PP1) 20:37
Cody Hodgson (PP1) 26:56
John Tavares (ENG) 59:13
Tyler Ennis (ENG) 59:50
Goals03:49 Kevin Shattenkirk
07:15 (PP2) Jimmy Hayes
12:35 Jim O'Brien
23:40 (PP1) Jonathon Blum

Group B edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Sweden 4 4 0 0 0 21 3 +18 12 Semifinals
2   Russia 4 3 0 0 1 17 9 +8 9 Quarterfinals
3   Slovakia 4 1 1 0 2 12 15 −3 5
4   Finland 4 1 0 1 2 10 12 −2 4 Relegation round
5   Latvia 4 0 0 0 4 5 26 −21 0
Source: IIHF
Results

All times are local (Eastern Time ZoneUTC−5).[8]

December 26, 2008
14:30
Latvia  1–4
(0–1, 0–1, 1–2)
  RussiaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,441 (95.7%)
Game reference
Jānis Ozoliņš 58:03Goals16:56 (PP1) Vyacheslav Voinov
31:38 Pavel Chernov
47:01 Maxim Goncharov
59:48 Dmitri Klopov
December 26, 2008
18:30
Finland  1–3
(0–2, 1–0, 0–1)
  SwedenOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,658 (97.9%)
Game reference
Toni Rajala 21:12Goals09:15 Marcus Johansson
12:38 David Rundblad
59:20 (ENG) Mikael Backlund
December 27, 2008
18:30
Slovakia  7–2
(2–2, 3–0, 2–0)
  LatviaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,370 (95.0%)
Game reference
Radoslav Tybor (PP1) 01:54
Ondrej Rusnák (PP1) 16:26
Marek Hrivík 33:20
Ondrej Rusnák (PP1) 33:58
Radoslav Tybor 38:21
Tomáš Tatar 42:12
Adam Bezák (SH1) 47:34
Goals07:29 Jānis Straupe
14:05 (PP1) Ronalds Cinks
December 28, 2008
14:30
Russia  5–2
(3–1, 1–1, 1–0)
  FinlandOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,715 (98.5%)
Game reference
Nikita Filatov 07:56
Evgeni Dadonov 08:34
Dmitri Klopov 11:29
Nikita Filatov 29:56
Dmitri Klopov (PP1) 58:14
Goals05:10 Jani Lajunen
23:55 (PP1) Joonas Nättinen
December 28, 2008
18:30
Sweden  3–1
(2–0, 1–0, 0–1)
  SlovakiaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,726 (98.6%)
Game reference
Simon Hjalmarsson 01:02
Mikael Backlund (PP1) 14:42
Erik Karlsson 33:30
Goals45:33 (PP1) Martin Uhnák
December 29, 2008
14:30
Latvia  1–10
(1–5, 0–1, 0–4)
  SwedenOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,622 (97.6%)
Game reference
Roberts Jekimovs 19:53Goals02:13 (PP1) Mattias Tedenby
09:15 Magnus Pääjärvi-Svensson
13:42 André Petersson
17:39 Magnus Pääjärvi-Svensson
19:10 Nicklas Lasu
26:31 Simon Hjalmarsson
40:33 Joakim Andersson
41:33 (PP1) Erik Karlsson
48:31 (PP1) David Ullström
49:18 Nicklas Lasu
December 30, 2008
14:30
Russia  8–1
(2–1, 4–0, 2–0)
  SlovakiaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,419 (95.5%)
Game reference
Nikita Filatov 2:12
Maxim Goncharov (PP1) 18:34
Maxim Goncharov 21:05
Nikita Filatov (PP1) 24:29
Igor Golovkov 28:32
Nikita Filatov (PP1) 29:15
Sergei Andronov 55:37
Sergei Korostin 56:52
Goals13:12 Adam Bezák
December 30, 2008
18:30
Finland  5–1
(2–0, 3–1, 0–0)
  LatviaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,376 (95.1%)
Game reference
Tomi Sallinen (PP1) 02:03
Nestori Lähde 14:25
Mikael Granlund 23:58
Mikael Granlund (PP2) 27:17
Antti Roppo 30:34
Goals34:03 (PP2) Roberts Jekimovs
December 31, 2008
14:30
Sweden  5–0
(4–0, 0–0, 1–0)
  RussiaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,675 (98.1%)
Game reference
André Petersson 05:01
Simon Hjalmarsson 10:00
André Petersson (PP1) 16:50
Mikael Backlund (PP1) 17:31
Marcus Johansson 43:55
Goals
December 31, 2008
18:30
Slovakia  3–2 GWS
(0–0, 1–2, 1–0)
OT: 0–0, GWS: 1–0
  FinlandOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,312 (94.4%)
Game reference
Richard Pánik (PP1) 30:36
Adam Bezák 48:32
Tomáš Tatar (GWG) 65:00
Goals24:40 (PP2) Niclas Lucenius
37:37 Nestori Lähde

Relegation round edit

The results from matches between teams from the same group in the preliminary round are carried forward to this round.

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Relegation
7   Finland 3 3 0 0 0 15 3 +12 9
8   Latvia 3 2 0 0 1 15 7 +8 6
9   Germany 3 1 0 0 2 11 10 +1 3 Relegated to the 2010 Division I
10   Kazakhstan 3 0 0 0 3 2 23 −21 0
Source: IIHF

Results edit

All times are local (Eastern Time ZoneUTC−5).[8]

January 2, 2009
18:30
Germany  1–7
(1–1, 0–5, 0–1)
  LatviaOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,888 (100.2%)
Game reference
Daniel Weiß 7:06Goals7:34 Roberts Bukarts
25:23 Roberts Bukarts
27:55 Jānis Straupe
28:57 Roberts Bukarts
29:28 (SH1) Vitālijs Pavlovs
36:01 Aldis Pizāns
44:44 Ronalds Cinks
January 3, 2009
18:30
Finland  7–1
(3–0, 2–1, 2–0)
  KazakhstanOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,180 (93.1%)
Game reference
Jyri Niemi 00:22
Joonas Rask 06:29
Tomi Sallinen 16:32
Antti Roppo (SH1) 27:26
Teemu Hartikainen (PP1) 39:09
Toni Rajala (PP2) 44:33
Teemu Hartikainen (PP1) 54:13
Goals21:03 Konstantin Savenkov
January 4, 2009
14:30
Finland  3–1
(2–0, 0–1, 1–0)
  GermanyOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,192 (93.2%)
Game reference
Tommi Kivistö 12:40
Teemu Hartikainen 13:02
Jyri Niemi (PP1) 41:31
Goals29:39 Jerome Flaake
January 4, 2009
18:30
Latvia  7–1
(1–0, 1–0, 5–1)
  KazakhstanOttawa Civic Centre (capacity: 9,862)
Attendance: 9,173 (93.0%)
Game reference
Roberts Jekimovs 12:53
Jānis Ozoliņš 29:10
Roberts Bukarts (SH1) 41:34
Artjoms Ogorodņikovs 48:43
Ralfs Freibergs 55:15
Artjoms Ogorodņikovs (PP1) 57:58
Roberts Jekimovs (PP1) 59:49
Goals55:01 Konstantin Savenkov

Final round edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
B3   Slovakia 3
A2   United States 3 B1   Sweden 5
B3   Slovakia 5 WSF1   Sweden 1
WSF2   Canada 5
B2   Russia 5
B2   Russia 5 A1   Canada (GWS) 6
A3   Czech Republic 1 Third place
LSF1   Slovakia 2
LSF2   Russia 5

Quarterfinals edit

January 2, 2009
15:30
United States  3–5
(1–3, 0–0, 2–2)
  SlovakiaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,042 (94.2%)
Game reference
Ian Cole (PP1) 12:01
Jonathon Blum (PP1) 45:31
James van Riemsdyk 58:42
Goals11:05 Adam Bezák
13:41 Tomáš Tatar
17:53 Jozef Molnár
51:38 Richard Pánik
57:46 (ENG) Tomáš Tatar
January 2, 2009
19:30
Russia  5–1
(1–0, 0–0, 4–1)
  Czech RepublicScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,753 (97.9%)
Game reference
Sergei Andronov (PP1) 11:53
Nikita Filatov 41:25
Evgeny Grachev (SH2) 47:26
Evgeni Dadonov 54:02
Pavel Chernov (PP1) 59:29
Goals48:01 (PP2) Radko Gudas

Semifinals edit

January 3, 2009
15:30
Sweden  5–3
(0–1, 1–1, 4–1)
  SlovakiaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,112 (94.6%)
Game reference
Mikael Backlund 30:19
Mikael Backlund (PP1) 47:04
David Ullström 48:52
Simon Hjalmarsson 51:42
Oscar Möller (ENG) 58:43
Goals19:56 (PP1) Marek Mertel
35:47 Tomáš Tatar
55:58 Tomáš Tatar
January 3, 2009
19:30
Canada  6–5 GWS
(2–2, 1–0, 2–3)
OT: 0–0, GWS: 1–0
  RussiaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 19,327 (100.9%)
Game reference
Brett Sonne 02:02
Patrice Cormier 07:04
Jordan Eberle (PP1) 36:40
Angelo Esposito (SH1) 45:44
Jordan Eberle 59:55
Jordan Eberle (GWG) 70:00
Goals05:18 Maxim Goncharov
07:20 Dmitri Klopov
40:51 Evgeny Grachev
46:22 (PP2) Sergei Andronov
57:40 Dmitri Klopov

5th place playoff edit

January 4, 2009
19:30
United States  3–2 OT
(1–0, 0–0, 1–2)
OT: 1–0
  Czech RepublicScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 17,936 (93.6%)
Game reference
Eric Tangradi 08:36
Cade Fairchild 53:02
James van Riemsdyk 62:49
Goals42:23 Zdeněk Okál
50:59 Ondřej Roman

3rd place playoff edit

January 5, 2009
15:30
Russia  5–2
(1–0, 2–1, 2–1)
  SlovakiaScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 18,763 (98.0%)
Game reference
04:30 Pavel Chernov
25:56 Maxim Goncharov
39:28 Nikita Filatov
51:11 Nikita Filatov
58:07 (ENG) Dmitri Kugryshev
GoalsMartin Štajnoch 30:14
Tomáš Tatar (PP1) 57:01

Final edit

January 5, 2009
19:30
Canada  5–1
(1–0, 1–0, 3–1)
  SwedenScotiabank Place (capacity: 19,153)
Attendance: 20,380 (106.4%)
Game reference
00:38 P. K. Subban (PP1)
24:06 Angelo Esposito
40:33 Cody Hodgson (PP1)
58:07 (ENG) Jordan Eberle
59:28 (ENG) Cody Hodgson
GoalsJoakim Andersson 48:30

Top 10 scorers edit

Pos Player Country GP G A Pts +/- PIM
1 Cody Hodgson   Canada 6 5 11 16 +8 2
2 John Tavares   Canada 6 8 7 15 +7 0
3 Jordan Eberle   Canada 6 6 7 13 +9 2
4 Nikita Filatov   Russia 7 8 3 11 +3 6
5 Tomáš Tatar   Slovakia 7 7 4 11 -2 4
6 Jordan Schroeder   United States 6 3 8 11 +1 2
7 James van Riemsdyk   United States 6 6 4 10 +1 4
8 Jan Káňa   Czech Republic 6 6 3 9 +2 0
9 Teemu Hartikainen   Finland 6 3 6 9 +4 4
9 P. K. Subban   Canada 6 3 6 9 +12 6
9 Colin Wilson   United States 6 3 6 9 +1 4
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes
Source:[9]

Goaltending leaders edit

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)

Pos Player Country MINS GA Sv% GAA SO
1 Jacob Markström   Sweden 298 8 .943 1.61 1
2 Juha Metsola   Finland 245 6 .939 1.47 0
3 Vadim Zhelobnyuk   Russia 292 11 .925 2.26 0
4 Dustin Tokarski   Canada 248 11 .906 2.65 1
5 Nauris Enkuzens   Latvia 346 25 .903 4.33 0

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts Source:[10]
09:50, 6 January 2009 (UTC)

Tournament awards edit

Source:[11]

Most Valuable Player
All-star team
IIHF best player awards

Final standings edit

Team
    Canada
    Sweden
    Russia
4th   Slovakia
5th   United States
6th   Czech Republic
7th   Finland
8th   Latvia
9th   Germany
10th   Kazakhstan
Relegated to the 2010 Division I

Division I edit

The Division I Championships were played between December 14 and December 20, 2008 in Herisau, Switzerland (Group A),[12] and between December 15 and December 21, 2008 in Aalborg, Denmark (Group B).[13]

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1    Switzerland (H) 5 5 0 0 0 31 7 +24 15 Promoted to the 2010 Top Division
2   Belarus 5 4 0 0 1 39 7 +32 12
3   France 5 3 0 0 2 33 17 +16 9
4   Slovenia 5 2 0 0 3 31 17 +14 6
5   Poland 5 1 0 0 4 7 23 −16 3
6   Estonia 5 0 0 0 5 6 76 −70 0 Relegated to the 2010 Division II
Source: IIHF
(H) Host

Group B edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1   Austria 5 4 0 1 0 28 9 +19 13 Promoted to the 2010 Top Division
2   Denmark (H) 5 4 0 0 1 16 13 +3 12
3   Norway 5 2 1 0 2 14 17 −3 8
4   Italy 5 2 1 0 2 14 10 +4 8
5   Ukraine 5 1 0 0 4 10 16 −6 3
6   Hungary 5 0 0 1 4 11 28 −17 1 Relegated to the 2010 Division II
Source: IIHF
(H) Host

Division II edit

The Division II Championships were played between December 15 and December 21, 2008 in Miercurea Ciuc, Romania (Group A),[14] and between January 10 and January 15, 2009 in Logroño, Spain (Group B).[15]

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion
1   Japan 5 4 0 0 1 45 11 +34 12 Promoted to the 2010 Division I
2   Lithuania 5 4 0 0 1 35 9 +26 12
3   South Korea 5 2 2 0 1 19 18 +1 10
4   Belgium 5 2 0 0 3 17 32 −15 6
5   Serbia 5 0 1 1 3 10 33 −23 3
6   Romania (H) 5 0 0 2 3 9 32 −23 2
Source: IIHF
(H) Host

Group B edit

  China, having been relegated to Division III in 2008, was returned to Division II after   New Zealand forfeited due to finances.[16]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion
1   Croatia 5 5 0 0 0 34 15 +19 15 Promoted to the 2010 Division I
2   Great Britain 5 4 0 0 1 29 10 +19 12
3   Netherlands 5 3 0 0 2 28 12 +16 9
4   Mexico 5 2 0 0 3 11 27 −16 6
5   Spain (H) 5 1 0 0 4 12 19 −7 3
6   China 5 0 0 0 5 9 40 −31 0
Source: IIHF
(H) Host
 
Croatian national team, winners of Group B.

Division III edit

The Division III tournament was to have been played in North Korea, but was cancelled.[16] The Division III was scheduled to include the following:[17]

Team Qualification
  Iceland Placed 6th in Division II Group A last year and was relegated.
  China Placed 6th in Division II Group B last year and was relegated,

but returned to Division II after   New Zealand forfeited.

  Australia Placed 4th in Division III last year.
  Turkey Placed 6th in Division III last year.
  Bulgaria Placed 7th in Division III last year.
  North Korea Hosts, first appearance since 1993.

References edit

  1. ^ "2009 IIHF World U20 Championship official website". Archived from the original on 2018-08-17. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  2. ^ 2009 IIHF World U20 Championship statistics
  3. ^ "2009 World Championship Program". iihf.com. Archived from the original on 24 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-04.
  4. ^ "Canada Defeats Sweden to Win Fifth Straight WJHC Gold". TSN. 2009-01-05. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  5. ^ "Schedule announced for 2009 IIHF World Junior Championship in Ottawa".
  6. ^ "Hockey Canada announces bid finalists for the 2009 IIHF World Junior Championship". hockeycanada.ca. April 10, 2006. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  7. ^ "Ottawa chosen to host 2009 IIHF World Junior Championship". hockeycanada.ca. May 3, 2006. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  8. ^ a b c "2009 World Junior Schedule". tsn.ca. Retrieved 2008-06-04.
  9. ^ "Scoring Leaders as of 06.01.2009" (PDF). IIHF.
  10. ^ "Goalkeepers as of 06.01.2009" (PDF). IIHF.
  11. ^ "Tavares named MVP". IIHF. January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
  12. ^ Division I Group A statistics
  13. ^ Division I Group B statistics
  14. ^ Division II Group A statistics
  15. ^ Division II Group B statistics
  16. ^ a b "Championnat du monde des moins de 20 ans 2008/2009". Retrieved 6 January 2011.
  17. ^ "2009 IIHF Championship Program". International Ice Hockey Federation. Archived from the original on 30 July 2008. Retrieved 2015-04-13.

External links edit

  • Official website of IIHF