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Men's Ice Hockey IIHF World Championship 2019


hckošice
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30 minutes ago, phelps said:

what are they doing in the main area? have they re-sized the entire ice sheet or are they just putting new boards on? :mumble:

 

New boards, (from 122 to 107 cm) and higher plexis. The rink size will not change, everyone in the country already call our ice rink "Letisko" "Airport" so no need to re-size it :p also they reinovate the penalty boxes they put new benches etc..

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IIHF announced today the 2019 Hall of Fame class and there 2 :SVK legends among the 5 chosen, Žigmund Pálffy and Miroslav Šatan will be honored this year :woohoo:

 

the best female player of history Hayley Wickenheiser :CAN Boris Alexandrov :URS and :KAZ  and Jorgen Jonsson :SWE complete the 5 selected World class hockey legends for this year

 

The induction ceremony will be held on 26th May 2019 in the Slovak capital of Bratislava before the medal games of the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship.

 

Boris Alexandrov :URS / :KAZ

Spoiler

b. Ust-Kamenogorsk, Soviet Union (Kazakhstan), 13 November 1955
d. Ust-Katav, Russia, 31 July 2002

Boris-Alexandrov.jpgEvery hockey-playing nation has a hero, and for the country of Kazakhstan there is one giant among its stars of the rink – Boris Alexandrov. But for his untimely death in a car accident at age 46, we might still be talking about his exploits as coach of the national team today.

Alexandrov was born in the Soviet Union and developed alongside many great players of that nation, players we know so very well – Tretiak, Vasiliev, Maltsev, Mikhailov, Kharlamov. Like any player of that vintage, Alexandrov could skate, and as a left winger he could also score. He wasn’t big in body, but he could level a solid bodycheck and was huge in heart.

Alexandrov watched the Summit Series on TV at home, but a year later he was scouted by the great Anatoli Firsov to play for CSKA Moscow. 

In international circles, Alexandrov’s greatest goal probably came on New Year’s Eve, 1975, at the Montreal Forum. At 20, he was the youngest player on the team, but he scored the tying goal in the third period of what many consider the greatest exhibition game ever played, a spectacular 3-3 game in which Tretiak was brilliant. The Canadiens outshot the Red Army, 38-13, but teams shook hands after dividing six goals equally.

In 1976, Alexandrov helped CCCP win gold at the Olympics, and he later played in the inaugural Canada Cup. In league play, he skated for the better part of two decades, first in Moscow and later in Ust-Kamenogorsk. But it was after he retired that he became a hero to the new country of Kazakhstan, which had achieved independence on 16 December 1991.

Kazakhstan joined the IIHF in 1992 and played as a nation for the first time a year later, in C Pool of the World Championship. Alexandrov played for his country at the 1995 Worlds and took over as coach in 1996, a year after retiring as a player. His effect on the players was immediate. The Kazaks won the C Pool that year, won the B Pool in 1997, and moved up to the A Pool in 1998. It was a meteoric rise, to be sure.

But before the team played in the 1998 World Championship, it had an even greater series of successes during the period 1996/97 in Olympic qualifying. Under the guidance of Alexandrov, Kazakhstan won all three games in the first round of play in February 1996 and tied with Belarus for top spot a year later in the final series of games, thus qualifying for play in Nagano in February 1998. The Kazakhs then went undefeated in three games of the first round of the Olympics to qualify for the main round which featured the top teams and a full slate of NHL players. 

Alexandrov continued to coach the national team for the next four years, and his time as coach of the Kazakh team mirrored his years coaching Torpedo Ust-Kamenogorsk at the league level. But one summer day in 2002, driving from Ufa to Chelyabinsk, he was killed in a car crash. A life was taken too early, but his immense influence on the game in his home country has long outlived that tragedy.

 

Jorgen Jonsson :SWE

Spoiler

b. Angelholm, Sweden, 29 September 1972

Jorgen-Jonsson.jpgIn the long and distinguished history of Swedish hockey no player wore the Tre Kronor sweater more often than Jorgen Jonsson. He wore the “three crowns” some 285 times during a career that was as successful as any in his nation’s history.

A centreman, Jonsson developed as a teen with his club team Rogle in his hometown of Angelholm. Drafted 227th overall by Calgary in 1994, he wasn’t particularly interested in moving to North America and instead moved from Rogle to the Farjestad team in Karlstad, where he thrived for many years. 

In 1999, however, he finally agreed to try his hand at the NHL, where his brother Kenny, the team captain, had enjoyed a successful career. Jorgen signed as a free agent with the New York Islanders, where Kenny was playing, but Jorgen made it clear he wasn’t interested in playing in the NHL for very long. As a result, late in his rookie season, he was traded to Anaheim for another Swede, Johan Davidsson.

Jorgen missed Sweden and missed family life, and true to his word, after that one NHL season, the now 28-year-old decided to return home and continue his career with Farjestad. 

Jonsson was slow to develop and never played at the World Junior Championship. In fact, his first tournament was the 1994 Olympics in Lillehammer at age 21, alongside Kenny. This tournament was made famous by Peter Forsberg’s one-handed goal in the shootout against Canada, giving Tre Kronor its first ever Olympic gold.

Later that year Jorgen helped Sweden win bronze at the World Championship in what was his first of 12 appearances at the year-end tournament. He didn’t play in either 1995 or 1996, but starting in 1997 he played in eleven consecutive World Championships, winning two gold, three silver, and four bronze medals. In all, his 104 World Championship games played ranks 11th on the all-time list.

Jonsson captained Tre Kronor for six straight years (2000-2005) during his 15-year international career, and he played more games as captain than anyone in Tre Kronor history. A smooth skater who was skilled in the offensive end of the ice and equally effective as a checker, he was the kind of player no team could win without.

Jonsson is part of two extraordinary groups. He and his brother Kenny and Peter Forsberg were the only players to win Olympic gold in both 1994 and 2006, an impressive example of longevity.

As well, Jonsson was part of another group of eight players to win gold at the Olympics and World Championship in the same year, 2006, the only time in IIHF history this has happened. And, of course, Jonsson in the only player who is on both of these lists of historic achievements.

Jonsson retired from the game in 2009, and after his 13 distinguished seasons with Farjestad the club retired his number 21. In 2012, he became the 58th member inducted into Sweden’s Hockey Hall of Fame.

 

Žigmund Pálffy :TCH / :SVK

Spoiler

b. Skalica, Czechoslovakia (Slovakia), 5 May 1972

Zigmund-Palffy.jpgThe flagbearer for Slovakia at the Opening Ceremony of the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, Zigmund Palffy was a hockey hero to a small, hockey-mad nation for more than 15 years. 

It didn’t take long for Palffy to make his mark on the world stage. After a sensational 1991 World Juniors, during which he scored a goal a game and helped Czechoslovakia win a bronze medal, Palffy was drafted 24th overall by the New York Islanders. He played for the Czechs at the Canada Cup that fall and then opted to play for Dukla Trencin for two years before feeling confident enough to test the NHL. Even when he first came to Long Island, however, he was still not quite ready.

Palffy persisted, though, and after two years mostly in the minors his determination was rewarded. Making the Islanders at training camp in 1995, he had two dominant seasons, producing 177 points in 161 games. 

During his minor pro days in North America, Palffy also played for Slovakia at the 1994 Olympics, an historic moment for the country that had to qualify to play in Lillehammer, its first ever tournament as an independent nation.

But the greatest moment in Slovakian hockey was yet to come. There was controversy first at the 2002 Olympics because NHL teams didn’t release all Slovak players in timely fashion, and the team finished a disappointing 13th. Every Slovak player in the NHL and around the world knew their nation was world class, and at the World Championship a few weeks later, they were determined to prove it. 

The Slovaks beat all comers, including Canada, 3-2, in the quarter-finals. In the semis, against Sweden, the game went to a shootout, and Palffy netted the winning goal to take Slovakia to the gold-medal game. 

Of course, if you are Slovak, you know where you were the afternoon of May 11, 2002, when Peter Bondra converted a pass from Palffy with exactly 100 seconds remaining in the game, giving their country a 4-3 win over Russia to win the gold medal. It remains the defining moment of their hockey history.

A year later, Palffy helped Slovakia win a World Championship bronze, but midway through the 2005/06 NHL season, he announced his retirement, citing a lingering shoulder injury. Palffy returned home, recovered, and came back two years later, eventually playing at the Vancouver Olympics, his final international event.

His IIHF career is full of highlights. A three-time Olympian, Palffy led the 1994 Olympics in scoring. He was also tied with teammate Jozef Stumpel as top scorer at the 2003 Worlds, and in 12 NHL seasons he had 30 goals or more six times. Over 684 regular-season games, he averaged better than a point a game. 

At home on both the NHL and international ice, Palffy was a fluid skater and natural scorer, a sporting player whose competitive nature was as impressive as his shot. But above all he was one of the heroes of 2002, a team that took tiny Slovakia and put it at the top of the hockey world.

 

Miroslav Šatan  :SVK

Spoiler

b. Jacovce, Czechoslovakia (Slovakia), 22 October 1974

Miroslav-Satan.jpgA legend among the first generation of Slovak players after the country achieved independence in the early 1990s, Miro Satan was the consummate professional, leader of the highest standing, and an inspiration to teammates and kids alike.

As with Peter Stastny, Ziggy Palffy, and Robert Petrovicky, Satan achieved two milestones in the mid-1990s. He helped his new nation qualify for the 1994 Olympics (where he led the tournament with nine goals), but at the same time he helped the team fight from C Pool of the World Championships (also in 1994) to B Pool (in 1995) to A Pool (1996), achieving their proper placing despite having to start from scratch after breaking free from Czechoslovakia.

But perhaps more than any other player of his era, Satan was at home in both the NHL and IIHF. His international achievements are why he is being inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame, but he also played 1,050 regular-season games in the NHL and won the Stanley Cup, with Pittsburgh, in 2009.

Drafted 111th overall by Edmonton in 1993 on the strength of a good rookie season in the Czech league, Satan made his way to North America a year later during the lockout-shortened season, playing with four teams in three leagues. It wasn’t until 1995/96 that he made his NHL debut with the Oilers, and before his second season he played for Slovakia at a third major event, the World Cup, in September 1996.

Satan was traded to Buffalo late in that season, and it was with the Sabres that he had many of his finest NHL seasons, culminating in 1999 when the Sabres went to the Stanley Cup finals before losing to Dallas.

A year later, the Slovaks showed what they were capable of at the 2000 World Championship, advancing to the gold-medal game before losing to arch-rivals Czech Republic, 5-3. Satan, the Slovak team captain, led the tournament in goals (10) and points (12) and was named tournament MVP. 

Two years later, the Slovaks were back--and finished what they started--winning gold and earning their place in Slovak history. Satan also captained that team and was named IIJF Directorate Best Forward. In all, he wore the “C” a total of nine times for Slovakia, eight at the World Championships as well as at the 2004 World Cup.

One extraordinary aspect of Satan’s accomplishments is the never waning quality of his play. He led the 1994 Olympics in goals, but he also led the 2000 and 2002 Worlds in points. Even still, he won his only Stanley Cup with Pittsburgh in 2009, at age 34, and he won another monumental silver at the Worlds in 2012.

Satan is one of only two players to win silver in 2000, gold in 2002, and silver in 2012 (Michal Handzus being the other).

Since retiring as a player in 2014, Satan has gone on to some success at the executive level. He was named general manager for the Team Europe entry at the 2016 World Cup, the team that shocked the world by advancing to the finals against Canada. He then became General Manager of the Slovak national team program.

 

Hayley Wickenheiser  :CAN

Spoiler

b. Shaunavon, Saskatchewan, Canada, 12 August 1978

Hayley-Wickenheiser.jpgLong before Hayley Wickenheiser played her final game for Team Canada (at the 2016 Women’s World Championship) it was clear she would one day be honoured by the IIHF for her career. She was that good for that long.

And what made her good wasn’t just the numbers. The numbers were there, of course, but they were the result of a personality that never said enough, never said compromise, never said better is not possible.

The numbers show that she is the all-time leader in scoring at both the Olympics (51 points in 26 games) and Women’s Worlds (86 points in 61 games), and that she has won more medals than any other woman (13 – 7 gold, 6 silver). The numbers show she won a record four Olympic gold medals and was twice named MVP (in 2002 and 2006) and that no athlete has appeared at more Winter Olympics than her five.

In total, she holds or is tied for eight Olympics records and four Women’s Worlds records, records achieved during a remarkable 22-year IIHF career.

The first indication that the young Wickenheiser was going to amount to something came ridiculously early in her life. At age 12, she played for Alberta in the Under-18 hockey tournament of the Canada Winter Games. She was no passenger – she scored the tournament-winning goal and was named MVP of the finals.

Wickenheiser made her debut with Team Canada at the 1994 Women’s Worlds at the tender age of 15. Three years later, at the next official IIHF event, she was named to the tournament all-star team and was clearly a force to be reckoned with.

What was it about her? In a word – everything. She trained and developed strong legs, giving her a stride no woman could match. She worked endlessly on her shot and could fire the puck like no woman in the game. She trained year round and was strong enough to play with men, which she did, in Finland, becoming the first women to score in a men’s professional league.

She had a determination so ferocious it was intimidating. She had a will that was overpowering, and she could single-handedly lift her team to victory, through words and actions. 

Off ice, her moral and ethical character were so respected that she was asked to recite the athletes’ Olympic oath in 2010, and in 2014 she was Canada’s flagbearer at the Opening Ceremony. That same year, she was named to the IOC’s Athletes’ Commission, the most important function an athlete can perform in sport away from the field of play.

In the summer of 2018, Wickenheiser made NHL history of sorts when the Toronto Maple Leafs hired her as their assistant director of player development, a move praised in all quarters because, in simple words, when you hire Hayley Wickenheiser, you hire a lifelong winner.

 

Richard Torriani Award for players from smaller hockey countries

Konstantin Mihaylov  :BUL

Spoiler

Konstantin Mihaylov
b. Sofia, Bulgaria, 22 May 1964

Konstantin-Mihaylov.jpgTo call Konstantin Mihaylov the defining player of Bulgaria is an understatement. Bulgaria has competed in 52 World Championships since its first in 1963, and goaltender Mihaylov has played in 28 of those. His dedication to the team, his love of the game, and his skill between the pipes are the stuff of legend. 

Konstantin and his twin brother, Boris, started playing hockey on Sofia’s famous outdoor rink Druzhba thanks to their father, Simeon, who also played for years in the Bulgarian league. 

Konstantin quickly became interested in being a goalie and went to all lengths to achieve his dream. He made his first goalie gloves from old hockey pants, and later in life he kept tools in the dressing room to repair his equipment at a time when teams never had an equipment manager. 

Mihaylov was also the first Bulgarian goalie to train off ice specifically for his position, focusing on stretching, using tennis balls to develop his hand-eye coordination, and working on other drills specific to goalies.

He first played for his country in 1981, at the European Junior Championship B Pool. His first senior event came in 1985 at the World Championship C Pool, in Megeve, France. That started a record 28 World Championship appearances for the goalie that ended after the 2014 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division III when he was 49 years old. He also represented Bulgaria in numerous Inline Hockey World Championships, last time in 2015 after his 51st birthday.

There were several career highlights along the way, of course. Mihaylov backstopped the country to victory in C Pool in 1991 to earn promotion to B Pool, and the year after the team played well enough to remain in the higher pool for another year. 

He was named tournament Best Goaltender twice, first in 1990 and then, incredibly, 16 years later at age 42. He appeared played in three Olympic qualifying tournaments for Bulgaria, in 2005, 2009, and 2015 (when he dressed as a backup for one game). Indeed, the running joke in the Bulgarian dressing room was that he was named Best Player for his team so often that every friend and relative owned a nice watch (the typical gift for Best Player)!

In league play Mihaylov was a star with HC Levski Sofia, in the Bulgarian league, for whom he played 20 of his 25 seasons. He also dressed for two seasons with Akademik SF (also Bulgaria), and one season with Istanbul Paten Kulubu (Turkey), Amneville (France, Second Division), and CSKA Sofia (Bulgaria).

 

Paul Loicq Award for outstanding Contribution to IIHF and International Ice Hockey

Jim Johannson  :USA

Spoiler

b. Rochester, Minnesota, United States, 10 March 1964
d. Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States, 21 January 2018

Jim-Johannson.jpgFor those who didn’t know him, he was Jim Johannson of USA Hockey For those who did, he was “JJ.” And, for those in the former category, if you were in hockey, you got to know JJ pretty quickly. Before his untimely death at age 53, he was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass.

Johannson was a Hartford Whalers draft choice in 1982. He went on to play four years of NCAA hockey at the University of Wisconsin, helping the Badgers to a national championship in 1983.  After graduating in 1986, he embarked on a pro career in the IHL. 

During his university career, Johannson played at two World Junior Championships, and as a pro he played at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics and the 1992 World Championship. His brother John and late father Ken had also donned the red, white, and blue sweater for the U.S., and as time would tell, it was JJ’s fate to be more actively involved in USA Hockey as an executive than as a player.

After retiring in 1994, JJ joined the Twin Cities Vulcans, a Junior A level team in the USHL, as their general manager. During his five years there he built a team that won the national championship in 2000, and at that point USA Hockey jumped in. 

JJ began his career there as general manager of international activities and within three years was promoted to senior director of hockey operations. Four years later, he became assistant executive director, a position which more or less put him in charge of every team the United States assembled for IIHF competition, men and women. 

Under his watch the U20 team won three gold medals, most memorably in Ufa in 2013. Johannson helped develop the U18 program for men, which also became the dominant team at the world level in that event, and he was responsible for the selection of players to the 2010, 2014, and 2018 Olympics.

More than titles, though, he was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable. He was taken too early, but by the time he left he had already made a lasting mark on the game worldwide.

 

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  • 3 weeks later...

Last phase of ticket sale starts on Thursday

 

The 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in Bratislava and Kosice is approaching fast, and another landmark date in the lead-up to the tournament (10-26 May) is 28 February, when single-game tickets go on sale. This is the third and final stage of the ticket sale.
 
“With the start of the single-game tickets, it is important to note that tickets won’t be available in packages anymore,” said Slovak Ice Hockey Federation president Martin Kohut. “In all, we sold an amazing 74,000 day packages, but any tickets not sold from that stage will now be available as single-game tickets. This will be the means of sale from now until the end of the tournament.”
 
Tickets are available in two price categories. Preliminary-round tickets in Bratislava and Kosice can be purchased for €20-75 (1st category) or €10-60 (2nd category). Quarter-finals prices vary from €100 (1st category) to €70 (2nd category). For the semi-finals and medal games, played at the Ondrej Nepela Arena in Bratislava, tickets are €200 (1st category) and €160 (2nd category). 
 
Tickets for the bronze medal game cost €180 (1st category) or €145 (2nd category) and for gold medal game € 350 (1st category) or € 300 (2nd category)
. “VIP tickets will be sold as well,” said Michaela Grendelova, the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship organizing committee’s head of media and communication. “This package includes more comfortable seats and all concessions as well as a dedicated entrance.”
 
The process to purchase single seats stays the same. Fans must go to the official website and fill out the registration form, providing their full name, e-mail address, and mobile phone number to which they will be sent a verification code in a text message. Only after the verification will it be possible to buy tickets. This step was established early as a preventive measure against resellers. The measures in place for the Ticketportal stores are still the same as well. Tickets can be bought or booked only online on 2019.iihfworlds.com, and sales are limited to four tickets per person.
 
“Fans have two options,“ Kohut explained. “The first is to buy tickets that can be printed at home, and the second option is to generate an online booking code. In this case, fans can buy hard-copy tickets in one of the Ticketportal stores.”
 
It is important to note that fans should buy tickets only from authorized retailers and on the official website 2019.iihfworlds.com because these tickets have safety features to prevent counterfeiting.

 

 

 

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Referees for Slovakia 2019 assigned

   
Referees   Linesmen  
Bjork, Tobias SWE Dalton, Andrew GBR
Frano, Martin CZE Golyak, Dmitri BLR
Gofman, Roman RUS Hancock II, William USA
Gouin, Oliver CAN Jensen, Rene DEN
Hribik, Jan CZE Kaderli, Roman SUI
Iverson, Brett CAN Lazarev, Gleb RUS
Kaukokari, Mikko FIN Leermakers, Joep NED
Nikolic, Manuel AUT Lhotsky, Miroslav CZE
Ohlund, Linus SWE Malmqvist, Andreas SWE
Rantala, Aleksi FIN McCrank, Dustin CAN
Reneau, Stephen USA Nikulainen, Lauri FIN
Romasko, Yevgeni RUS Oliver, Brian USA
Schukies, Gordon GER Ondracek, Jiri CZE
Sidorenko, Maxim BLR Shishlo, Dmitri RUS
Stano, Peter SVK Sormunen, Hannu FIN
Tufts, Jeremy USA Vanoosten, Nathan CAN

 

The International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) has assigned the on-ice officials for the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in Bratislava and Kosice, Slovakia, and for the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division I Group A in Astana, Kazakhstan.

With the final selections, all assignments for the World Championship events in various categories and levels in spring have been confirmed and can be found here.

16 referees and 16 linesmen will call the games at this year’s flagship event in Slovakia. The 32 on-ice officials come from 14 different countries, with Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, Russia and the United States leading the way with four nominations each. Officials from non-participating countries include a referee and a linesman from Belarus and a linesman from the Netherlands. With Peter Stano, one referee from the host nation Slovakia made the cut as well. He came back into the program after switching from linesman to referee a few years ago.

Aleksi Rantala from Finland is the most experienced referee with five previous World Championships and one Olympics. Roman Gofman from Russia has also officiated in five World Championships. Martin Frano officiated in four Worlds as did the two linesmen Gleb Lazarev and Miroslav Lhotsky.

The 2019 Worlds is also the start of a new Olympic cycle with young officials joining the crew. For referees Stano, Manuel Nikolic, Yevgeni Romasko, and Jeremy Tufts it will be their first top-level men’s World Championship, while five linesmen will also officiate at that level for the first time. Romasko returned to Russia half a year ago after having worked for four seasons in the NHL, where he officiated 66 NHL games, and the AHL.

In addition to the 32 on-ice officials who will work in Slovakia, the IIHF also selected seven referees and seven linesmen for the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division I Group A in Kazakhstan, where the best countries outside of the top-level Worlds will battle for promotion to the 2020 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in Switzerland.

The top-two men’s events of the program are the last two where referees and linesmen have been assigned. The performance of the candidates were evaluated by the IIHF Officiating Committee during the season in international and national competitions until the recent nominations.

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  • 3 weeks later...

51 Days to go !!!

 

2 Brief info

 

 

IIHF President René Fasel after his official visit expressed his satisfaction with preparations almost 50 days to go

https://www.iihf.com/en/events/2019/wm/news/9581/rene-fasel-slovakia-is-a-hockey-country

 

 

and special mention about the extra trains, our Rail company added 7 trains to help the fans to travel from Košice to Bratislava and vice-versa

https://www.iihf.com/en/events/2019/wm/news/9464/zssk-slovakrail-is-the-2019-world-championship-tra

 

Quote

The national train service is adding seven trains for the tournament, which runs from 10 to 26 May in Bratislava and Kosice. The first train is named after the official WM mascot and is called IC 521 MACEJKO (Bratislava 06:01 – Košice 10:48). It will run on days during the World Championship when Slovakia plays, and it will inlcude four extra 2nd class carriages and a “fan“ carriage. 

Each passenger on the extra train will get a small gift – a fan scarf. As well, the return journey, train IC 526 MACEJKO (Košice 23:17 – Bratislava 03:58), will run only for Slovakia’s games during the preliminary round. The trains will be available not only for fans but also for players, referees, and delegates. These extra cars have been designed by Stano “JAS“ Malak.

 

6949484a-6b8f-41a8-b0ec-851cac6a60b0.png

 

 

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  • 3 weeks later...
On 05/04/2019 at 17:21, hckosice said:

1st reinforcement from NHL for our team. Andrej Sekera from the Edmonton Oilers accepted tonight the National team coach invitation and will play at the World Champs :yes

 

 

 

It Looks Promising with the participation of three more NHLers, Tomáš Tatár (Montreal), Richard Pánik (Arizona) and Christián Jaroš (Ottawa) all accepted the invitation to play at the World Champs.

 

They just need now also the approval from their NHL clubs (in other words successful exit medical exams) which can be a bit problematic for Jaroš, since he injured during the penultimate Ottawa match, but he played more than 18 minutes in the last game...so hopefully it will be ok.

 

The main problem so far about this group is the situation around Pánik, who is finishing his contract with the Coyotes and thus will be a free player this summer, our federation will need to reimburse him the mandatory insurance, they are already in contact with IIHF, there a deal with the World hockey federation, that they can repay in special ocassions a part of the players insurances, this case (since we are the World Champs hosts) will probably work this time. Let´s hope for so, because we really need a real striker like Pánik in our team..our biggest issue actually being the very poor offensive efficiency.

 

We will know more and probably the definitive result about the mentioned three players by the end of this week after the 2 test matches in Germany.

 

In other hand, Sekera from Edmonton is safe and confirmed. He will come to reinforce our team

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23 hours ago, hckosice said:

 

It Looks Promising with the participation of three more NHLers, Tomáš Tatár (Montreal), Richard Pánik (Arizona) and Christián Jaroš (Ottawa) all accepted the invitation to play at the World Champs.

 

They just need now also the approval from their NHL clubs (in other words successful exit medical exams) which can be a bit problematic for Jaroš, since he injured during the penultimate Ottawa match, but he played more than 18 minutes in the last game...so hopefully it will be ok.

 

The main problem so far about this group is the situation around Pánik, who is finishing his contract with the Coyotes and thus will be a free player this summer, our federation will need to reimburse him the mandatory insurance, they are already in contact with IIHF, there a deal with the World hockey federation, that they can repay in special ocassions a part of the players insurances, this case (since we are the World Champs hosts) will probably work this time. Let´s hope for so, because we really need a real striker like Pánik in our team..our biggest issue actually being the very poor offensive efficiency.

 

We will know more and probably the definitive result about the mentioned three players by the end of this week after the 2 test matches in Germany.

 

In other hand, Sekera from Edmonton is safe and confirmed. He will come to reinforce our team

 

 

Tomáš Tatar and Christián Jaroš confirmed :thumbup: Jaroš is a Košice born player so it will be the fullfiled dream for him to play the world champs for his country in his home town :)

 

https://sport.aktuality.sk/c/391861/dalsi-slovensky-hokejista-z-nhl-potvrdil-ucast-na-domacich-ms/

 

https://sport.aktuality.sk/c/391864/christian-jaros-je-uz-na-slovensko-a-je-pripraveny-na-majstrovstva-sveta/

 

 

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  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • If lacrosse can be selected then I don't see why Australian rules football can't be selected if they get Olympic sport recognition. Australia will obviously dominate, but there's enough other nations to make a tournament.   As for netball, a women's only event is still much more likely to be accepted than a men's only event. Australia and the netball federation can spin it as bringing equality to the number of men's and women's events (while obviously ignoring that there will be more women at the Olympics).
    • The NFL are pushing had to develop flag football in Australia in hopes of getting it included in 2032. I hope they fail tbh.   Single gender sports fail the gender equality requirement so netball is out unless they can rapidly fix their gender problem. World Netball not so long ago was refusing utterly to sanction men's international netball or even support the growth of men's netball so they kind of sabotaged themselves and are only changing courses out of self interest because Brisbane was awarded the Olympics.   It doesn't even make sense to propose Aussie rules given how poor the participation is outside of Australia.
    • - Great Britain Team Size Prediction for Winter Olympic Games 2026 Milano Cortina   Ski Sports   Alpine Skiing  (4) - The qualification system is a bit confusing, but from what I gather the team is Guaranteed 2 quotas (one for each gender), and then more are given for rankings. I can only see 1 female qualifying, but the men's team is a bit stronger, and could improve with some juniors coming through. I would say a baseline of 3, with a max of 5, 6 if things really improve.  Cross Country Skiing  (3) - The men's team came 11th in the world cup last year, and with some good results could move up to top 10 which would give 3 quotas, The women's team is non existant.  Ski Jumping  (0) - Nope Nordic Combined  (0) - Nope Freestyle Skiing  (6) - Based on last year rankings, the athletes are ranked: M Moguls (26/30), M Ski Cross (26/32), M Halfpipe (33/25), M Slopestyle (39+40/30) W Moguls (23+42/30), W Halfpipe (3/25), W Big Air (5/30), W Slopestyle (19+22/30)  Barring Injury , thats 2 quotas on the women's side, and I would predict 4 more, with a max team of 7 or 8. Snowboarding  (2) - W Halfpipe (34/25) is the only unknown quota, as both Charlotte Bankes and Mia Brookes should qualify easily. Huw Nightlingale may get a spot for the Mixed Team snowboard cross but I don't know how it works. Biathlon  (0) - Nope Ski Mountaineering  (0) - Nope     Skating Sports   Speed Skating  (2) - Cornelius Kersten and Elia Smelding should qualify, although they both haven't competed this year. Short Track Speed Skating  (2) - A team of 5 went to the world but only a couple could really qualify Figure Skating  (4) - Fear and Gibson should qualify, and the pair team is ranked 16th in the world with 19 qualifiers.      Sleigh Sports   Luge  (0) - Nope Skeleton  (6) - A full team is certainly on the cards, but with only ranking points from the next season counting a lot could change Bobsleigh  (6) - Brad Hall and Co should qualify for both 2 and 4 man. I doubt any more will qualify from the mens side. Adele Nicholl on the womens should also qualify in both events     Team Sports   Curling  (12) - Anything but a full team would be a dissapointment Ice Hockey  (0) - The men were the only chance       Total Optimistic Prediction  -  (60) Total Pessimistic Prediction  - (32)   Total Realistic Prediction  -  (47)
    • Medal Table [16/78]    04 00 03 [07]  04 00 01 [05]    03 04 02 [09]  01 02 01 [04]   01 02 00 [03]  01 01 02 [04]   01 00 04 [05] 01 00 00 [01]  00 02 02 [04] 00 02 00 [02]  00 01 01 [02] 00 01 00 [01]  00 01 00 [01] 00 00 02 [02] 00 00 02 [02]   00 00 01 [01] 00 00 01 [01]   00 00 01 [01]   00 00 01 [01]  
    • Men's Team Foil  ( Tunis) Gold: Italy Silver: United States Bronze:  France   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/9F61644FE8314F2FB276EDB05BE2EDD4   Women's Team Foil  ( Tunis) Gold:  Japan  Silver:  Ukraine Bronze:  South Korea   Full results https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/717527B161BD4D5F886E902B95185B92   Men's Team Epee ( Vancouver) Gold:  Hungary Silver:  Japan Bronze:  Kazakistan   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/72BA0CEEBF9A4D599176E4F3A6AE671A     Women's Team Epee ( Vancouver) Gold:  South Korea Silver: Ukraine Bronze: France   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/F0AB7989D0044A7DACEE29D1A7114152
    • Team Size Prediction for Winter Olympic Games 2026 Milano Cortina   Let's do this for a country that is not actually that good in winter sports as well as our Olympic Committee Declining lots of places. In Beijing we had 7 quotas and used 2      (also I am a very optimistic person in relation to sport in general and always hope for the best. )    Ski Sports   Alpine Skiing  (2) - Emilija Djurović and Aleksa Tomović Cross Country Skiing  (2) - Anja Ilić (the olympic committee cancelled her participation just before Bejing) and Andrija Tošić Ski Jumping  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Nordic Combined  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Freestyle Skiing  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Snowboarding  (1) - Matija Milenković  Biathlon  (2) - We had two juniors at the YOG 2024, maybe they can get better, I will be optimistic  (Lamija Salihagić and/or Hanna Jelena Braun) Ski Mountaineering  (0) - I don't think it will be existing      Skating Sports   Speed Skating  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Short Track Speed Skating  (1) - Out first EYOF winter medal in a long time came from Luka Jašić Figure Skating  (0) - Maybe we will have a good junior come      Sleigh Sports   Luge  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Skeleton  (1) - We had two juniors at the YOG 2024, maybe they can get better, I will be optimistic Bobsleigh  (0) - Not existent anymore      Team Sports   Curling  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Ice Hockey  (0) - Qualifier for women's team cancelled, and mens team eliminated       Total  VERY Optimistic Prediction  -  (9) Total Pessimistic Prediction  - (3)   Total Realistic Prediction  -  (3)
    • North American rugby quotas ( and qualified automatically)    M: and W: and  
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