Ice hockey in Finland

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CountryFinland
National teams
Nicknames
  • Leijonat (men)
  • Naisleijonat (women)
  • Nuoret Leijonat (junior men)
  • Pikkuleijonat (U18 men)
  • Tyttöleijonat (U18 women)
Ice hockey in Finland
Esa Pirnes (Blues) and Michal Bros (Kärpät) in the faceoff circle during a decisive SM-liiga playoff game on 1 April 2006.
CountryFinland
Governing bodyFinnish Ice Hockey Association
National teams
Nicknames
  • Leijonat (men)
  • Naisleijonat (women)
  • Nuoret Leijonat (junior men)
  • Pikkuleijonat (U18 men)
  • Tyttöleijonat (U18 women)
Registered players71,063[1]
National competitions

Ice hockey is the most popular sport in Finland in terms of television viewership and game attendance figures.[2][3][4] It is third most popular sport in participation amongst children.[5] As of 2020, approximately 1.3% of the Finnish population was registered with the International Ice Hockey Federation, ranking Finland second in the world for percentage of population participating in ice hockey[a] and the highest percentage of any country outside of North America.[1]

Ice hockey leagues were first established in Finland in the 1920s.[6] SM-sarja was established as the first national men's ice hockey league in 1928. Viipurin Reipas were champions in the inaugural year and remain one of the oldest ice hockey teams in Finland, still competing today under the name Lahti Pelicans.

Finland's first ice hockey rink, Hakametsä, was founded in January 1965 in Tampere.[7]

Governing body

The Finnish Ice Hockey Association (Finnish: Suomen Jääkiekkoliitto) is the national board for ice hockey in the country and has been instrumental in producing many world class ice hockey players.[8][9][10]

Since 2011, the association has operated a financial support system for minor and junior ice hockey players from low-income families. In 2021, 975 players qualified for grants ranging from 700 to 1,300 euros, determined by player age level. In total, the program has distributed approximately 6.7 million euros to youth hockey players since 2011.[11]

National teams

Domestic leagues

References

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