Ice hockey at the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics

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Ice hockey at the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics was held at the Tyrolean Ice Arena in Innsbruck, Austria from 13 to 22 January. The difference between the Youth Olympic program for ice hockey and the Winter Olympics was the addition of a skill challenge for each gender.[1]

Dates13–22 January
Competitors200 from 26 nations
Quick facts Ice hockey at the I Winter Youth Olympic Games, Venue ...
Ice hockey
at the I Winter Youth Olympic Games
VenueTyrolean Ice Arena
Innsbruck
Dates13–22 January
Competitors200 from 26 nations
2016 
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Medal summary

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Austria)

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Finland1001
 Latvia1001
 Netherlands1001
 Sweden1001
5 Hungary0202
6 Austria*0101
 Russia0101
8 Australia0011
 Canada0011
 Germany0011
 Japan0011
Totals (11 entries)44412
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Events

Boys' semifinal game Canada vs. Finland
Girls' playoff game Germany vs. Kazakhstan
More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Boys'
details
Finland Finland Russia Russia Canada Canada
Boys' individual skills challenge[2]
details
Augusts Valdis Vasiļonoks
 Latvia
22 points Attila Kovács
 Hungary
21 points Seiya Furukawa
 Japan
19 points
Girls'
details
 Sweden  Austria  Germany
Girls' individual skills challenge
details
Julie Zwarthoed
 Netherlands
22 points Fanni Gasparics
 Hungary
19 points Sharnita Crompton
 Australia
17 points
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Qualification system

There were ten teams total (five per gender), with 17 players on each team. The host nation was allowed one team of each gender. The remaining eight teams were selected based on their joint Men's and Women's 2011 IIHF World Ranking.[3][4]

For the skills challenge, the host nation was allowed one competitor of each sex. For the remaining competitors, national competitions were held, and the qualifiers attended a Global Skills Challenge at the 2011 Hockey Development Camp in Vierumäki, Finland.[5]

For the boys tournament, athletes born in 1996 are permitted to compete, for the girls its 1994.[5]

The IIHF announced the teams on September 23.[5]

Boys

Girls

Skills challenge

The following athletes have qualified:[6] Originally 16 athletes from each gender were to compete, but the girls' competition will have only 15 while the boys' competition will have 16.

More information Event, Boys' ...
EventBoys'Girls'
Host nation Stephan Gaffal (AUT) Victoria Hummel (AUT)
Skills challenge qualifier Lewis Hook (GBR)
 Attila Kovács (HUN)
 Callum Burns (NZL)
 Seiya Furukawa (JPN)
 Sam Hodic (AUS)
 Guus Simons (NED)
 Liu Qing (CHN)
 Thibaut Colombin (FRA)
 Cho Ji-hyun (KOR)
 Paul Cerda (ESP)
 Mihai Sotir (ROU)
 Primož Čuvan (SLO)
 Augusts Vasiļonoks (LAT)
 Alexei Dashkevich (BLR)
 Matija Miličić (CRO)
 Kathrine Gale (GBR)
 Agnese Tartaglione (ITA)
 Fanni Gasparics (HUN)
 Libby-Jean Hay (NZL)
 Akane Deguchi (JPN)
 Sharnita Crompton (AUS)
 Julie Zwarthoed (NED)
 Sun Jiayue (CHN)
 Morgane Rihet (FRA)
 Lee Yeon-jeong (KOR)
 Irene Senac (ESP)
 Noemi Ballo (ROU)
 Renee De Wolf (BEL)
 Urša Pazlar (SLO)
Total1615
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References

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