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2016 IIHF World Championship

The 2016 IIHF World Championship was the 80th such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), being held from 6 to 22 May 2016 in Moscow and Saint Petersburg, Russia.[1] Canada entered the tournament as the defending 2015 champions. Hungary returned to the Championship after a 6-year absence, and Kazakhstan after a 1-year absence.[2]

2016 IIHF World Championship
Tournament details
Host country Russia
Venue(s)2 (in 2 host cities)
Dates6–22 May
Opened byDmitry Medvedev
Teams16
Final positions
Champions  Canada (26th title)
Runner-up  Finland
Third place  Russia
Fourth place United States
Tournament statistics
Games played64
Goals scored363 (5.67 per game)
Attendance417,414 (6,522 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Vadim Shipachyov (18 points)
MVP Patrik Laine
← 2015
2017 →
2016 postage stamp of Russia, dedicated to 2016 IIHF World Championship. Laika, the mascot of the championship, is in the centre.

Canada won their 26th gold medal, defeating Finland 2–0 in the gold medal game.[3] With the win Corey Perry became the second consecutive Canadian team captain to earn membership in the Triple Gold Club.[4] Russia won the bronze medal, defeating the United States 7–2 in the bronze medal game.[5]

Bids edit

There were three official bids to host these championships. The decision on who hosts the tournament was decided during the final weekend of the 2011 IIHF World Championship in Bratislava, Slovakia.[6]

Denmark has never hosted these championships. The tournament was proposed to run from May 6–22, 2016 in Parken Stadium (Copenhagen, 15,000 seats) and Jyske Bank Boxen (Herning, 12,000 seats).[6]
Russia was the only bidder to ever have hosted these championships, with the most recent being in 2007. The tournament was proposed to run from April 29 – May 15, 2016 in Megasport Arena (Moscow, 13,577 seats) and Ice Palace (Saint Petersburg, 12,300 seats).[6]
Ukraine, like Denmark, has never hosted these championships. The tournament was proposed to run from May 6–22, 2016 in Palace of Sports (Kyiv, 7,000 seats) and a new 12,000 seat arena to be built by 2015 in Kyiv.[6]

Venues edit

  Moscow   Saint Petersburg
VTB Ice Palace Yubileyny Sports Palace
Capacity: 12,100 Capacity: 7,300
   

Participants edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Automatic qualifier after a top 14 placement at the 2015 IIHF World Championship
  2. ^ a b Qualified through winning a promotion at the 2015 IIHF World Championship Division I
  3. ^ Qualified as host

Format edit

The 16 teams were split into two groups of eight teams. After playing a round-robin, the top four teams advance to the knockout stage, to play out the winner. The last team of each group will be relegated to Division I the following year.[7]

Seeding edit

The seeding in the preliminary round was based on the 2015 IIHF World Ranking, which ended at the conclusion of the 2015 IIHF World Championship.[8]

Rosters edit

Each team's roster consisted of at least 15 skaters (forwards and defencemen) and two goaltenders, and at most 22 skaters and three goaltenders. All 16 participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting.

Officials edit

The IIHF selected 16 referees and 16 linesmen to work the tournament.[9]

 
Henrik Pihlblad, Tobias Wehrli, Stefan Fonselius and Peter Šefčík during Norway vs. Denmark match
Referees Linesmen
  •   Nicolas Chartrand-Piché
  •   Nicolas Fluri
  •   Roman Kaderli
  •   Jon Killian
  •   Gleb Lazarev
  •   Vit Lederer
  •   Miroslav Lhotský
  •   Andreas Malmqvist
  •   Fraser McIntyre
  •   Pasi Nieminen
  •   Alexander Otmakhov
  •   Henrik Pihlblad
  •   Nikolaj Ponomarjow
  •   Judson Ritter
  •   Peter Šefčík
  •   Sakari Suominen

Preliminary round edit

The schedule was released on 15 July 2015.[10]

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1   Czech Republic 7 5 1 1 0 27 12 +15 18[a] Playoff round
2   Russia (H) 7 6 0 0 1 32 10 +22 18[a]
3   Sweden 7 3 2 0 2 23 18 +5 13
4   Denmark 7 2 2 1 2 17 22 −5 11
5   Norway 7 2 1 0 4 13 22 −9 8[b]
6    Switzerland 7 1 1 3 2 20 26 −6 8[b]
7   Latvia 7 1 0 3 3 13 22 −9 6
8   Kazakhstan (R) 7 0 1 0 6 15 28 −13 2 Relegation to Division I A[c]
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
(H) Host; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Czech Republic 3–0 Russia
  2. ^ a b Norway 4–3 Switzerland
  3. ^ The rules state that "the bottom ranked two teams will be relegated" and the 2017 hosts (France and Germany) cannot be relegated by rule.[11]
6 May 2016
Sweden   2–1 (OT)   Latvia
Czech Republic   3–0   Russia
7 May 2016
Switzerland   2–3 (GWS)   Kazakhstan
Norway   0–3   Denmark
Latvia   3–4 (GWS)   Czech Republic
8 May 2016
Kazakhstan   4–6   Russia
Norway   4–3 (OT)    Switzerland
Sweden   5–2   Denmark
9 May 2016
Latvia   0–4   Russia
Sweden   2–4   Czech Republic
10 May 2016
Switzerland   3–2 (OT)   Denmark
Kazakhstan   2–4   Norway
11 May 2016
Switzerland   5–4   Latvia
Sweden   7–3   Kazakhstan
12 May 2016
Czech Republic   7–0   Norway
Russia   10–1   Denmark
13 May 2016
Czech Republic   3–1   Kazakhstan
Denmark   3–2 (GWS)   Latvia
14 May 2016
Norway   2–3   Sweden
Russia   5–1    Switzerland
Kazakhstan   1–2   Latvia
15 May 2016
Denmark   2–1 (GWS)   Czech Republic
Switzerland   2–3 (GWS)   Sweden
16 May 2016
Russia   3–0   Norway
Denmark   4–1   Kazakhstan
17 May 2016
Czech Republic   5–4    Switzerland
Latvia   1–3   Norway
Russia   4–1   Sweden

Group B edit

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1   Finland 7 7 0 0 0 29 6 +23 21 Playoff round
2   Canada 7 6 0 0 1 34 8 +26 18
3   Germany 7 4 0 1 2 22 20 +2 13
4   United States 7 3 0 1 3 22 18 +4 10
5   Slovakia 7 2 1 0 4 15 23 −8 8
6   Belarus 7 2 0 0 5 16 32 −16 6
7   France 7 1 1 0 5 11 23 −12 5
8   Hungary (R) 7 1 0 0 6 12 31 −19 3 Relegation to Division I A[a]
Source: IIHF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament.
(R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ The rules state that "the bottom ranked two teams will be relegated" and the 2017 hosts (France and Germany) cannot be relegated by rule.[12][13]
6 May 2016
United States   1–5   Canada
Finland   6–2   Belarus
7 May 2016
Slovakia   4–1   Hungary
France   3–2 (GWS)   Germany
Belarus   3–6   United States
8 May 2016
Hungary   1–7   Canada
Finland   5–1   Germany
France   1–5   Slovakia
9 May 2016
Belarus   0–8   Canada
Finland   3–2   United States
10 May 2016
Slovakia   1–5   Germany
Hungary   2–6   France
11 May 2016
Slovakia   2–4   Belarus
Finland   3–0   Hungary
12 May 2016
United States   4–0   France
Canada   5–2   Germany
13 May 2016
United States   5–1   Hungary
Germany   5–2   Belarus
14 May 2016
France   1–3   Finland
Hungary   5–2   Belarus
Canada   5–0   Slovakia
15 May 2016
Germany   3–2   United States
Slovakia   0–5   Finland
16 May 2016
Canada   4–0   France
Germany   4–2   Hungary
17 May 2016
United States   2–3 (OT)   Slovakia
Belarus   3–0   France
Canada   0–4   Finland

Playoff round edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
A1   Czech Republic 1
B4   United States (GWS) 2
B2   Canada 4
B4   United States 3
B2   Canada 6
A3   Sweden 0
B1   Finland 0
B2   Canada 2
B1   Finland 5
A4   Denmark 1
B1   Finland 3 Bronze medal game
A2   Russia 1
A2   Russia 4 A2   Russia 7
B3   Germany 1 B4   United States 2

Quarterfinals edit

19 May 2016
16:15
Czech Republic  1–2 GWS
(1–0, 0–1, 0–0)
OT (0–0)
GWS (0–1)
  United StatesVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 7,853
Game reference
Dominik FurchGoaliesKeith KinkaidReferees:
  Linus Ohlund
  Tobias Wehrli
Linesmen:
  Alexander Otmakhov
  Henrik Pihlblad
Zohorna (PS) – 15:231–0
1–121:27 – Matthews (Vatrano, Wideman)
Kašpar  
Koukal  
Zohorna  
Shootout  Hendricks
  Matthews
12 minPenalties12 min
32Shots28
19 May 2016
16:15
Finland  5–1
(1–0, 2–1, 2–0)
  DenmarkYubileyny Sports Palace, Saint Petersburg
Attendance: 5,038
Game reference
Mikko KoskinenGoaliesSebastian DahmReferees:
  Martin Fraňo
  Jozef Kubuš
Linesmen:
  Nicolas Fluri
  Gleb Lazarev
Granlund (Koivu, Komarov) – 14:291–0
Koskiranta (Pyörälä, Ohtamaa) – 21:452–0
2–131:42 – Eller (Christensen, Ehlers) (PP)
Laine (Hietanen, Jaakola) – 38:573–1
Jokinen (Koivu) (EN) – 57:464–1
Granlund – 58:075–1
6 minPenalties6 min
28Shots17
19 May 2016
20:15
Russia  4–1
(0–1, 3–0, 1–0)
  GermanyVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 12,199
Game reference
Sergei BobrovskyGoaliesThomas GreissReferees:
  Tobias Björk
  Aleksi Rantala
Linesmen:
  Miroslav Lhotský
  Fraser McIntyre
0–104:45 – Reimer
Shipachyov (Dadonov, Belov) – 20:401–1
Dadonov (Shipachyov) – 27:172–1
Shipachyov (Telegin) – 34:143–1
Ovechkin (Kuznetsov, Lyubimov) – 42:454–1
2 minPenalties4 min
37Shots20
19 May 2016
20:15
Canada  6–0
(1–0, 3–0, 2–0)
  SwedenYubileyny Sports Palace, Saint Petersburg
Attendance: 6,090
Game reference
Cam TalbotGoaliesJacob MarkströmReferees:
  Roman Gofman
  Maxim Sidorenko
Linesmen:
  Judson Ritter
  Sakari Suominen
Scheifele (O'Reilly, Stone) – 18:391–0
Dumba (Stone, Scheifele) (PP) – 26:052–0
Marchand (Dumba, Scheifele) – 32:023–0
Domi (Reinhart, Matheson) – 32:134–0
Stone – 51:055–0
Brassard (Gallagher, Hall) – 53:226–0
10 minPenalties18 min
34Shots24

Semifinals edit

21 May 2016
16:15
Finland  3–1
(0–1, 3–0, 0–0)
  RussiaVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 12,215
Game reference
Mikko KoskinenGoaliesSergei BobrovskyReferees:
  Martin Fraňo
  Jozef Kubuš
Linesmen:
  Fraser McIntyre
  Judson Ritter
0–102:52 – Shirokov (Telegin, Marchenko)
Aho (Granlund, Lindell) (PP) – 25:341–1
Jokinen (Laine) – 35:502–1
Aho (Koskiranta, Koivu) (PP) – 38:153–1
10 minPenalties8 min
16Shots29
21 May 2016
20:15
Canada  4–3
(2–0, 1–3, 1–0)
  United StatesVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 10,455
Game reference
Cam TalbotGoaliesKeith KinkaidReferees:
  Roman Gofman
  Tobias Wehrli
Linesmen:
  Miroslav Lhotský
  Alexander Otmakhov
Gallagher (Jenner, Reinhart) – 08:591–0
Marchand (Ceci) – 18:022–0
2–121:14 – Matthews (Wideman, Larkin) (PP)
2–223:57 – Warsofsky (Nelson, Fasching)
2–328:25 – Motte (Larkin, Compher)
Brassard (O'Reilly, Perry) (PP) – 35:303–3
Ellis (Murray, McDavid) – 41:344–3
6 minPenalties14 min
27Shots33

Bronze medal game edit

22 May 2016
16:15
Russia  7–2
(2–0, 3–1, 2–1)
  United StatesVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 12,043
Game reference
Sergei BobrovskyGoaliesKeith Kinkaid
Mike Condon
Referees:
  Tobias Björk
  Martin Fraňo
Linesmen:
  Miroslav Lhotský
  Henrik Pihlblad
Voynov (Kalinin, Shirokov) – 06:231–0
Mozyakin (Datsyuk, Orlov) (PP) – 13:412–0
Telegin (Datsyuk, Mozyakin) – 29:363–0
Dadonov (Panarin, Shipachyov) – 32:494–0
4–134:29 – Vatrano (Warsofsky, Nelson) (PP)
Panarin (Belov, Chudinov) – 35:225–1
5–243:42 – Vatrano (Warsofsky)
Mozyakin (Datsyuk) – 53:136–2
Shipachyov (Dadonov, Panarin) (PP) – 59:537–2
10 minPenalties8 min
29Shots30

Gold medal game edit

22 May 2016
20:45
Finland  0–2
(0–1, 0–0, 0–1)
  CanadaVTB Ice Palace, Moscow
Attendance: 11,509
Game reference
Mikko KoskinenGoaliesCam TalbotReferees:
  Roman Gofman
  Tobias Wehrli
Linesmen:
  Gleb Lazarev
  Fraser McIntyre
0–111:24 – McDavid (Duchene)
0–259:59 – Duchene (Marchand) (ENG)
6 minPenalties8 min
16Shots33

Final ranking edit

 
Team Canada celebrates with the cup
Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 B   Canada 10 9 0 0 1 46 11 +35 27 Champions
2 B   Finland 10 9 0 0 1 37 10 +27 27 Runners-up
3 A   Russia (H) 10 8 0 0 2 44 16 +28 24 Third place
4 B   United States 10 3 1 1 5 29 30 −1 12 Fourth place
5 A   Czech Republic 8 5 1 2 0 28 14 +14 19 Eliminated in
Quarter-finals
6 A   Sweden 8 3 2 0 3 23 24 −1 13
7 B   Germany 8 4 0 1 3 23 24 −1 13
8 A   Denmark 8 2 2 1 3 18 27 −9 11
9 B   Slovakia 7 2 1 0 4 15 23 −8 8 Eliminated in
Group stage
10 A   Norway 7 2 1 0 4 13 22 −9 8
11 A    Switzerland 7 1 1 3 2 20 26 −6 8
12 B   Belarus 7 2 0 0 5 16 32 −16 6
13 A   Latvia 7 1 0 3 3 13 22 −9 6
14 B   France 7 1 1 0 5 11 23 −12 5
15 B   Hungary 7 1 0 0 6 12 31 −19 3 2017 IIHF World Championship Division I
16 A   Kazakhstan 7 0 1 0 6 15 28 −13 2
Source: IIHF.com
(H) Host

Awards and statistics edit

Awards edit

Source: IIHF.com

Source: IIHF.com

Scoring leaders edit

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
  Vadim Shipachyov 10 6 12 18 +10 8 F
  Artemi Panarin 10 6 9 15 +9 4 F
  Evgenii Dadonov 10 6 7 13 +10 6 F
  Patrik Laine 10 7 5 12 +4 4 F
  Mikael Granlund 10 4 8 12 +6 2 F
  Derick Brassard 10 5 6 11 +9 4 F
  Pavel Datsyuk 10 1 10 11 +6 0 F
  Matt Duchene 10 5 5 10 +10 2 F
  Mikko Koivu 10 4 6 10 +8 12 F
  Mark Stone 10 4 6 10 +8 6 F

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Source: IIHF.com

Goaltending leaders edit

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.

Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
  Dominik Furch 255:00 4 0.94 100 96.00 2
  Mikko Koskinen 479:01 9 1.13 169 94.67 1
  Cam Talbot 480:00 10 1.25 167 94.01 4
  Sebastian Dahm 434:04 16 2.21 248 93.55 1
  Sergei Bobrovsky 520:51 15 1.73 218 93.12 1

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

References edit

  1. ^ IIHF: 2016 Worlds go to Russia
  2. ^ Merk, Martin (2 June 2015). . IIHFWorlds2016.com. Archived from the original on 23 July 2016. Retrieved 14 May 2016.
  3. ^ . iihfworlds2016.com. 22 May 2016. Archived from the original on 25 July 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  4. ^ Nelson, Dustin L. (22 May 2016). "Corey Perry Enters Triple Gold Club". The Hockey Writers. The Hockey Writers. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  5. ^ . iihfworlds2016.com. 22 May 2016. Archived from the original on 23 May 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d Three bids for 2016
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 May 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
  8. ^ . iihfworlds2015.com. 17 May 2015. Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  9. ^ Match officials
  10. ^ . iihfworlds2016.com. 15 July 2015. Archived from the original on 28 June 2016. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  11. ^ "Statutes and Bylaws (701.3)" (PDF). iihf.com. 10 September 2015.
  12. ^ "Statutes and Bylaws (701.3)" (PDF). iihf.com. 10 September 2015.
  13. ^ . iihf.com. 22 April 2016. Archived from the original on 4 May 2016. Retrieved 22 April 2016.

External links edit

  • Official website

2016, iihf, world, championship, 80th, such, event, hosted, international, hockey, federation, iihf, being, held, from, 2016, moscow, saint, petersburg, russia, canada, entered, tournament, defending, 2015, champions, hungary, returned, championship, after, ye. The 2016 IIHF World Championship was the 80th such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF being held from 6 to 22 May 2016 in Moscow and Saint Petersburg Russia 1 Canada entered the tournament as the defending 2015 champions Hungary returned to the Championship after a 6 year absence and Kazakhstan after a 1 year absence 2 2016 IIHF World ChampionshipTournament detailsHost country RussiaVenue s 2 in 2 host cities Dates6 22 MayOpened byDmitry MedvedevTeams16Final positionsChampions Canada 26th title Runner up FinlandThird place RussiaFourth place United StatesTournament statisticsGames played64Goals scored363 5 67 per game Attendance417 414 6 522 per game Scoring leader s Vadim Shipachyov 18 points MVPPatrik Laine 20152017 2016 postage stamp of Russia dedicated to 2016 IIHF World Championship Laika the mascot of the championship is in the centre Main article 2016 Men s Ice Hockey World Championships Canada won their 26th gold medal defeating Finland 2 0 in the gold medal game 3 With the win Corey Perry became the second consecutive Canadian team captain to earn membership in the Triple Gold Club 4 Russia won the bronze medal defeating the United States 7 2 in the bronze medal game 5 Contents 1 Bids 2 Venues 3 Participants 4 Format 5 Seeding 6 Rosters 7 Officials 8 Preliminary round 8 1 Group A 8 2 Group B 9 Playoff round 9 1 Quarterfinals 9 2 Semifinals 9 3 Bronze medal game 9 4 Gold medal game 10 Final ranking 10 1 Awards and statistics 10 1 1 Awards 10 2 Scoring leaders 10 3 Goaltending leaders 11 References 12 External linksBids editThere were three official bids to host these championships The decision on who hosts the tournament was decided during the final weekend of the 2011 IIHF World Championship in Bratislava Slovakia 6 nbsp Denmark Copenhagen Herning Denmark has never hosted these championships The tournament was proposed to run from May 6 22 2016 in Parken Stadium Copenhagen 15 000 seats and Jyske Bank Boxen Herning 12 000 seats 6 dd nbsp Russia Moscow Saint Petersburg Russia was the only bidder to ever have hosted these championships with the most recent being in 2007 The tournament was proposed to run from April 29 May 15 2016 in Megasport Arena Moscow 13 577 seats and Ice Palace Saint Petersburg 12 300 seats 6 dd nbsp Ukraine Kyiv Ukraine like Denmark has never hosted these championships The tournament was proposed to run from May 6 22 2016 in Palace of Sports Kyiv 7 000 seats and a new 12 000 seat arena to be built by 2015 in Kyiv 6 dd Venues edit nbsp Moscow nbsp nbsp Moscow nbsp Saint Petersburg nbsp Saint Petersburg VTB Ice Palace Yubileyny Sports Palace Capacity 12 100 Capacity 7 300 nbsp nbsp Participants edit nbsp Belarus a nbsp Canada a nbsp Czech Republic a nbsp Denmark a nbsp Finland a nbsp France a nbsp Germany a nbsp Hungary b nbsp Kazakhstan b nbsp Latvia a nbsp Norway a nbsp Russia c nbsp Slovakia a nbsp Sweden a nbsp Switzerland a nbsp United States a a b c d e f g h i j k l m Automatic qualifier after a top 14 placement at the 2015 IIHF World Championship a b Qualified through winning a promotion at the 2015 IIHF World Championship Division I Qualified as hostFormat editThe 16 teams were split into two groups of eight teams After playing a round robin the top four teams advance to the knockout stage to play out the winner The last team of each group will be relegated to Division I the following year 7 Seeding editThe seeding in the preliminary round was based on the 2015 IIHF World Ranking which ended at the conclusion of the 2015 IIHF World Championship 8 Group A Moscow nbsp Russia 2 nbsp Sweden 3 nbsp Czech Republic 6 nbsp Switzerland 7 nbsp Latvia 10 nbsp Norway 11 nbsp Denmark 15 nbsp Kazakhstan 17 Group B St Petersburg nbsp Canada 1 nbsp Finland 4 nbsp United States 5 nbsp Slovakia 8 nbsp Belarus 9 nbsp France 12 nbsp Germany 13 nbsp Hungary 19 Rosters editFurther information 2016 IIHF World Championship rosters Each team s roster consisted of at least 15 skaters forwards and defencemen and two goaltenders and at most 22 skaters and three goaltenders All 16 participating nations through the confirmation of their respective national associations had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting Officials editThe IIHF selected 16 referees and 16 linesmen to work the tournament 9 nbsp Henrik Pihlblad Tobias Wehrli Stefan Fonselius and Peter Sefcik during Norway vs Denmark match Referees Linesmen nbsp Tobias Bjork nbsp Stefan Fonselius nbsp Martin Frano nbsp Peter Gebei nbsp Roman Gofman nbsp Brett Iverson nbsp Antonin Jerabek nbsp Jozef Kubus nbsp Timothy Mayer nbsp Linus Ohlund nbsp Konstantin Olenin nbsp Daniel Piechaczek nbsp Aleksi Rantala nbsp Maxim Sidorenko nbsp Tobias Wehrli nbsp Marc Wiegand nbsp Nicolas Chartrand Piche nbsp Nicolas Fluri nbsp Roman Kaderli nbsp Jon Killian nbsp Gleb Lazarev nbsp Vit Lederer nbsp Miroslav Lhotsky nbsp Andreas Malmqvist nbsp Fraser McIntyre nbsp Pasi Nieminen nbsp Alexander Otmakhov nbsp Henrik Pihlblad nbsp Nikolaj Ponomarjow nbsp Judson Ritter nbsp Peter Sefcik nbsp Sakari SuominenPreliminary round editThe schedule was released on 15 July 2015 10 Group A edit Main article 2016 IIHF World Championship Group A Pos Teamvte Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation 1 nbsp Czech Republic 7 5 1 1 0 27 12 15 18 a Playoff round 2 nbsp Russia H 7 6 0 0 1 32 10 22 18 a 3 nbsp Sweden 7 3 2 0 2 23 18 5 13 4 nbsp Denmark 7 2 2 1 2 17 22 5 11 5 nbsp Norway 7 2 1 0 4 13 22 9 8 b 6 nbsp Switzerland 7 1 1 3 2 20 26 6 8 b 7 nbsp Latvia 7 1 0 3 3 13 22 9 6 8 nbsp Kazakhstan R 7 0 1 0 6 15 28 13 2 Relegation to Division I A c Source IIHFRules for classification 1 points 2 head to head points 3 head to head goal difference 4 head to head number of goals scored 5 result against closest best ranked team outside tied teams 6 result against second best ranked team outside tied teams 7 seeding before tournament H Host R RelegatedNotes a b Czech Republic 3 0 Russia a b Norway 4 3 Switzerland The rules state that the bottom ranked two teams will be relegated and the 2017 hosts France and Germany cannot be relegated by rule 11 6 May 2016 Sweden nbsp 2 1 OT nbsp Latvia Czech Republic nbsp 3 0 nbsp Russia 7 May 2016 Switzerland nbsp 2 3 GWS nbsp Kazakhstan Norway nbsp 0 3 nbsp Denmark Latvia nbsp 3 4 GWS nbsp Czech Republic 8 May 2016 Kazakhstan nbsp 4 6 nbsp Russia Norway nbsp 4 3 OT nbsp Switzerland Sweden nbsp 5 2 nbsp Denmark 9 May 2016 Latvia nbsp 0 4 nbsp Russia Sweden nbsp 2 4 nbsp Czech Republic 10 May 2016 Switzerland nbsp 3 2 OT nbsp Denmark Kazakhstan nbsp 2 4 nbsp Norway 11 May 2016 Switzerland nbsp 5 4 nbsp Latvia Sweden nbsp 7 3 nbsp Kazakhstan 12 May 2016 Czech Republic nbsp 7 0 nbsp Norway Russia nbsp 10 1 nbsp Denmark 13 May 2016 Czech Republic nbsp 3 1 nbsp Kazakhstan Denmark nbsp 3 2 GWS nbsp Latvia 14 May 2016 Norway nbsp 2 3 nbsp Sweden Russia nbsp 5 1 nbsp Switzerland Kazakhstan nbsp 1 2 nbsp Latvia 15 May 2016 Denmark nbsp 2 1 GWS nbsp Czech Republic Switzerland nbsp 2 3 GWS nbsp Sweden 16 May 2016 Russia nbsp 3 0 nbsp Norway Denmark nbsp 4 1 nbsp Kazakhstan 17 May 2016 Czech Republic nbsp 5 4 nbsp Switzerland Latvia nbsp 1 3 nbsp Norway Russia nbsp 4 1 nbsp Sweden Group B edit Main article 2016 IIHF World Championship Group B Pos Teamvte Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation 1 nbsp Finland 7 7 0 0 0 29 6 23 21 Playoff round 2 nbsp Canada 7 6 0 0 1 34 8 26 18 3 nbsp Germany 7 4 0 1 2 22 20 2 13 4 nbsp United States 7 3 0 1 3 22 18 4 10 5 nbsp Slovakia 7 2 1 0 4 15 23 8 8 6 nbsp Belarus 7 2 0 0 5 16 32 16 6 7 nbsp France 7 1 1 0 5 11 23 12 5 8 nbsp Hungary R 7 1 0 0 6 12 31 19 3 Relegation to Division I A a Source IIHFRules for classification 1 points 2 head to head points 3 head to head goal difference 4 head to head number of goals scored 5 result against closest best ranked team outside tied teams 6 result against second best ranked team outside tied teams 7 seeding before tournament R RelegatedNotes The rules state that the bottom ranked two teams will be relegated and the 2017 hosts France and Germany cannot be relegated by rule 12 13 6 May 2016 United States nbsp 1 5 nbsp Canada Finland nbsp 6 2 nbsp Belarus 7 May 2016 Slovakia nbsp 4 1 nbsp Hungary France nbsp 3 2 GWS nbsp Germany Belarus nbsp 3 6 nbsp United States 8 May 2016 Hungary nbsp 1 7 nbsp Canada Finland nbsp 5 1 nbsp Germany France nbsp 1 5 nbsp Slovakia 9 May 2016 Belarus nbsp 0 8 nbsp Canada Finland nbsp 3 2 nbsp United States 10 May 2016 Slovakia nbsp 1 5 nbsp Germany Hungary nbsp 2 6 nbsp France 11 May 2016 Slovakia nbsp 2 4 nbsp Belarus Finland nbsp 3 0 nbsp Hungary 12 May 2016 United States nbsp 4 0 nbsp France Canada nbsp 5 2 nbsp Germany 13 May 2016 United States nbsp 5 1 nbsp Hungary Germany nbsp 5 2 nbsp Belarus 14 May 2016 France nbsp 1 3 nbsp Finland Hungary nbsp 5 2 nbsp Belarus Canada nbsp 5 0 nbsp Slovakia 15 May 2016 Germany nbsp 3 2 nbsp United States Slovakia nbsp 0 5 nbsp Finland 16 May 2016 Canada nbsp 4 0 nbsp France Germany nbsp 4 2 nbsp Hungary 17 May 2016 United States nbsp 2 3 OT nbsp Slovakia Belarus nbsp 3 0 nbsp France Canada nbsp 0 4 nbsp FinlandPlayoff round editMain article 2016 IIHF World Championship playoff round QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals A1 nbsp Czech Republic1B4 nbsp United States GWS 2B2 nbsp Canada4B4 nbsp United States3B2 nbsp Canada6A3 nbsp Sweden0B1 nbsp Finland0B2 nbsp Canada2B1 nbsp Finland5A4 nbsp Denmark1B1 nbsp Finland3Bronze medal gameA2 nbsp Russia1A2 nbsp Russia4A2 nbsp Russia7B3 nbsp Germany1B4 nbsp United States2 Quarterfinals edit 19 May 201616 15Czech Republic nbsp 1 2 GWS 1 0 0 1 0 0 OT 0 0 GWS 0 1 nbsp United StatesVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 7 853Game referenceDominik FurchGoaliesKeith KinkaidReferees nbsp Linus Ohlund nbsp Tobias WehrliLinesmen nbsp Alexander Otmakhov nbsp Henrik PihlbladZohorna PS 15 231 01 121 27 Matthews Vatrano Wideman Kaspar nbsp Koukal nbsp Zohorna nbsp Shootout nbsp Hendricks nbsp Matthews12 minPenalties12 min32Shots28 19 May 201616 15Finland nbsp 5 1 1 0 2 1 2 0 nbsp DenmarkYubileyny Sports Palace Saint Petersburg Attendance 5 038Game referenceMikko KoskinenGoaliesSebastian DahmReferees nbsp Martin Frano nbsp Jozef KubusLinesmen nbsp Nicolas Fluri nbsp Gleb LazarevGranlund Koivu Komarov 14 291 0Koskiranta Pyorala Ohtamaa 21 452 02 131 42 Eller Christensen Ehlers PP Laine Hietanen Jaakola 38 573 1Jokinen Koivu EN 57 464 1Granlund 58 075 16 minPenalties6 min28Shots17 19 May 201620 15Russia nbsp 4 1 0 1 3 0 1 0 nbsp GermanyVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 12 199Game referenceSergei BobrovskyGoaliesThomas GreissReferees nbsp Tobias Bjork nbsp Aleksi RantalaLinesmen nbsp Miroslav Lhotsky nbsp Fraser McIntyre0 104 45 ReimerShipachyov Dadonov Belov 20 401 1Dadonov Shipachyov 27 172 1Shipachyov Telegin 34 143 1Ovechkin Kuznetsov Lyubimov 42 454 12 minPenalties4 min37Shots20 19 May 201620 15Canada nbsp 6 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 nbsp SwedenYubileyny Sports Palace Saint Petersburg Attendance 6 090Game referenceCam TalbotGoaliesJacob MarkstromReferees nbsp Roman Gofman nbsp Maxim SidorenkoLinesmen nbsp Judson Ritter nbsp Sakari SuominenScheifele O Reilly Stone 18 391 0Dumba Stone Scheifele PP 26 052 0Marchand Dumba Scheifele 32 023 0Domi Reinhart Matheson 32 134 0Stone 51 055 0Brassard Gallagher Hall 53 226 010 minPenalties18 min34Shots24 Semifinals edit 21 May 201616 15Finland nbsp 3 1 0 1 3 0 0 0 nbsp RussiaVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 12 215Game referenceMikko KoskinenGoaliesSergei BobrovskyReferees nbsp Martin Frano nbsp Jozef KubusLinesmen nbsp Fraser McIntyre nbsp Judson Ritter0 102 52 Shirokov Telegin Marchenko Aho Granlund Lindell PP 25 341 1Jokinen Laine 35 502 1Aho Koskiranta Koivu PP 38 153 110 minPenalties8 min16Shots29 21 May 201620 15Canada nbsp 4 3 2 0 1 3 1 0 nbsp United StatesVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 10 455Game referenceCam TalbotGoaliesKeith KinkaidReferees nbsp Roman Gofman nbsp Tobias WehrliLinesmen nbsp Miroslav Lhotsky nbsp Alexander OtmakhovGallagher Jenner Reinhart 08 591 0Marchand Ceci 18 022 02 121 14 Matthews Wideman Larkin PP 2 223 57 Warsofsky Nelson Fasching 2 328 25 Motte Larkin Compher Brassard O Reilly Perry PP 35 303 3Ellis Murray McDavid 41 344 36 minPenalties14 min27Shots33 Bronze medal game edit 22 May 201616 15Russia nbsp 7 2 2 0 3 1 2 1 nbsp United StatesVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 12 043Game referenceSergei BobrovskyGoaliesKeith KinkaidMike CondonReferees nbsp Tobias Bjork nbsp Martin FranoLinesmen nbsp Miroslav Lhotsky nbsp Henrik PihlbladVoynov Kalinin Shirokov 06 231 0Mozyakin Datsyuk Orlov PP 13 412 0Telegin Datsyuk Mozyakin 29 363 0Dadonov Panarin Shipachyov 32 494 04 134 29 Vatrano Warsofsky Nelson PP Panarin Belov Chudinov 35 225 15 243 42 Vatrano Warsofsky Mozyakin Datsyuk 53 136 2Shipachyov Dadonov Panarin PP 59 537 210 minPenalties8 min29Shots30 Gold medal game edit Main article 2016 IIHF World Championship Final 22 May 201620 45Finland nbsp 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 nbsp CanadaVTB Ice Palace Moscow Attendance 11 509Game referenceMikko KoskinenGoaliesCam TalbotReferees nbsp Roman Gofman nbsp Tobias WehrliLinesmen nbsp Gleb Lazarev nbsp Fraser McIntyre0 111 24 McDavid Duchene 0 259 59 Duchene Marchand ENG 6 minPenalties8 min16Shots33Final ranking edit nbsp Team Canada celebrates with the cup Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result 1 B nbsp Canada 10 9 0 0 1 46 11 35 27 Champions 2 B nbsp Finland 10 9 0 0 1 37 10 27 27 Runners up 3 A nbsp Russia H 10 8 0 0 2 44 16 28 24 Third place 4 B nbsp United States 10 3 1 1 5 29 30 1 12 Fourth place 5 A nbsp Czech Republic 8 5 1 2 0 28 14 14 19 Eliminated inQuarter finals 6 A nbsp Sweden 8 3 2 0 3 23 24 1 13 7 B nbsp Germany 8 4 0 1 3 23 24 1 13 8 A nbsp Denmark 8 2 2 1 3 18 27 9 11 9 B nbsp Slovakia 7 2 1 0 4 15 23 8 8 Eliminated inGroup stage 10 A nbsp Norway 7 2 1 0 4 13 22 9 8 11 A nbsp Switzerland 7 1 1 3 2 20 26 6 8 12 B nbsp Belarus 7 2 0 0 5 16 32 16 6 13 A nbsp Latvia 7 1 0 3 3 13 22 9 6 14 B nbsp France 7 1 1 0 5 11 23 12 5 15 B nbsp Hungary 7 1 0 0 6 12 31 19 3 2017 IIHF World Championship Division I 16 A nbsp Kazakhstan 7 0 1 0 6 15 28 13 2Source IIHF com H Host Awards and statistics edit Awards edit Best players selected by the directorate Best Goaltender nbsp Mikko Koskinen Best Defenceman nbsp Mike Matheson Best Forward nbsp Patrik Laine Source IIHF com Media All Stars MVP nbsp Patrik Laine Goaltender nbsp Mikko Koskinen Defencemen nbsp Nikita Zaitsev nbsp Mike Matheson Forwards nbsp Patrik Laine nbsp Vadim Shipachyov nbsp Mikael Granlund Source IIHF com Scoring leaders edit List shows the top skaters sorted by points then goals Player GP G A Pts PIM POS nbsp Vadim Shipachyov 10 6 12 18 10 8 F nbsp Artemi Panarin 10 6 9 15 9 4 F nbsp Evgenii Dadonov 10 6 7 13 10 6 F nbsp Patrik Laine 10 7 5 12 4 4 F nbsp Mikael Granlund 10 4 8 12 6 2 F nbsp Derick Brassard 10 5 6 11 9 4 F nbsp Pavel Datsyuk 10 1 10 11 6 0 F nbsp Matt Duchene 10 5 5 10 10 2 F nbsp Mikko Koivu 10 4 6 10 8 12 F nbsp Mark Stone 10 4 6 10 8 6 F GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points Plus minus PIM Penalties in minutes POS Position Source IIHF com Goaltending leaders edit Only the top five goaltenders based on save percentage who have played at least 40 of their team s minutes are included in this list Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv SO nbsp Dominik Furch 255 00 4 0 94 100 96 00 2 nbsp Mikko Koskinen 479 01 9 1 13 169 94 67 1 nbsp Cam Talbot 480 00 10 1 25 167 94 01 4 nbsp Sebastian Dahm 434 04 16 2 21 248 93 55 1 nbsp Sergei Bobrovsky 520 51 15 1 73 218 93 12 1 TOI Time on ice minutes seconds SA Shots against GA Goals against GAA Goals against average Sv Save percentage SO Shutouts Source IIHF comReferences edit IIHF 2016 Worlds go to Russia Merk Martin 2 June 2015 To Russia with love IIHFWorlds2016 com Archived from the original on 23 July 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Connor da Gold iihfworlds2016 com 22 May 2016 Archived from the original on 25 July 2016 Retrieved 22 May 2016 Nelson Dustin L 22 May 2016 Corey Perry Enters Triple Gold Club The Hockey Writers The Hockey Writers Retrieved 22 May 2016 Happy ending for hosts iihfworlds2016 com 22 May 2016 Archived from the original on 23 May 2016 Retrieved 22 May 2016 a b c d Three bids for 2016 Format Archived from the original on 4 May 2016 Retrieved 13 May 2016 Canada tops World Ranking iihfworlds2015 com 17 May 2015 Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Match officials Russia to open vs Czechs iihfworlds2016 com 15 July 2015 Archived from the original on 28 June 2016 Retrieved 20 July 2015 Statutes and Bylaws 701 3 PDF iihf com 10 September 2015 Statutes and Bylaws 701 3 PDF iihf com 10 September 2015 Tournament Format iihf com 22 April 2016 Archived from the original on 4 May 2016 Retrieved 22 April 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2016 IIHF World Championship Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 IIHF World Championship amp oldid 1193290486, 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