HOCKEYGODS FORUMS
FORUM POSTS IN ALL FORUMS
posted almost 13 years ago
#851
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#852
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#853
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#854
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#855
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#856
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#857
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#858
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#859
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#860
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#861
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#862
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#863
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#864
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#865
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#866
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#867
Hockey History
→
Finnish Ice Hockey History
Finnish Ice Hockey History Finland was one of the last European traditional winter sport nations to embrace the game of ice hockey. Up until the late 1920’s only bandy was played on Finnish ice. Played by teams of 11 on large ice fields in open air, bandy was developed in England as a winter version of field hockey and came to Finland via Russia and Sweden around the turn of the century. Confusingly, bandy was also often called “ice hockey” in Europe in these early years. Canadian-style ice hockey gained a foothold in Central Europe in the first decade of the 20th century. The International Ice Hockey Federation (originally called Ligue Internationale de Hockey sur Glace, LIHG) was founded in 1908. The first European Championship tournament was played in 1910 and won by Great Britain. Sweden was also quick to adopt the new game, finishing fourth at the first Olympic ice hockey tournament in Antwerp 1920. Ice hockey was finally introduced in Finland in the winter of 1927 by Yrjö Salminen and Walter Jakobsson, chairmen of the Finnish Skating Association. Speed and figure skaters had long competed for ice with bandy players, and the skating leaders wanted to promote an alternative game which would take less ice space. The Skating Association adopted ice hockey officially in 1927, but in a countermove so did the Finnish Ball Association, the ruling organ for bandy in Finland. Happily, the feud did not last long. On 29 January 1929 both associations agreed to relinquish their claims over ice hockey and jointly created a new independent organization, the Finnish Ice Hockey Association. It took twenty more years for ice hockey to challenge bandy as the most popular winter team sport in Finland. By the 1950’s hockey was able to offer better facilities for players and spectators. The first artificial ice rink in Finland was built in Tampere in 1956. The final breakthrough came when hockey moved indoors. The first indoor ice arena in the country was opened in Tampere in 1965 just in time to host the first World Ice Hockey Championships held in Finland. Ice hockey benefitted strongly from social changes that took place in Finland in the late 1960’s. The country urbanized rapidly, and youths in the growing cities were eager to play team sports. In most other countries they took up football, but in Finland they turned to ice hockey. The popularity of the game soared in the 1970’s. Elite hockey teams developed into business ventures and the best players became professional athletes. The Finnish national hockey team, known as the Lions, took a long road to success. Finland lost all its games and finished 13th out of 14 in its first ever World Championship tournament in Basel, Switzerland in 1939. The Olympic debut in Oslo 1952 was a little better, yielding a seventh place. By the 1960’s Finland had climbed to sixth in international rankings but made little more progress in the next 30 years. Victories over any of the big five were celebrated as milestones. The USA was defeated at major championships for the first time in 1963, Sweden was first held to a draw in 1965, Czechoslovakia was beaten in 1967 and Canada vanquished in 1968. Only the Soviet Union remained untouchable until 1988. Unlike most other team sports, ice hockey holds a World Championship tournament every year. Since the early 1970’s the Finnish Lions were counted as medal contenders but returned empty-handed each time. The agonizing wait for first major international medal was finally rewarded at the Olympic Games in Calgary in 1988, where Finland beat the USSR in the final game of the tournament to earn silver. In the world elite Every reason to celebrate in Calgary 1988 The collapse of communism caused profound changes in the world hockey map in the 1990’s. The Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia were replaced by Russia and Czech Republic, who sent their best players to the NHL just like Sweden and Finland had done for years. From now on there were four hockey powers of roughly equal strength in Europe, Finland among them. In Prague 1992 the Finnish Lions won their first World Championship medal, silver. Gold medal was not long in coming. In 1995 the Lions beat their eternal rivals Sweden in its home lair in Stockholm in the World Championship final. The homecoming champions were greeted by tens of thousands of jubilant people in the streets of Helsinki. Since 1995 Finnish hockey has kept on winning Olympic and World Championship medals at a fairly regular pace. This holds also true for Finnish women. Finland was the third country in the world (after Canada and the USA) and first in Europe to take women’s ice hockey seriously: in 1998 Finland won bronze in the first women’s Olympic hockey tournament in Nagano. The Women’s Team won Olympic Bronze in Nagano 1998 |
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#868
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#869
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#870
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#871
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#872
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#873
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#874
|
|
posted almost 13 years ago
#875
|
|