2001 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship

2001 IIHF Asian Oceanic Junior U18 Championship
Tournament details
Host country  South Korea
Dates 8 – 11 March 2001
Teams 7
Final positions
Champions   South Korea (2nd title)
Runner-up   China
Third place   Australia
Tournament statistics
Matches played 9
Goals scored 110 (12.22 per match)
Attendance 3,900 (433 per match)
2000
2002

The 2001 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship was the 18th edition of the IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship. The Division I and Division II tournaments took place between 8 and 11 March 2001 in Seoul, South Korea. The Division I tournament was won by South Korea, who claimed their second title by winning all three of their games and finishing first in the standings. Upon winning the tournament South Korea gained promotion to Division III of the 2002 IIHF World U18 Championships. China and Australia finished second and third respectively.

In the Division II tournament, which was also known as the 2002 Division I Qualification tournament, Mongolia finished first in the standings after winning both of their games against Chinese Taipei and Thailand.

Overview

The Division I tournament began on 8 March 2001 in Seoul, South Korea.[1] New Zealand had gained promotion to Division I after finishing first in the Division II tournament at the 2000 IIHF Asian Oceanic Junior U18 Championship.[2] South Korea won the tournament after winning all three of their games and claimed their second title, their first coming in 1998. Following their win South Korea gained promotion for the following year to Division III of the 2002 IIHF World U18 Championships. China finished second after losing their game to South Korea and Australia finished third on losing on goal difference to China after both teams finished on the same amount of points.[2] New Zealand who finished last were set to be relegated to Division II for the 2002 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship however due to a format change both divisions were merged into one tournament for the 2002 competition.[2][3] Park Chul Ho of South Korea finished as the top scorer for the tournament with ten points including six goals and four assists.[4]

The Division II tournament began on 9 March 2001 in Seoul, South Korea and was officially known as the 2002 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship Division I Qualification.[2][5] Mongolia won the tournament after winning both of their games against Chinese Taipei and Thailand. Chinese Taipei finished in second after winning their game against Thailand. Thailand who finished last also suffered the largest defeat of the tournament, losing to Mongolia 1 – 12.[2] Mongolia gained promotion to Division I for the 2002 tournament however due to a format change all teams from Division II were merged into a single competition with the Division I teams for the 2002 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship.[2][6] Bold Munktulga of Mongolia finished as the top scorer for the tournament with seven points including five goals and two assists.[7]

Division I

Standings

Rk Team GP W T L GF GA GDF PTS
 South Korea 3 3 0 0 39 4 +35 6
 China 3 1 1 1 26 8 +18 3
 Australia 3 1 1 1 11 16 –5 3
4  New Zealand 3 0 0 3 4 52 –48 0

Fixtures

All times local.

8 March 2001
14:00
New Zealand  1 – 22
(0–6, 0–10, 1–6)
 South Korea Seoul
Attendance: 1500
8 March 2001
17:00
China  2 – 2
(0–1, 1–1, 1–0)
 Australia Seoul
Attendance: 300
9 March 2001
14:00
China  22 – 0
(10–0, 7–0, 5–0)
 New Zealand Seoul
Attendance: 300
9 March 2001
17:00
South Korea  11 – 1
(2–0, 4–0, 5–1)
 Australia Seoul
Attendance: 300
11 March 2001
14:00
South Korea  6 – 2
(2–0, 2–0, 2–2)
 China Seoul
Attendance: 300
11 March 2001
17:00
Australia  8 – 3
(4–2, 2–0, 2–1)
 New Zealand Seoul
Attendance: 300

Scoring leaders

List shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.[4]

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
South Korea Park Chul Ho 3 6 4 10 +13 2 F
South Korea Lee Kwon Jae 3 5 5 10 +13 4 F
China Cui Zhinan 3 5 3 8 +6 0 F
South Korea Lee Seong Keun 3 4 4 8 +14 0 F
South Korea Park Jin Hee 3 3 5 8 +13 0 F
China Ding Kun 3 5 1 6 +5 2 F
China Liu Liang 3 4 2 6 +5 4 F
South Korea Kim Dong Hwan 3 3 3 6 +13 2 D
South Korea Choi Jung Sik 3 3 3 6 +13 2 F
Australia Jaden McKeever 3 3 3 6 –4 4 F

Leading goaltenders

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.[8]

Player MIP SOG GA GAA SVS% SO
South Korea Lee Ji Sub 100:00 20 0 0.00 100.00 0
China An Dapeng 80:00 25 2 1.50 92.00 0
Australia Ezzy, MatthewMatthew Ezzy 120:00 135 13 6.50 90.37 0
China Sun Peng 100:00 50 6 3.60 88.00 0
South Korea Kim Sung Hoon 80:00 22 4 3.00 81.82 0

Division II

Standings

Rk Team GP W T L GF GA GDF PTS
1  Mongolia 2 2 0 0 22 4 +18 4
2  Chinese Taipei 2 1 0 1 6 11 –5 2
3  Thailand 2 0 0 2 2 15 –13 0

Fixtures

All times local.

9 March 2001
11:00
Mongolia  10 – 3
(1–1, 5–1, 4–1)
 Chinese Taipei Seoul
Attendance: 300
10 March 2001
14:00
Thailand  1 – 12
(1–4, 0–3, 0–5)
 Mongolia Seoul
Attendance: 300
11 March 2001
11:00
Chinese Taipei  3 – 1
(0–0, 2–1, 1–0)
 Thailand Seoul
Attendance: 300

Scoring leaders

List shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.[7]

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
Mongolia Bold Munkhtulga 2 5 2 7 +10 0 F
Mongolia Bat-Erdene Ayushbaatar 2 6 0 6 +8 4 F
Mongolia Naidansuren Byambasuren 2 2 2 4 +5 0 F
Mongolia Ichinnorov Altangerel 2 2 1 3 +4 0 F
Chinese Taipei Ya-Hsien Lai 2 1 2 3 –2 0 F
Mongolia Dashnyam Aldarbayar 2 1 2 3 +7 2 F
Mongolia Byambaa Bayarjargal 2 1 2 3 +5 4 F
Chinese Taipei Ryan Jaw 2 2 0 2 -1 0 F
Mongolia Oktyabri Chuluunbat 2 2 0 2 +11 2 D
Thailand Abhirat Suraboonkul 2 2 0 2 –6 4 F

Leading goaltenders

Only the top goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.[9]

Player MIP SOG GA GAA SVS% SO
Mongolia Odkhuu Batsuuri 120:00 70 4 2.00 94.29 0
Thailand Naratip Kanchanachongkol 103:40 78 8 4.63 89.74 0
Chinese Taipei Tony Chang 120:00 106 11 5.50 89.62 0

References

External links

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