Finland men's national under-18 ice hockey team

The Finland men's national under-18 ice hockey team is the men's national under-18 ice hockey team of Finland. The team is controlled by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association, a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation. The team represents Finland at the IIHF World U18 Championships.

Finland
Nickname(s)Pikkuleijonat (The little Lions)
AssociationSuomen jääkiekkoliitto
Head coach Jussi Ahokas
Team colors         
First international
 Sweden 8–1 Finland 
(Bremerhaven, West Germany; 1 April 1977)
Biggest win
 Finland 28–0 Italy 
(Tychy, Poland; 1 April 1979)
Biggest defeat
 Soviet Union 14–2 Finland 
(Bremerhaven, West Germany; 2 April 1977)
IIHF World U18 Championship
Appearances19 (first in 1999)
Best result Gold: 1999, 2000, 2016, 2018
Medal record
World U18 Championships
1999 Germany
2000 Switzerland
2016 USA
2018 Russia
2006 Sweden
2015 Switzerland
2017 Slovakia
2001 Finland
2009 USA
2010 Belarus
2013 Russia
Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament
2007 Czech Republic/Slovakia
2012 Czech Republic/Slovakia
1996 Canada
2005 Czech Republic/Slovakia
IIHF European Junior Championships
1978 Finland
1986 West Germany
1995 Germany
1997 Czech Republic
1967 Soviet union
1979 Poland
1983 Norway
1988 Czechoslovakia
1996 Russia
1998 Sweden
1974 Switzerland
1976 Czechoslovakia
1989 Soviet Union
1991 Czechoslovakia
Medal record
World U-17 Hockey Challenge
1990 Canada
1995 Canada
2018 Canada
1998 Canada
European Youth Olympic Winter Festival
2013 RomaniaTeam
2007 SpainTeam
2011 Czech RepublicTeam
2003 SloveniaTeam
2009 PolandTeam
2015 Austria\LiechtensteinTeam
2019 Bosnia and HerzegovinaTeam

International competitions

IIHF European U18 / U19 Championships

Tournament Rank
1967 Yaroslavl, Russian SFSR
1968 Tampere4th
1969 Garmisch-Partenkirchen / Bavaria4th
1970 Geneva4th
1971 Prešov, Slovak SR4th
1972 Boden / Luleå / Skellefteå4th
1973 Leningrad, Russian SFSR4th
1974 Herisau / Appenzell / Ausserrhoden
1975 Grenoble4th
1976 Koprivnice / Opava, Czech SR
1977 Bremerhaven / Bremen4th
1978 Vantaa
1979 Tychy / Katowice
1980 Brno / Hradec Králové, Czech SR4th
1981 Minsk, Belorussian SSR4th
1982 Ängelholm / Tyringe4th
1983 Oslo
1984 Rosenheim / Garmisch-Partenkirchen / Füssen / Bad Tölz / Bavaria4th
1985 Anglet5th
1986 Düsseldorf / Ratingen / Krefeld / North Rhine-Westphalia
1987 Tampere / Kouvola / Hämeenlinna4th
1988 Frýdek-Místek / Vsetín / Olomouc / Prerov, Czech SR
1989 Kiev, Ukrainian SSR
1990 Örnsköldsvik / Sollefteå4th
1991 Spišská Nová Ves / Prešov, Slovak SR
1992 Lillehammer / Hamar4th
1993 Nowy Targ / Oswiecim4th
1994 Jyväskylä4th
1995 Berlin
1996 Ufa
1997 Znojmo / Trebic
1998 Malung / Mora

IIHF World U18 Championships

Tournament Rank
1999 Füssen / Kaufbeuren
2000 Kloten / Weinfelden
2001 Heinola / Helsinki / Lahti
2002 Piešťany / Trnava4th
2003 Yaroslavl7th
2004 Minsk7th
2005 České Budějovice / Plzeň7th
2006 Ängelholm / Halmstad
2007 Tampere / Rauma7th
2008 Kazan6th
2009 Fargo
2010 Minsk / Babruysk
2011 Crimmitschau / Dresden5th
2012 Brno / Znojmo / Břeclav4th
2013 Sochi
2014 Lappeenranta / Imatra6th
2015 Zug / Lucerne
2016 Grand Forks
2017 Poprad / Spišská Nová Ves
2018 Chelyabinsk / Magnitogorsk
2019 Örnsköldsvik / Umeå7th
2020 Plymouth / Ann ArborCancelled[1]
2021 Plymouth / Ann Arbor
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Define definition.
gollark: Existent within potato-space.
gollark: Socrates is not real.
gollark: "Good" means "colored purple".

References

  1. Steiss, Adam. "2020 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship cancelled". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.