website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Ice Hockey 2015 - 2016 Discussion Thread


Recommended Posts

Men’s Div. III begins

Six teams, free live stream

841b3b2cce.jpg

The Turkish team in front of its fans at last year’s IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division III in Izmir.

 

The 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division III begins today in Istanbul with six teams competing for promotion to the next level.

South Africa, host Turkey, Luxembourg, Hong Kong, Georgia and Bosnia & Herzegovina will play in the six-team round-robin event from 31 March until 6 April. The schedule was adjusted due to the late withdrawal of the United Arab Emirates.

One year ago DPR Korea won the tournament thanks to a 4-3 overtime win against host Turkey, then in Izmir, in front of 2,135 fans and earned promotion. They are replaced by South Africa, which was relegated from the Division II Group B. Last year Turkey won silver and Luxembourg the bronze medals.

All games will be streamed live and for free. Games of the Turkish national team will also be televised by NTV Spor and Sports TV respectively.

It’s the first men’s senior tournament of this year’s IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship program. The Division II groups will start on 9 April in Jaca (Spain) and Mexico City (Mexico) followed by the Division I Group B in Zagreb (Croatia) 17-23 April and the Division I Group A in Katowice (Poland) 23-29 April. The top division will start on 6 May with the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship taking place in Moscow and St. Petersburg, Russia.

Free Livestream Here

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/9-ice-hockey-2015-2016-discussion-thread/page/10/#findComment-5617
Share on other sites

  • Replies 991
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Czechs shoot down Japan

Hymlarova plays the heroine

Czechs shoot down Japan

Czech Republic's Alena Polenska #9 celebrates a second period goal against Japan's Nana Fujimoto #1 during preliminary round action at the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women's World Championship

 

 

The Czech Republic edged Japan 3-2 in a shootout at McArthur Island Centre to complete their round-robin slate on Thursday. Klara Hymlarova notched the winner

 

It was an epic shootout indeed. Hymlarova’s game-deciding shot was the 15th overall, and she had taken three previous shots, including one goal, beforehand.

The result gave the Czechs an opportunity to reach the quarter-finals for the first time in their Women’s Worlds history. It would hold up unless Switzerland beat Sweden in regulation in the last Group B game.

The Japanese, meanwhile, are bound for relegation play, like last year.

Czech goalie Klara Peslarova got the victory versus last year’s Best Goalie, Nana Fujimoto. Final shots on goal favored the Czechs 33-28.

With Katerina Bukolska off for tripping, Japanese captain Chiho Osawa opened the scoring with a power play goal at 4:55.

The Czechs failed to capitalize on three second-period power plays as Japan held on to its lead. Yet Czech captain Alena Polenska stepped up with just 41 seconds left in the middle frame, notching the equalizer on a Denisa Krizova set-up.

Polenska assisted on Aneta Tejralova’s 2-1 goal at 7:48 of the third period. But Japan’s Mika Hori made it 2-2 just over two minutes later.

The Czechs had a golden chance to get the winner in regulation time when they got a 5-on-3 with just 2:20 remaining. In an unusual sequence, Haruna Yoneyama was sent off hooking at the same time as Shoko Ono was sent off for tripping. However, it was nothing doing, and extra time was required.

In 2013, the Czechs finished eighth. Japan has never finished higher than seventh at the Women’s Worlds (2008, 2015).

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/9-ice-hockey-2015-2016-discussion-thread/page/10/#findComment-5686
Share on other sites

Same old song and dance

U.S. hammers Russia to clinch SF bye

Same old song and dance

USA's Monique Lamoureux #7 scores a first period goal against Russia's Maria Sorokina #33 while Anna Shukina #21 looks on during preliminary round action at the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women's World Championship.

 

 

The United States clinched the top seed in Group A and a semi-final berth with a 8-0 pounding of Russia. Monique Lamoureux and Hilary Knight both scored twice.

 

Kendall Coyne, Megan Keller, Shiann Darkangelo, and Anne Pankowski also scored for the Americans. It was another methodical, efficient performance at the Sandman Centre.

Last year, the U.S. hammered Russia 9-2 in round-robin play and 13-1 in the semi-finals. The outclassed Russians have never beaten the U.S. in 11 tries at this tournament.

Looking ahead to the semi-finals, Lamoureux said: "We have two days to prepare. Not sure who we’re going to play yet, but I think we haven’t played our best 60 minutes yet. Our goal is to get better each and every game."

U.S. goalie Nicole Hensley recorded her first tournament shutout as her team earned a 39-16 edge in shots on goal. The U.S. has used all three of its goalies in three straight wins.

"I just got the chills thinking about it," said Coyne of Hensley. "She definitely gave us energy all game long, just looking back at her. I was excited for her. I think everyone was excited for her. First career start, first career win, first career shutout. She did it all!"

Russia will now set its sights on surviving the quarter-finals. It has twice won a medal at this tournament, taking bronze in 2001 and 2013.

At 5:07, the U.S. took a 1-0 lead as Coyne dipsy-doodled past the Russian defence and scored on an in-close shot.

Just 1:22 later, Monique Lamoureux cut down the right side and fooled Russian starter Maria Sorokina with a pretty forehand deke. Russian coach Mikhail Chekhanov had seen enough and yanked Sorokina in favor of back-up Nadezhda Morosva.

It was 3-0 for the Americans at 14:19 when Keller scored with a rising wrister from the top of the right faceoff circle.

The Russians settled down and played a better defensive game in the first half of the second period as the Americans also seemed to compete with a little less urgency.

But in the end, a three-goal lead certainly didn't prove to be "the worst lead in hockey" for the defending World Champions.

At 4:54 of the third, Lamoureux got her second of the night with the man advantage, using a forehand move virtually identical to her first-period tally.

"It wasn’t the same goalie each time, but yeah, I guess if you watched one, you basically saw the other," Lamoureux admitted.

Darkangelo made it 5-0 at 6:19 with her first career Women's Worlds goal, going to the net and converting Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson's pass.

"It’s really exciting," said Darkangelo. "I just drove to the net, and Jocelyne made a beautiful pass over and I tipped it in. It’s easy when you’re playing with talented players who set you up like that."

Halfway through the period, Knight cruised straight down the middle and beat Morozova high to the glove side for a 6-0 edge. She made it 7-0 with her team-leading fifth goal of the tournament at 16:17.

Pankowski rounded out the scoring with another power play marker with 2:46 left, skating unobstructed into the high slot and whipping it home.

"Something we’ve really focused on is getting better every game," said Coyne. "I think we’re definitely doing that. We’re enjoying each other and having fun, and I think that’s what it’s all about."

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/9-ice-hockey-2015-2016-discussion-thread/page/10/#findComment-5688
Share on other sites

Swedes down Swiss

 

Czechs make QF, Switzerland misses out

Swedes down Swiss

Sweden's Anna Borgqvist #18 and Switzerland's Sabrina Zollinger #11 battle for the puck while Switzerland's Florence Schelling #41 defends during preliminary round action at the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey Women's World Championship

 

 

Sweden beat Switzerland 2-1 in a shootout to finish Group B undefeated. The Swiss missed the quarter-finals and will face Japan in relegation play

 

Sweden’s quest to win its first medal since 2007’s bronze continues as it prepares for Friday’s quarter-finals. The Swiss needed a regulation win here to move on to the next round, and didn’t get it.

Instead, the Czech Republic will be in the quarter-finals. It’s a great moment for the Czechs, who upset Switzerland 3-1 in the round-robin. They were relegated in their only previous Women’s Worlds appearance in 2013.

Anna Borgqvist, who finished third in tournament scoring last year, got the shootout winner. The Swedes outshot Switzerland 39-22.

The disappointed Swiss will finish seventh or lower for the first time since the 2011 Women’s Worlds (seventh). The last time they were relegated was in 2004.

Switzerland jumped out to a 1-0 lead on Evelina Raselli’s goal at 4:21. But the red-and-white team would run into penalty trouble thereafter, including two bench minors for too many players on the ice.

The Swedes poured it on in the second period, outshooting the Swiss 19-8. Their effort finally bore fruit. At 19:34, Lisa Johansson potted the tying goal on the power play.

In the dying moments of the third period, the Swiss pulled netminder Florence Schelling in a bid to get a three-point regulation win. However, the gambit didn’t pay off, and their medal dreams were over.

Swiss coach Daniela Diaz offered a post-mortem: "We had victory on our stick until the last second. The team struggled with a lot of heart. From this point of view, the defeat is very bitter. Despite an outstanding goalkeeping performance from Florence Schelling, it was not enough. Unfortunately. wie had to kill off many unnecessary penalties, which cannot happen at this level. Now we have to focus on the relegation game against Japan tomorrow. "

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/9-ice-hockey-2015-2016-discussion-thread/page/10/#findComment-5690
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • 2026 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Series #1/5 - Cottbus   Results (February 19-22, 2026)   Men's Floor Exercise: 1. Artem Dolgopyat   2. Yahor Sharamkou  (Belarus) 3. Aleksandr Kartsev  (Russia) 4. Anze Hribar   5. Kameron Nelson   6. Noam Berkovich   7. Jesse Moore   8. Dimitriy Patanin     Men's Pommel Horse: 1. Gabriele Targhetta   2. Mamikon Khachatryan   3. Nariman Kurbanov   4. Zeinolla Idrissov   5. Aidan Li   6. Brandon Dang   7. Hamlet Manukyan   8. Eyal Indig     Men's Rings: 1. Artur Avetisyan   2. Nikita Simonov   3. Kameron Nelson   4. Shumpei Fujimaki   5. Artur Davtyan   6. Daniel Villafañe   7. Luka Bojanc   8. Jack Stanley     Men's Vault: 1. Nazar Chepurnyi   2. Sol Scott   3. Ares Federici   4. Ondrej Kalny   5. Metehan Kartin   6. Tommaso Brugnami   7. Tom Schultze   8. Shohei Kawakami     Men's Parallel Bars: 1. Shohei Kawakami   2. Aleksandr Kartsev  (Russia) 3. Savelii Sieedin  (Russia) 4. Hiroto Ishizawa   5. Ron Pyatov   6. Agust Ingi Davidsson   7. Adam Tobin   8. Jesse Moore     Men's Horizontal Bar: 1. Shohei Kawakami   2. Angel Barajas   3. Aleksandr Kartsev  (Russia) 4. Savelii Sieedin  (Russia) 5. Kilan van der Aa   6. Tin Srbic   7. Ron Ortal   8. Yumin Abbadini     Women's Vault: 1. Anna Kalmykova  (Russia) 2. Karina Schoenmaier   3. Kohane Ushioku   4. Liudmila Roshchina  (Russia) 5. Teja Belak   6. Emma Fioravanti   7. Oksana Chusovitina   8. Lihie Raz     Women's Uneven Bars: 1. Elisa Iorio   2. Milana Kaiumova  (Russia) 3. Giulia Perotti   4. Karin Nakashima   5. Lea Marie Quaas   6. Ulyana Kuzmenkova  (Belarus) 7. Kaylia Nemour   8. Aiko Sugihara     Women's Balance Beam: 1. Aiko Sugihara   2. Kaylia Nemour   3. Milana Kaiumova  (Russia) 4. Emma Fioravanti   5. Lea Marie Quaas   6. Bohdana Kovalova   7. Leila Vasileva  (Russia) 8. Karin Nakashima     Women's Floor Exercise: 1. Anna Kalmykova  (Russia) 2. Aiko Sugihara   3. Emma Puato  4. Lihie Raz   5. Emma Fioravanti   6. Anastasiya Smantsar  (Belarus) 7. Ulyana Kuzmenkova  (Belarus) 8. Patricie Makovickova     Results
    • This is not the middle east , rafinery is burning in Texas    Price of oil will increase again, unluky Trump     
    • Foil Grand Prix #2 - Lima   Results (March 20-22, 2026)   Men's: 1. Guillaume Bianchi 2. Kirill Borodachev  (Russia) 3. Cheung Ka Long 3. Alexander Choupenitch 5. Ryan Choi Chun Yin   5. Nick Itkin   5. Harris Ho Shing Him   5. Kyosuke Matsuyama   9. Tommaso Marini   9. Maxime Pauty   9. Anas Anane   9. Anton Borodachev  (Russia) 9. Tommaso Martini   9. Luis Klein   9. Adrien Helmy-Cocoynacq   9. Carlos Llavador     Women's: 1. Alice Volpi 2. Lauren Scruggs 3. Katerina Lung 3. Martina Favaretto   5. Flora Pasztor   5. Olga Sopit   5. Leonie Ebert   5. Irene Bertini   9. Arianna Errigo   9. Eva Lacheray   9. Anne Kleibrink   9. Carlotta Morandi   9. Adeline Senic   9. Matilde Molinari   9. Kata Kondricz   9. Mo Byeo-li     Results   NEXT: World Cup #4 in Cairo  (April 16-19, 2026)
    • 2026 IJF World Tour Grand Slam - Tbilisi     Results (March 20-22, 2026)     Men's -60kg: 1. Izhak Ashpiz   2. Achyty Dombuu   3. Samariddin Kuchkarov   3. Talgat Orynbassar   5. Jorre Verstraeten   5. Artem Lesiuk   7. Magzhan Shamshadin   7. Jozef Tomanek     Men's -66kg: 1. Nurkanat Serikbayev   2. Turan Bayramov   3. Ramazan Abdulaev   3. Tornike Gigauri   5. David Garcia Torne   5. Petros Christodoulides   7. Luukas Saha   7. Azizbek Ortikov     Men's -73kg: 1. Leonardo Valeriani   2. Valtteri Olin   3. Giorgi Loladze   3. Hidayat Heydarov   5. Muhammed Demirel   5. Anton Shuhalieiev   7. Mark Hristov   7. Giorgi Terashvili     Men's -81kg: 1. Vedat Albayrak   2. Mykhailo Svidrak   3. Mihajlo Simin   3. Matthias Casse   5. Timo Cavelius   5. Dimitri Gochilaidze   7. Georgi Gramatikov   7. Zaur Dvalashvili     Men's -90kg: 1. Luka Maisuradze   2. Nemanja Majdov   3. Luka Javakhishvili   3. Guilherme Schimidt   5. Akaki Japaridze   5. Nurbek Murtozoev   7. Jarne Duyck   7. Umar Bozorov     Men's -100kg: 1. Idar Bifov   2. Niiaz Bilalov   3. Simeon Catharina   3. Robert Florentino   5. Darko Brasnjovic   5. Nika Kharazishvili   7. Yaroslav Davydchuk   7. Michael Korrel     Men's +100kg: 1. Irakli Demetrashvili   2. Losseni Kone   3. Saba Inaneishvili   3. Jur Spijkers   5. Artem Zolotukhin   5. Dzhamal Gamzatkhanov   7. Giannis Antoniou   7. Jakub Sordyl     Women's -48kg: 1. Tugce Beder   2. Tara Babulfath   3. Marina Vorobeva   3. Sabina Giliazova   5. Sarah Ischt   5. Eva Perez Soler   7. Konul Aliyeva   7. Andrea Stojadinov     Women's -52kg: 1. Blandine Pont   2. Tatum Keen   3. Gabriela Dimitrova   3. Gefen Primo   5. Sita Kadamboeva   5. Pauline Cuq   7. Hanna Burakova   7. Sofia Asvesta   Women's -57kg: 1. Timna Nelson Levy   2. Inbal Shemesh   3. Martha Fawaz   3. Pihla Salonen   5. Acelya Toprak   5. Nino Loladze   7. Shirlen Nascimento   7. Marica Perisic     Women's -63kg: 1. Haruka Kaju   2. Joanne van Lieshout   3. Kaja Kajzer   3. Iva Oberan   5. Gaetane Deberdt   5. Enkhriilen Lkhagvatogoo   7. Laura Vazquez Fernandez   7. Anna Kriza     Women's -70kg: 1. Madina Taimazova   2. Aoife Coughlan   3. Ida Eriksson   3. Shiho Tanaka   5. Tais Pina   5. Aleksandra Andric   7. Margit de Voogd   7. Maya Goshen     Women's -78kg: 1. Audrey Tcheumeo   2. Alina Boehm   3. Yuliia Kurchenko   3. Milica Zabic   5. Emma Reid   5. Metka Lobnik   7. Maria Swan   7. Vicky Verschaere     Women's +78kg: 1. Raz Hershko   2. Lea Fontaine   3. Asya Tavano   3. Celia Cancan   5. Mariia Ivanova   5. Erica Simonetti   7. Yuli Alma Mishiner   7. Tina Radic     Results
    • I asked chatGPT to list the differences between V2 and V3.  It spat back 250 event changes.  Most were innocuous textual differences in the event description, but still...  
    • 2026 IJF World Tour European Open - Warsaw   Results (March 14-15, 2026)   Men's -60kg: 1. Toktar Umutaliyev 2. Sunggat Nurlatuly 3. Muhammadjon Masharipov 3. Assylkhan Zinullin     Men's -66kg: 1. Simon Lesauvage 2. Mattia Miceli 3. Tofig Mammadov 3. Ari Berliner     Men's -73kg: 1. Orlando Cazorla 2. Wiktor Mrowczynski 3. Kevin Abeltshauser 3. Khojiakbar Toshev     Men's -81kg: 1. Szymon Szulik 2. Joshua de Lange 3. Luca Otmane 3. Bastien Pons     Men's -90kg: 1. Novo Raicevic 2. Aleksa Mitrovic 3. Aibol Nyssanali 3. Johann Lenz     Men's -100kg: 1. Joes Schell 2. Lars Vissers 3. Michal Jedrzejewski 3. Elmar Gasimov     Men's +100kg: 1. Grzegorz Teresinski 2. Jamal Feyziyev 3. Jakub Sordyl 3. Daniel Udsilauri     Women's -48kg: 1. Marine Gilly 2. Fina Pamedie Katendi Nzuzi 3. Aitana Diaz Hernandez 3. Anais Perrot     Women's -52kg: 1. Aleksandra Kaleta 2. Kenya Perna   3. Barbara Twarowska 3. Alicia Marques     Women's -57kg: 1. Ophelie Vellozzi 2. Arleta Podolak 3. Malin Wilson Claret 3. Carla Ubasart Mascaro     Women's -63kg: 1. Melodie Turpin 2. Natalia Kropska 3. Elena Renes 3. Ariela Sanchez Benitez     Women's -70kg: 1. Aleksandra Kowalewska 2. Sarah Mehlau 3. Florine Soula 3. Tanja Gruenewald     Women's -78kg: 1. Samah Hawa Camara 2. Sara Fernandez Campillo 3. Morgane Rubiano 3. Xanne van Lijf     Women's +78kg: 1. Tiziana Marini 2. Kinga Wolszczak 3. Kamila Berlikash 3. Dounia Nacer     Results
    • If Colturi were to return to Italy, we will have another super duo after Goggia and Brignone. If Colturi has to return, it would be right now, when alpine skiing is so popular here. There are still girls like Pirovano, who are quite young and are already started winning. Alpine skiing in Italy is similar to ski jumping in Poland: there are speak about no young talents, but there is always someone new – it is a matter of the popularity of these sports in these countries and the large amounts of money invested in them.
    • World Cup Finals in Lillehammer (NOR)   Women´s Slalom:   1. Mikaela Shiffrin    2:07.61 2. Wendy Holdener    2:08.93 3. Emma Aicher    2:08.97   Full Final Results HERE
    • World Cup Finals in Lillehammer (NOR)   Men´s Giant Slalom   1. Lucas Pinheiro Braathen    2:20.65 2. Loic Meillard    2:21.23 3. Atle Lie McGrath    2:21.52   Full Final Results HERE
    • Holdener beat Aicher for 2nd place by 0.04 so Aicher has to win the last GS to have any chance for the overall (trails Shiffrin by 85 pts).
×
×
  • Create New...