2011 IIHF World Championship

Summary

The 2011 IIHF World Championship was the 75th IIHF World Championship, an annual international men's ice hockey tournament. It took place between 29 April and 15 May 2011 in Slovakia. The games were played in the Orange Arena in Bratislava, and the Steel Aréna in Košice. The Czech team was the defending champion.

2011 IIHF World Championship
Tournament details
Host country Slovakia
Dates29 April – 15 May
Opened byIvan Gašparovič
Teams16
Final positions
Champions  Finland (2nd title)
Runner-up  Sweden
Third place  Czech Republic
Fourth place Russia
Tournament statistics
Games played56
Goals scored325 (5.8 per game)
Attendance406,804 (7,264 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Finland Jarkko Immonen (12 points)
MVPSweden Viktor Fasth
← 2010
2012 →

This was the first time the independent Slovakia hosted the World Championships. However, this was the third time that Bratislava co-hosted the World Championships. The first two times were 1959 and 1992, each time with Prague, and while part of Czechoslovakia.

Finland won the gold medal after beating Sweden in the final 6–1. This was the second title for Finland, and the most lopsided final since the knockout playoff format was introduced in 1992.

Tournament format edit

The tournament is divided into four stages. The preliminary round, qualification round and relegation round use a round-robin format with each team playing every other team in its group once. The winner of a game in regulation time will earn 3 points, with the loser earning zero points. The winner of a game decided in overtime or in a shootout will be awarded 2 points, with the loser getting one point. Teams in the preliminary round are divided into four groups of four teams each; the last-place team in each group moves to the relegation round while the remainder move to the qualification round. The qualification round is divided into two groups of six teams each with the top four teams in each group moving to the playoff round. Games played in the preliminary round against teams in the same qualification round group count for the qualification round standings; therefore, teams who were previously in the same Preliminary round group do not play each other again in the qualification round. The relegation round is a single group of four teams with the bottom 2 teams being relegated to Division I of the World Championships. The tournament concludes with the playoff round, which is an 8-team tournament, to determine the winners of the gold, silver and bronze medals.

In the event of a tie in points at the conclusion of the preliminary, qualification or relegation rounds, the following tie-breaker format will be used:

  1. Points earned in games against tied teams
  2. Goal differential in games against tied teams
  3. Highest number of goals in games against tied teams
  4. Repetition of steps 1, 2 and 3, in order, including results against the next closest ranked team to the tied teams
  5. Repetition of step 4, including the next closest ranked teams one at a time
  6. 2010 IIHF World Ranking

[1]

Rosters edit

Each team's roster for the 2011 IIHF World Championship consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 20 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All sixteen participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting on 28 April 2011.[2]

Summary edit

Preliminary round edit

 
Match between Russia and Slovenia (Group A), 1 May 2011

The first gameday in Group A started with an upset, when Germany went on to win 2–0 against Russia after goals from Thomas Greilinger in the second period and Patrick Reimer, who decided the game with a goal two minutes before the final horn.[3] It was the first win for the German team over Russia in a World Championship and the first one since the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer. After the second gameday, the group was decided in the outcome who advances and who would battle against relegation. Germany pulled another surprise victory over host Slovakia; after being down 4–0, Slovakia started a comeback but could only cut the deficit to one, losing by a final of 4–3. Germany was the group winner and advanced alongside Slovakia and Russia into the second round, while Slovenia finished fourth and went to the relegation round.[4] The last time Germany won a preliminary round group was 78 years ago, in 1933.

Group B saw the first overtime of the tournament in a game between Switzerland and France. Julien Vauclair scored the decisive goal after 1:46 minutes played in overtime.[5] Canada defeated Switzerland after overtime to capture first place,[6] while France won against Belarus to go through to the qualifying round and sent Belarus to the relegation round.[7]

In Group C, Sweden played against Norway and it was a back-and-forth game. Sweden went up 3–1 in the first period, but Norway fought back and at the end it was 4–4 after 60 minutes. The overtime went scoreless and so it went into a shootout; Per-Åge Skrøder scored on the first try for Norway and Eriksson missed on the first for Sweden and so Norway won 5–4, making it their first win against the Scandinavian rival in World Championship history.[8] Sweden and the US team both got their second wins as the United States came back from being down 0–2 to win 4–2 against Norway.[9] On the last gameday, Sweden captured the top seed in the group after a 6–2 win over the USA.[10] Norway followed those two in the qualifying round after a 5–0 win over Austria, who found themselves in the relegation round.[11]

Group D saw two wins from the respective favorites at the start: Finland and the Czech Republic. The picture was the same on the second game day, though Finland needed a shootout against Latvia to win 3–2. Jarkko Immonen scored the game-winning goal.[12] Denmark needed a win over Latvia to advance and they got one after a shootout; 3–2 was the result, Latvia then saw themselves facing the relegation.[13]

Qualifying round edit

Every game in Group E was close, each was decided by one goal. The Czech team was still perfect after their fifth win, defeating Russia 3–2. Alongside them, Germany, Russia and Finland qualified for the quarterfinals and the Czech team was set to win the group with one more game to play.[14] The host Slovakia was eliminated after losing to Finland 1–2.[15] After the last game day, the Czech team was still perfect after winning 5–2 against Germany.[16]

In Group F, Canada and Sweden played each other to determine the group winner, and the United States also qualified for the quarterfinals.[17] Switzerland and Norway played for the last spot in the final round as Norway will face France which are already eliminated before their last game. Switzerland won 5–3 against the United States but they were still eliminated[18] because Norway defeated France 5–2 to advance to the quarterfinals.[19]

Relegation round edit

After two game days in Group G every team had three points and so the last two games determined the two teams going down and the two that remained in the top division for the next year. Slovenia faced Belarus, while Latvia played against Austria. Belarus crushed Slovenia into the Division A with a 7–1 win to stay in the top division.[20] Austria joined Slovenia in the second division after losing against Latvia 1–4.[21]

Playoff round edit

Quarterfinals edit

The quarterfinals started with the undefeated Czech Republic against Team USA. The United States started off better but Jaromír Jágr scored for the Czechs to take a 1–0 into the first intermission. Jágr scored the second goal during a 5 on 3 power play after a strong shot from the right side. The third goal came after a good combination over the whole ice leading to a goal by Tomáš Plekanec. Jágr became the man of the match after he scored his third goal four minutes before the end during another power play and the game ended in a comfortable 4–0 win for the Czech Republic.[22]

In the evening game, Sweden took on Germany and scored the first goal in the first minute by Martin Thörnberg. Germany came right back and tied the game after two minutes as Alexander Barta was credited with the goal. Both teams had chances during the first period but Sweden took the 2–1 lead into the intermission. In the second period, Sweden went up 4–1 before Germany came closer by going 2–4 in the last break. Sweden scored a goal in the last period which was disallowed because a whistle occurred before the goal was scored, however Thörnberg scored his second goal of the night shortly after and Sweden won 5–2 at the end. Both, Thörnberg and Berglund were credited with three points.[23]

Day two of the quarterfinals started with a Nordic matchup as Finland faced Norway. After a scoreless opening period, Norway took the lead after Ken André Olimb scored on a penalty shot. Five minutes later, Finland had the lead after two quick goals. Jarkko Immonen scored his second goal to give Finland a two-goal lead before Jani Lajunen scored to make it 4–1 for the Finnish squad. Three of those four goals were scored during a power play. The third and last period went scoreless again and so Finland won 4–1, Mikael Granlund scored two points in the game alongside Immonen.[24]

The last game of the quarterfinal round brought up a rivalry between Russia and Team Canada. Jason Spezza seemed to be the hero after he scored the first goal after 25 minutes and the lead held into the last period, when Alexei Kaigorodov went on his way to score the equalizer shorthanded, he went by two defenders to put the puck high into the Canadian net. Three minutes later, Ilya Kovalchuk scored to give Russia the lead. Canada pulled the goalie with a minute to go but they did not score, and Russia won the game 2–1.[25]

Semifinals edit

The first semifinal was the matchup between the favourite and defending champion, the Czech Republic against Sweden. After the first period went scoreless Patrik Eliáš brought the lead to the Czechs after just 46 seconds into the second period. Sweden struck back twice with goals from Patrik Berglund and Mikael Backlund to take a one-goal lead into the last intermission. Jimmie Ericsson and Marcus Krüger scored to increase Sweden's lead to 4–1. Six minutes before the end, Eliáš scored his second goal and the Czechs gained hope again. They pulled their goaltender with under a minute to go but Sweden's Berglund scored an empty net goal. The Czech Republic was eliminated and Sweden advanced to the final with a 5–2 win.[26]

In the evening game of the semifinals Finland played against Russia. Despite having a so-so tournament so far the Russian team qualified for this late stage of it. Konstantin Barulin was again the goaltender instead of Evgeni Nabokov and the first period ended scoreless. Mikael Granlund scored an airhook goal to take the Finnish team into a 1–0 lead in the second period. The goal has been noted by multiple media outlets worldwide as the finest goal in the tournament, and as one of the finest in the history of international hockey.[citation needed] In the last period Jani Lajunen scored the second goal before Immonen decided the game with the 3–0 goal, assisted by Granlund. Both players received their second point in the game.[27]

Bronze medal game edit

The Czech Republic took on Russia for the bronze medal. The first period was a wild one ending in a 3–2 advantage for the Russian team while Ilya Kovalchuk scored two goals. The second period belonged to the Czech team after Petr Průcha scored his second point and Roman Červenka his second goal in the game. After the lead grew to 5–3 Vladimir Tarasenko brought Russia back into the game making it a one-goal game before the last period. After Jan Marek scored to make it 6–4, the Russian team pulled their goalie with two minutes to go. The Czech's Tomáš Plekanec scored an empty net goal to decide the game and give the Czech Republic the bronze medal after winning 7–4.[28]

Gold medal game edit

 
Captain Mikko Koivu holds the trophy as the Finnish team arrives at Market Square in Helsinki to celebrate the title with about 100,000 fans.

The gold medal game was played between Sweden and Finland at the Orange Arena on 15 May.[29]

After a goal-less first period, Sweden opened the game with a 1–0 goal by Magnus Pääjärvi in the second period at 27:40. Seven seconds before the period's end, Finland's Jarkko Immonen scored to tie the game 1–1. Finland took the lead early in the third period, scoring two goals at 42:35 and 43:21 by Nokelainen and Kapanen. Sweden took a time-out before the last period's half but did not manage to regroup, and the tournament was decided by a clear 6–1 victory to Finland by Janne Pesonen's, Mika Pyörälä's and Pihlström goals.[30]

Host selection edit

Four nations, all located in Europe placed formal bids to host the 2011 IIHF World Championship. Those nations were:

Finland withdrew from bidding before voting began in order to apply for the 2012 World Championship. Finland and Sweden would both later win respective bids to host in 2012 and 2013, but this decision was later changed instead for the two Nordic countries to be joint hosts of the 2012, and 2013 IIHF World Championship editions.[31]

After one round of voting, the winning bid was announced by IIHF president René Fasel on 19 May 2006, at the delegates congress of the International Ice Hockey Federation in Riga, Latvia. Slovakia's bidding cities received 70 votes, followed by the Swedish bid cities of Stockholm, and Gothenburg with 20 votes, and finally the Hungarian bid with 14 votes. The required 50% of the vote had been attained in the first round, which finalized Slovakia's successful bid.[32]

Ivan Gašparovič, the President of Slovakia, was instrumental in Slovakia winning its successful bid, as he came in person to the delegates congress in Riga to endorse his country's bid, and convince the IIHF delegates of the viability of Slovakia. Gašparovič is himself an avid hockey fan and past vice-president of the Slovak Extraliga team, HC Slovan Bratislava.[33]

Voting results edit

Country Votes
  Slovakia 70
  Sweden 20
  Hungary 14
  •   Finland withdrew from the 2011 bid prior to the start of the congress, postponed 2012.

Promotions edit

 
Goooly, mascot of the 2011 World Championship

Official song edit

Song Life is a Game by Slovak singer Kristina was officially released on 18 March.

Mascot edit

Goooly[34] is the official mascot of the tournament. Goooly is a Gray wolf, and Igor Nemeček, the 2011 IIHF World Championship general director, said he was chosen because: "Wolves are animals which are typically Slovak, evoking our forests and countryside".[35] Over 14,000 entries were submitted for a national contest to name the mascot organized in association with Radio Expres and the Slovak Ice Hockey Federation.[36] It is a word-play on the Slovak words for goal, and/or goals (Slovak: gól, góly).[37] Goooly, the mascot, was subjected to considerable ridicule in the English-speaking world because "gooly" is a well known slang term for a testicle.[38]

Motto edit

Slovenská republika. Hokejová republika. (Slovak Republic. Hockey Republic).

Ambassadors edit

The official ambassadors of the 2011 IIHF World Championship Slovakia are Slovak hockey players Peter Bondra, Zdeno Chára, Marián Gáborík, Ľubomír Višňovský, Pavol Demitra, Jozef Stümpel, Marián Hossa, Miroslav Šatan and Slovak President Ivan Gašparovič.[39]

Venues edit

The Orange Arena in Bratislava, also known as the Ondrej Nepela Arena, was substantially upgraded for the championship, in line with IIHF, Slovak, and international specifications, largely funded by the Slovakian government. Construction began on 23 April 2009 and was completed on 30 November 2010.[40] More than €65 million (US$90 million) was spent to install a new roof, modernize facilities, build two new adjacent practice arenas, and bring the seating from 8,350 to 10,000.[41][42] The Steel Aréna, also known as the Ladislav Troják Arena, which was newly constructed in 2006, had a new €11 million practice rink built adjacent, between April 2009 and February 2010 for the World Championship legacy of future hockey development in Slovakia.[43] The stadium would have the name Orange Arena, but only for the time of World Championship 2011 (29 April to 15 May 2011).[44]

Both arenas were known by their Slovak honorific titles during the 2011 World Championship to correspond with IIHF neutral non-inclusive sponsorship rules.[45] (Samsung Arena as the Ondrej Nepela Arena, and Steel Aréna as the Ladislav Troják Arena.)

Bratislava
class=notpageimage|
Host cities of the 2011 World Championship in Slovakia
Košice
Orange Arena1 Steel Arena2
48°08′38″N 17°06′35″E / 48.14389°N 17.10972°E / 48.14389; 17.10972 (Bratislava) 48°43′16″N 21°15′27″E / 48.72111°N 21.25750°E / 48.72111; 21.25750 (Košice)
Capacity: 9 246[46] Capacity: 7 628[46]
   
  • ^1 As Ondrej Nepela Arena
  • ^2 As Ladislav Troják Arena

Nations edit

The following 16 nations qualified for the elite-pool tournament. 14 nations from Europe, and two nations from North America were represented.

 
Qualified nations in the 2011 IIHF World Championship, in Slovakia.[47]
Europe
North America
  1. ^ a b Qualified through winning a promotion at the 2010 IIHF World Championship Division I
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Automatic qualifier after a top 14 placement at the 2010 IIHF World Championship
  3. ^ Qualified as hosts (and as automatic qualifier)

Seeding and Groups edit

The seeding in the preliminary round was based on the 2010 IIHF World Ranking, which ends at the conclusion of the 2010 IIHF World Championship.[48] The 2010 Olympics were included. The teams were grouped accordingly by seeding (in parentheses is the corresponding world ranking):

Group A

Group B

Group C

Group D

Preliminary round edit

Sixteen participating teams were placed in the following four groups. After playing a round-robin, the top three teams in each group advanced to the qualifying round. The last team in each group competes in the relegation round.

Groups A and D played in Bratislava, and groups B and C played in Košice.

     Team advanced to Qualifying Round
     Team competes in Relegation Round

Group A edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Germany 3 2 1 0 0 9 5 +4 8
  Russia 3 2 0 0 1 10 9 +1 6
  Slovakia 3 1 0 0 2 9 9 0 3
  Slovenia 3 0 0 1 2 7 12 −5 1
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

29 April 2011
16:15
Germany  2–0
(0–0, 1–0, 1–0)
  RussiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,049
Game reference
Dennis EndrasGoaliesEvgeni NabokovReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Brent Reiber
T. Greilinger (C. Braun) – 24:191–0
P. Reimer – 57:532–0
6 minPenalties4 min
27Shots31
29 April 2011
20:15
Slovakia  3–1
(0–0, 1–1, 2–0)
  SloveniaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,248
Game reference
Jaroslav HalákGoaliesRobert KristanReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Thomas Sterns
0–122:37 – A. Kranjc (G. Kuznik, T. Razingar) (PP)
M. Šatan (T. Surový) – 35:161–1
P. Podhradský (R. Zedník, T. Surový) – 47:032–1
Ľ. Bartečko (ENG) – 59:523–1
4 minPenalties10 min
45Shots15
1 May 2011
16:15
Russia  6–4
(1–0, 1–1, 4–3)
  SloveniaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,090
Game reference
Evgeni NabokovGoaliesAndrej HočevarReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Sören Persson
V. Atyushov (I. Kovalchuk, A. Radulov) (PP) – 04:221–0
1–129:15 – A. Hebar (B. Gregorc)
M. Afinogenov (K. Korneyev) – 35:412–1
2–242:49 – B. Goličič (M. Šivic, M. Hočevar)
D. Kulikov (A. Kaigorodov) – 46:153–2
E. Artyukhin (M. Afinogenov, A. Kaigorodov) – 46:534–2
4–347:21 – B. Goličič (D. Rodman)
4–451:28 – R. Pajič (A. Tavželj)
A. Radulov (I. Kovalchuk, K. Gorovikov) – 56:195–4
S. Zinovjev (D. Zaripov) – 59:226–4
33 minPenalties6 min
25Shots35
1 May 2011
20:15
Slovakia  3–4
(0–0, 0–3, 3–1)
  GermanyOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,303
Game reference
Jaroslav HalákGoaliesDimitri PatzoldReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Christer Lärking
0–124:51 – M. Müller (C. Ullmann, T. Greilinger)
0–233:07 – J. Tripp (F. Schütz, F. Mauer)
0–336:35 – F. Hördler (C. Ullmann, K. Holzer)
0–444:37 – F. Schütz (J. Tripp, N. Goc)
L. Nagy (Ľ. Bartečko) – 45:261–4
J. Stümpel (L. Nagy, M. Šatan) (PP) – 47:492–4
P. Demitra (M. Hossa) – 52:433–4
10 minPenalties20 min
38Shots29
3 May 2011
16:15
Slovenia  2–3 GWS
(1–0, 1–1, 0–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  GermanyOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 8,010
Game reference
Robert KristanGoaliesDennis EndrasReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Konstantin Olenin
Z. Jeglič (R. Sabolič, M. Robar) – 04:091–0
R. Tičar (R. Sabolič) – 28:332–0
2–135:19 – M. Wolf (A. Rankel, K. Hospelt) (PP)
2–245:32 – F. Schütz (J. Krueger, P. Gogulla)
R. Tičar  
Ž. Jeglič  
R. Pajič  
D. Rodman  
R. Sabolič  
D. Rodman  
M. Rodman  
Ž. Jeglič  
Shootout  T. Greilinger
  C. Ullmann
  M. Wolf
  P. Reimer
  P. Reimer
  D. Kreutzer
  M. Müller
  F. Hördler
12 minPenalties8 min
26Shots61
3 May 2011
20:15
Russia  4–3
(2–1, 1–2, 1–0)
  SlovakiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,314
Game reference
Evgeni Nabokov
Konstantin Barulin
GoaliesJaroslav HalákReferees:
  Christer Lärking
  Sören Persson
A. Radulov (I. Kovalchuk, F. Tyutin) – 00:581–0
1–101:28 – M. Šatan (L. Nagy, M. Jurčina)
I. Nikulin (I. Kovalchuk, F. Tyutin) – 18:042–1
2–230:06 – M. Gáborík (P. Demitra)
2–332:01 – L. Nagy (I. Majeský, Ľ. Višňovský)
I. Nikulin (I. Kovalchuk) (PP) – 38:103–3
A. Morozov (V. Atyushov, A. Kaigorodov) (PP) – 43:384–3
8 minPenalties14 min
31Shots32

Group B edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Canada 3 2 1 0 0 17 5 +12 8
   Switzerland 3 1 1 1 0 8 5 +3 6
  France 3 0 1 1 1 3 11 −8 3
  Belarus 3 0 0 1 2 3 10 −7 1
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

29 April 2011
16:15
Switzerland  1–0 OT
(0–0, 0–0, 0–0)
( OT: 1–0 )
  FranceSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 2,964
Game reference
Tobias StephanGoaliesCristobal HuetReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Jyri Petteri Rönn
J. Vauclair (I. Rüthemann) – 61:461–0
12 minPenalties10 min
35Shots29
29 April 2011
20:15
Belarus  1–4
(1–1, 0–1, 0–2)
  CanadaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 6,025
Game reference
Andrei MezinGoaliesJames ReimerReferees:
  Antonín Jeřábek
  Vladimír Šindler
0–101:52 – J. Eberle (E. Kane, M. Scalzo)
A. Stepanov (A. Kulakov, A. Kitarov) – 19:261–1
1–230:27 – J. Skinner (J. Tavares)
1–345:18 – J. Tavares (J. Skinner)
1–448:39 – J. Eberle (D. Phaneuf, M. Scalzo) (PP)
8 minPenalties14 min
22Shots39
1 May 2011
16:15
Canada  9–1
(3–0, 2–1, 4–0)
  FranceSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,457
Game reference
James Reimer
Devan Dubnyk
GoaliesCristobal Huet
Fabrice Lhenry
Referees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Eduards Odiņš
M. Gragnani (J. Spezza, D. Phaneuf) (PP) – 01:021–0
J. Spezza (D. Phaneuf) – 06:352–0
J. Skinner (J. Tavares) – 12:023–0
3–129:14 – P. Bellemare (S. Treille, Y. Auvitu) (PP)
C. Stewart (J. Skinner, J. Tavares) – 36:064–1
A. Pietrangelo – 36:495–1
B. Burns (J. Neal, R. Nash) (PP) – 41:416–1
R. Nash – 44:387–1
J. Skinner (PS) – 54:308–1
T. Zajac (C. Clutterbuck, A. Pietrangelo) – 57:449–1
10 minPenalties12 min
39Shots33
1 May 2011
20:15
Switzerland  4–1
(1–0, 3–1, 0–0)
  BelarusSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 3,193
Game reference
Tobias StephanGoaliesAndrei MezinReferees:
  Peter Ország
  Daniel Piechaczek
R. Gardner (R. Diaz, S. Moser) (PP) – 07:081–0
1–121:33 – D. Korobov (V. Kostyuchenok, A. Stepanov)
G. Bezina (I. Rüthemann, R. Gardner) – 24:112–1
R. Gardner (B. Gerber, I. Rüthemann) – 27:033–1
I. Rüthemann (A. Ambühl, F. Du Bois) (SH) – 30:514–1
8 minPenalties10 min
27Shots23
3 May 2011
16:15
Canada  4–3 OT
(0–1, 2–0, 1–2)
( OT: 1–0 )
   SwitzerlandSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 7,214
Game reference
James ReimerGoaliesLeonardo GenoniReferees:
  Antonín Jeřábek
  Vladimír Šindler
0–112:29 – R. Diaz (V. Stancescu, R. Lemm)
J. Eberle (E. Kane) – 31:571–1
J. Tavares – 36:512–1
2–248:08 – F. Du Bois (L. Sbisa, R. Gardner)
C. Stewart (T. Zajac) – 56:463–2
3–358:38 – A. Ambühl (J. Vauclair)
A. Pietrangelo (T. Zajac) – 64:144–3
4 minPenalties10 min
61Shots33
3 May 2011
20:15
France  2–1 OT
(1–0, 0–0, 0–1)
( OT: 1–0 )
  BelarusSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 3,968
Game reference
Cristobal HuetGoaliesAndrei MezinReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Jyri Rönn
S. Treille (K. Hecquefeuille, L. Meunier) (PP) – 12:351–0
1–155:32 – S. Demagin (O. Goroshko, A. Mikhalev)
K. Hecquefeuille (S. Da Costa, S. Treille) – 60:462–1
8 minPenalties8 min
35Shots38

Group C edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Sweden 3 2 0 1 0 13 7 +6 7
  United States 3 2 0 0 1 11 9 +2 6
  Norway 3 1 1 0 1 12 8 +4 5
  Austria 3 0 0 0 3 1 13 −12 0
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

30 April 2011
16:15
United States  5–1
(2–0, 1–1, 2–0)
  AustriaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,495
Game reference
Al MontoyaGoaliesJürgen PenkerReferees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Eduards Odiņš
C. Kreider (M. Fayne, D. Stepan) – 14:421–0
B. Wheeler (D. Stepan) – 17:152–0
2–134:00 – M. Pewal (T. Raffl, M. Raffl)
Y. Šťastný (C. Wilson, C. Fowler) – 38:363–1
K. Shattenkirk (N. Palmieri, R. Shannon) – 42:474–1
C. Smith (J. Johnson) (PP) – 56:425–1
10 minPenalties6 min
32Shots13
30 April 2011
20:15
Norway  5–4 GWS
(1–3, 2–0, 1–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
  SwedenSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 5,147
Game reference
Lars HaugenGoaliesErik ErsbergReferees:
  Peter Ország
  Daniel Piechaczek
0–106:21 – L. Eriksson (R. Nilsson)
M. Røymark (M. Hansen, M. Ask) (PP) – 08:061–1
1–211:41 – P. Berglund (M. Thörnberg)
1–315:01 – P. Berglund (D. Petrasek, M. Pääjärvi-Svensson) (PP)
M. Ask (M. Olimb) (PP) – 21:002–3
M. Holtet (A. Bastiansen, P. Skrøder) (PP) – 33:453–3
3–449:37 – L. Eriksson (R. Nilsson) (PP)
A. Bastiansen (M. Olimb, L. Spets) – 55:064–4
P. Skrøder  
M. Olimb  
Shootout  L. Eriksson
  P. Berglund
18 minPenalties12 min
20Shots46
2 May 2011
16:15
United States  4–2
(0–2, 0–0, 4–0)
  NorwaySteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,149
Game reference
Al MontoyaGoaliesLars HaugenReferees:
  Antonín Jeřábek
  Jyri Rönn
0–108:09 – K. Olimb (M. Holtet)
0–209:22 – A. Bastiansen (SH)
N. Palmieri (C. Kreider, R. Shannon) – 41:161–2
J. Skille (T. Stapleton, R. McDonagh) – 44:592–2
N. Palmieri (R. Shannon, K. Shattenkirk) (PP) – 53:443–2
C. Smith (D. Stepan, J. Johnson) (PP) – 58:344–2
10 minPenalties14 min
49Shots15
2 May 2011
20:15
Sweden  3–0
(1–0, 1–0, 1–0)
  AustriaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 3,704
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesFabian WeinhandlReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Vladimír Šindler
N. Persson (L. Eriksson, R. Nilsson) – 19:391–0
N. Persson (D. Petrasek, R. Nilsson) – 25:392–0
M. Pääjärvi-Svensson (D. Petrasek) (PP) – 42:343–0
6 minPenalties12 min
38Shots23
4 May 2011
16:15
Austria  0–5
(0–3, 0–1, 0–1)
  NorwaySteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,355
Game reference
Jürgen PenkerGoaliesLars HaugenReferees:
  Eduards Odiņš
  Daniel Piechaczek
0–106:26 – E. Koivu (A. Bastiansen, M. Olimb)
0–209:31 – M. Olimb (L. Spets, A. Bastiansen)
0–310:27 – J. Holøs (P. Skrøder, M. Olimb) (PP)
0–439:41 – L. Spets (A. Bastiansen, M. Olimb)
0–549:51 – A. Bastiansen (M. Olimb, P. Skrøder) (PP)
39 minPenalties8 min
25Shots27
4 May 2011
20:15
Sweden  6–2
(1–1, 3–0, 2–1)
  United StatesSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 7,401
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesAl MontoyaReferees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Peter Ország
P. Berglund (T. Erixon) – 17:311–0
1–118:43 – C. Fowler (D. Stepan, C. Smith) (PP)
M. Krüger (M. Tedenby) – 23:172–1
M. Sjögren (J. Ericsson) – 30:273–1
P. Berglund (M. Thörnberg, M. Pääjärvi-Svensson) – 35:164–1
4–250:29 – B. Wheeler (C. Smith)
J. Ericsson (S. Kronwall, M. Sjögren) – 56:015–2
D. Petrasek (M. Sjögren) (PP) – 58:506–2
12 minPenalties4 min
30Shots32

Group D edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Czech Republic 3 3 0 0 0 12 3 +9 9
  Finland 3 1 1 0 1 9 5 +4 5
  Denmark 3 0 1 0 2 4 13 −9 2
  Latvia 3 0 0 2 1 6 10 −4 2
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

30 April 2011
16:15
Finland  5–1
(0–0, 2–0, 3–1)
  DenmarkOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,125
Game reference
Petri VehanenGoaliesFrederik AndersenReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Konstantin Olenin
J. Immonen (J. Välivaara) (PP) – 23:571–0
J. Aaltonen (M. Koivu) (PP) – 36:262–0
A. Pihlström (M. Pyörälä, P. Nokelainen) – 42:393–0
3–147:54 – N. Hardt (J. Jakobsen, M. Green) (PP)
M. Granlund (J. Niskala, P. Puistola) (PP) – 52:294–1
T. Ruutu (J. Aaltonen) – 53:215–1
4 minPenalties10 min
44Shots9
30 April 2011
20:15
Czech Republic  4–2
(1–1, 1–1, 2–0)
  LatviaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,219
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesEdgars MasaļskisReferees:
  Christer Lärking
  Sören Persson
0–109:04 – L. Dārziņš (M. Rēdlihs, K. Sotnieks)
T. Rolinek (J. Voráček, M. Škoula) – 17:471–1
1–221:21 – R. Bukarts (A. Bērziņš, G. Meija)
P. Eliáš (M. Havlát, M. Michálek) – 33:022–2
M. Havlát (P. Eliáš) – 41:153–2
R. Červenka – 58:114–2
14 minPenalties20 min
34Shots24
2 May 2011
16:15
Czech Republic  6–0
(1–0, 4–0, 1–0)
  DenmarkOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,217
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesPatrick GalbraithReferees:
  Konstantin Olenin
  Brent Reiber
M. Frolík (P. Hubáček, Z. Michálek) – 02:291–0
M. Michálek (M. Židlický) – 31:342–0
M. Michálek (P. Eliáš, M. Havlát) (PP) – 33:173–0
M. Frolík (P. Čáslava, J. Novotný) – 34:254–0
T. Plekanec (R. Červenka) – 34:385–0
P. Průcha (M. Frolík) – 56:236–0
12 minPenalties4 min
35Shots24
2 May 2011
20:15
Latvia  2–3 GWS
(0–1, 1–0, 1–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  FinlandOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,210
Game reference
Edgars MasaļskisGoaliesTeemu LassilaReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Thomas Sterns
0–113:54 – J. Immonen (J. Välivaara, M. Granlund) (PP)
K. Rēdlihs (M. Rēdlihs, A. Džeriņš) (PP) – 33:361–1
H. Vasiļjevs (M. Cipulis, G. Pujacs) (PP) – 42:122–1
2–252:51 – N. Kapanen (J. Immonen, M. Granlund) (PP)
A. Ņiživijs  
L. Dārziņš  
Shootout  J. Immonen
  M. Koivu
10 minPenalties10 min
25Shots34
4 May 2011
16:15
Denmark  3–2 GWS
(1–0, 1–2, 0–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
  LatviaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 8,870
Game reference
Frederik AndersenGoaliesEdgars MasaļskisReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Darcy Burchell
M. Christensen (J. Jakobsen, M. Bødker) – 01:431–0
1–123:03 – M. Cipulis (O. Cibuļskis, A. Ņiživijs)
M. Christensen (D. Nielsen, N. Hardt) (PP) – 28:272–1
2–235:14 – J. Rēdlihs (A. Ņiživijs, M. Rēdlihs) (PP)
M. Green  
M. Madsen  
J. Jakobsen  
M. Christensen  
Shootout  A. Ņiživijs
  H. Vasiļjevs
  A. Džeriņš
  A. Ņiživijs
12 minPenalties14 min
29Shots39
4 May 2011
20:15
Finland  1–2
(0–0, 0–1, 1–1)
  Czech RepublicOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,310
Game reference
Petri VehanenGoaliesOndřej PavelecReferees:
  Brent Reiber
  Thomas Sterns
0–124:24 – M. Michálek (M. Židlický, K. Rachůnek) (PP)
0–242:48 – J. Jágr (R. Červenka, L. Krajíček)
A. Salmela – 59:411–2
16 minPenalties24 min
32Shots25

Qualifying round edit

The top three teams from each group of the preliminary round advanced to the qualifying round. They were placed into two groups: teams from Groups A and D were placed into Group E, while teams from Groups B and C were placed into Group F. Every team kept the points from preliminary round matches against teams who also advanced. The teams played a single round robin, but didn't play against teams that they had already met in preliminary groups.[49]

The top four teams in both groups E and F advanced to the playoff round.

     Team advanced to the Playoff Round
     Team eliminated from advancing

Group E edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Czech Republic 5 5 0 0 0 19 7 +12 15
  Finland 5 2 2 0 1 16 10 +6 10
  Germany 5 2 0 2 1 15 17 −2 8
  Russia 5 2 0 1 2 12 14 −2 7
  Slovakia 5 1 0 0 4 13 14 −1 3
  Denmark 5 0 1 0 4 9 22 −13 2
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

5 May 2011
20:15
Russia  4–3
(1–2, 2–0, 1–1)
  DenmarkOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,204
Game reference
Evgeni Nabokov
Konstantin Barulin
GoaliesFrederik AndersenReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Soeren Perrson
S.Zinoviev (I.Nikulin, D.Zaripov) – 09:261–0
1–111:12 – N.Hardt (K.Starkov)
1–219:46 – Ma. Bødker (P.Hersby) (PP)
S.Zinoviev (A.Morozov, D.Zaripov) – 30:082–2
S.Zinoviev (D.Zaripov, A.Morozov) – 34:183–2
E.Artyukhin (A.Korneyev, D.Kalinin) – 45:214–2
4–347:27 – N.Hardt (K.Starkov)
14 minPenalties6 min
40Shots22
6 May 2011
16:15
Germany  4–5 GWS
(1–1, 3–2, 0–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  FinlandOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,255
Game reference
Dennis EndrasGoaliesTeemu Lassila
Petri Vehanen
Referees:
  Konstantin Olenin
  Brent Reiber
0–100:13 – T. Ruutu (M. Koivu, S. Lepistö)
A. Rankel (M. Wolf, K. Hospelt) – 14:451–1
F. Schütz (P. Gogulla, F. Mauer) – 26:282–1
K. Hospelt (K. Lavallée, N. Goc) – 27:323–1
3–231:39 – J. Pesonen (M. Granlund, P. Puistola)
3–338:07 – J. Immonen (J. Pesonen, J. Niskala)
P. Reimer (C. Braun, M. Mueller) – 39:034–3
4–454:12 – T. Ruutu (J. Pesonen, S. Lepistö)
P. Reimer  
K. Hospelt  
M. Wolf  
P. Reimer  
Shootout  J. Immonen
  M. Koivu
  M. Granlund
  M. Koivu
8 minPenalties6 min
21Shots50
6 May 2011
20:15
Czech Republic  3–2
(1–0, 0–1, 2–1)
  SlovakiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,313
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesJaroslav HalákReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Danny Kurmann
M. Židlický (P. Eliáš, J. Marek) (PP) – 17:481–0
1–122:54 – L. Nagy (Ľ Višňovský, J. Stümpel)
M. Havlát (P. Eliáš) – 41:062–1
M. Michálek (P. Eliáš, M. Havlát) – 44:283–1
3–258:41 – T. Surový (B. Radivojevič, M. Cibák)
6 minPenalties4 min
37Shots22
7 May 2011
16:15
Denmark  4–3 GWS
(1–1, 1–1, 1–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
  GermanyOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,299
Game reference
Frederik AndersenGoaliesDennis EndrasReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Darcy Burchell
Ma.Bødker (M. Christensen, J. Jakobsen) (PP) – 08:091–0
1–1J. Tripp (M. Müller, C. Ullmann) – 10:15
Mi. Bødker (J. Jakobsen, K. Jensen) – 21:392–1
2–2A. Barta (M. Kink, P. Reimer) – 22:05
2–3K. Lavallée (F. Hördler, M. Müller) – 41:32
N. Hardt (M. Green, M. Madsen) – 57:333–3
M. Madsen  
M. Christensen  
Mi. Bødker  
Shootout  M. Müller
  P. Reimer
  M. Wolf
12 minPenalties8 min
22Shots33
7 May 2011
20:15
Finland  2–1
(0–1, 0–0, 2–0)
  SlovakiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,321
Game reference
Petri VehanenGoaliesJaroslav HalákReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Brent Reiber
0–116:21 – M. Gáborík (M. Handzuš, P. Demitra) (PP)
T. Ruutu (M. Koivu) – 47:171–1
T. Ruutu (A. Salmela, M. Pyörälä) – 50:262–1
8 minPenalties6 min
35Shots28
8 May 2011
16:15
Czech Republic  3–2
(2–0, 0–1, 1–1)
  RussiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,308
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesKonstantin BarulinReferees:
  Brent Reiber
  Thomas Sterns
J. Voráček (T. Rolinek, M. Škoula) – 14:011–0
J. Jágr (T. Plekanec) – 15:522–0
2–131:50 – A. Tereshchenko (V. Atyushov, A. Radulov) (PP)
T. Plekanec (PS) – 43:273–1
3–255:04 – D. Zaripov (D. Kalinin, S. Zinovjev)
8 minPenalties16 min
33Shots26
9 May 2011
12:15
Slovakia  4–1
(2–1, 0–0, 2–0)
  DenmarkOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,307
Game reference
Jaroslav HalákGoaliesPatrick GalbraithReferees:
  Konstantin Olenin
  Thomas Sterns
0–104:09 – M. Christensen (Mi. Bødker, J. Jakobsen)
J. Stümpel (M. Jurčina, M. Šatan) – 10:101–1
M. Šatan (Š Ružička, I. Majeský) – 15:522–1
M. Hossa (M. Gáborík, J. Halák) (PP) – 40:323–1
R. Zedník (M. Handzuš, D. Graňák) – 50:054–1
16 minPenalties10 min
43Shots18
9 May 2011
16:15
Russia  2–3 GWS
(2–0, 0–2, 0–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  FinlandOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,292
Game reference
Konstantin BarulinGoaliesPetri Vehanen
Teemu Lassila
Referees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Christer Lärking
N. Kulemin (D. Kulikov, E.Artyukhin) – 04:261–0
I. Nikulin (D. Zaripov, A. Morozov) – 04:372–0
2–126:59 – M. Koivu (P. Puistola, M. Pyörälä)
2–236:39 – J. Niskala (J. Immonen)
I. Kovalchuk  
A. Morozov  
Shootout  J. Immonen
  M. Koivu
12 minPenalties12 min
35Shots32
9 May 2011
20:15
Germany  2–5
(1–2, 0–3, 1–0)
  Czech RepublicOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,305
Game reference
Dennis EndrasGoaliesJakub ŠtěpanekReferees:
  Vladimír Baluška
  Sören Persson
0–100:51 – T. Plekanec (J. Jágr)
J. Tripp (K. Lavallée, F. Hördler) – 01:491–1
1–210:38 – M. Frolík (J. Novotný, P. Hubáček)
1–322:47 – K. Rachůnek (J. Jágr, R. Červenka) (PP)
1–435:34 – T. Plekanec (J. Jágr, R. Červenka) (PP)
1–536:58 – P. Eliáš (P. Průcha, M. Havlát)
T. Greilinger (PP) – 58:262–5
10 minPenalties8 min
42Shots22

Group F edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Canada 5 3 2 0 0 23 11 +12 13
  Sweden 5 3 0 1 1 18 10 +8 10
  Norway 5 2 1 0 2 17 15 +2 8
  United States 5 2 0 1 2 15 19 −4 7
   Switzerland 5 1 1 1 2 11 12 −1 6
  France 5 0 0 1 4 5 22 −17 1
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

5 May 2011
20:15
Switzerland  2–3
(0–2, 1–0, 1–1)
  NorwaySteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 2,820
Game reference
Tobias StephanGoaliesLars HaugenReferees:
  Eduards Odiņš
  Peter Ország
0–108:47 – J. Holøs (A. Bonsaksen, M. Olimb)
0–219:55 – P. Skrøder (J. Holøs, M. Olimb) (PP)
T. Monnet (J. Sprunger, M. Seger) (PP) – 28:351–2
1–342:48 – K. Forsberg (M. Holtet)
R. Diaz (I. Rüthemann) (PP) – 47:192–3
8 minPenalties14 min
41Shots25
6 May 2011
16:15
Canada  4–3 GWS
(0–0, 1–2, 2–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
  United StatesSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 7,485
Game reference
James ReimerGoaliesTy ConklinReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Daniel Piechaczek
0–124:13 – M. Komisarek (C. Smith, T. Conklin)
B. Burns (A. Pietrangelo) – 27:201–1
1–233:47 – J. Johnson (B. Wheeler, Y. Šťastný)
J. Tavares (C. Stewart, M. Gragnani) – 43:272–2
J. Spezza (J. Tavares, B. Burns) (PP) – 45:223–2
3–351:17 – D. Stepan (B. Wheeler) (PP)
J. Eberle  
R. Nash  
Shootout  J. Johnson
  B. Wheeler
8 minPenalties14 min
52Shots20
6 May 2011
20:15
Sweden  4–0
(3–0, 0–0, 1–0)
  FranceSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,761
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesCristobal Huet
Fabrice Lhenry
Referees:
  Jyri Rönn
  Vladimír Šindler
R. Nilsson (D. Fernholm, T. Erixon) – 04:341–0
O. Ekman-Larsson (S. Kronwall) (PP) – 13:512–0
P. Berglund (M. Pääjärvi-Svensson, C. Gunnarsson) – 15:393–0
S. Kronwall (O. Ekman-Larsson, M. Backlund) – 45:344–0
10 minPenalties22 min
58Shots29
7 May 2011
16:15
Norway  2–3
(0–1, 0–1, 2–1)
  CanadaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,978
Game reference
Lars HaugenGoaliesJonathan BernierReferees:
  Jyri Rönn
  Vladimír Šindler
0–1J. Spezza (R. Nash, J. Neal) – 15:26
0–2J. Tavares – 30:15
0–3J. Neal (R. Nash, J. Spezza) – 49:02
K. Olimb (M. Røymark) – 51:361–3
M. Holtet (O. Tollefsen) – 52:492–3
6 minPenalties14 min
27Shots43
7 May 2011
20:15
United States  3–2
(1–1, 2–0, 0–1)
  FranceSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 3,101
Game reference
Ty ConklinGoaliesCristobal HuetReferees:
  Eduards Odiņš
  Peter Ország
0–105:25 – S. Treille
D. Stepan (B. Wheeler) – 16:061–1
M. Stuart (C. Porter, P. Gaustad) – 21:162–1
C. Kreider (A. Miele) (PP) – 25:243–1
3–255:30 – L. Meunier (K. Hecquefeuille)
20 minPenalties22 min
38Shots22
8 May 2011
16:15
Sweden  2–0
(0–0, 0–0, 2–0)
   SwitzerlandSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 5,941
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesLeonardo GenoniReferees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Eduards Odiņš
M. Backlund (S. Kronwall) – 47:471–0
M. Backlund (ENG) – 59:282–0
10 minPenalties14 min
34Shots31
9 May 2011
12:15
France  2–5
(1–3, 1–1, 0–1)
  NorwaySteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 3,178
Game reference
Cristobal HuetGoaliesLars HaugenReferees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Antonín Jeřábek
0–103:26 – P. Skrøder (M. Røymark, M. Ask) (PP)
0–203:52 – M. Holtet (K. Olimb, J. Holøs)
D. Fleury (D. Raux, J. Desrosiers) – 10:571–2
1–317:50 – M. Holtet
L. Meunier (K. Hecquefeuille, P. Bellemare) (SH) – 31:202–3
2–435:19 – M. Holtet (P. Skrøder, J. Holøs) (PP)
2–552:26 – M. Holtet (A. Bonsaksen)
32 minPenalties8 min
19Shots37
9 May 2011
16:15
Switzerland  5–3
(2–1, 2–1, 1–1)
  United StatesSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,939
Game reference
Tobias StephanGoaliesTy Conklin
Al Montoya
Referees:
  Jyri Rönn
  Vladimír Šindler
0–111:01 – C. Smith (C. Wilson, K. Shattenkirk)
K. Lotscher (M. Trachsler, S. Moser) – 11:351–1
R. Diaz (M. Plüss, I. Rüthemann) – 14:102–1
I. Rüthemann (M. Bieber, M. Plüss) – 21:063–1
3–226:09 – R. Shannon (A. Miele)
K. Lotscher – 31:004–2
4–358:17 – J. van Riemsdyk (C. Fowler, D. Stepan)
R. Gardner (M. Plüss, M. Trachsler) (ENG) – 59:435–3
6 minPenalties4 min
29Shots34
9 May 2011
20:15
Canada  3–2
(2–1, 0–1, 1–0)
  SwedenSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 7,633
Game reference
Jonathan BernierGoaliesErik ErsbergReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Daniel Piechaczek
J. Neal (J. Spezza) – 01:081–0
1–103:43 – D. Petrasek (C. Gunnarsson, M. Pääjärvi-Svensson) (PP)
J. Tavares (J. Skinner, C. Stewart) – 13:202–1
2–230:38 – M. Tedenby (J. Silfverberg, M. Krüger) (PP)
R. Nash (B. Burns, J. Neal) (PP) – 52:313–2
14 minPenalties16 min
43Shots25

Relegation round edit

The bottom team in the standings from each group of the preliminary round plays in the relegation round. The bottom two teams in the relegation round move down to Division 1 for the 2012 World Championship.

     Team qualified for the 2012 IIHF World Championship
     Team relegated to Division I

Group G edit

Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
  Latvia 3 2 0 0 1 12 9 +3 6
  Belarus 3 2 0 0 1 17 9 +8 6
  Austria 3 1 0 0 2 6 13 −7 3
  Slovenia 3 1 0 0 2 8 12 −4 3
Source: [citation needed]

All times are local (UTC+2).

5 May 2011
16:15
Slovenia  5–2
(0–0, 3–0, 2–2)
  LatviaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 7,467
Game reference
Robert KristanGoaliesEdgars Masaļskis
Martins Raitums
Referees:
  Christer Lärking
  Thomas Sterns
R. Tičar (Z. Jeglič, M. Robar) (PP) – 27:591–0
T. Razingar (M. Rodman, D. Rodman) – 33:552–0
T. Razingar (M. Rodman, D. Rodman) – 39:113–0
R. Tičar (R. Sabolič) – 40:544–0
R. Pajič (B. Goličič) – 41:275–0
5–151:33 – M. Cipulis (J. Rēdlihs, J. Andersons)
5–259:59 – R. Bukarts (K. Sotnieks, G. Meija)
12 minPenalties37 min
35Shots31
5 May 2011
16:15
Belarus  7–2
(3–0, 2–0, 2–2)
  AustriaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,483
Game reference
Andrei MezinGoaliesJürgen Penker
Fabian Weinhandl
Referees:
  Vyacheslav Bulanov
  Antonín Jeřábek
E. Kovyrshin (A. Kostitsyn, A. Kulakov) – 04:061–0
M. Grabovski (D. Meleshko, N. Stasenko) – 17:172–0
A. Kostitsyn (A. Kulakov, E. Kovyrshin) – 18:573–0
A. Demkov – 30:174–0
S. Demagin (SH) – 32:495–0
5–140:47 – O. Setzinger (D. Werenka, T. Koch) (PP)
D. Korobov (A. Kostitsyn, A. Stepanov) (PP2) – 42:536–1
A. Kulakov (E. Kovyrshin) – 51:557–1
7–253:29 – M. Schiechl (T. Hundertpfund)
12 minPenalties18 min
30Shots21
7 May 2011
12:15
Austria  3–2
(1–0, 1–2, 1–0)
  SloveniaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,033
Game reference
Fabian WeinhandlGoaliesRobert KristanReferees:
  Christer Lärking
  Konstantin Olenin
G. Unterluggauer (T. Raffl, T. Koch) – 19:031–0
T. Raffl (M. Peintner, M. Trattnig) – 24:152–0
2–136:30 – T. Razingar (D. Rodman, M. Rodman)
2–239:41 – D. Rodman (B. Gregorc, R. Kristan)
R. Rotter (P. Lukas) – 45:523–2
10 minPenalties14 min
37Shots33
7 May 2011
12:15
Belarus  3–6
(1–3, 1–1, 1–2)
  LatviaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,976
Game reference
Andrei MezinGoaliesEdgars MasaļskisReferees:
  Sami Partanen
  Daniel Piechaczek
0–1M. Cipulis (A. Reķis, A. Ņiživijs) – 09:26
0–2G. Pujacs (A. Džeriņš, J. Rēdlihs) – 13:23
0–3G. Pujacs (M. Rēdlihs) – 17:19
V. Kostyuchenok (A. Kitarov, A. Demkov) – 19:311–3
M. Grabovski (D. Korobov D. Meleshko) – 20:532–3
2–4A. Ņiživijs (M. Cipulis, H. Vasiļjevs) – 36:17
2–5M. Cipulis (A. Ņiživijs, A. Reķis) – 49:44
2–6K. Saulietis (M. Rēdlihs, A. Džeriņš) – 57:29
D. Meleshko (A. Kostitsyn, A. Kulakov) – 59:503–6
16 minPenalties16 min
39Shots31
8 May 2011
20:15
Slovenia  1–7
(0–2, 1–3, 0–2)
  BelarusOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 8,708
Game reference
Robert Kristan
Andrej Hočevar
GoaliesAndrei MezinReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Sören Persson
0–106:02 – S. Demagin (M. Grabovski, D. Meleshko)
0–207:23 – A. Kostitsyn (E. Kovyrshin, A. Kulakov)
0–328:21 – A. Stepanov (A. Kitarov, A. Kostitsyn) (PP2)
31:51 – R. Sabolič (R. Pajič, Ž Jeglič)1–3
1–435:52 – A. Mikhalev (A. Ugarov, V. Denisov)
1–537:13 – A. Kostitsyn (A. Stepanov, A. Demkov) (PP)
1–655:07 – A. Mikhalev (D. Korobov) (SH)
1–756:13 – A. Mikhalev (M. Grabovski, D. Korobov) (PP)
14 minPenalties6 min
24Shots39
8 May 2011
20:15
Latvia  4–1
(2–0, 1–0, 1–1)
  AustriaSteel Aréna, Košice
Attendance: 4,110
Game reference
Edgars MasaļskisGoaliesFabian WeinhandlReferees:
  Antonín Jeřábek
  Peter Ország
R. Bukarts (G. Meija) – 05:011–0
M. Rēdlihs (K. Saulietis, A. Bērziņš) – 13:302–0
K. Saulietis (A. Džeriņš, K. Sotnieks) (PP) – 22:573–0
K. Saulietis (K. Sotnieks, A. Džeriņš) (PP) – 48:474–0
4–159:01 – T. Raffl (R. Lukas, R. Rotter) (PP)
14 minPenalties10 min
39Shots41

Playoff round edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
E1   Czech Republic 4
F4   United States 0
QF1   Czech Republic 2
QF2   Sweden 5
F2   Sweden 5
E3   Germany 2
SF1   Sweden 1
SF2   Finland 6
F1   Canada 1
E4   Russia 2
QF3   Russia 0 Bronze medal game
QF4   Finland 3
E2   Finland 4 SF1   Czech Republic 7
F3   Norway 1 SF2   Russia 4

Quarterfinals edit

All times are local (UTC+2).

11 May 2011
16:15
Czech Republic  4–0
(1–0, 1–0, 2–0)
  United StatesOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,311
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesTy ConklinReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Brent Reiber
J. Jágr (R. Červenka) – 18:451–0
J. Jágr (T. Plekanec, K. Rachůnek) (PP2) – 24:472–0
T. Plekanec (M. Frolík, M. Židlický) – 50:333–0
J. Jágr (T. Plekanec) (PP) – 56:254–0
6 minPenalties10 min
39Shots29
11 May 2011
20:15
Sweden  5–2
(2–1, 2–1, 1–0)
  GermanyOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 8,986
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesDennis EndrasReferees:
  Jyri Rönn
  Vladimír Šindler
M. Thörnberg (P. Berglund) – 00:271–0
1–102:01 – A. Barta (F. Mauer, M. Kink)
P. Berglund (M. Thörnberg, V. Fasth) – 15:462–1
N. Persson (R. Nilsson, O. Ekman-Larsson) – 24:303–1
L. Eriksson (D. Rundblad, R. Nilsson) – 28:104–1
4–238:44 – M. Wolf (A. Rankel, K. Holzer)
M. Thörnberg (P. Berglund, M. Pääjärvi-Svensson) – 48:545–2
8 minPenalties14 min
46Shots37
12 May 2011
16:15
Finland  4–1
(0–0, 4–1, 0–0)
  NorwayOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 8,947
Game reference
Petri VehanenGoaliesLars HaugenReferees:
  Sören Persson
  Daniel Piechaczek
0–123:56 – K. Olimb (PS)
J. Immonen (M. Granlund, J. Niskala) (PP) – 26:011–1
T. Ruutu (M. Koivu, J. Pesonen) (PP) – 28:432–1
J. Immonen (M. Granlund, J. Välivaara) (PP) – 35:383–1
J. Lajunen (L. Komarov, T. Jaakola) – 38:294–1
14 minPenalties18 min
34Shots38
12 May 2011
20:15
Canada  1–2
(0–0, 1–0, 0–2)
  RussiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,300
Game reference
Jonathan BernierGoaliesKonstantin BarulinReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Christer Lärking
J. Spezza (A. Pietrangelo) – 25:321–0
1–149:07 – A. Kaigorodov (SH)
1–252:19 – I. Kovalchuk (A. Radulov, D. Kalinin)
12 minPenalties10 min
37Shots20

Semifinals edit

All times are local (UTC+2).

13 May
16:15
Czech Republic  2–5
(0–0, 1–2, 1–3)
  SwedenOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,285
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesViktor FasthReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Brent Reiber
P. Eliáš (M. Michálek, M. Židlický) – 20:461–0
1–124:34 – P. Berglund (O. Ekman-Larsson) (PP)
1–235:10 – M. Backlund (M. Sjögren)
1–348:07 – J. Ericsson (M. Backlund)
1–452:29 – M. Krüger (M. Tedenby)
P. Eliáš (J. Voráček) – 54:222–4
2–559:13 – P. Berglund (D. Petrasek) (ENG)
6 minPenalties2 min
37Shots48
13 May
20:15
Finland  3–0
(0–0, 1–0, 2–0)
  RussiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,272
Game reference
Petri VehanenGoaliesKonstantin BarulinReferees:
  Christer Lärking
  Peter Ország
M. Granlund (J. Immonen) – 25:131–0
J. Lajunen – 47:402–0
J. Immonen (M. Granlund) – 49:15 (PP)3–0
10 minPenalties12 min
29Shots30

Bronze medal game edit

Time is local (UTC+2).

15 May
16:00
Czech Republic  7–4
(2–3, 3–1, 2–0)
  RussiaOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,283
Game reference
Ondřej PavelecGoaliesKonstantin BarulinReferees:
  Danny Kurmann
  Christer Lärking
R. Červenka – 03:331–0
1–109:25 – I. Kovalchuk (A. Radulov, F. Tyutin)
1–209:40 – D. Kulikov (M. Afinogenov, K. Gorovikov)
P. Průcha (T. Rolinek, J. Marek) – 10:222–2
2–318:53 – I. Kovalchuk (A. Radulov, S. Zinovjev)
P. Průcha – 22:113–3
R. Červenka (P. Průcha) – 30:454–3
R. Červenka (T. Plekanec) – 35:105–3
5–436:03 – V. Tarasenko (S. Zinovjev, K. Korneyev)
J. Marek – 46:306–4
T. Plekanec (J. Jágr, R. Červenka) (ENG) – 58:167–4
4 minPenalties6 min
28Shots43

Gold medal game edit

Time is local (UTC+2).

15 May
20:30
Sweden  1–6
(0–0, 1–1, 0–5)
  FinlandOrange Arena, Bratislava
Attendance: 9,166
Game reference
Viktor FasthGoaliesPetri VehanenReferees:
  Darcy Burchell
  Brent Reiber
M. Pääjärvi-Svensson – 27:401–0
1–1J. Immonen (J. Pesonen, M. Koivu) (PP) – 39:53
1–2P. Nokelainen (A. Pihlström) – 42:35
1–3N. Kapanen (J. Aaltonen, L. Komarov) – 43:21
1–4J. Pesonen (M. Granlund) – 56:41
1–5M. Pyörälä (M. Koivu, A. Salmela) – 57:16
1–6A. Pihlström (J. Lajunen) – 59:05
8 minPenalties4 min
33Shots32

Ranking and statistics edit


 2011 IIHF World Championship winners 
 
Finland
2nd title

Tournament awards edit

Final standings edit

 
Ice hockey championship celebration in Helsinki, Finland

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

    Finland
    Sweden
    Czech Republic
4   Russia
5   Canada
6   Norway
7   Germany
8   United States
9    Switzerland
10   Slovakia
11   Denmark
12   France
13   Latvia
14   Belarus
15   Austria
16   Slovenia

Scoring leaders edit

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals. If the list exceeds 10 skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are shown.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
  Jarkko Immonen 9 9 3 12 +2 2 FW
  Patrik Berglund 9 8 2 10 +6 8 FW
  Tomáš Plekanec 8 6 4 10 +3 6 FW
  Roman Červenka 9 4 6 10 +7 4 FW
  John Tavares 7 5 4 9 +6 12 FW
  Jaromír Jágr 9 5 4 9 +5 4 FW
  Patrik Eliáš 9 4 5 9 +4 6 FW
  Mikael Granlund 9 2 7 9 +3 2 FW
  Mathis Olimb 7 1 8 9 0 4 FW
  Marius Holtet 7 6 2 8 +6 4 FW

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

Leading goaltenders edit

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

Player TOI SA GA GAA Sv% SO
  Petri Vehanen 388:13 175 8 1.24 95.43 1
  Viktor Fasth 420:00 221 12 1.71 94.57 3
  Ondřej Pavelec 479:16 247 15 1.88 93.93 2
  Tobias Stephan 240:48 111 7 1.74 93.69 0
  Lars Haugen 422:18 257 19 2.70 92.61 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

Officials edit

The IIHF selected 16 referees and 16 linesmen to work the 2011 IIHF World Championship. They are the following:[50]

Referees
Referees
Linesmen
  •   Roger Arm
  •   Chris Carlson
  •   Paul Carnathan
  •   Ivan Dedioulia
  •   Jiří Gebauer
  •   Manuel Hollenstein
  •   Matjaž Hribar
  •   Kiel Murchison
Linesmen
  •   Milan Novák
  •   Andre Schrader
  •   Sirko Schulz
  •   Anton Semionov
  •   Sergei Shelyanin
  •   Jussi Terho
  •   Christian Tillerkvist
  •   Miroslav Valach

IIHF broadcasting rights edit

Country Broadcaster HD (High Definition)
  Austria ORF
  Belarus BTRC
  Bulgaria Nova Sport
  Canada TSN TSN HD
RDS RDS HD
  Croatia Sportska
  Czech Republic ČT ČT HD
  Denmark TV2 Sport TV2 Sport HD
  Finland YLE Viasat Sport HD
  France Sport+
  Germany SPORT1 SPORT1 HD
  Hungary Sport 1
Sport 2
  Latvia TV3
TV6
Viasat Sport Baltic
3+
  Norway Viasat 4
Viasat Sport Viasat Sport HD
  Poland Polsat Sport Polsat Sport HD
  Russia C1R
Russia 2
Sport 1
  Slovakia STV STV HD
  Slovenia Šport TV
  Sweden TV3 TV3 HD
TV6
TV10
Viasat Hockey
   Switzerland SRG SSR
  United States Versus Versus HD

Trailer edit

A trailer was created for the World Championship which is entitled: Slovak Republic becomes the Hockey Republic! (Slovak: Slovenská republika sa mení na hokejovú republiku!). The trailer starts with ice and snow gradually covering Slovakia and ends with Slovak hockey players jumping onto the ice and shooting a puck.[51] The player who shoots has the number 38 on his hockey jersey, the same as the Slovak legend Pavol Demitra. It features the Slovak countryside, and Trojične square, in Trnava. It took a 70-man film crew, more than 100 extras, several 3D animators, and the support of the Slovak Tourist Board.[52]

Online edit

For the first time in an IIHF World Championship, a YouTube channel was created to promote the Slovakia 2011 tournament.[53] A video campaign was launched on this YouTube website which featured the christening of the mascot Goooly,[54] updates on the construction work of the arena's,[55] and the status of general preparations.[56]

An official Facebook page was also created for the championship, being only the second tournament to do so, after the previous championship in Germany.[57] Its 10,000th "fan" was awarded a prize by the tournaments organizing committee. [58]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Format & Rules". IIHF. Archived from the original on 28 April 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  2. ^ "Player Entry". IIHF. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  3. ^ "History! Germany 2, Russia 0". IIHF. 28 April 2011. Archived from the original on 4 May 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  4. ^ "Germans stave off Slovaks". IIHF. 1 May 2011. Archived from the original on 5 May 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  5. ^ "Swiss win a close one". IIHF. 29 April 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
  6. ^ "Canada wins in overtime". IIHF. 3 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  7. ^ "France moves on with OT win". IIHF. 3 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  8. ^ "After 61 years – a win!". IIHF. 30 April 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
  9. ^ "USA finally get it rolling". IIHF. 2 May 2011. Archived from the original on 6 May 2011. Retrieved 2 May 2011.
  10. ^ "Sweden finishes on top". IIHF. 4 May 2011. Archived from the original on 7 May 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  11. ^ "Norway onto the next round". IIHF. 4 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  12. ^ "Finland squeaks by Latvia". IIHF. 2 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 2 May 2011.
  13. ^ "Danes go Mads, Latvians down". IIHF. 4 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  14. ^ "Group win? Czech". IIHF. 8 May 2011. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  15. ^ "Ruutu ends Slovakia's dream". IIHF. 8 May 2011. Archived from the original on 10 May 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  16. ^ "Reigning champs are ready". IIHF. 9 May 2011. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  17. ^ "Sweden into quarter-finals". IIHF. 8 May 2011. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  18. ^ "Swiss finally score some goals". IIHF. 9 May 2011. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  19. ^ "Polar Bears roar into quarters". IIHF. 9 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  20. ^ "Hello Belarus, goodbye Slovenia". IIHF. 8 May 2011. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  21. ^ "Latvia stays, Austria goes". IIHF. 8 May 2011. Archived from the original on 13 May 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  22. ^ "Jagr lifts Czechs into semis". IIHF. 11 May 2011. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  23. ^ "Oops, Sweden did it again". IIHF. 11 May 2011. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
  24. ^ "Finns advance over Norway". IIHF. 12 May 2011. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  25. ^ "Russia rallies again, in semis". IIHF. 12 May 2011. Archived from the original on 16 May 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  26. ^ "Sweden going for gold". IIHF. 13 May 2011. Archived from the original on 16 May 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  27. ^ "It's an all-Nordic final!". IIHF. 13 May 2011. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  28. ^ "Hats off to Cervenka". IIHF. 15 May 2011. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
  29. ^ "Game Summary" (PDF). IIHF. 15 May 2011. Archived (PDF) from the original on 31 December 2016. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  30. ^ Aykroyd, Lucas (15 May 2011). "It's gold for Finland!". IIHF. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  31. ^ 2012 WC going to Finland Archived 24 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine www.Eurohockey.net
  32. ^ Victory in the first round Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine IIHF.com
  33. ^ http://www.hokej.sk/spravy/clanok56669-Fanusik_Slovana_Ivan_Gasparovic_dostal_dres_Dukly_Trencin.htm Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine (in Slovak)
  34. ^ "Plans on track". IIHF. Archived from the original on 16 May 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  35. ^ "Goooly the mascot's christening". IIHF. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  36. ^ "The official 2011 IIHF WM mascot is called Goooly". IIHF. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  37. ^ Preklad slova " gól (šport) ” zo slovenčiny do angličtiny Archived 25 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Slovnik.sk (in Slovak)
  38. ^ "Meet Goooly". Sports Geek. Archived from the original on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  39. ^ Video of the Ambassadors Archived 6 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Szlh.sk. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  40. ^ "President René Fasel satisfied after Slovak inspection". IIHF. 1 June 2010. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2010.
  41. ^ "Ondrej Nepela arena reconstruction going to plan". IIHF. 5 November 2010. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  42. ^ "Orange Arena". IIHF. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010.
  43. ^ Technical data of the Practice Rink Archived 24 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine. .steelarena.sk. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  44. ^ Sme Zimný štadión dostane nové meno. Len na šampionát slovak, 05. 01. 2011
  45. ^ "Venues map". IIHF. Archived from the original on 22 July 2010.
  46. ^ a b 2011 IIHF World Championship Slovakia – Venues Archived 30 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Iihf.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  47. ^ "Schedule". IIHF. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  48. ^ "2010 Ranking". IIHF. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  49. ^ Format & Rules IIHF
  50. ^ "Referee Assignments". IIHF. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  51. ^ Official trailer of 2011 IIHF World Championship, Slovakia (long version). YouTube.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  52. ^ "Slovak Republic becomes the Hockey Republic!". IIHF. 21 May 2010. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  53. ^ "Канал користувача iihfworlds2011". YouTube. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  54. ^ Christen of mascot Goooly. YouTube.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  55. ^ "- YouTube". www.youtube.com.
  56. ^ Preparation for 2011 is underway. YouTube.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  57. ^ Official Facebook Page. Facebook.com. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  58. ^ "Prize for the 10000th 2011 WM Facebook fan". IIHF. 14 July 2010. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 14 July 2010.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official Youtube channel of the 2011 IIHF World Championship (in Slovak and English)
  • Official Facebook page of the 2011 IIHF World Championship (in Slovak and English)
  • Slovak Hockey Federation official 2011 website (in Slovak)