Latvia men's national junior ice hockey team
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2016) |
Association | Latvian Ice Hockey Federation |
---|---|
Head coach | Artis Ābols |
Assistants | Kārlis Zirnis Edgars Masaļskis |
Captain | Dans Ločmelis |
Most points | Aleksandrs Ņiživijs (45) |
IIHF code | LAT |
First international | |
Latvia 47 – 1 Greece (Riga, Latvia; November 10, 1992) | |
Biggest win | |
Latvia 47 – 1 Greece (Riga, Latvia; November 10, 1992) | |
Biggest defeat | |
Canada 16 – 0 Latvia (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; December 26, 2009) | |
IIHF World Junior Championship | |
Appearances | 31 (first in 1993) |
Best result | 7th (2022 (August)) |
The Latvian men's national under 20 ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team in Latvia. The team represents Latvia at the International Ice Hockey Federation's IIHF World Junior Championship.
They have played at the top division of the tournament seven times; it has been at the top division since the 2022 tournament, where Latvia was called up to replace Russia in the rescheduled tournament due to the country being banned from international ice hockey (Latvia had originally been promoted for 2023). During the tournament, Latvia won its first-ever preliminary round game in the top division.[1]
History
[edit]Division | Championship | Coach | Captain | Finish | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pool C | 1993 Minsk | – | – | Qualified | 25th (1st in Pool C Qualification) |
Pool C | 1994 Odense/Esbjerg | – | – | Promoted | 18th (2nd in Pool C) |
Pool C1 | 1995 Puigcerda | – | – | Promoted | 17th (1st in Pool C1) |
Pool B | 1996 Sosnowiec/Tychy | – | – | Final round | 12th (2nd in Pool B) |
Pool B | 1997 Kyiv | – | – | Group round | 12th (2nd in Pool B) |
Pool B | 1998 Sosnowiec/Tychy | – | – | Final round | 14th (4th in Pool B) |
Pool B | 1999 Dunaújváros | – | – | Final round | 15th (5th in Pool B) |
Pool B | 2000 Minsk | – | – | Relegation round | 17th (7th in Pool B) |
Division I | 2001 Landsberg/Füssen | – | – | relegated | 18th (8th in Division I) |
Division II | 2002 Zagreb | – | – | Promoted | 21st (2nd in Division IIA) |
Division I | 2003 Bled | – | – | Group stage | 18th (4th in Division IB) |
Division I | 2004 Berlin | – | – | Group stage | 14th (4th in Division IA) |
Division I | 2005 Narva | – | – | Promoted | 12th (1st in Division IB) |
Top Division | 2006 British Columbia | – | – | relegated | 9th |
Division I | 2007 Odense | – | – | Group stage | 13th (2nd in Division IA) |
Division I | 2008 Riga | – | – | Promoted | 12th (1st in Division IB) |
Top Division | 2009 Ottawa | – | – | Relegation round | 8th |
Top Division | 2010 Saskatchewan | – | – | relegated | 9th |
Division I | 2011 Babruysk | – | – | Promoted | 11th (1st in Division IA) |
Top Division | 2012 Calgary/Edmonton | – | – | Relegation round | 9th |
Top Division | 2013 Ufa | – | – | relegated | 10th |
Division I | 2014 Sanok | – | – | Group stage | 12th (2nd in Division IA) |
Division I | 2015 Asiago | – | – | Group stage | 13th (3rd in Division IA) |
Division I | 2016 Vienna | – | – | Promoted | 11th (1st in Division IA) |
Top Division | 2017 Montreal/Toronto | – | – | relegated | 10th |
Division I | 2018 Courchevel/Meribel | – | – | Group stage | 12th (2nd in Division IA) |
Division I | 2019 Füssen | – | – | Group stage | 14th (4th in Division IA) |
Division I | 2020 Minsk | – | – | Group stage | 12th (2nd in Division IA) |
Division I | 2021 Hørsholm | Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[2] | |||
Division I | 2022 Hørsholm | – | – | Promoted | 12th (2nd in Division IA) |
Top Division | 2022 Edmonton | – | – | Quarterfinals | 7th |
Top Division | 2023 Halifax/Moncton | – | – | Relegation Round | 9th |
Top Division | 2024 Gothenburg | – | – | Quarterfinals | 8th |
Top Division | 2025 Ottawa | – | – |
References
[edit]- ^ Ellis, Steven. "Latvia is the Little Team that Could at World Juniors". The Hockey News. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
- ^ "IIHF cancels Division I tournaments". iihf.com. 17 March 2019.