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International Ice Hockey Federation

The International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF; French: Fédération internationale de hockey sur glace; German: Internationale Eishockey-Föderation) is a worldwide governing body for ice hockey.[1] It is based in Zurich, Switzerland, and has 83 member countries.

International Ice Hockey Federation
Fédération internationale de hockey sur glace
Internationale Eishockey-Föderation
AbbreviationIIHF
Formation15 May 1908; 114 years ago (1908-05-15)
Founded atParis, France
TypeSports federation
Legal statusGoverning body of
Ice hockey
PurposeSport governance
HeadquartersZurich, Switzerland
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
83 members
Official languages
English, French, German
Luc Tardif
WebsiteIIHF.com

The IIHF maintains the IIHF World Ranking based on international ice hockey tournaments. Rules of play for IIHF events differ from hockey in North America and the rules of the National Hockey League (NHL). Decisions of the IIHF can be appealed through the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland. The IIHF maintains its own hall of fame for international ice hockey. The IIHF Hall of Fame was founded in 1997, and has been located within the Hockey Hall of Fame since 1998.

Previously, the IIHF also managed the development of inline hockey, however in June 2019 the IIHF announced that they would no longer govern inline hockey or organize the Inline Hockey World Championships.[2]

Functions

 
IIHF Headquarters in Zurich (Villa Freigut, Enge).

The main functions of the IIHF are to govern, develop and organize hockey throughout the world. Another duty is to promote friendly relations among the member national associations and to operate in an organized manner for the good order of the sport.[3] The federation may take the necessary measures in order to conduct itself and its affairs in accordance with its statutes, bylaws and regulations as well as in holding a clear jurisdiction with regards to ice hockey at the international level. The IIHF is the body responsible with arranging the sponsorships, license rights, advertising and merchandising in connection with all IIHF competitions.

Another purpose of the federation is to provide aid in the young players' development and in the development of coaches and game officials. On the other hand, all the events of IIHF are organized by the federation along with establishing and maintaining contact with any other sport federations or sport groups. The IIHF is responsible for processing the international players' transfers. It is also the body that presides over ice hockey at the Olympic Games as well as over all levels of the IIHF World Championships.[4] The federation works in collaboration with local committees when organizing its 25 World Championships, at five different categories.

Even though the IIHF runs the world championships, it is also responsible for the organization of several European club competitions such as the Champions Hockey League or the Continental Cup.

The federation is governed by the legislative body of the IIHF which is the General Congress along with the executive body, which is the Council. The Congress is entitled to make decisions with regard to the game's rules, the statutes and bylaws in the name of the federation. It is also the body that elects the president and the council or otherwise known as board.[5] The president of the IIHF is basically the representative of the federation. He represents the federation's interests in all external matters and he is also responsible that the decisions are made according to the federation's statutes and regulations. The president is assisted by the General Secretary, who is also the highest ranked employee of the IIHF.

History

The International Ice Hockey Federation was founded on 15 May 1908 at 34 Rue de Provence in Paris, France, as Ligue Internationale de Hockey sur Glace (LIHG).[6] The 1920 Olympics were the first to integrate hockey into their program.

The 1928 Winter Olympics, which also served as the World and European Championship for the year, saw a record 11 countries participate.[7] The 1936 Winter Olympics set a new record with 15 participants.

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 which had caused Hungary to be occupied by the Soviet Army, led to a boycott of the 1957 World Championships, which were being staged in Moscow. Canada and the United States led the boycott, and were joined by Norway, West Germany, Italy, and Switzerland.[8]

The 1962 World Championship, hosted by the American cities of Colorado Springs and Denver, was boycotted by the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia, which led to a further boycott by the other Eastern Bloc countries. At issue was the boycott of the 1957 championships in Moscow by Canada and the United States, and the Americans refusal of East German passports in reaction to the building of the Berlin Wall by East Germany.[9]

For the 1965–66 season, the IIHF created the European Cup, a tournament consisting of the top club teams from around Europe. The competition was originated by Günther Sabetzki, based on the Association football European Cup (now UEFA Champions League). In 1968 the IIHF organized the European U19 Championship, a junior competition for players aged 19 and under. The age limit was later reduced to 18 in 1977.[8]

During the 1980s Canada stopped boycotting the World Championships and Olympic Games. The Canadians had boycotted these tournaments between 1970 and 1976 after the IIHF had refused to allow them to roster professional players at the World Championships from NHL teams that had not qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs. President Sabetzki managed to find a compromise that resulted in the return of Canada to international events beginning in 1977. The pro players whose teams had been eliminated from the playoffs were allowed to compete and in exchange, Canada agreed to participate in the World Championships. They also waived their right to host any World Championships. The creation of the Canada Cup (a competition organized by the NHL in Canada every four years) was also part of the new agreement between the IIHF and North American professional hockey.[9]

The IIHF continued to grow in numbers during the 1980s and 1990s, both due to political events and the continued growth of hockey worldwide. The dissolution of the Soviet Union saw its membership transferred to Russia, and the addition of four ex-Soviet republics; Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine to the federation. In addition, the memberships of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania - all of which had initially joined the IIHF in the 1930s but were expelled following their annexation by the Soviet Union - were renewed. The breakup of Yugoslavia also resulted in an increase in membership. Croatia and Slovenia joined as new members, while the membership of the old Yugoslavia was transferred to FR Yugoslavia (which later became known as Serbia and Montenegro and still later dissolved into the independent republics of Serbia and Montenegro). When Czechoslovakia broke up, its membership rights were transferred to the Czech Republic, and Slovakia was admitted as a new member. The influx of new members resulted in the IIHF increasing the size of the Group A tournament. It expanded from 8 teams to 12 in 1992 and from 12 to 16 in 1998.[10]

The IIHF celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2008. As part of the celebrations, the 2008 World Championship was held in Canada for the first time (the tournament was co-hosted by the cities of Halifax and Quebec City).[11] To commemorate the anniversary, the IIHF Centennial All-Star Team was chosen by votes.

The number of members grew in the 21st century: Chile (2000), Bosnia and Herzegovina (2001), Liechtenstein (2001), North Macedonia (2001), the United Arab Emirates (2001), Macau (2005), Malaysia (2006), Moldova (2008), Georgia (2009), Kuwait (2009; had originally joined in 1985, but was expelled in 1992), Morocco (2010), Kyrgyzstan (2011), Jamaica (2012), Qatar (2012), Oman (2014), Turkmenistan (2015), Indonesia (2016), Nepal (2016), the Philippines (2016), Algeria (2019), Colombia (2019), Iran (2019), Lebanon (2019), Uzbekistan (2019), and Tunisia (2021)..[10]

The IIHF received international criticism for holding the 2014 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships in Belarus because of the poor human rights record of the country. Several human rights organisations launched the "Don’t play with the dictator!" boycott campaign[12] and there were appeals from the US Congress, German Parliament and the European Parliament.[13] The IIHF again received criticism for planning to partly hold the 2021 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships in Belarus.[14][15] In January 2021, the IIHF withdrew the 2021 World Championship from Minsk due to safety and security issues during the political unrest, besides the COVID-19 pandemic and decided to solely hold the tournament in Riga, Latvia.[16]

On May 23, 2021 civilian Ryanair Flight 4978, which was enroute from Athens to Vilnius, was forced to land in Minsk and a passenger of that flight was detained. In protest, Latvian officials replaced the Belarusian state flag in Riga with the former flag associated with the Belarusian opposition groups, including at the 2021 IIHF World Championship display of flags. This was by order of Mayor of Riga Mārtiņš Staķis and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Latvia Edgars Rinkēvičs. The IIHF issued a statement protesting the replacement of the flag, and IIHF president René Fasel asked the mayor to remove the IIHF name, its flag and its symbols from such sites, or to restore the flag, insisting that the IIHF is an "apolitical sports organization".[17] In response, Staķis said he would remove the IIHF flags.[18][19]

On 28 February 28 2022, the IIHF suspended the memberships of the Russian and Belarusian hockey federations until further notice due to the countries' invasion of Ukraine.[20] Still, non-Russian players in Russian clubs are according to IIHF rules bound by their contracts, and can not leave their clubs and Russia until their contracts expire or is terminated by their club. If players leave anyway they can be sued and would be blocked from playing for other clubs.[21]

On 22 March 2023, the IIHF excluded Russian and Belarussian national and club teams from IIHF competitions during the 2023–24 season, based on safety considerations.[22]

IIHF Hall of Fame

 
The Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto has hosted the IIHF Hall of Fame since 1998.

Prior to the establishment of the IIHF Hall of Fame, the IIHF displayed a collection of historical artifacts from World Championships and the Olympic Games in temporary exhibits. From 1992 to 1997, the IIHF loaned its exhibits to the International Hockey Hall of Fame in Kingston, Ontario, Canada.[23]

The first step taken by the IIHF to create its own hall of fame was a proposal made in 1996, which was later ratified at the 1997 IIHF summer congress to host the museum in Zürich.[23] The approval came exactly 89 years from the foundation of the IIHF, with the purpose of honoring former international ice hockey players, builders (administrators) and officials.[24] The annual induction ceremony takes place on the medal presentation day of the Ice Hockey World Championships.[23][24] The IIHF agreed with the National Hockey League to transfer its exhibits to the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto, Canada, as of 29 July 1998.[23]

Tournaments

Men's

Current top four per tournament[25]Current pool: 56 countries
Tournament Year Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
IIHF World Championship   2022   Finland   Canada   Czechia   United States
Winter Olympics   2022   Finland   Russia[26]   Slovakia   Sweden
U-20 IIHF World Championship   2023   Canada   Czechia   United States   Sweden
U-18 IIHF World Championship   2022   Sweden   United States   Finland   Czechia

Women's

Current top four per tournament[25]Current pool: 42 countries
Tournament Year Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
IIHF Women's World Championship   2023   United States   Canada   Czech Republic   Switzerland
Winter Olympics   2022   Canada   United States   Finland   Switzerland
U-18 IIHF Women's World Championship   2023   Canada   Sweden   United States   Finland

Club

Current top four per tournament[27]
Tournament Year Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
Champions Hockey League 2022–23   Tappara   Luleå HF   Frölunda HC &   EV Zug
IIHF Continental Cup 2022–23   HK Nitra   Ducs d'Angers   Cardiff Devils   Asiago Hockey

Executives and personnel

The IIHF employs twenty staff members at the headquarters in Zurich.[28]

Presidents

Name Years
  Louis Magnus 1908–1912
  Henri van den Bulcke 1912–1914
  Louis Magnus 1914
  Peter Patton 1914
  Henri van den Bulcke 1914–1920
  Max Sillig 1920–1922
  Paul Loicq 1922–1947
  Fritz Kraatz 1947–1948
  W. G. Hardy 1948–1951
  Fritz Kraatz 1951–1954
  Walter A. Brown 1954–1957
  Bunny Ahearne 1957–1960
  Robert Lebel 1960–1963
  Bunny Ahearne 1963–1966
  William Thayer Tutt 1966–1969
  Bunny Ahearne 1969–1975
  Günther Sabetzki 1975–1994
  René Fasel 1994–2021
  Luc Tardif 2021–present

Chief Medical Officers

Members

 
Map of the world with current members of the IIHF. (Red indicates full members, blue indicates associate members, green indicates affiliate members and black indicates suspended members.)

As of 2022, the IIHF has 83 members.[32]

The federation has 60 full members, including two suspended members: Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus (suspended), Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Chinese Taipei(Taiwan), Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Great Britain, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, the Philippines, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Russia (suspended), Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. Full members have a national body dedicated to the sport, and participate annually in the international championships. Only full members have voting rights.

In addition, there are 22 associate members who either do not have a national body dedicated to the sport, or do not regularly participate in the international championships. They are Algeria, Andorra, Argentina, Armenia, Brazil, Colombia, Greece, Indonesia, Jamaica, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Macau, Moldova, Morocco, Nepal, North Macedonia, Oman, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Singapore, Tunisia, and Uzbekistan.

The IIHF recognizes Chile as an affiliated member that only participates in inline championships.

Registered players

Based on the number of registered ice hockey players, including male, female and junior, provided by the respective countries' federations. Note that this list includes 71 out of 83 IIHF member countries with more than 100 registered players as of October 2022.[32][33]

Country Registered players % of registered players % of population
  United States 551,006 35.44% 0.166%
  Canada 513,674 33.04% 1.361%
  Russia 103,101 6.63% 0.071%
  Finland 66,687 4.29% 1.204%
  Sweden 61,547 3.96% 0.609%
  Czechia 34,341 2.21% 0.321%
  Switzerland 29,360 1.89% 0.339%
  Germany 21,090 1.36% 0.025%
  France 18,686 1.20% 0.029%
  Japan 16,219 1.04% 0.013%
  China 13,388 0.86% 0.001%
  Great Britain 13,327 0.86% 0.020%
  Slovakia 11,447 0.74% 0.210%
  Hungary 8,943 0.58% 0.093%
  Norway 8,618 0.55% 0.159%
  Latvia 7,898 0.51% 0.419%
  Austria 7,232 0.47% 0.080%
  Belarus 7,053 0.45% 0.075%
  Australia 6,150 0.40% 0.024%
  Ukraine 5,341 0.34% 0.012%
  Denmark 5,147 0.33% 0.089%
  Italy 5,136 0.33% 0.008%
  Kazakhstan 4,320 0.28% 0.023%
  Poland 3,950 0.25% 0.010%
  Netherlands 3,515 0.23% 0.021%
  South Korea 3,044 0.20% 0.006%
  Kyrgyzstan 2,702 0.17% 0.041%
  Romania 2,213 0.14% 0.012%
  New Zealand 2,035 0.13% 0.042%
  Belgium 1,793 0.12% 0.015%
  North Korea 1,700 0.11% 0.007%
  India 1,502 0.10% 0.000%
  Turkey 1,486 0.10% 0.002%
  Lithuania 1,340 0.09% 0.049%
  Mexico 1,232 0.08% 0.001%
  Slovenia 1,072 0.07% 0.052%
  Estonia 995 0.06% 0.075%
  Argentina 980 0.06% 0.002%
  Bulgaria 945 0.06% 0.014%
  Spain 893 0.06% 0.002%
  Chinese Taipei 868 0.06% 0.004%
  Mongolia 828 0.05% 0.025%
  Iceland 752 0.05% 0.220%
  United Arab Emirates 695 0.04% 0.007%
  Serbia 668 0.04% 0.008%
  Thailand 624 0.04% 0.001%
  Georgia 598 0.04% 0.015%
  Hong Kong 576 0.04% 0.008%
  Croatia 520 0.03% 0.013%
  Israel 508 0.03% 0.006%
  Luxembourg 492 0.03% 0.079%
  South Africa 480 0.03% 0.001%
  Uzbekistan 421 0.03% 0.001%
  Kuwait 402 0.03% 0.009%
  Ireland 350 0.02% 0.007%
  Turkmenistan 347 0.02% 0.006%
  Greece 269 0.02% 0.003%
  Chile 250 0.02% 0.001%
  Bosnia and Herzegovina   242 0.02% 0.007%
  Iran 233 0.01% 0.000%
  Morocco 225 0.01% 0.001%
  Singapore 220 0.01% 0.004%
  Lebanon 208 0.01% 0.003%
  Puerto Rico 205 0.01% 0.007%
  Armenia 187 0.01% 0.006%
  Philippines 185 0.01% 0.000%
  Qatar 165 0.01% 0.006%
  Indonesia 139 0.01% 0.000%
  Macau 121 0.01% 0.019%
  Colombia 110 0.01% 0.000%
  Malaysia 110 0.01% 0.000%

IIHF World Ranking

The IIHF World Ranking is a tool to reflect the long-term quality of the countries' national team program.[34] The IIHF World Ranking is released following each IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship and the Olympic Ice Hockey Tournament.

References

  1. ^ "IIHF - Who we are". International Ice Hockey Federation.
  2. ^ "Statutes, Regulations amended". International Ice Hockey Federation. 24 June 2019. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  3. ^ International Ice Hockey Federation. "IIHF Mission" 8 May 2019.
  4. ^ International Hockey online portal. "International hockey and the olympics" 10 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine 18 February 2010.
  5. ^ International Ice Hockey Federation. "IIHF Statutes and Bylaws" 8 May 2019.
  6. ^ It all Started in Paris, 1908 International Ice Hockey Federation. Retrieved on 7 May 2019
  7. ^ "IIHF 1914-1933". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  8. ^ a b "IIHF 1957-1974". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  9. ^ a b "IIHF 1975-1989". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  10. ^ a b "IIHF 1990-today". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  11. ^ "IIHF Timeline". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  12. ^ "International Campaign: Don't play with the dictator!". 17 April 2012.
  13. ^ Davide Tuniz (15 March 2012). "European Parliament calls to move the 2014 World Championship from Belarus".
  14. ^ "Ice hockey-IIHF president to meet Belarus' Lukashenko to discuss 2021 world championship – RIA". Reuters. 29 December 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  15. ^ "Ice Hockey: Belarus must meet 'specific requirements' to host World Championship". Deutsche Welle. 14 January 2021. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  16. ^ "IIHF to move 2021 World Championship". International Ice Hockey Federation. 18 January 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  17. ^ "Latvia and hockey body spar over Belarus opposition flag". France 24. 25 May 2021.
  18. ^ "Ice Hockey Federation boss Fasel unhappy with Belarus flag switch". lsm.lv. 25 May 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  19. ^ "Latvia removes ice hockey body's banner in row over Belarus flag swap". Reuters. 25 May 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  20. ^ "IIHF - IIHF Council takes definitive action over Russia, Belarus". IIHF.com. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  21. ^ IIHF won’t be able to cancel KHL Legionnaires’ contracts until 2023
  22. ^ "Update on Russia and Belarus", IIHF, 22 March 2023
  23. ^ a b c d "IIHF Hall of Fame". Hockey Archives (in Russian). Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  24. ^ a b "IIHF Hall of Fame". International Ice Hockey Federation. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  25. ^ a b "IIHF - Tournaments". IIHF. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  26. ^ Competed as the   Russian Olympic Committee due to sanctions from the Russian doping scandal
  27. ^ "IIHF - Tournaments (Club)". IIHF. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  28. ^ "IIHF Staff". International Ice Hockey Federation. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  29. ^ "Wolf-Dieter Montag – Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Gesellschaft für Orthopädisch-Traumatologische Sportmedizin (in German). 19 November 2014. p. 2. (PDF) from the original on 12 November 2018.
  30. ^ "Paul Loicq Award: Dr Mark Aubry (CAN)". IIHF. 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  31. ^ "Dr. Mark Aubry – 2006 Dr. Tom Pashby Sports Safety Award". Dr. Pashby Sports Safety Fund. 18 November 2006. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  32. ^ a b "IIHF Member National Associations". International Ice Hockey Federation. 29 September 2022.
  33. ^ "Countries in the world by population (2022)". Worldometer. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  34. ^ "IIHF World Ranking". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 4 October 2022.

Sources

  • Podnieks, Andrew; Szemberg, Szymon (2007). World of hockey : celebrating a century of the IIHF. Fenn Publishing. ISBN 9781551683072.

External links

  Media related to International Ice Hockey Federation at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website

international, hockey, federation, this, article, about, governing, body, hockey, governing, body, field, hockey, international, hockey, federation, iihf, french, fédération, internationale, hockey, glace, german, internationale, eishockey, föderation, worldwi. This article is about the governing body of ice hockey For the governing body of field hockey see International Hockey Federation The International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF French Federation internationale de hockey sur glace German Internationale Eishockey Foderation is a worldwide governing body for ice hockey 1 It is based in Zurich Switzerland and has 83 member countries International Ice Hockey FederationFederation internationale de hockey sur glace Internationale Eishockey FoderationAbbreviationIIHFFormation15 May 1908 114 years ago 1908 05 15 Founded atParis FranceTypeSports federationLegal statusGoverning body of Ice hockeyPurposeSport governanceHeadquartersZurich SwitzerlandRegion servedWorldwideMembership83 membersOfficial languagesEnglish French GermanPresidentLuc TardifWebsiteIIHF comThe IIHF maintains the IIHF World Ranking based on international ice hockey tournaments Rules of play for IIHF events differ from hockey in North America and the rules of the National Hockey League NHL Decisions of the IIHF can be appealed through the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne Switzerland The IIHF maintains its own hall of fame for international ice hockey The IIHF Hall of Fame was founded in 1997 and has been located within the Hockey Hall of Fame since 1998 Previously the IIHF also managed the development of inline hockey however in June 2019 the IIHF announced that they would no longer govern inline hockey or organize the Inline Hockey World Championships 2 Contents 1 Functions 2 History 3 IIHF Hall of Fame 4 Tournaments 4 1 Men s 4 2 Women s 4 3 Club 5 Executives and personnel 5 1 Presidents 5 2 Chief Medical Officers 6 Members 6 1 Registered players 7 IIHF World Ranking 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksFunctions Edit IIHF Headquarters in Zurich Villa Freigut Enge The main functions of the IIHF are to govern develop and organize hockey throughout the world Another duty is to promote friendly relations among the member national associations and to operate in an organized manner for the good order of the sport 3 The federation may take the necessary measures in order to conduct itself and its affairs in accordance with its statutes bylaws and regulations as well as in holding a clear jurisdiction with regards to ice hockey at the international level The IIHF is the body responsible with arranging the sponsorships license rights advertising and merchandising in connection with all IIHF competitions Another purpose of the federation is to provide aid in the young players development and in the development of coaches and game officials On the other hand all the events of IIHF are organized by the federation along with establishing and maintaining contact with any other sport federations or sport groups The IIHF is responsible for processing the international players transfers It is also the body that presides over ice hockey at the Olympic Games as well as over all levels of the IIHF World Championships 4 The federation works in collaboration with local committees when organizing its 25 World Championships at five different categories Even though the IIHF runs the world championships it is also responsible for the organization of several European club competitions such as the Champions Hockey League or the Continental Cup The federation is governed by the legislative body of the IIHF which is the General Congress along with the executive body which is the Council The Congress is entitled to make decisions with regard to the game s rules the statutes and bylaws in the name of the federation It is also the body that elects the president and the council or otherwise known as board 5 The president of the IIHF is basically the representative of the federation He represents the federation s interests in all external matters and he is also responsible that the decisions are made according to the federation s statutes and regulations The president is assisted by the General Secretary who is also the highest ranked employee of the IIHF History EditMain article History of the International Ice Hockey Federation The International Ice Hockey Federation was founded on 15 May 1908 at 34 Rue de Provence in Paris France as Ligue Internationale de Hockey sur Glace LIHG 6 The 1920 Olympics were the first to integrate hockey into their program The Poland men s national ice hockey team debuted at the 1928 Winter Olympics The 1928 Winter Olympics which also served as the World and European Championship for the year saw a record 11 countries participate 7 The 1936 Winter Olympics set a new record with 15 participants The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 which had caused Hungary to be occupied by the Soviet Army led to a boycott of the 1957 World Championships which were being staged in Moscow Canada and the United States led the boycott and were joined by Norway West Germany Italy and Switzerland 8 The 1962 World Championship hosted by the American cities of Colorado Springs and Denver was boycotted by the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia which led to a further boycott by the other Eastern Bloc countries At issue was the boycott of the 1957 championships in Moscow by Canada and the United States and the Americans refusal of East German passports in reaction to the building of the Berlin Wall by East Germany 9 For the 1965 66 season the IIHF created the European Cup a tournament consisting of the top club teams from around Europe The competition was originated by Gunther Sabetzki based on the Association football European Cup now UEFA Champions League In 1968 the IIHF organized the European U19 Championship a junior competition for players aged 19 and under The age limit was later reduced to 18 in 1977 8 During the 1980s Canada stopped boycotting the World Championships and Olympic Games The Canadians had boycotted these tournaments between 1970 and 1976 after the IIHF had refused to allow them to roster professional players at the World Championships from NHL teams that had not qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs President Sabetzki managed to find a compromise that resulted in the return of Canada to international events beginning in 1977 The pro players whose teams had been eliminated from the playoffs were allowed to compete and in exchange Canada agreed to participate in the World Championships They also waived their right to host any World Championships The creation of the Canada Cup a competition organized by the NHL in Canada every four years was also part of the new agreement between the IIHF and North American professional hockey 9 The IIHF continued to grow in numbers during the 1980s and 1990s both due to political events and the continued growth of hockey worldwide The dissolution of the Soviet Union saw its membership transferred to Russia and the addition of four ex Soviet republics Azerbaijan Belarus Kazakhstan and Ukraine to the federation In addition the memberships of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania all of which had initially joined the IIHF in the 1930s but were expelled following their annexation by the Soviet Union were renewed The breakup of Yugoslavia also resulted in an increase in membership Croatia and Slovenia joined as new members while the membership of the old Yugoslavia was transferred to FR Yugoslavia which later became known as Serbia and Montenegro and still later dissolved into the independent republics of Serbia and Montenegro When Czechoslovakia broke up its membership rights were transferred to the Czech Republic and Slovakia was admitted as a new member The influx of new members resulted in the IIHF increasing the size of the Group A tournament It expanded from 8 teams to 12 in 1992 and from 12 to 16 in 1998 10 The IIHF celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2008 As part of the celebrations the 2008 World Championship was held in Canada for the first time the tournament was co hosted by the cities of Halifax and Quebec City 11 To commemorate the anniversary the IIHF Centennial All Star Team was chosen by votes The number of members grew in the 21st century Chile 2000 Bosnia and Herzegovina 2001 Liechtenstein 2001 North Macedonia 2001 the United Arab Emirates 2001 Macau 2005 Malaysia 2006 Moldova 2008 Georgia 2009 Kuwait 2009 had originally joined in 1985 but was expelled in 1992 Morocco 2010 Kyrgyzstan 2011 Jamaica 2012 Qatar 2012 Oman 2014 Turkmenistan 2015 Indonesia 2016 Nepal 2016 the Philippines 2016 Algeria 2019 Colombia 2019 Iran 2019 Lebanon 2019 Uzbekistan 2019 and Tunisia 2021 10 The IIHF received international criticism for holding the 2014 Men s Ice Hockey World Championships in Belarus because of the poor human rights record of the country Several human rights organisations launched the Don t play with the dictator boycott campaign 12 and there were appeals from the US Congress German Parliament and the European Parliament 13 The IIHF again received criticism for planning to partly hold the 2021 Men s Ice Hockey World Championships in Belarus 14 15 In January 2021 the IIHF withdrew the 2021 World Championship from Minsk due to safety and security issues during the political unrest besides the COVID 19 pandemic and decided to solely hold the tournament in Riga Latvia 16 On May 23 2021 civilian Ryanair Flight 4978 which was enroute from Athens to Vilnius was forced to land in Minsk and a passenger of that flight was detained In protest Latvian officials replaced the Belarusian state flag in Riga with the former flag associated with the Belarusian opposition groups including at the 2021 IIHF World Championship display of flags This was by order of Mayor of Riga Martins Stakis and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Latvia Edgars Rinkevics The IIHF issued a statement protesting the replacement of the flag and IIHF president Rene Fasel asked the mayor to remove the IIHF name its flag and its symbols from such sites or to restore the flag insisting that the IIHF is an apolitical sports organization 17 In response Stakis said he would remove the IIHF flags 18 19 On 28 February 28 2022 the IIHF suspended the memberships of the Russian and Belarusian hockey federations until further notice due to the countries invasion of Ukraine 20 Still non Russian players in Russian clubs are according to IIHF rules bound by their contracts and can not leave their clubs and Russia until their contracts expire or is terminated by their club If players leave anyway they can be sued and would be blocked from playing for other clubs 21 On 22 March 2023 the IIHF excluded Russian and Belarussian national and club teams from IIHF competitions during the 2023 24 season based on safety considerations 22 IIHF Hall of Fame Edit The Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto has hosted the IIHF Hall of Fame since 1998 Main article IIHF Hall of Fame Prior to the establishment of the IIHF Hall of Fame the IIHF displayed a collection of historical artifacts from World Championships and the Olympic Games in temporary exhibits From 1992 to 1997 the IIHF loaned its exhibits to the International Hockey Hall of Fame in Kingston Ontario Canada 23 The first step taken by the IIHF to create its own hall of fame was a proposal made in 1996 which was later ratified at the 1997 IIHF summer congress to host the museum in Zurich 23 The approval came exactly 89 years from the foundation of the IIHF with the purpose of honoring former international ice hockey players builders administrators and officials 24 The annual induction ceremony takes place on the medal presentation day of the Ice Hockey World Championships 23 24 The IIHF agreed with the National Hockey League to transfer its exhibits to the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto Canada as of 29 July 1998 23 Tournaments EditMen s Edit Current top four per tournament 25 Current pool 56 countries Tournament Year Champions Runners up Third place Fourth placeIIHF World Championship 2022 Finland Canada Czechia United StatesWinter Olympics 2022 Finland Russia 26 Slovakia SwedenU 20 IIHF World Championship 2023 Canada Czechia United States SwedenU 18 IIHF World Championship 2022 Sweden United States Finland CzechiaWomen s Edit Current top four per tournament 25 Current pool 42 countries Tournament Year Champions Runners up Third place Fourth placeIIHF Women s World Championship 2023 United States Canada Czech Republic SwitzerlandWinter Olympics 2022 Canada United States Finland SwitzerlandU 18 IIHF Women s World Championship 2023 Canada Sweden United States FinlandClub Edit Current top four per tournament 27 Tournament Year Champions Runners up Third place Fourth placeChampions Hockey League 2022 23 Tappara Lulea HF Frolunda HC amp EV ZugIIHF Continental Cup 2022 23 HK Nitra Ducs d Angers Cardiff Devils Asiago HockeyExecutives and personnel EditThe IIHF employs twenty staff members at the headquarters in Zurich 28 Presidents Edit Name Years Louis Magnus 1908 1912 Henri van den Bulcke 1912 1914 Louis Magnus 1914 Peter Patton 1914 Henri van den Bulcke 1914 1920 Max Sillig 1920 1922 Paul Loicq 1922 1947 Fritz Kraatz 1947 1948 W G Hardy 1948 1951 Fritz Kraatz 1951 1954 Walter A Brown 1954 1957 Bunny Ahearne 1957 1960 Robert Lebel 1960 1963 Bunny Ahearne 1963 1966 William Thayer Tutt 1966 1969 Bunny Ahearne 1969 1975 Gunther Sabetzki 1975 1994 Rene Fasel 1994 2021 Luc Tardif 2021 presentChief Medical Officers Edit Wolf Dieter Montag Germany 1975 to 1998 29 Mark Aubry Canada 1998 to present 30 31 Members Edit Map of the world with current members of the IIHF Red indicates full members blue indicates associate members green indicates affiliate members and black indicates suspended members Main article List of members of the International Ice Hockey Federation As of 2022 the IIHF has 83 members 32 The federation has 60 full members including two suspended members Australia Austria Azerbaijan Belarus suspended Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Canada China Chinese Taipei Taiwan Croatia Czechia Denmark Estonia Finland France Georgia Germany Great Britain Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Iran Ireland Israel Italy Japan Kazakhstan North Korea South Korea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malaysia Mexico Mongolia Netherlands New Zealand Norway the Philippines Poland Qatar Romania Russia suspended Serbia Slovakia Slovenia South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland Thailand Turkey Turkmenistan Ukraine the United Arab Emirates and the United States Full members have a national body dedicated to the sport and participate annually in the international championships Only full members have voting rights In addition there are 22 associate members who either do not have a national body dedicated to the sport or do not regularly participate in the international championships They are Algeria Andorra Argentina Armenia Brazil Colombia Greece Indonesia Jamaica Lebanon Liechtenstein Macau Moldova Morocco Nepal North Macedonia Oman Portugal Puerto Rico Singapore Tunisia and Uzbekistan The IIHF recognizes Chile as an affiliated member that only participates in inline championships Registered players Edit Based on the number of registered ice hockey players including male female and junior provided by the respective countries federations Note that this list includes 71 out of 83 IIHF member countries with more than 100 registered players as of October 2022 32 33 Country Registered players of registered players of population United States 551 006 35 44 0 166 Canada 513 674 33 04 1 361 Russia 103 101 6 63 0 071 Finland 66 687 4 29 1 204 Sweden 61 547 3 96 0 609 Czechia 34 341 2 21 0 321 Switzerland 29 360 1 89 0 339 Germany 21 090 1 36 0 025 France 18 686 1 20 0 029 Japan 16 219 1 04 0 013 China 13 388 0 86 0 001 Great Britain 13 327 0 86 0 020 Slovakia 11 447 0 74 0 210 Hungary 8 943 0 58 0 093 Norway 8 618 0 55 0 159 Latvia 7 898 0 51 0 419 Austria 7 232 0 47 0 080 Belarus 7 053 0 45 0 075 Australia 6 150 0 40 0 024 Ukraine 5 341 0 34 0 012 Denmark 5 147 0 33 0 089 Italy 5 136 0 33 0 008 Kazakhstan 4 320 0 28 0 023 Poland 3 950 0 25 0 010 Netherlands 3 515 0 23 0 021 South Korea 3 044 0 20 0 006 Kyrgyzstan 2 702 0 17 0 041 Romania 2 213 0 14 0 012 New Zealand 2 035 0 13 0 042 Belgium 1 793 0 12 0 015 North Korea 1 700 0 11 0 007 India 1 502 0 10 0 000 Turkey 1 486 0 10 0 002 Lithuania 1 340 0 09 0 049 Mexico 1 232 0 08 0 001 Slovenia 1 072 0 07 0 052 Estonia 995 0 06 0 075 Argentina 980 0 06 0 002 Bulgaria 945 0 06 0 014 Spain 893 0 06 0 002 Chinese Taipei 868 0 06 0 004 Mongolia 828 0 05 0 025 Iceland 752 0 05 0 220 United Arab Emirates 695 0 04 0 007 Serbia 668 0 04 0 008 Thailand 624 0 04 0 001 Georgia 598 0 04 0 015 Hong Kong 576 0 04 0 008 Croatia 520 0 03 0 013 Israel 508 0 03 0 006 Luxembourg 492 0 03 0 079 South Africa 480 0 03 0 001 Uzbekistan 421 0 03 0 001 Kuwait 402 0 03 0 009 Ireland 350 0 02 0 007 Turkmenistan 347 0 02 0 006 Greece 269 0 02 0 003 Chile 250 0 02 0 001 Bosnia and Herzegovina 242 0 02 0 007 Iran 233 0 01 0 000 Morocco 225 0 01 0 001 Singapore 220 0 01 0 004 Lebanon 208 0 01 0 003 Puerto Rico 205 0 01 0 007 Armenia 187 0 01 0 006 Philippines 185 0 01 0 000 Qatar 165 0 01 0 006 Indonesia 139 0 01 0 000 Macau 121 0 01 0 019 Colombia 110 0 01 0 000 Malaysia 110 0 01 0 000 IIHF World Ranking EditMain article IIHF World Ranking The IIHF World Ranking is a tool to reflect the long term quality of the countries national team program 34 The IIHF World Ranking is released following each IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship and the Olympic Ice Hockey Tournament References Edit IIHF Who we are International Ice Hockey Federation Statutes Regulations amended International Ice Hockey Federation 24 June 2019 Retrieved 24 June 2019 International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF Mission 8 May 2019 International Hockey online portal International hockey and the olympics Archived 10 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine 18 February 2010 International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF Statutes and Bylaws 8 May 2019 It all Started in Paris 1908 International Ice Hockey Federation Retrieved on 7 May 2019 IIHF 1914 1933 iihf com IIHF Retrieved 14 January 2021 a b IIHF 1957 1974 iihf com IIHF Retrieved 14 January 2021 a b IIHF 1975 1989 iihf com IIHF Retrieved 14 January 2021 a b IIHF 1990 today iihf com IIHF Retrieved 14 January 2021 IIHF Timeline iihf com IIHF Retrieved 14 January 2021 International Campaign Don t play with the dictator 17 April 2012 Davide Tuniz 15 March 2012 European Parliament calls to move the 2014 World Championship from Belarus Ice hockey IIHF president to meet Belarus Lukashenko to discuss 2021 world championship RIA Reuters 29 December 2020 Retrieved 11 January 2021 Ice Hockey Belarus must meet specific requirements to host World Championship Deutsche Welle 14 January 2021 Retrieved 14 January 2021 IIHF to move 2021 World Championship International Ice Hockey Federation 18 January 2021 Retrieved 18 January 2021 Latvia and hockey body spar over Belarus opposition flag France 24 25 May 2021 Ice Hockey Federation boss Fasel unhappy with Belarus flag switch lsm lv 25 May 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2021 Latvia removes ice hockey body s banner in row over Belarus flag swap Reuters 25 May 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2021 IIHF IIHF Council takes definitive action over Russia Belarus IIHF com Retrieved 2 March 2022 IIHF won t be able to cancel KHL Legionnaires contracts until 2023 Update on Russia and Belarus IIHF 22 March 2023 a b c d IIHF Hall of Fame Hockey Archives in Russian Retrieved 12 March 2019 a b IIHF Hall of Fame International Ice Hockey Federation Retrieved 12 March 2019 a b IIHF Tournaments IIHF Retrieved 4 January 2022 Competed as the Russian Olympic Committee due to sanctions from the Russian doping scandal IIHF Tournaments Club IIHF Retrieved 4 January 2022 IIHF Staff International Ice Hockey Federation Retrieved 26 January 2021 Wolf Dieter Montag Curriculum Vitae PDF Gesellschaft fur Orthopadisch Traumatologische Sportmedizin in German 19 November 2014 p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 12 November 2018 Paul Loicq Award Dr Mark Aubry CAN IIHF 2014 Retrieved 31 July 2018 Dr Mark Aubry 2006 Dr Tom Pashby Sports Safety Award Dr Pashby Sports Safety Fund 18 November 2006 Retrieved 1 August 2018 a b IIHF Member National Associations International Ice Hockey Federation 29 September 2022 Countries in the world by population 2022 Worldometer Retrieved 6 October 2022 IIHF World Ranking iihf com IIHF Retrieved 4 October 2022 Sources Edit Podnieks Andrew Szemberg Szymon 2007 World of hockey celebrating a century of the IIHF Fenn Publishing ISBN 9781551683072 External links Edit Media related to International Ice Hockey Federation at Wikimedia Commons Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Ice Hockey Federation amp oldid 1151673659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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