IIHF Suspends all Russian and Belarusian National Teams and Clubs from participation in every age category and in all IIHF competitions or events until further notice

During an extra-ordinary meeting held on Monday, 28 February, the IIHF Council evaluated the impact of the current war. The IIHF strongly condemns the use of military force and urges the use of diplomatic means to solve conflict.

The IIHF Council has decided to take the following actions: 

-Suspension of all Russian and Belarusian National Teams and Clubs from participation in every age category and in all IIHF competitions or events until further notice

-Withdrawal of the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship hosting rights from Russia
These two actions have been initiated by the Council in order to enable the IIHF to ensure the safety of IIHF Championships and all participating players, officials, and fans.

Under the current conditions, this decision would have an impact on the following events:

2022 IIHF Continental Cup (4-6 March 2022)
-Belarus club team HK Gomel would not participate

2022 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship (21 April-01 May 2022) 
-Russia and Belarus men’s U18 teams would not participate

2022 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship (13-29 May 2022)
-ROC and Belarus men’s national teams would not participate

2022 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 Women’s Word Championship (Dates TBB) 
-Russia women’s U18 national team would not participate 

2022 IIHF World Junior Championship (Dates TBD)
-Russia men’s U20 national teams would not participate 

2022 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship (26 August-4 September 2022)
-ROC women’s national team would not participate

Any potential sportive impact of the Council decision on tournament seeding and promotion/relegation will be announced in the coming weeks. 

The 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship was scheduled to take place from 26 December 2022 to 5 January 2023. The IIHF will initiate discussions in the coming months to find a new host for the event. 

The decision to relocate the event was taken primarily out of concern for the health and well-being of all participating players, officials, and fans. The IIHF Council also expressed deep concerns over the safe freedom of movement of players and officials to, from, and within Russia. The IIHF Council also took into account the Russian government’s breach of the Olympic Truce, which was adopted in December 2021 as a UN resolution by United Nations General Assembly. The breach of the Olympic Truce led to a condemnation by the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board last week. 

The IIHF Council has not left out the possibility of further actions impacting future events or other IIHF activities but hopes above all for a swift and peaceful resolution to the war.  

“The IIHF is not a political entity and cannot influence the decisions being taken over the war in Ukraine,” said IIHF President Luc Tardif. “We nevertheless have a duty of care to all of our members and participants and must therefore do all we can to ensure that we are able to operate our events in a safe environment for all teams taking part in the IIHF World Championship program.”

“We were incredibly shocked to see the images that have come out of Ukraine,” added Tardif. “I have been in close contact with members of the Ice Hockey Federation of Ukraine and we hope for all Ukrainians that this conflict can be resolved in a peaceful way and without the need for further violence.”

Source: iihf.com

Finland Comes From Behind With Two Goals To Take Gold Over ROC 2-1

It was classic blue-and-white magic. Hannes Bjorninen scored the third-period winner as Finland captured its first Olympic men’s hockey gold medal ever with a 2-1 victory over the ROC team on Sunday. Coach Jukka Jalonen’s team rallied from a 1-0 first-period deficit to give their nation of 5.5 million the thrill of a lifetime.

Just 31 seconds into the third period, the relentless veterans Finns pounced in the ROC zone. Assistant captain Marko Anttila, the giant hero of the 2019 gold medal run, accepted Atte Ohtamaa’s pass from the left point, circled to the middle, and fired a shot that Bjorninen tipped past Russian starter Ivan Fedotov.

Even under the unprecedented circumstances of a global pandemic, Beijing’s National Indoor Stadium will always hold a special place in the hearts of Finnish hockey lovers. This gold medal has been nearly a century in the making. Finland joined the IIHF family in 1928, played its first World Championship in 1939 in Switzerland, and made its Olympic debut in 1952.

As widely predicted, this was a full-fledged defensive duel, fought in the trenches along the boards. Shots favoured the Finns 31-17.

Ville Pokka had the other goal for Finland, and Ohtamaa added two assists.

Mikhail Grigorenko replied for the ROC team.

Finland has finally cured its “close but no cigar” syndrome at the Olympics. In the 1988 tournament in Calgary, played under a round-robin format, the Finns edged the Soviet Union 2-1 to earn the silver medal. In 2006, Nicklas Lidstrom’s third-period goal and Henrik Lundqvist’s last-minute save on Olli Jokinen gave Sweden a 3-2 final victory and the Finns went home with silver.

It was the second consecutive Olympic final appearance for a Russian squad, although this time they settled for silver under rookie head coach Alexei Zhamnov. In the 2018 final in PyeongChang, the Olympic Athletes from Russia defeated Germany 4-3 in overtime on Kirill Kaprizov’s goal.

In 1992, the Commonwealth of Independent States captured the gold medal in Albertville. Prior to that, the Soviet Union captured seven Olympic gold medals. No team under the Russian flag has ever won Olympic gold.

This is the ultimate feather in Jalonen’s cap. The 58-year-old Riihimaki native led the Finns to their second and third IIHF World Championship titles of all time in 2011 and 2019, and added a silver medal at last year’s Worlds in Riga. He also masterminded a World Junior crown in Helsinki in 2016. And Jalonen, who was behind the bench for the 2010 bronze medal in Vancouver, now owns an Olympic gold medal.

There was little to choose between Finnish starting goalie Harri Sateri and ROC’s Fedotov. Sateri had an excellent tournament, swapping roles with Jussi Olkinuora, whom he backed up last year in Riga. Despite losing in the final, the towering Fedotov made a name for himself in his IIHF debut at age 25, playing every game in Beijing.

Arguably, these two teams entered the Games as co-favourites for men’s gold, and it was fitting they fought it out in the end. Neither side boasted its biggest superstars. Finnish captain Valtteri Filppula, who dominated on faceoffs in Beijing, was the best-known ex-NHLer with a Stanley Cup ring from the 2008 Detroit Red Wings and 1,056 career NHL games.

This was a battle of wits and grit between familiar foes. Not only do 17 Finns on the Beijing roster play in the KHL, but Jalonen also coached both ROC captain Vadim Shipachyov and now-ROC GM Ilya Kovalchuk with SKA St. Petersburg in 2013-14.

After a grinding start, the Finns got aggressive in the ROC zone. Bjorninen got two cracks at the puck right in front, forcing Fedotov to be sharp. But then the versatile Jokerit forward, who previously captained Lahti Pelicans, was sent to the sin bin for high-sticking Yegor Yakolev behind the goal line at 6:59.

Just 18 seconds later, ROC cashed in with their first man advantage. Grigorenko waltzed into the right faceoff circle, scoped out the situation, and zipped a blocker-side shot past Sateri with Pavel Karnaukhov providing the screen.

It was the first goal and point of these Olympics for Grigorenko, a CSKA Moscow veteran who spent last season with the Columbus Blue Jackets. It came on just ROC’s second shot of the game. Nikita Gusev, who had four points in OAR’s 2018 triumph over Germany, got his tournament-leading sixth assist on the play.

After ROC’s Damir Sharipzyanov was penalized for a huge cross-check on Leo Komarov, the Finns exerted good pressure with their first power play, but couldn’t find the range.

Finland outshot their opponents 15-6 in the first period, with ROC vying to clog up the neutral zone in a reversal of these teams’ usual roles. Bjorninen had a great chance on a give-and-go with Saku Maenalanen just before the buzzer but couldn’t convert. 

In the second period, the Finns stayed gritty on the forecheck, and Pokka notched the equalizer with a drifting shot from the right point through traffic that dipped and fooled Fedotov at 3:28. Bjorninen atoned for his earlier errors with a nice backhanded pass to set it up.

It was Pokka’s first goal ever in senior IIHF competition. The defensive-minded Avangard Omsk blueliner played 28 Worlds games prior to his Olympic debut in Beijing.

More Finnish pressure followed when Kirill Semyonov was dinged for an undisciplined elbow on Valtteri Kemilainen. But the Russians were as ferocious in their shot-blocking as the Finns were at firing the puck. The trend continued at even strength.

The best second-period ROC chance saw Arseni Gritsyuk, the semi-final shootout hero against Sweden, navigating into the slot surrounded by Suomi sweaters and pivoting to zing a shot just past Sateri’s right post.

After Bjorninen’s third-period go-ahead marker, Finland had to tap into its reserves of sisu (Finnish for “grit”) as the Russians attacked Sateri’s crease vigorously. Fedotov made a couple of great saves off Maenalanen from the slot to keep it a one-goal game.

The Finns did everything but score during a power play with less than nine minutes left in regulation after Sergei Andronov tripped up Anttila. Shortly afterwards, veteran defenceman Juuso Hietanen rang one off the cross bar on the rush. Zhamnov pulled Fedotov late for the extra attacker, but his troops couldn’t get anything going, and the Finns went wild with joy at the final horn.

Finnish supporters revere their first World Championship title from 1995, which featured a 4-1 gold medal win over Sweden and a top line of Saku Koivu, Jere Lehtinen, and Ville Peltonen. It’s hard to imagine just how much they’ll celebrate this Winter Games gold, both now and in the future. With or without NHLers participating, it’s a crowning glory.

Finland only beat the Soviet Union once (1988) in seven Olympics meetings dating back to 1960. In the post-Soviet era, Finland’s record against Russian squads stands at six wins and three losses. The Finns have now won the last four Olympic meetings. The last one was the famous 3-1 quarter-final victory in Sochi.

Sunday was an historic day all around, as Slovakia also won its first Olympic medal, shutting out Sweden 4-0 in the bronze game.

The Finns head into the 2022 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in Tampere and Helsinki with hopes of becoming the second team ever to win the Olympics and Worlds in the same year and the first to complete the feat on home ice. Sweden is the only nation to “do the double” before, in Turin and Riga in 2006.

Source: iihf.com