Men's World Floorball Championship

The Men's World Floorball Championship is an international floorball competition contested by the senior men's national teams of the members of the International Floorball Federation (IFF), the sport's global governing body. It is distinct from the Women's Floorball World Championships, which is for women's teams. They were preceded by the European Championships which were held twice in 1994 and 1995. Originally played in May–June, the IFF decided in 2007 to move the tournament to early-December starting in 2008.[1]

Men's World Floorball Championship
Statusactive
Genresporting event
Date(s)early December
Frequencybiannual
Location(s)various
Inaugurated1996 (1996) ®
Organised byIFF

Men

Results

Year Final venue Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1996
Details

Stockholm

Sweden
5–0
Finland

Norway
6–2
Czech Republic
1998
Details

Prague

Sweden
10–3
Switzerland

Finland
4–1
Denmark
2000
Details

Oslo

Sweden
5–3
Finland

Switzerland
4–2
Denmark
2002
Details

Helsinki

Sweden
6–4
Finland

Switzerland
4–3 SD
Czech Republic
2004
Details

Zürich

Sweden
6–4
Czech Republic

Finland
8–7 (p)
Switzerland
2006
Details

Stockholm

Sweden
7–6 SD
Finland

Switzerland
9–4
Czech Republic
2008
Details

Prague

Finland
7–6 SD
Sweden

Switzerland
5–4 SD
Czech Republic
2010
Details

Helsinki

Finland
6–2
Sweden

Czech Republic
9–3
Switzerland
2012
Details

Zürich

Sweden
11–5
Finland

Switzerland
8–0
Germany
2014
Details

Gothenburg

Sweden
3–2
Finland

Czech Republic
4–3
Switzerland
2016
Details

Rīga

Finland
4–3 (p)
Sweden

Switzerland
8–5
Czech Republic
2018
Details

Prague

Finland
6–3
Sweden

Switzerland
4–2
Czech Republic
2020
Details

Helsinki
2022
Detalis

Zürich

Medal table

Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Medals
1  Sweden 8 4 0 12
2  Finland 4 6 2 12
3   Switzerland 0 1 7 8
4  Czech Republic 0 1 2 3
5  Norway 0 0 1 1
Total12121236

Participation details

Team
1996

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

2016

2018

2020
Years
 Australia-------14th-14th15th12thq5
 Austria----10th-------1
 Canada-------11th13th12th12th11thq5
 Czech Republic4th6th6th4th2nd4th4th3rd7th3rd4th4thq13
 Denmark7th4th4th6th9th6th9th13th-7th5th8thq12
 Estonia11th-----8th7th9th8th8th10th7
 Finland2nd3rd2nd2nd3rd2nd1st1st2nd2nd1st1stq13
 Germany8th8th-8th8th10th-10th4th9th7th6thq11
 Hungary10th-------14th---2
 Italy-----8th10th12th----3
 Japan-------15th15th15th-15thq5
 Latvia9th-7th7th6th5th5th5th6th5th10th5thq12
 Norway3rd5th5th5th5th7th6th6th5th6th6th7thq13
 Poland-------9th11th-13th13thq5
 Russia6th7th8th-7th9th7th8th10th13th--9
 Singapore12th------16th16th-16th16thq5
 Slovakia--------8th10th9th9thq5
 South Korea---------16th--1
 Sweden1st1st1st1st1st1st2nd2nd1st1st2nd2ndq13
  Switzerland5th2nd3rd3rd4th3rd3rd4th3rd4th3rd3rdq13
 Thailand----------14th14thq3
 United States--------12th11th11th-q4

Men Under-19

Results

Year Final venue Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
2001
Details

Weissenfels

Sweden
4–2
Switzerland

Finland
7–1
Latvia
2003
Details

Prague

Finland
6–2
Sweden

Czech Republic
5–2
Switzerland
2005
Details

Cēsis

Sweden
6–2
Finland

Switzerland
8–3
Latvia
2007
Details

Kirchberg, Haut-Rhin

Sweden
9–3
Czech Republic

Finland
3–2
Switzerland
2009
Details

Turku

Sweden
8–3
Finland

Switzerland
7–1
Czech Republic
2011
Details

Weissenfels

Finland
4–3
Sweden

Switzerland
6–4
Czech Republic
2013
Details

Hamburg

Sweden
6–2
Switzerland

Finland
8–5
Czech Republic
2015
Details

Helsingborg

Finland
13–3
Switzerland

Czech Republic
7–6
Sweden
2017
Details

Växjö

Finland
7–4
Sweden

Czech Republic
8–5
Switzerland
2019
Details

Halifax

Czech Republic
8–2
Sweden

Finland
4–2
Switzerland
2021
Details

Brno

Medal table

Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Medals
1  Sweden 5 4 0 9
2  Finland 4 2 4 10
3  Czech Republic 1 1 3 5
4   Switzerland 0 3 3 6
Total10101030

Participation details

Team
2001

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

2013

2015

2017

2019

2021
Total
 Czech Republic5352444331q11
 Denmark878-8-8-67-7
 Estonia10----8-----2
 Finland3123213113-10
 Germany11----------1
 Hungary12----------1
 Latvia4645556755-10
 Norway75666758-8-9
 Poland9-78---68--5
 Russia68---------2
 Slovakia---7767576-7
 Sweden1211121422-10
  Switzerland2434332244-10
gollark: The regular 2D kind.
gollark: <@249056455552925697> You know tesselations of stuff in regular Euclidean geometry, where you have infinite grids of squares and triangles and hexagons and all that?
gollark: I don't actually understand the maths involved well enough to generate those myself, but I was reading the Wikipedia articles on it and thought "hmmm, these patterns are neat, I will use [search engine] image search to find a nice one to use as a profile picture".
gollark: It's actually some sort of tesselation of heptagons ~~in~~ and hexagons in hyperbolic geometry.
gollark: No, those tend to be translucent.

See also

References

  1. "Innebandy: Stjärna tveksam till VM-flytt" (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 15 December 2013.
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