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Uploaded By: PRESIDENT on September 17th, 2020

Czechoslovakia National Hockey Team
1947 World Ice Hockey Championships

Team Roster
Vladimír Zábrodský, Josef Trousílek, Miroslav Sláma, Jaroslav Drobný, Miloslav Pokorný, Josef Kus, Bohumil Modrý, Stanislav Konopásek, Ladislav Troják, Karel Stibor, Vilibald Šťovík.

Coach - Mike Buckna

Владимир Забродский, Йозеф Троусилек, Мирослав Слама, Ярослав Дробны, Милослав Покорны, Йозеф Кус, Богумил Модры, Станислав Конопасек, Ладислав Трояк, Карел Стибор, Вилибальд Стовик

тренер - Майк Букна

The 14th Ice Hockey World Championship and 25th European Championship was the first competition after the Second World War. It was held from 15 to 23 February 1947 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Eight teams participated, but the competition was notably missing the reigning world champion, Canada. The world champion was decided for the first time by round robin league play. Czechoslovakia won the world championship for the first time and the European championship for the seventh time. King Gustav V had sent a telegram of congratulations to the Swedish team after beating the Czechs, unfortunately they had barely finished celebrating when they were upset by the Austrians, costing them the Gold.

Many notable changes were made to the rules for this championship. The game was standardized to be played in three 20 minute periods, aligning with the Canadian practice. The net size was standardized as well. There would be no more one- and three-minute penalties, and penalty shots were instituted. The Congress in Brussels where all this was decided, also tried to absolve Canada's objections to the definition of what an 'amateur player' was. Canada's absence from the first post WWII games was a combination of this dispute, and a dispute over who was making the decisions (i.e. North America vs. Europe).

Also at issue was which American federation's team was the proper representative, (a dispute that nearly destroyed the following year's Olympic tournament) and how to decide which nations would receive invitations. Japan and Germany were barred from participation, but the IIHF was careful to illustrate that it was the politics, not the people, who were at fault, and allies like Austria and Italy were admitted.

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