1958 World Ice Hockey Championships

1958 World Ice Hockey Championships
Tournament details
Host country  Norway
Dates 28 February–9 March
Teams 8
Venue(s) 1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions   Canada (17th title)
Runner-up   Soviet Union
Third place   Sweden
Fourth place  Czechoslovakia
Tournament statistics
Matches played 28
Goals scored 257 (9.18 per match)
Attendance 73,786 (2,635 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Canada Connie Broden 19 points
1957
1959
Trophy awarded for the 1958 World Championships

The 1958 Ice Hockey World Championships were held between February 28 and March 9, 1958 in Oslo, Norway at the Jordal Amfi arena. The Whitby Dunlops represented Canada, winning the World Championship for the 17th time. The Soviets lost the final game to the Canadians four to two, settling for both silver and their fourth European Championship. Scoring leading Connie Broden holds the distinction of being the only player ever to win the Stanley Cup and the World Championship in the same year.[1][2]

Standings

Rank Team GP W T L GF GA Pts
1  Canada 7 7 0 0 82 6 14
2  Soviet Union 7 5 1 1 44 15 11
3  Sweden 7 5 0 2 46 22 10
4  Czechoslovakia 7 3 2 2 21 21 8
5  United States 7 3 1 3 29 33 7
6  Finland 7 1 1 5 9 51 3
7  Norway 7 1 0 6 12 44 2
8  Poland 7 0 1 6 14 65 1

Final round

28 February United States  12–4
 Poland
28 February Czechoslovakia  5–1
 Finland
28 February Norway  0–9
 Sweden
1 March Sweden  5–2
 Finland
1 March Norway  2–10
 Soviet Union
1 March Canada  14–1
 Poland
2 March Soviet Union  10–0
 Finland
2 March Norway  0–12
 Canada
3 March Czechoslovakia  7–1
 Poland
3 March Canada  24–0
 Finland
4 March Soviet Union  4–4
 Czechoslovakia
4 March Sweden  8–3
 United States
5 March Norway  1–6
 United States
5 March Finland  2–2
 Poland
6 March Canada  10–2
 Sweden
6 March Czechoslovakia  2–2
 United States
6 March Soviet Union  10–1
 Poland
6 March Norway  1–2
 Finland
7 March Canada  6–0
 Czechoslovakia
7 March Sweden  12–2
 Poland
7 March Soviet Union  4–1
 United States
8 March Norway  0–2
 Czechoslovakia
8 March Soviet Union  4–3
 Sweden
8 March Canada  12–1
 United States
9 March United States  4–2
 Finland
9 March Sweden  7–1
 Czechoslovakia
9 March Norway  8–3
 Poland
9 March Canada  4–2
 Soviet Union

European Championship medal table

 Soviet Union
 Sweden
 Czechoslovakia
4  Finland
5  Norway
6  Poland

Tournament awards

Citations

References

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