1989 Ice Hockey World Championships

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1989 Ice Hockey World Championships
Tournament details
Host country  Sweden
Dates 15 April – 1 May
Teams 8
Venue(s) (in 2 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg  Soviet Union (21st title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg  Canada
Third place Bronze medal blank.svg  Czechoslovakia
Fourth place  Sweden
Tournament statistics
Matches played 40
Goals scored 282 (7.05 per match)
Attendance 388,563 (9,714 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Canada Brian Bellows 14 points
1987
1990

The 1989 Ice Hockey World Championships took place in Sweden from 15 April – 1 May. The games were played in Södertälje and Stockholm, in the newly built arena Globen. Eight teams took part, and each team played each other once. The four best teams then played each other again. This was the 53rd World Championships, and also the 64th European Championships. The Soviet Union became world champions for the 21st time, and also European champions for the 26th time.

The tournament was marred by positive drug tests. Only the goal totals of the Americans were affected in the end. Their losses against the Czechoslovaks and the Canadians were ruled as shutouts because of Corey Millen's high testosterone levels. Canadian Randy Carlyle also came under suspicion, but his A and B samples did not match, and he was cleared of wrongdoing.[1][2] The Soviet team won all ten of their games.

At the end of the tournament, Soviet star Alexander Mogilny defected to the United States by getting on a plane with two Buffalo Sabres executives. The Sabres had drafted Mogilny the year before.[3] He joined the team and went on to score 1032 points in his NHL career.

World Championship Group A (Sweden)

First round

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
1  Soviet Union 7 7 0 0 36 - 12 14
2  Sweden 7 4 2 1 29 - 20 10
3  Canada 7 5 0 2 45 - 18 10
4  Czechoslovakia 7 3 2 2 33 - 15 8
5  Finland 7 2 1 4 22 - 25 5
6  United States 7 2 1 4 20 - 29 5
7  Poland 7 1 0 6 10 - 59 2
8  West Germany 7 0 2 5 17 - 34 2
15 April Canada  6-4
 Finland
15 April Czechoslovakia  3-3
 West Germany
15 April Soviet Union  4-2
 United States
15 April Sweden  5-1
 Poland
16 April Canada  11-0
 Poland
16 April Sweden  4-2
 United States
16 April Czechoslovakia  3-1
 Finland
16 April Soviet Union  5-1
 West Germany
18 April Canada  8-0
 United States
18 April Czechoslovakia  15-0
 Poland
18 April Soviet Union  4-1
 Finland
18 April Sweden  3-3
 West Germany
19 April Canada  8-2
 West Germany
19 April Soviet Union  12-1
 Poland
19 April Czechoslovakia  5-0
 United States
19 April Sweden  6-3
 Finland
21 April Sweden  6-5
 Canada
21 April Soviet Union  4-2
 Czechoslovakia
21 April Finland  7-2
 Poland
21 April United States  7-4
 West Germany
22 April Soviet Union  4-3
 Canada
22 April Czechoslovakia  3-3
 Sweden
23 April Finland  3-3
 United States
23 April Poland  5-3
 West Germany
24 April Canada  4-2
 Czechoslovakia
24 April Soviet Union  3-2
 Sweden
25 April United States  6-1
 Poland
25 April Finland  3-1
 West Germany

Final Round

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
1  Soviet Union 3 3 0 0 11 - 04 6
2  Canada 3 2 0 1 12 - 11 4
3  Czechoslovakia 3 1 0 2 05 - 06 2
4  Sweden 3 0 0 3 05 - 12 0
27 April Canada  5-3
 Sweden
27 April Soviet Union  1-0
 Czechoslovakia
29 April Soviet Union  5-3
 Canada
29 April Czechoslovakia  2-1
(2-0, 0-0, 0-1)
 Sweden
Attendance: 13,856
1 May Canada  4-3
 Czechoslovakia
1 May Soviet Union  5-1
 Sweden

Consolation Round

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
5  Finland 10 5 1 4 35 - 27 11
6  United States 10 4 1 5 37 - 40 9
7  West Germany 10 1 2 7 22 - 41 4
8  Poland 10 1 0 9 12 - 76 2

Poland was relegated to Group B.

26 April United States  11-2
 Poland
26 April Finland  3-0
 West Germany
28 April United States  4-3
 West Germany
28 April Finland  4-0
 Poland
30 April Finland  6-2
 United States
30 April West Germany  2-0
 Poland

World Championship Group B (Norway)

Played in Oslo and Lillehammer 30 March to 9 April. The 5 April game between Norway and Austria was officially adjusted to 8-0 for Norway because of Siegfried Haberl's positive drug test.[2] Standard procedure, since 1969, had been for Group B and Group C to exchange two teams, but that stopped this year.

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
9  Norway 7 5 1 1 28 - 16 11
10  Italy 7 5 1 1 37 - 16 11
11  France 7 4 2 1 29 - 18 10
12   Switzerland 7 5 0 2 40 - 21 10
13  East Germany 7 3 0 4 22 - 29 6
14  Austria 7 2 0 5 25 - 32 4
15  Japan 7 2 0 5 20 - 34 4
16  Denmark 7 0 0 7 09 - 44 0

Norway was promoted to Group A and Denmark was relegated to Group C.

30 March Austria  3-4
 Italy
30 March Norway  7-4
 Japan
30 March France  3-5
 East Germany
30 March Switzerland   6-3
 Denmark
31 March Norway  3-1
 Italy
31 March France  8-0
 Denmark
1 April Japan  0-10
  Switzerland
1 April East Germany  4-0
 Austria
2 April Austria  10-3
 Denmark
2 April Norway  5-2
 East Germany
2 April France  5-4
 Japan
3 April Switzerland   6-7
 Italy
4 April Italy  3-3
 France
4 April East Germany  0-3
  Switzerland
4 April Japan  2-4
 Austria
4 April Norway  3-2
 Denmark
5 April Norway  8-2
 Austria
6 April Italy  6-0
 Japan
6 April Denmark  0-9
 East Germany
6 April Switzerland   2-5
 France
7 April Denmark  0-6
 Italy
7 April Norway  1-1
 France
8 April Japan  8-1
 East Germany
8 April Austria  5-7
  Switzerland
9 April Denmark  1-2
 Japan
9 April East Germany  1-10
 Italy
9 April Austria  3-4
 France
9 April Norway  1-6
  Switzerland

World Championship Group C (Australia)

Played in Sydney 18–27 March.

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
17  Netherlands 7 7 0 0 48 - 15 14
18  Yugoslavia 7 6 0 1 55 - 15 12
19  China 7 4 1 2 31 - 29 9
20  Hungary 7 3 1 3 32 - 30 7
21  Bulgaria 7 3 1 3 35 - 35 7
22  North Korea 7 2 0 5 26 - 40 4
23  South Korea 7 1 1 5 27 - 46 3
24  Australia 7 0 0 7 14 - 58 0

The Netherlands were promoted to Group B, and Australia was relegated to Group D.

18 March Yugoslavia  8-1
 Bulgaria
18 March Hungary  6-3
 North Korea
18 March Netherlands  5-2
 South Korea
18 March Australia  1-3
 China
19 March Yugoslavia  11-2
 South Korea
19 March Australia  2-9
 Hungary
20 March Bulgaria  3-3
 China
20 March Netherlands  3-1
 North Korea
21 March China  5-3
 Hungary
21 March Netherlands  4-1
 Bulgaria
21 March North Korea  7-4
 South Korea
21 March Australia  2-8
 Yugoslavia
22 March Hungary  0-3
 Yugoslavia
22 March Australia  2-6
 South Korea
23 March China  5-8
 Netherlands
23 March Bulgaria  8-4
 North Korea
24 March South Korea  4-10
 China
24 March Yugoslavia  14-1
 North Korea
24 March Hungary  7-4
 Bulgaria
24 March Australia  1-12
 Netherlands
26 March Bulgaria  6-4
 South Korea
26 March China  1-8
 Yugoslavia
26 March Netherlands  8-2
 Hungary
26 March Australia  1-8
 North Korea
27 March North Korea  2-4
 China
27 March South Korea  5-5
 Hungary
27 March Yugoslavia  3-8
 Netherlands
27 March Australia  5-12
 Bulgaria

World Championship Group D (Belgium)

Played in Geel and Heist-op-den-Berg 16–21 March.

Positive drug tests wiped out the results of the first day: both games were officially rendered scoreless, and were counted as losses for all four teams.[2]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
25  Belgium 4 3 0 1 35 - 09 6
26  Romania 4 2 1 1 69 - 07 5
27  Great Britain 4 1 1 2 19 - 16 3
28  Spain 4 1 0 3 29 - 27 2
29  New Zealand 4 0 0 4 03 - 96 0

Both Belgium and Romania were promoted to Group C.

16 March New Zealand  0-26
 Great Britain
16 March Belgium  3-8
 Romania
17 March Spain  23-0
 New Zealand
17 March Great Britain  6-6
 Romania
18 March Belgium  8-2
 Spain
19 March New Zealand  1-52
 Romania
19 March Great Britain  5-6
 Belgium
20 March Spain  0-11
 Romania
21 March Spain  4-8
 Great Britain
21 March Belgium  21-2
 New Zealand

Ranking and statistics

 


 1989 IIHF World Championship Winners 

Soviet Union
21st title

Tournament Awards

Final standings

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

Gold medal icon.svg  Soviet Union
Silver medal icon.svg  Canada
Bronze medal icon.svg  Czechoslovakia
4  Sweden
5  Finland
6  United States
7  West Germany
8  Poland

European championships final standings

The final standings of the European Championship were determined by the points earned in games played solely between European teams.[4]

Gold medal icon.svg  Soviet Union
Silver medal icon.svg  Czechoslovakia
Bronze medal icon.svg  Sweden
4  Finland
5  Poland
6  West Germany

Scoring leaders

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

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
Canada Brian Bellows 10 8 6 14 +12 2 F
Czechoslovakia Vladimír Růžička 10 7 7 14 +11 2 F
Finland Kari Jalonen 10 5 9 14 +14 0 F
Sweden Kent Nilsson 10 3 11 14 +7 0 F
Soviet Union Vyacheslav Bykov 10 6 6 12 +9 2 F
Canada Steve Yzerman 8 5 7 12 +5 2 F
Canada Dale Hawerchuk 10 4 8 12 +10 6 F
Canada Kirk Muller 9 6 4 10 +12 6 F
Finland Jukka Vilander 10 6 4 10 0 0 F
Czechoslovakia Vladimír Svitek 10 4 6 10 +10 0 F

Source: [1]

Leading goaltenders

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 50% of their team's minutes are included in this list.

Player MIP GA GAA SVS% SO
Soviet Union Sergei Mylnikov 420 11 1.57 .922 1
Canada Sean Burke 275 10 2.18 .918 1
Finland Jukka Tammi 520 23 2.65 .916 2
Czechoslovakia Dominik Hašek 600 21 2.10 .915 2
Sweden Peter Lindmark 299 15 3.01 .900 0

Source: [2]

Citations

  1. Duplacey page 508
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 1989 Summary at Passionhockey.com
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References

  • Complete results
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