Ice hockey at the 1964 Winter Olympics

Ice hockey at the 1964 Winter Olympics
Tournament details
Host country  Austria
Dates 29 January – 9 February
Teams 16
Final positions
Champions   Soviet Union (2nd title)
Runner-up   Sweden
Third place   Czechoslovakia
Fourth place  Canada
Tournament statistics
Matches played 56
Goals scored 469 (8.38 per match)
Attendance 199,450 (3,562 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Soviet Union Konstantin Loktev 15 points

The men's ice hockey tournament (women's was added in 1998) at the 1964 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, was the 10th Olympic Championship, also serving as the 31st World Championships and the 42nd European Championships. The games were held at the Olympiahalle Innsbruck. The Soviet Union won its second Olympic gold medal, fourth World Championship and eighth European Championship. Canada, represented for the first time by a purpose built national team organized and coached by Father David Bauer, was shut out of the medals for the first time in Olympic ice hockey historystill in contention for the gold medal on the last day until a loss to the Soviets, the Canadians were controversially denied a bronze medal as the rules were hastily changed by the IIHF late in the final period of the final game, where the Czechoslovakians were being dramatically outscored by Sweden just minutes prior to the medals presentation.[1][2]

Medalists

Medal Team
Gold  Soviet Union
Silver  Sweden
Bronze  Czechoslovakia¹

¹The tie-breaking procedures for the Olympics were changed in the few minutes between the end of the final game and the medals presentation. By the rules that were being used until the end of the final game (goal difference between the top four teams),[1][3] Canada was the bronze medal winner, but just before the medal ceremony this was changed, and Czechoslovakia won bronze by the new rules (goal difference in all games of the Olympics). In 2005, the International Ice Hockey Federation attempted to alter the results of World Championship, awarding Canadians a bronze medal, but then it changed its mind, and in September 2005 the IIHF finally rejected Canada's appeal to be awarded 3rd place.[4]

Qualification

Prior to the tournament it was determined that there would be a spot allocated for an Asia/Oceanic representative. Also, for the third (and final time) East played West to decide the German representative in the Olympic hockey tournament.



First Round (A/B)

Winners (in bold) qualified for the Group A to play for 1st–8th places. Teams which lost their qualification matches, played in Group B for 9th–16th places. Countries were seeded (roughly) from their placement at the 1963 World Ice Hockey Championships. Switzerland was the only 'B' pool team to win, defeating Norway who was also from the 'B' pool.

World Championship Group A (Austria)

Final Round

First place team wins gold, second silver and third bronze.

Rank Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
1  Soviet Union 7700541014
2  Sweden 7520471610
3  Czechoslovakia 7520381910
4  Canada 7520321710
5  United States 725029334
6  Finland 725010314
7  Germany[5] 725013494
8   Switzerland 70709570

World Championship Group B (Austria)

Consolation Round

Teams in this group play for 9th–16th places.

Rank Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
9  Poland 7610401312
10  Norway 7520401910
11  Japan 742135319
12  Romania 733131287
13  Austria 733124287
14  Yugoslavia 733129377
15  Italy 725024424
16  Hungary 707014390

Leading scorers

Rk Team GP G A Pts
1 Soviet Union Konstantin Loktev 86915
2 Sweden Sven Tumba 811314
3 Soviet Union Viktor Yakushev 89413
4 Sweden Ulf Sterner 87512
5 Czech Republic Josef Černý 86612
T6 Czech Republic Jiří Dolana 88311
T6 Soviet Union Vyacheslav Starshinov 88311
8 Soviet Union Boris Mayorov 85510
9 Canada Gary Dineen 83710
10 Sweden Anders Andersson 7729

Final ranking

  1.  Soviet Union
  2.  Sweden
  3.  Czechoslovakia
  4.  Canada
  5.  United States
  6.  Finland
  7.  Germany
  8.   Switzerland
  9.  Poland
  10.  Norway
  11.  Japan
  12.  Romania
  13.  Austria
  14.  Yugoslavia
  15.  Italy
  16.  Hungary

European Championship final ranking

  1.  Soviet Union
  2.  Sweden
  3.  Czechoslovakia
  4.  Germany
  5.  Finland
  6.   Switzerland

Tournament awards

Originally Boris Mayorov was selected as best forward, but the Soviet coaches chose to present the award to Ivanov despite the fact that he was actually a defenseman.[3][4]

Citations

References

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