2015 Bandy World Championship


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2015 Bandy World Championship 2015 was the XXXVth Bandy World Championship. At the FIB congress held during the XXXIVth World Championship in 2014, it was announced that Khabarovsk in Russia had been elected as host city. It was also decided the Group A tournament would be played around the end of March/beginning of April, which means it would take place when the national bandy leagues in the major bandy playing countries, Finland, Norway, Russia and Sweden, would be finished for the season.[1] Group B was played between February 1 and 6 and hit a new record attendance, already before the match for the bronze and the final.[2]

2015 Bandy World Championship
XXXVth Bandy World Championship
Tournament details
Host country Russia
CityKhabarovsk
Venue(s)Arena Yerofey
Dates29 March – 4 April 2015
Teams16
Final positions
Champions  Russia (9th title)
Runner-up  Sweden
Third place  Kazakhstan
Fourth place Finland
Tournament statistics
Games played22
Goals scored294 (13.36 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Andrey Kabanov  Belarus
(15 goals)
A corner during the final

High-profile people who visited the Group A tournament include the Prime Minister of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev, and the President of Ice Hockey Federation of Russia, the legendary goaltender Vladislav Tretiak.[3]

The mascots of the games were a bear and a tiger, named Тоша and Ероша, were inspired by the animals in the coat of arms of Khabarovsk.[4]

Ukraine refused to take part in the Russian-hosted championship because of the Russian annexation of Crimea the previous year.

On 5 December 2013, the Russian news agency AmurMedia (which quoted Russian Internet site Sportbox.ru) reported that the decision on host city was made, after a decision by the working committee of FIB.[5]

The candidates were:

Minsk withdrew its candidacy in August 2013.[6] Khabarovsk won over Helsinki because there is an indoor arena in the city.

 
Participating countries in the Bandy World Championship 2015.
Blue: Division A
Red: Division B
Purple: both divisions
Green: members of the Federation of International Bandy not participating in this year's World Championship

Latvia won Division B in 2014 and was thus promoted to Division A for 2015. However, the Latvians made an application to play in Division B this year too, and this was approved by the Federation of International Bandy. Latvia was therefore playing in both divisions this year. This was made possible by the divisions not being played at the same time, Division B was being played in early February while Division A was being played in late March/early April.[7]

Khabarovsk
Arena Yerofey
Capacity: 10,000
 

After drawn games in the group stage, a penalty shootout is held to determine final placings in the event of teams finishing on equal points

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1   Sweden 3 2 1 0 15 6 +9 5[a]
2   Russia (H) 3 2 1 0 20 3 +17 5[a]
3   Kazakhstan 3 0 1 2 8 22 −14 1[b]
4   Finland 3 0 1 2 5 17 −12 1[b]

Source: [8]
(H) Hosts
Notes:

  1. ^ a b Sweden won after-match penalties against Russia 5–4.
  2. ^ a b Kazakhstan won after-match penalties against Finland 4–3.

All times are local (UTC+10).

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1   Norway 3 2 1 0 23 15 +8 5
2   Belarus 3 2 0 1 27 22 +5 4
3   United States 3 1 1 1 20 20 0 3
4   Latvia 3 0 0 3 10 23 −13 0

Source: [8]

Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
          
1 April – Khabarovsk
  Finland13
2 April – Khabarovsk
  Norway5
  Finland1
1 April – Khabarovsk
  Sweden10
  Sweden14
4 April – Khabarovsk
  Latvia2
  Sweden3
1 April – Khabarovsk
  Russia5
  Kazakhstan26
2 April – Khabarovsk
  Belarus8
  Kazakhstan0
1 April – Khabarovsk
  Russia14 Third place
  Russia17
3 April – Khabarovsk
  United States2
  Finland6
  Kazakhstan8

Consolation tournament

edit

1.   Russia
2.   Sweden
3.   Kazakhstan
4.   Finland
5.   Norway
6.   Belarus
7.   Latvia
8.   United States
15 goals
13 goals
11 goals
9 goals
8 goals
7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

Source:[9]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Estonia 3 2 1 0 17 14 +3 5 Quarterfinals
2   Latvia 3 2 0 1 12 6 +6 4
3   Hungary 3 1 0 2 12 14 −2 2
4   Japan 3 0 1 2 6 13 −7 1

Source: [10]

Matches in Group B are 60 minutes in duration rather than the standard 90 minutes.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Netherlands 4 3 1 0 32 4 +28 7 Quarterfinals
2   Germany 4 3 0 1 25 9 +16 6
3   Mongolia 4 2 1 1 19 6 +13 5
4   China 4 1 0 3 12 19 −7 2
5   Somalia 4 0 0 4 2 52 −50 0 8th place game

Source: [10]

Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
          
4 February – Khabarovsk
  Estonia14
5 February – Khabarovsk
  China3
  Estonia8
4 February – Khabarovsk
  Netherlands2
  Japan2
6 February – Khabarovsk
  Netherlands4
  Estonia3
4 February – Khabarovsk
  Latvia8
  Latvia11
5 February – Khabarovsk
  Mongolia5
  Latvia7
4 February – Khabarovsk
  Hungary5 Third place
  Hungary5
6 February – Khabarovsk
  Germany4
  Netherlands1
  Hungary9

The match was 60 minutes rather than standard 90 minutes.

The match was 60 minutes rather than standard 90 minutes.

The match was 60 minutes rather than standard 90 minutes.

1.   Latvia
2.   Estonia
3.   Hungary
4.   Netherlands
5.   Germany
6.   Japan
7.   Mongolia
8.   China
9.   Somalia