1999 Sweden Hockey Games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Host country Sweden
Venue1 (in 1 host city)
Dates9-14 February 1999
1999 Sweden Hockey Games
Tournament details
Host country Sweden
CityStockholm
Venue1 (in 1 host city)
Dates9-14 February 1999
Teams5
Final positions
Champions  Finland (2nd title)
Runners-up  Sweden
Third place  Canada
Fourth place Russia
Tournament statistics
Games played10
Goals scored50 (5 per game)
Attendance67,510 (6,751 per game)
Scoring leaderFinland Marko Tuomainen (5 points)
 1998
2000 

The 1999 Sweden Hockey Games was played between 9 and 14 February 1999 in Stockholm, Sweden. The Czech Republic, Finland, Sweden, Russia and Canada played a round-robin for a total of four games per team and 10 games in total. All of the games were played in the Globen in Stockholm, Sweden. The tournament was won by Finland. The tournament was part of 1998–99 Euro Hockey Tour.

Games against Canada was not included in the 1998–99 Euro Hockey Tour.[1]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1  Finland 4 3 0 1 14 10 +4 9
2  Sweden 4 2 1 1 14 7 +7 7
3  Canada 4 2 0 2 6 9 3 6
4  Czech Republic 4 1 1 2 8 9 1 4
5  Russia 4 1 0 3 8 15 7 3
Source: swehockey[2]

Games

All times are local. Stockholm – (Central European TimeUTC+1)

Error: Goals/Progression mismatch: N1 = 7 N2 = 7 PN = 5

9 February 1999
15:30
Russia 4-5
(2-2,1-1,1-2)
 Czech RepublicGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 832
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Christer Lärking
Sweden Ulf Rådbjer
0-103:07 – Pavel Patera (Jiri Vykoukal)
03:21 – Roman Lyashenko (Dmitri Vlasenkov)1-1
10:20 – Roman Lyashenko (Maxim Sushinsky)2-1
2-217:41 – Tomas Kucharcik (Jan Čaloun)
2-323:51 – Tomáš Vlasák (Martin Štěpánek) (PP)
12 minPenalties10 min
25Shots25
9 February 1999
19:00
Canada 1-4
(0-1, 1-2, 0-1)
 SwedenGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 12,237
Game reference
Referees:
Switzerland Danny Kurmann
Sweden Thomas Andersson
0-106:25 – Christer Olsson (Ove Molin, Jan Larsson)
0-224:43 – Magnus Wernblom (Jörgen Jönsson)
31:21 – Shawn Heins (Sergio Momesso)1-2
1-334:09 – Jan Larsson (Anders Huusko)
1-440:42 – Niclas Hävelid (Christer Olsson, Per Svartvadet)
20 minPenalties20 min
27Shots34
10 February 1999
19:00
Finland 3-2
(1-0, 1-0, 1-2)
 Czech RepublicGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 3,748
Game reference
Referees:
Switzerland Danny Kurmann
Sweden Thomas Andersson
03:28 – Marko Tuomainen (Janne Ojanen) (PP)1-0
25:7 – Marko Kiprusoff (Juha Ikonen)2-0
48:18 – Kimmo Rintanen (Janne Ojanen) (PP)3-0
3-153:49 – Viktor Ujčík (PP)
3-259:47 – Martin Prochazka (Pavel Patera, Jan Čaloun) (PP)
14 minPenalties10 min
22Shots22
11 February 1999
15:30
Finland 2-3
(1-1,0-2,1-0)
 CanadaGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 1,151
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Ulf Rådbjer
Sweden Christer Lärking
0-111:32 – Paul DiPietro (Justin Cardwell, Bob Maudie) (PP)
16:52 – Mika Alatalo (Janne Ojanen) (PP)1-1
1-221:02 – Dale McTavish (Justin Cardwell) (PP)
1-325:00 – Dwayne Norris (Sergio Momasso)
50:16 – Marku Hurme (Marko Tuomainen)2-3
12 minPenalties18 min
34Shots25
11 February 1999
19:00
Sweden 5-0
(1-0, 1-0, 3-0)
 RussiaGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 9,931
Game reference
Referees:
Switzerland Danny Kurmann
Sweden Lars-Johan Ryhed,
13:13 – Jörgen Jönsson (Samuel Påhlsson)1-0
24:34 – Per Svartvadet (Jörgen Jönsson)2-0
47:20 – Magnus Wernblom (Per Eklund, Nichlas Falk)3-0
51:02 – Magnus Wernblom (Christer Olsson, Per Svartvadet)4-0
51:39 – Anders Huusko (Janne Larsson, Ove Molin)5-0
6 minPenalties6 min
32Shots13
12 February 1999
19:00
Czech Republic 0-1
(0-0, 0-0, 0-1)
 CanadaGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 5,853
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Ulf Rådbjer
Finland Rami Savolainen
0-149:43 – Casson Masters (Ryan Foster)
14 minPenalties18 min
38Shots22

Error: Goals/Progression mismatch: N1 = 3 N2 = 4 PN = 2

13 February 1999
12:00
Russia 1-4
(0-2, 1-1, 0-1)
 FinlandGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 4,192
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Peter Andersson
Sweden Christer Lärking
0-111:18 – Antti Törmänen (Jussi Tarvainen)
0-218:50 – Marku Hurme (Jere Karalahti, Marko Tuomainen) (PP)
6 minPenalties8 min
25Shots27
13 February 1999
15:30
Czech Republic 1-1
(1-0, 0-1, 0-0)
 SwedenGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 13,850
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Robert Lathi
Finland Rami Savolainen
08:50 – Viktor Ujčík (František Kaberle, Libor Procházka) (PP)1-0
1-121:17 – Kim Johnsson (Nichlas Falk)
29 minPenalties8 min
18Shots39
14 February 1999
13:00
Canada 1-3
(0-0, 1-1, 0-2)
 RussiaGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 1,866
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Robert Lahti
Sweden Peter Andersson
24:33 – Sergio Momesso (hawn Heins, Dale McTavish)1-0
1-127:29 – Oleg Petrov (Alexander Barkov, Andrei Yakhanov) (PP)
1-248:01 – Alexei Kudashov (Oleg Sjevtsov) (PP)
1-349:54 – Dmitri Bykov (Alexander Barkov)
26 minPenalties12 min
18Shots25
14 February 1999
17:00
Sweden 4-5
(0-2, 2-3, 2-0)
 FinlandGloben, Stockholm
Attendance: 13,850
Game reference
Referees:
Sweden Ulf Rådbjer
Finland Rami Savolainen
0-111:09 – Pasi Saarela (Kimmo Rintanen, Aki-Petteri Berg)
0-217:56 – Jere Karalahti (Toni Sihvonen)
23:41 – Jesper Mattsson (Ove Molin, Jan Larsson)1-2
1-325:0% – Mikko Eloranta (Mika Alatalo, Marko Kiprusoff)
27:43 – Pär Djoos (Hans Jonsson, Ove Molin) (PP)2-3
2-434:35 – Marko Tuomainen (Toni Sihvonen, Pasi Petriläinen)
2-535:03 – Pasi Saarela (Antti Törmänen)
42:53 – Niclas Hävelid (Samuel Påhlsson)3-5
59:37 – Pär Djoos (Jan Larsson) (PP)4-5
41 minPenalties46 min
35Shots27

Scoring leaders

Pos Player Country GP G APts +/− PIM POS
1Marko Tuomainen Finland4235+225RW
2Jan Larsson Sweden4145+30CE
3Ove Molin Sweden4044+32RW
4Viktor Ujčík Czech Republic4303+22RW
5Magnus Wernblom Sweden4303+235RW

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Source: swehockey[3]

Goaltending leaders

Pos Player Country TOI GA GAA Sv% SO
1Roman Čechmánek Czech Republic118:4742.0293.440
2Andrew Verner Canada240:0092.2593.130
3Miikka Kiprusoff Finland118:5542.0292.001
4Petter Rönnquist Sweden239:2571.7591.760
5Ari Sulander Finland120:0063.0089.471
6Milan Hnilička Czech Republic118:3952.5389.360
7Oleg Shevtsov Russia220:00133.5586.600

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: swehockey[4]

Tournament awards

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI