2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

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2017 IIHF World Junior Championship
Tournament details
Host country Canada
CityMontreal, Toronto
Venue(s)Bell Centre
Air Canada Centre (in 2 host cities)
DatesDecember 26, 2016 – January 5, 2017
Teams10
Final positions
Champions  United States (4th title)
Runner-up  Canada
Third place  Russia
Fourth place Sweden
Tournament statistics
Games played30
Goals scored183 (6.1 per game)
Attendance257,882 (8,596 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Russia Kirill Kaprizov (12 points)
MVPCanada Thomas Chabot
Websiteworldjunior2017.com
← 2016
2018 →

The 2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 41st edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship (WJC or WM20).[1][2] The main tournament was co-hosted by the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec and Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario.[3][4] This was the 14th championship that Canada had hosted. Montreal and Toronto also jointly hosted the 2015 edition.[5] The tournament consisted of 30 games between 10 nations.[6]

Group A preliminary games, as well as the medal rounds, were hosted by the Bell Centre in Montreal. The Air Canada Centre in Toronto hosted preliminaries in Group B, including the host country of Canada.[7] The tournament also initiated several year-long celebrations, the 375th anniversary of Montreal's founding; the 100th anniversary of the National Hockey League's founding in Montreal;[8] the 100th anniversary of Hockey Canada's origins; the 50th anniversary of Montreal's Expo 67; the 150th anniversary of Canadian confederation; and the 100th anniversary of the Toronto Maple Leafs.[9] The Maple Leafs had planned to make the WJHC the centrepiece of their 100th-anniversary celebrations.[10]

The event was organized by Hockey Canada, Hockey Québec, Ontario Hockey Federation, Montreal Canadiens, Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment and Evenko.[6] Montreal and Quebec provided C$1 million and C$2 million in funding, respectively, for both the 2015 and 2017 editions.

For the first time in the history of the event, the defending champion (Finland) had to compete in the relegation round. Latvia was relegated to Division I-A for 2018 by merit of their tenth-place finish.

Player eligibility[edit]

A player was eligible to play in the 2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships if:[11]

  • the player was of male gender;
  • the player was born at the earliest in 1997, and at the latest, in 2002;
  • the player was a citizen in the country he represented;
  • the player was under the jurisdiction of a national association that was a member of the IIHF.

If a player who has never played in IIHF-organized competition wishes to switch national eligibility, he must have played in competitions for two consecutive years in the new country without playing in another country, as well as show his move to the new country's national association with an international transfer card. In case the player has previously played in IIHF-organized competition but wishes to switch national eligibility, he must have played in competitions for four consecutive years in the new country without playing in another country, he must show his move to the new country's national association with an international transfer card, as well as be a citizen of the new country. A player may only switch national eligibility once.[12]

Top Division[edit]

Venues[edit]

Montreal Toronto
Bell Centre
Capacity: 21,287
Air Canada Centre
Capacity: 18,819

Match officials[edit]

The International Ice Hockey Federation selected 12 referees and 10 linesmen to officiate during the tournament:[13]

Referees

  • Sweden Tobias Björk
  • Canada Darcy Burchell
  • Czech Republic Jan Hribik
  • Slovakia Jozef Kubus
  • United States Mark Lemelin
  • Sweden Marcus Linde
  • Germany Marian Rohatsch
  • Finland Anssi Salonen
  • United States Brett Sheva
  • Belarus Maxim Sidorenko
  • Czech Republic Robin Šír
  • Switzerland Daniel Stricker

Linesmen

  • Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
  • United States Jake Davis
  • Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
  • Belarus Dmitry Golyak
  • Denmark Henrik Haurum
  • Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
  • Russia Yakov Paley
  • Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
  • Finland Sakari Suominen
  • Canada Nathan Vanoosten

Rosters[edit]

Format[edit]

The four best ranked teams from each group of the preliminary round advanced to the quarterfinals, while the last-placed team from both groups played a relegation round in a best-of-three format to determine the relegated team.[14]

Preliminary round[edit]

All times are local. (Eastern Standard TimeUTC−5)

Group A[edit]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Sweden 4 4 0 0 0 18 6 +12 12 Quarterfinals
2  Denmark 4 1 1 1 1 11 15 −4 6
3  Czech Republic 4 1 0 2 1 9 13 −4 5
4   Switzerland 4 0 2 0 2 11 13 −2 4
5  Finland 4 1 0 0 3 6 8 −2 3 Relegation round
Source: IIHF
26 December 2016
13:00
Denmark 1–6
(0–2, 0–4, 1–0)
 SwedenBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,518
Game reference
Lasse PetersenGoaliesFelix SandströmReferees:
Germany Marian Rohatsch
Finland Anssi Salonen
Linesmen:
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
Finland Sakari Suominen
0–110:11 – Nylander
0–218:24 – Eriksson Ek (Dahlin, Kylington)
0–324:30 – Dahlén (Grundström, L. Carlsson)
0–426:26 – Grundström (SH)
0–533:12 – Dahlin (G. Carlsson)
0–638:22 – Nylander (Bernhardt, Eriksson Ek)
Krag Christensen (J. Røndbjerg) – 57:531–6
2 minPenalties6 min
22Shots33
26 December 2016
17:00
Finland 1–2
(1–1, 0–0, 0–1)
 Czech RepublicBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,703
Game reference
Veini VehviläinenGoaliesJakub ŠkarekReferees:
Sweden Tobias Björk
Switzerland Daniel Stricker
Linesmen:
Russia Yakov Paley
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
0–104:27 – Krenželok (Nečas)
Luoto – 08:461–1
1–258:42 – Špaček (Musil, Zbořil)
4 minPenalties2 min
23Shots30
27 December 2016
13:00
Czech Republic 3–4 OT
(0–0, 0–2, 3–1)
(OT: 0–1)
  SwitzerlandBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,683
Game reference
Jakub ŠkarekGoaliesJoren van PottelbergheReferees:
United States Mark Lemelin
Finland Anssi Salonen
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Finland Sakari Suominen
0–129:19 – In Albon (Hischier, Diem)
0–236:03 – Thürkauf (Riat, Hischier) (PP)
Koblížek (Zbořil) – 45:021–2
1–348:34 – Riat (Siegenthaler, Thurkauf) (PP)
Chlapík (Hronek, Špaček) (PP) – 50:412–3
Chlapík (Špaček, Zbořil) (EA) – 59:443–3
3–460:23 – Hischier (Riat)
14 minPenalties8 min
39Shots22
27 December 2016
17:30
Denmark 3–2
(2–0, 1–0, 0–2)
 FinlandBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,733
Game reference
Kasper KrogGoaliesVeini Vehviläinen
Karolus Kaarlehto
Referees:
Sweden Tobias Björk
Czech Republic Robin Šír
Linesmen:
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
Boysen (Weichel, True) (PP) – 05:201–0
Madsen (Jensen, Høeg) – 17:402–0
Blichfeld (J. Røndbjerg, Koch) – 35:533–0
3–144:17 – Vaakanainen (Mattila, Väyrynen)
3–255:30 – Björkqvist (Luoto, Mattila)
12 minPenalties10 min
10Shots36
28 December 2016
17:00
Switzerland 2–4
(1–2, 1–0, 0–2)
 SwedenBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 5,630
Game reference
Joren van PottelbergheGoaliesFelix SandströmReferees:
Germany Marian Rohatsch
Czech Republic Robin Šír
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Russia Yakov Paley
0–104:13 – Eriksson Ek (Nylander, Bernhardt)
Siegenthaler (Riat, In Albon) (PP) – 05:081–1
1–206:38 – Andersson (Grundström)
Thürkauf (Hischier, Siegenthaler) (PP) – 26:172–2
2–354:52 – Eriksson Ek (Grundström, Nylander)
2–457:11 – L. Carlsson (Asplund)
10 minPenalties14 min
15Shots46
29 December 2016
13:00
Denmark 3–2 OT
(0–1, 1–1, 1–0)
(OT: 1–0)
 Czech RepublicBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,536
Game reference
Lasse PetersenGoaliesDaniel VladařReferees:
Sweden Marcus Linde
United States Brett Sheva
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
Russia Yakov Paley
0–107:56 – Nečas (Musil)
Blichfeld (Boysen, Larsen) (PP) – 28:411–1
1–230:29 – Hronek (Suchý)
Krag Christensen (Blichfeld) – 53:362–2
From (Krag Christensen) – 60:473–2
8 minPenalties8 min
22Shots34
29 December 2016
17:30
Finland 1–3
(1–0, 0–1, 0–2)
 SwedenBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 9,062
Game reference
Veini VehviläinenGoaliesFelix SandströmReferees:
Czech Republic Jan Hribik
Slovakia Jozef Kubus
Linesmen:
United States Jake Davis
Denmark Henrik Haurum
Räsänen (Tolvanen, Juolevi) (PP) – 16:351–0
1–132:16 – Andersson (Nylander)
1–241:24 – Nylander (Grundström, Eriksson Ek)
1–359:00 – Nylander (ENG)
0 minPenalties8 min
29Shots20
30 December 2016
17:00
Switzerland 5–4 GWS
(1–3, 2–1, 1–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
 DenmarkBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 6,006
Game reference
Joren van PottelbergheGoaliesKasper KrogReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Slovakia Jozef Kubus
Linesmen:
United States Jake Davis
Czech Republic Suchanek Libor
0–100:20 – True (Gatz)
0–203:45 – Blichfeld (Krag Christensen, Gatz)
0–313:40 – Andersen (From, Weichel) (PP)
Hischier (Riat, Siegenthaler) – 17:561–3
1–420:28 – From (True, M. Røndbjerg)
Zehnder (Weber, Gross) – 26:292–4
Eggenberger (Prassl, Miranda) – 32:263–4
Zehnder (In-Albon, Siegenthaler) – 43:354–4
Miranda GOAL
Riat MISS
ShootoutMISS From
MISS Blichfeld
MISS True
6 minPenalties20 min
53Shots22
31 December 2016
13:00
Sweden 5–2
(3–0, 1–0, 1–2)
 Czech RepublicBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 6,259
Game reference
Filip GustavssonGoaliesDaniel VladařReferees:
United States Brett Sheva
Belarus Maxim Sidorenko
Linesmen:
Belarus Dmitry Golyak
Denmark Henrik Haurum
Asplund (Ahl, Pettersson) – 00:371–0
Dahlén (Asplund, Nylander) (PP) – 08:562–0
Lööke (Karlström, Bernhardt) – 16:463–0
Dahlén (Karlström) – 37:094–0
Dahlén (Nylander, Kylington) (PP) – 43:345–0
5–153:09 – Kaše (Kurovský)
5–257:28 – Hronek (Kaše, Chlapík) (PP)
14 minPenalties10 min
37Shots38
31 December 2016
17:30
Finland 2–0
(0–0, 2–0, 0–0)
  SwitzerlandBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,013
Game reference
Veini VehviläinenGoaliesJoren van PottelbergheReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Sweden Marcus Linde
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
Räsänen (Vesalainen, Tolvanen) – 24:351–0
Tolvanen (Saarijärvi, Räsänen) (PP) – 33:532–0
2 minPenalties8 min
51Shots17

Group B[edit]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  United States 4 4 0 0 0 17 6 +11 12 Quarterfinals
2  Canada (H) 4 3 0 0 1 21 8 +13 9
3  Russia 4 2 0 0 2 16 9 +7 6
4  Slovakia 4 1 0 0 3 6 14 −8 3
5  Latvia 4 0 0 0 4 6 29 −23 0 Relegation round
Source: IIHF
(H) Host
26 December 2016
15:30
United States 6–1
(1–1, 2–0, 3–0)
 LatviaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 7,014
Game reference
Tyler ParsonsGoaliesMareks MitensReferees:
Slovakia Jozef Kubus
Belarus Maxim Sidorenko
Linesmen:
Belarus Dmitry Golyak
Denmark Henrik Haurum
Harper (Fitzgerald, Ahcan) – 06:271–0
1–115:22 – Krastenbergs (E. Jansons)
White (Thompson, Fox) – 26:292–1
Keller (White, Thompson) – 38:453–1
Keller – 52:194–1
Bracco (Terry) (PP) – 57:415–1
Greenway (Kunin, Terry) – 59:206–1
14 minPenalties20 min
30Shots12
26 December 2016
20:00
Canada 5–3
(1–1, 2–0, 2–2)
 RussiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,099
Game reference
Carter HartGoaliesIlya SamsonovReferees:
Czech Republic Jan Hribik
Sweden Marcus Linde
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
United States Jake Davis
Jost (Myers, Dubé) – 03:111–0
1–109:47 – Sergachev (Guryanov)
Strome (Barzal, Chabot) (PP) – 33:152–1
Roy (Gauthier) – 37:083–1
Barzal (Dubois) (PP) – 43:034–1
4–245:12 – Kaprizov (Vorobyev, Rykov) (PP)
Strome (Barzal) (PP) – 49:065–2
5–350:36 – Rykov (Yurtaikin, Kaprizov)
6 minPenalties12 min
37Shots17
27 December 2016
16:00
Latvia 1–9
(0–3, 1–3, 0–3)
 RussiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 6,789
Game reference
Gustavs Grigals
Denijs Romanovskis
GoaliesVladislav SukhachyovReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Sweden Marcus Linde
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
0–105:33 – Yurtaikin (Dronov)
0–212:10 – Polunin (Kaprizov, Sidorov)
0–317:39 – Karnaukhov (Guryanov, Kudako)
0–420:56 – Kaprizov (Vorobyev, Polunin)
Balcers (Dzierkals) (PP) – 23:421–4
1–524:21 – Polunin (Rykov, Vorobyov)
1–625:04 – Belyayev (Yurtaikin, Alexeyev)
1–746:07 – Kaprizov (Rykov, Vorobyov) (PP)
1–849:28 – Trenin (Kaprizov, Polunin) (PP2)
1–956:07 – Kaprizov (Rykov, Vorobyov) (PP)
18 minPenalties10 min
26Shots40
27 December 2016
20:00
Canada 5–0
(0–0, 4–0, 1–0)
 SlovakiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 12,694
Game reference
Connor IngramGoaliesAdam HuskaReferees:
Czech Republic Jan Hribik
United States Brett Sheva
Linesmen:
United States Jake Davis
Denmark Henrik Haurum
Lauzon (Gauthier, Jost) – 25:301-0
Raddysh (Dubois, Chabot) (PP) – 30:572-0
Cirelli (Lauzon, Speers) – 32:373-0
Chabot (Barzal, Strome) (PP) – 36:254-0
McLeod (Cirelli, Dubé) – 42:595–0
4 minPenalties8 min
44Shots6
28 December 2016
19:30
Slovakia 2–5
(1–2, 0–3, 1–0)
 United StatesAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 8,391
Game reference
Matej TomekGoaliesJoseph WollReferees:
CanadaDarcy Burchell
Belarus Maxim Sidorenko
Linesmen:
Belarus Dmitry Golyak
Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
0–110:15 – Laczynski (Cecconi)
0–217:00 – White (Keller, Jones)
Fehérváry (Sádecký, Pataky) (PP) – 18:081–2
1–322:03 – Thompson (Roslovic, Bellows)
1–428:39 – McAvoy (Roslovic, Cecconi)
1–532:57 – Terry (Kunin, Fitzgerald) (PP)
Roman (Andrisik, Sádecký) – 59:232–5
22 minPenalties4 min
20Shots50
29 December 2016
15:30
Russia 2–3
(1–1, 1–2, 0–0)
 United StatesAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 13,759
Game reference
Ilya SamsonovGoaliesTyler ParsonsReferees:
Finland Anssi Salonen
Switzerland Daniel Stricker
Linesmen:
Finland Sakari Suominen
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
0–104:14 – Keller (Anderson, Fitzgerald)
Urakov (Trenin, Zborovski) (SH) – 11:591–1
1–224:03 – White (McAvoy, Keller) (PP)
1–331:41 – Terry (Foley, Laczynski)
Kaprizov (Rykov, Vorobyev) (PP) – 37:172–3
10 minPenalties6 min
27Shots37
29 December 2016
20:00
Latvia 2–10
(0–3, 1–5, 1–2)
 CanadaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 13,796
Game reference
Mareks Mitens
Gustavs Grigals
GoaliesCarter HartReferees:
Sweden Tobias Björk
United States Mark Lemelin
Linesmen:
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
Belarus Dmitry Golyak
Canada Nathan Vanoosten replaced Golyak during the game due to injury
0–110:38 – Barzal (Myers) (SH)
0–211:54 – Roy (Myers, Clague) (PP)
0–319:40 – Raddysh (Chabot, Strome) (PP)
0–429:11 – Raddysh (Strome, Dubois) (PP)
0–532:13 – Raddysh (Joseph, Clague)
0–632:53 – Barzal (Raddysh, Clague)
0–733:30 – Cirelli (Dubé, Speers)
0–834:56 – McLeod (Strome, Fabbro)
Krastenbergs (Tralmaks, E. Jansons) (SH) – 37:581–8
1–942:07 – Raddysh (Juulsen, Joseph)
Dzierkals – 47:592–9
2–1058:05 – Gauthier (Dubois, Strome)
14 minPenalties20 min
25Shots35
30 December 2016
19:30
Slovakia 4–2
(1–1, 1–0, 2–1)
 LatviaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 6,018
Game reference
Adam HuskaGoaliesMareks Mitens
Gustavs Grigals
Referees:
United States Mark Lemelin
Germany Marian Rohatsch
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Finland Sakari Suominen
0–103:40 – Cukste (Balcers, Buncis)
Lestan – 08:131–1
Mi Roman (Mich Roman, Sloboda) – 38:112–1
Hatala (Mich Roman, Sádecký) – 40:413–1
Sloboda (Mi Roman, Grman) – 45:014–1
4–253:29 – Buncis (Cukste, Dzierkals) (PP)
12 minPenalties10 min
36Shots24
31 December 2016
15:30
United States 3–1
(2–0, 1–1, 0–0)
 CanadaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,584
Game reference
Joseph WollGoaliesConnor IngramReferees:
Finland Anssi Salonen
Switzerland Daniel Stricker
Linesmen:
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
Russia Yakov Paley
White (Greenway, Keller) (PP) – 04:311–0
Greenway (Keller, McAvoy) (PP) – 06:042–0
2–128:12 – Chabot (Barzal, Strome) (PP2)
Bracco (Lindgren, Greenway) – 33:083–1
37 minPenalties16 min
20Shots26
31 December 2016
20:00
Russia 2–0
(0–0, 1–0, 1–0)
 SlovakiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 5,269
Game reference
Ilya SamsonovGoaliesMatej TomekReferees:
Germany Marian Rohatsch
Czech Republic Robin Šír
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
Guryanov (Kvartalnov, Karnaukhov) (PP) – 29:061–0
Trenin (Urakov, Belyayev) – 49:392–0
4 minPenalties6 min
30Shots15

Relegation round[edit]

2 January 2017
11:00
Finland 2–1
(1–0, 0–1, 1–0)
 LatviaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 3,016
Game reference
Veini VehviläinenGoaliesMareks MitensReferees:
United States Brett Sheva
Belarus Maxim Sikorenko
Linesmen:
Belarus Dmitry Golyak
Denmark Henrik Haurum
Saarijärvi (Räsänen) (PP) – 07:431–0
1–124:37 – Ponomarenko (Krastenbergs, Tralmaks)
Vesalainen (Heiskanen, Tolvanen) – 49:002–1
10 minPenalties12 min
45Shots24
3 January 2017
17:30
Latvia 1–4
(1–1, 0–0, 0–3)
 FinlandBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 4,216
Game reference
Mareks MitensGoaliesVeini VehviläinenReferees:
Czech Republic Jan Hribik
Czech Republic Robin Šir
Linesmen:
United States Jake Davis
Russia Yakov Paley
0–101:31 – Tolvanen (Räsänen, Nättinen) (PP2)
Krastenbergs (Čukste, Ponomarenko) (PP) – 16:231–1
1–241:28 – Saarijärvi (Tolvanen, Juolevi) (PP)
1–342:33 – Välimäki (Björkqvist, Kuokkanen)
1–457:26 – Välimäki (Räsänen, Saarijärvi) (PP2)
49 minPenalties16 min
23Shots42

Note:  Latvia was relegated to the 2018 Division I A

Playoff round[edit]

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
1A  Sweden 8
4B  Slovakia 3
1A  Sweden 2
2B  Canada 5
2B  Canada 5
3A  Czech Republic 3
2B  Canada 4
1B  United States 5
2A  Denmark 0
3B  Russia 4
3B  Russia 3 Bronze medal game
1B  United States 4
1B  United States 3 1A  Sweden 1
4A   Switzerland 2 3B  Russia 2

Quarterfinals[edit]

2 January 2017
13:00
Denmark 0–4
(0–2, 0–0, 0–2)
 RussiaAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 7,801
Game reference
Lasse Petersen
Kasper Krog
GoaliesIlya SamsonovReferees:
United States Mark Lemelin
Germany Marian Rohatsch
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Finland Sakari Suominen
0–108:45 – Polunin (Vorobyev)
0–219:49 – Kaprizov (Vorobyev, Trenin) (PP)
0–347:12 – Karnaukhov (Guryanov, Kvartalnov)
0–455:35 – Kaprizov (Polunin)
10 minPenalties14 min
14Shots32
2 January 2017
15:30
Sweden 8–3
(3–0, 2–2, 3–1)
 SlovakiaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 6,331
Game reference
Felix SandströmGoaliesAdam HuskaReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Czech Republic Jan Hribik
Linesmen:
United States Jake Davis
Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
Eriksson Ek (Asplund, Karlström) (PP) – 01:181–0
Söderlund (Wingerli, Gunnarsson) – 16:282–0
Grundström (Nylander, L. Carlsson) – 17:013–0
Nylander (Dahlén, Asplund) – 26:174–0
Karlström (Ahl, Asplund) – 33:075–0
5–135:48 – Bodák (Sloboda) (PP)
5–236:54 – Struska (Černák)
5–341:53 – Ružička
Söderlund (G. Carlsson) – 42:366–3
Andersson (Larsson, Lööke) (PP) – 44:277–3
Eriksson Ek (Asplund, Kylington) (PP) – 57:048–3
2 minPenalties20 min
50Shots18
2 January 2017
17:30
United States 3–2
(2–0, 0–1, 1–1)
  SwitzerlandAir Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 8,176
Game reference
Tyler ParsonsGoaliesJoren van PottelbergheReferees:
Sweden Tobias Björk
Czech Republic Robin Šír
Linesmen:
Russia Yakov Paley
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
Bracco (Thompson, Terry) (PP) – 08:321–0
Kunin (Greenway, Bracco) – 10:422–0
2–130:47 – Hischier (Siegenthaler, Riat) (PP)
2–246:00 – Hischier (Thürkauf) (PP)
Greenway (McAvoy, Keller) (PP) – 46:183–2
10 minPenalties18 min
17Shots21
2 January 2017
20:00
Canada 5–3
(0–1, 3–1, 2–1)
 Czech RepublicBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 10,215
Game reference
Connor IngramGoaliesJakub ŠkarekReferees:
Slovakia Jozef Kubus
Sweden Marcus Linde
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmen
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
0–116:49 – Kaše (Musil, Hronek)
Speers (Stephens, Joseph) – 23:451–1
Stephens (Cirelli) – 27:272–1
2–228:53 – Soustal
Chabot (Stephens, Cirelli) – 33:323–2
Gauthier (Roy) – 43:184–2
4–345:54 – Stransky (Nečas)
Gauthier (Barzal, Chabot) – 46:375–3
4 minPenalties8 min
41Shots19

Semifinals[edit]

4 January 2017
15:00
United States 4–3 GWS
(1–1, 2–1, 0–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 4–3)
 RussiaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 11,576
Game reference
Tyler ParsonsGoaliesIlya SamsonovReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Sweden Marcus Linde
Linesmen:
Germany Lukas Kohlmuller
Czech Republic Libor Suchanek
0–111:54 – Kaprizov (Vorobyev)
White (Keller, Jones) – 19:051–1
1–221:17 – Guryanov (Kudako, Karnaukhov)
Kunin (Greenway, Bracco) (PP) – 30:232–2
White (Anderson, Keller) – 36:213–2
3–346:04 – Guryanov
White MISS
Keller MISS
Anderson MISS
Terry GOAL
Bracco GOAL
Terry GOAL
Terry GOAL
ShootoutGOAL Guryanov
MISS Polunin
MISS Alexeyev
GOAL Vorobyev
MISS Kaprizov
GOAL Guryanov
MISS Polunin
2 minPenalties8 min
44Shots36
4 January 2017
19:30
Sweden 2–5
(2–2, 0–1, 0–2)
 CanadaBell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 13,456
Game reference
Felix SandströmGoaliesConnor Ingram
Carter Hart
Eriksson Ek (Söderlund) (SH) – 6:051–0
1–17:43 – Stephens (Cirelli)
Grundström (Nylander, Eriksson Ek) – 8:052–1
2–218:49 – Cirelli (Clague, Chabot)
2–332:02 – Gauthier (Dubois)
2–447:38 – Strome (Juulsen, Bean)
2–558:02 – Gauthier (Strome, Jost) (ENG)
12 minPenalties8 min
31Shots43

Bronze medal game[edit]

5 January 2017
15:30
Sweden 1–2 OT
(0–0, 1–1, 0–0)
(OT: 0–1)
 Russia 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Bell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 8,366
Game reference
Felix SandströmGoaliesIlya SamsonovReferees:
Canada Darcy Burchell
Slovakia Jozef Kubus
Linesmen:
Finland Sakari Suominen
Canada Nathan Vanoosten
0–120:16 – Kaprizov (Vorobyev, Rykov)
Dahlén – 30:111–1
1–260:33 – Guryanov
4 minPenalties6 min
39Shots26

Final[edit]

5 January 2017
20:00
1st place, gold medalist(s) United States 5–4 SO
(0–2, 2–0, 2–2)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
 Canada 2nd place, silver medalist(s)Centre Bell, Montreal
Attendance: 20,173
Game reference
Tyler ParsonsGoaliesCarter HartReferees:
Finland Anssi Salonen
Switzerland Daniel Stricker
Linesmen:
Sweden Jimmy Dahmén
Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
0–14:58 – Chabot (Barzal, Joseph)
0–29:02 – Lauzon (Stephens)
McAvoy (Greenway, Fox) – 23:041–2
Bellows (Fox, Thompson) (PP) – 29:302–2
2–341:52 – Roy (Bean, Jost) (PP)
2–444:05 – Joseph (McLeod, Chabot)
Bellows (McAvoy) – 44:443–4
White (Fox, Keller) – 47:074–4
White MISS
Keller MISS
Bellows MISS
Terry GOAL
Bracco MISS
ShootoutMISS Strome
MISS Barzal
MISS Jost
MISS Cirelli
MISS Roy
12 minPenalties4 min
36Shots50

Statistics[edit]

Scoring leaders[edit]

Pos Player Country GP G A Pts +/− PIM
1 Kirill Kaprizov  Russia 7 9 3 12 +7 2
2 Alexander Nylander  Sweden 7 5 7 12 +7 0
3 Clayton Keller  United States 7 3 8 11 +3 2
4 Thomas Chabot  Canada 7 4 6 10 +4 8
5 Dylan Strome  Canada 7 3 7 10 +1 0
6 Mikhail Vorobyev  Russia 7 0 10 10 +6 4
7 Joel Eriksson Ek  Sweden 7 6 3 9 +8 4
8 Colin White  United States 7 7 1 8 +5 4
9 Mathew Barzal  Canada 7 3 5 8 +4 4
9 Jordan Greenway  United States 7 3 5 8 +3 2

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus–minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes
Source: IIHF [15]

Goaltending leaders[edit]

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)

Pos Player Country TOI GA GAA Sv% SO
1 Veini Vehviläinen  Finland 317:57 8 1.51 93.10 1
2 Ilya Samsonov  Russia 370:11 13 2.11 92.97 2
3 Kasper Krog  Denmark 165:00 9 3.27 91.96 0
4 Tyler Parsons  United States 330:00 12 2.18 91.67 0
5 Felix Sandström  Sweden 359:50 13 2.17 91.45 0

TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF[16]

Tournament awards[edit]

Reference: [1] Most Valuable Player

All-star team

IIHF best player awards

Final standings[edit]

Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 B  United States 7 5 2 0 0 29 15 +14 19 Champions
2 B  Canada (H) 7 5 0 1 1 35 18 +17 16 Runners-up
3 B  Russia 7 3 1 1 2 25 14 +11 12 Third place
4 A  Sweden 7 5 0 1 1 29 16 +13 16 Fourth place
5 A  Denmark 5 1 1 1 2 11 19 −8 6 Eliminated in
Quarter-finals
6 A  Czech Republic 5 1 0 2 2 12 18 −6 5
7 A   Switzerland 5 0 2 0 3 13 16 −3 4
8 B  Slovakia 5 1 0 0 4 9 22 −13 3
9 A  Finland 6 3 0 0 3 12 10 +2 9 Advanced in Relegation round
10 B  Latvia 6 0 0 0 6 8 35 −27 0 Relegated to the 2018 Division I A
Source: IIHF
(H) Host

Division I[edit]

Group A[edit]

The Division I A tournament was held in Bremerhaven, Germany, from December 11 to 17, 2016.[17][18]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1  Belarus 5 4 0 1 0 20 10 +10 13 Promoted to the 2018 Top Division
2  Germany (H) 5 3 1 0 1 17 13 +4 11
3  France 5 2 0 0 3 16 19 −3 6[a]
4  Kazakhstan 5 2 0 0 3 14 16 −2 6[a]
5  Austria 5 2 0 0 3 15 17 −2 6[a]
6  Norway 5 1 0 0 4 10 17 −7 3 Relegated to the 2018 Division I B
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
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c In head-to-head games, France had 6 Pts, Kazakhstan had 3 Pts, and Austria 0 Pts.

Group B[edit]

The Division I B tournament was held in Budapest, Hungary, from December 11 to 17, 2016.[19][20] The hosts, entering as the bottom seed, won promotion for the second year in a row.

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1  Hungary (H) 5 4 0 0 1 21 12 +9 12 Promoted to the 2018 Division I A
2  Poland 5 3 1 0 1 21 16 +5 11
3  Slovenia 5 2 1 0 2 21 13 +8 8
4  Italy 5 2 0 1 2 12 19 −7 7
5  Ukraine 5 1 1 0 3 9 13 −4 5
6  Great Britain 5 0 0 2 3 8 19 −11 2 Relegated to the 2018 Division II 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.
(H) Host

Division II[edit]

Group A[edit]

The Division II A tournament was held in Tallinn, Estonia, from December 11 to 17, 2016.[21][22]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1  Lithuania 5 5 0 0 0 42 10 +32 15 Promoted to the 2018 Division I B
2  Japan 5 4 0 0 1 35 13 +22 12
3  Romania 5 2 0 1 2 21 29 −8 7
4  Estonia (H) 5 2 0 0 3 18 24 −6 6
5  Netherlands 5 1 0 0 4 9 24 −15 3
6  Croatia 5 0 1 0 4 11 36 −25 2 Relegated to the 2018 Division II B
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

Group B[edit]

The Division II B tournament was held in Logroño, Spain, from January 7 to 13, 2017.[23][24]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1  South Korea 5 4 1 0 0 27 7 +20 14 Promoted to the 2018 Division II A
2  Spain (H) 5 4 0 0 1 38 12 +26 12
3  Serbia 5 3 0 1 1 23 12 +11 10
4  Belgium 5 2 0 0 3 15 19 −4 6
5  Mexico 5 0 1 0 4 13 39 −26 2
6  Australia 5 0 0 1 4 9 36 −27 1 Relegated to the 2018 Division III
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

Division III[edit]

The Division III tournament was held in Dunedin, New Zealand, from January 16 to 22, 2017.[25][26] Turkey defeated China in the Gold medal game to achieve promotion to Division II. Chinese Taipei returned to play for the first time since 2011, losing all but their final game.

Playoffs[edit]

Semifinals Final
      
B1  Turkey 3
A2  Iceland 2
B1  Turkey 2
A1  China 1
A1  China 11
B2  New Zealand 2 3rd place match
A2  Iceland 10
B2  New Zealand 0
5th–8th place semifinals 5th place match
      
A3  Israel 9
B4  South Africa 0
A3  Israel 3
B3  Bulgaria 2
B3  Bulgaria 6
A4  Chinese Taipei 1 7th place match
B4  South Africa 1
A4  Chinese Taipei 7

Final standings[edit]

Rank Team Result
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Turkey Promoted to the 2018 Division II B
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  China
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Iceland
4  New Zealand
5  Israel
6  Bulgaria
7  Chinese Taipei Relegated to the 2018 Division III Qualification
8  South Africa

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship official website". IIHF. Archived from the original on January 20, 2017.
  2. ^ 2017 Top Division statistics
  3. ^ "The Official Website of Hockey Canada".
  4. ^ TSN, "Montreal and Toronto to Host 2015, 2017 World Juniors on TSN"[permanent dead link], Hockey Canada, June 20, 2013
  5. ^ CTV News, "Montreal and Toronto to host 2015, 2017 world junior championships", Canadian Press, June 20, 2013
  6. ^ a b IIHF, "Heading to hockey’s meccas", June 20, 2013
  7. ^ The Gazette (Montreal), "World Junior Championship is coming to town" Archived June 25, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Brenda Branswell, June 20, 2013
  8. ^ (in French) 24H de Montreal, "Le Championnat junior à Montréal en 2015 et 2017"[usurped], Mathieu Boulay, June 24, 2013
  9. ^ CBC News, "Montreal, Toronto to co-host junior hockey worlds in 2015, 2017", Canadian Press, June 20, 2013
  10. ^ Calgary Herald, "Montreal and Toronto to host 2015 and 2017 world junior hockey championships"[permanent dead link], Bill Beacon, June 20, 2013
  11. ^ "IIHF statutes and bylaws" (PDF). IIHF. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  12. ^ "IIHF Eligibility". IIHF. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  13. ^ "Competition Officials" (PDF). IIHF.com. Retrieved December 30, 2016.
  14. ^ "New format for U18, U20 Worlds". IIHF.com. May 29, 2012. Archived from the original on July 2, 2012. Retrieved May 29, 2011.
  15. ^ "Scoring Leaders" (PDF) (PDF). IIHF. January 5, 2017.
  16. ^ "Goalkeepers" (PDF). IIHF.com. January 5, 2017.
  17. ^ 2017 Division I A official website
  18. ^ 2017 Division I A statistics
  19. ^ 2017 Division I B official website
  20. ^ 2017 Division I B statistics
  21. ^ 2017 Division II A official website
  22. ^ 2017 Division II A statistics
  23. ^ 2017 Division II B official website
  24. ^ 2017 Division II B statistics
  25. ^ 2017 Division III official website
  26. ^ 2017 Division III statistics

External links[edit]