The 1977 IIHF European U18 Championship was the tenth playing of the IIHF European Junior Championships. With the creation of the World Junior Hockey Championships, which used players under the age of 20, the European championships adjusted the age limitation to being under 18.
Group A
editPlayed in Bremerhaven, West Germany from April 1–10, 1977. Romania was to participate but withdrew (and forfeited) in the aftermath of the earthquake that hit the area in March of that year.[1]
Team | SWE | TCH | URS | FIN | SUI | FRG | POL | GF/GA | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Sweden | 4:0 | 5:2 | 8:1 | 13:2 | 15:1 | 13:1 | 58: | 712 | |
2. Czechoslovakia | 0:4 | 5:3 | 10:1 | 15:3 | 10:1 | 9:1 | 49:13 | 10 | |
3. Soviet Union | 2:5 | 3:5 | 14:2 | 6:4 | 7:3 | 17:0 | 49:19 | 8 | |
4. Finland | 1:8 | 1:10 | 2:14 | 11:2 | 8:3 | 8:1 | 31:38 | 6 | |
5. Switzerland | 2:13 | 3:15 | 4:6 | 2:11 | 2:2 | 8:5 | 21:52 | 3 | |
6. West Germany | 1:15 | 1:10 | 3:7 | 3:8 | 2:2 | 4:3 | 14:45 | 3 | |
7. Poland | 1:13 | 1:9 | 0:17 | 1:8 | 5:8 | 3:4 | 11:59 | 0 |
Romania, after withdrawing, was relegated to Group B for 1978.
Tournament Awards
edit- Top Scorer: Conny Silfverberg (17 Points)
- Top Goalie: Pelle Lindbergh
- Top Defenceman: Peter Slanina
- Top Forward: Conny Silfverberg
Group B
editPlayed in Bilbao and San Sebastián, Spain from March 30 to April 4, 1977.
First round
edit- Group 1
Team | YUG | DEN | FRA | ESP | GF/GA | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Yugoslavia | 4:2 | 7:2 | 10:2 | 21: | 66 | |
2. Denmark | 2:4 | 12:3 | 10:1 | 24: | 84 | |
3. France | 2:7 | 3:12 | 6:2 | 11:21 | 2 | |
4. Spain | 2:10 | 1:10 | 2:6 | 5:26 | 0 |
- Group 2
Team | NOR | AUT | ITA | NED | GF/GA | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Norway | 6:3 | 6:1 | 3:2 | 15: | 66 | |
2. Austria | 3:6 | 3:2 | 8:5 | 14:13 | 4 | |
3. Italy | 1:6 | 2:3 | 3:2 | 6:11 | 2 | |
4. Netherlands | 2:3 | 5:8 | 2:3 | 9:14 | 0 |
Placing round
edit7th place | Netherlands | 7:3 (4:0, 2:1, 1:2) |
Spain | |
5th place | Italy | 4:3 o.t. (1:1, 2:1, 0:1, 1:0) |
France | |
3rd place | Denmark | 5:2 (2:1, 1:1, 2:0) |
Austria | |
Final | Norway | 4:1 (0:0, 1:1, 3:0) |
Yugoslavia |
Norway was promoted to group A, and Spain was relegated to the new Group C, for 1978.
References
edit- Complete results
- Duplacey, James (1998). Total Hockey: The official encyclopedia of the National Hockey League. Total Sports. pp. 530–2. ISBN 0-8362-7114-9.