2004 World Cup of Hockey

Last updated

2004 World Cup of Hockey
2004 World Cup of Hockey logo.svg
Tournament details
Host countriesFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Venue(s)7 (in 7 host cities)
DatesAugust 30 – September 14, 2004
Teams8
Final positions
Champions  Gold medal blank.svg Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada (1st title)
Tournament statistics
Games played19
Goals scored104 (5.47 per game)
Attendance303,630 (15,981 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of Sweden.svg Fredrik Modin (8 pts)
MVP Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Vincent Lecavalier
  1996
2016  

The 2004 World Cup of Hockey was an international ice hockey tournament. It was the second installment of the National Hockey League (NHL)-sanctioned competition, eight years after the inaugural 1996 World Cup of Hockey. It was held from August 30 to September 14, 2004, and took place in various venues in North America and Europe. Canada won the championship, defeating Finland in the final, held in Toronto.

Contents

The tournament directly preceded the NHL lockout, as the NHL announced they were locking out players during 2004–05 season two days after the tournament final was played, pending the adoption of a new Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Team participants

North American poolEuropean pool
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada (roster, statistics)Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic (roster, statistics)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia (roster, statistics)Flag of Finland.svg  Finland (roster, statistics)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia (roster, statistics)Flag of Germany.svg  Germany (roster, statistics)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States (roster, statistics)Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden (roster, statistics)

Venues

North American pool and quarterfinals, semifinals and final
European pool and quarterfinals

Pre-tournament games

Preliminary round

North American pool

TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 3300103+76
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 321096+34
Flag of the United States.svg  United States 31205612
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 303041390
Source: [ citation needed ]

All times are local (UTC-5 / UTC-4).

31 August 2004
19:00
United States  Flag of the United States.svg1–2
(0–1, 1–1, 0–0)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Bell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 21,273
Game reference
Robert Esche Goalies Martin Brodeur Referees:
Paul Devorski
Brad Watson
Linesmen:
Brian Murphy
Tim Nowak
0–116:01 – M. St. Louis (J. Thornton, S. Niedermayer) (PP)
0–223:05 – J. Sakic (W. Redden, M. St. Louis) (PP)
B. Guerin (S. Gomez) – 30:401–2
21 minPenalties19 min
24Shots32
1 September 2004
19:00
Canada  Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg5–1
(2–0, 1–0, 2–1)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia Bell Centre, Montreal
Attendance: 21,273
Game reference
Martin Brodeur Goalies Rastislav Staňa Referees:
Don Van Massenhoven
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Jean Morin
Pierre Racicot
J. Thornton – 3:021–0
R. Smyth (A. Foote, V. Lecavalier) – 4:432–0
S. Gagné (M. St. Louis) – 24:073–0
M. St. Louis (B. Richards, A. Foote) (PP) – 40:584–0
4–144:53 – M. Cibák (Ľ. Bartečko, B. Radivojevič)
R. Smyth (V. Lecavalier, D. Heatley) – 47:115–1
8 minPenalties12 min
35Shots25
2 September 2004
19:00
Russia  Flag of Russia.svg3–1
(0–0, 1–1, 2–0)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 18,064
Game reference
Ilya Bryzgalov Goalies Robert Esche Referees:
Paul Devorski
Brad Watson
Linesmen:
Brian Murphy
Tim Nowak
D. Zubrus (O. Kvasha, A. Yashin) – 32:201–0
1–133:44 – K. Tkachuk (M. Modano, B. Rafalski) (PP)
A. Kovalev (A. Khavanov) – 45:052–1
V. Kozlov (S. Samsonov) – 58:023–1
41 minPenalties17 min
45Shots21
3 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia  Flag of Slovakia.svg1–3
(1–2, 0–0, 0–1)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 17,104
Game reference
Ján Lašák Goalies Rick DiPietro Referees:
Don Van Massenhoven
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Jean Morin
Pierre Racicot
0–13:09 – B. Smolinski (B. Leetch, T. Amonte) (PP)
L. Nagy (P. Demitra, Z. Chára) (PP) – 11:141–1
1–213:27 – J. Blake (C. Chelios, S. Gomez)
1–356:17 – B. Guerin (M. Modano)
12 minPenalties12 min
17Shots39
4 September 2004
19:00
Russia  Flag of Russia.svg1–3
(0–0, 0–2, 1–1)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,226
Game reference
Maxim Sokolov Goalies Martin Brodeur Referees:
Paul Devorski
Brad Watson
Linesmen:
Brian Murphy
Tim Nowak
0–123:40 – B. Richards (S. Gagné, S. Hannan) (SH)
0–225:17 – K. Draper (S. Doan, V. Lecavalier)
0–345:43 – J. Sakic (M. Lemieux)
S. Gonchar (M. Afinogenov) – 52:461–3
12 minPenalties12 min
28Shots28
5 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia  Flag of Slovakia.svg2–5
(1–1, 0–2, 1–2)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,115
Game reference
Ján Lašák Goalies Ilya Bryzgalov Referees:
Don Van Massenhoven
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Jean Morin
Pierre Racicot
0–18:10 – P. Datsyuk (A. Markov, A. Frolov)
M. Hossa (P. Demitra, Z. Chára) – 10:271–1
1–232:01 – A. Kovalev
1–335:47 – S. Samsonov (D. Zubrus, S. Gonchar)
1–440:59 – A. Yashin (A. Frolov) (SH)
M. Gáborík – 45:472–4
2–547:10 – A. Ovechkin (D. Afanasenkov)
14 minPenalties12 min
27Shots15

European pool

TeamPldWLDGFGAGDPts
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 3201114+75
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 3201139+45
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 3120101002
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 3030415110
Source: [ citation needed ]

All times are local (UTC+2 / UTC+3).

30 August 2004
20:00
Czech Republic  Flag of the Czech Republic.svg0–4
(0–1, 0–0, 0–3)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland Hartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 11,407
Game reference
Tomáš Vokoun Goalies Miikka Kiprusoff Referees:
Marc Joannette
Don Koharski
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
0–16:33 – J. Hentunen (N. Kapanen, T. Numminen)
0–240:30 – S. Koivu (J. Lehtinen)
0–344:54 – N. Kapanen (S. Salo, V. Peltonen) (PP)
0–448:51 – M. Eloranta (K. Timonen, M. Koivu)
14 minPenalties4 min
12Shots34
31 August 2004
19:00
Germany  Flag of Germany.svg2–5
(1–1, 1–4, 0–0)
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden Globen, Stockholm
Attendance: 12,133
Game reference
Olaf Kölzig Goalies Tommy Salo Referees:
Dan Marouelli
Kevin Pollock
Linesmen:
Derek Amell
Brad Kovachik
0–116:34 – T. Holmström (M. Näslund, P. Forsberg) (PP)
M. Sturm (SH) – 17:531–1
1–221:59 – M. Sundin (D. Alfredsson, F. Modin)
1–327:26 – K. Johnsson (D. Alfredsson, F. Modin) (PP)
1–431:51 – M. Nilson (M. Sundin, T. Holmström)
D. Kreutzer (T. Boos) (SH) – 33:002–4
2–536:25 – F. Modin (K. Johnsson, M. Sundin)
14 minPenalties8 min
19Shots42
1 September 2004
19:00
Czech Republic  Flag of the Czech Republic.svg3–4
(0–1, 0–3, 3–0)
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden Globen, Stockholm
Attendance: 13,850
Game reference
Tomáš Vokoun Goalies Mikael Tellqvist Referees:
Dan Marouelli
Kevin Pollock
Linesmen:
Derek Amell
Brad Kovachik
0–111:49 – F. Modin (M. Sundin)
0–222:58 – P. Forsberg (T. Holmström, M. Näslund) (PP)
0–324:28 – M. Öhlund (D. Alfredsson, F. Modin) (PP)
0–430:30 – H. Zetterberg (K. Johnsson) (PP)
M. Ručinský (M. Havlát) – 43:121–4
M. Židlický – 45:162–4
P. Eliáš (R. Hamrlík) – 54:253–4
16 minPenalties16 min
40Shots20
2 September 2004
19:30
Finland  Flag of Finland.svg3–0
(1–0, 1–0, 1–0)
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany Kölnarena, Cologne
Attendance: 12,975
Game reference
Miikka Kiprusoff Goalies Olaf Kölzig Referees:
Marc Joannette
Don Koharski
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
K. Timonen (J. Lehtinen, T. Selänne) (PP) – 10:471–0
T. Selänne (K. Timonen, S. Koivu) (PP) – 31:272–0
J. Lehtinen (K. Timonen) – 55:383–0
14 minPenalties10 min
39Shots29
3 September 2004
19:00
Germany  Flag of Germany.svg2–7
(0–0, 0–5, 2–2)
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic Sazka Arena, Prague
Attendance: 11,944
Game reference
Robert Müller (out 30:17)
Oliver Jonas (in 30:17)
Goalies Tomáš Vokoun Referees:
Marc Joannette
Don Koharski
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
0–122:56 – M. Židlický (M. Straka, V. Prospal) (PP)
0–224:27 – J. Šlégr (J. Dopita, P. Sýkora)
0–325:52 – J. Jágr (V. Prospal)
0–430:50 – M. Hejduk (P. Eliáš) (PP)
0–535:48 – P. Eliáš (M. Havlát)
T. Boos (E. Lewandowski) – 43:551–5
1–650:59 – M. Havlát (T. Vlasák, R. Hamrlík)
J. Hecht (R. Leask) – 57:192–6
2–758:36 – V. Prospal (J. Jágr)
10 minPenalties8 min
30Shots56
4 September 2004
20:00
Sweden  Flag of Sweden.svg4–4 (OT)
(3–3, 0–1, 1–0, 0–0)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland Hartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 12,948
Game reference
Mikael Tellqvist Goalies Miikka Kiprusoff Referees:
Dan Marouelli
Kevin Pollock
Linesmen:
Derek Amell
Brad Kovachik
0–11:39 – V. Peltonen (T. Ruutu, O. Väänänen)
0–24:34 – O. Väänänen (T. Lydman, J. Hentunen) (PP)
F. Modin (H. Zetterberg, D. Alfredsson) (PP) – 12:271–2
1–312:46 – S. Koivu (J. Lehtinen, T. Selänne)
N. Lidström (D. Alfredsson, M. Sundin) (PP) – 17:242–3
F. Modin (K. Johnsson, D. Alfredsson) – 19:173–3
3–420:38 – O. Jokinen (T. Ruutu, V. Peltonen)
T. Holmström (P. Forsberg, F. Modin) (PP) – 59:494–4
10 minPenalties16 min
30Shots25

Playoff round

Bracket

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
E1 Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 2
E4 Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 1
E1 Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 2
NA3 Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 1
NA3 Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 5
NA2 Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 3
E1 Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 2
NA1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 3
NA1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 5
NA4 Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 0
NA1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 4
E3 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 3
E3 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 6
E2 Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 1

Quarter-finals

All times are local (UTC+3 / UTC+2 / UTC-5 / UTC-4).

6 September 2004
20:00
Germany  Flag of Germany.svg1–2
(0–0, 0–1, 1–1)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland Hartwall Areena, Helsinki
Attendance: 8,650
Olaf Kölzig Goalies Miikka Kiprusoff Referees:
Dan Marouelli
Kevin Pollock
Linesmen:
Derek Amell
Brad Kovachik
0–130:50 – N. Hagman (N. Kapanen, K. Timonen) (PP)
M. Sturm (M. Goc, D. Kreutzer) – 53:581–1
1–256:38 – M. Eloranta (K. Timonen, O. Jokinen)
8 minPenalties4 min
28Shots24
7 September 2004
19:00
Czech Republic  Flag of the Czech Republic.svg6–1
(2–0, 1–0, 3–1)
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden Globen, Stockholm
Attendance: 11,957
Game reference
Tomáš Vokoun Goalies Mikael Tellqvist Referees:
Marc Joannette
Don Koharski
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
M. Straka (V. Prospal) – 6:151–0
M. Havlát (P. Eliáš) – 13:302–0
M. Židlický (M. Straka) – 36:083–0
R. Dvořák (P. Čajánek) (SH) – 48:174–0
M. Hejduk (M. Židlický) – 54:375–0
5–156:29 – T. Holmström (M. Näslund, P. Forsberg) (PP)
M. Hejduk (P. Čajánek) (EN) – 58:156–1
4 minPenalties8 min
32Shots18
7 September 2004
18:00
United States  Flag of the United States.svg5–3
(1–0, 1–1, 3–2)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 17,218
Game reference
Robert Esche Goalies Ilya Bryzgalov Referees:
Paul Devorski
Brad Watson
Linesmen:
Brian Murphy
Tim Nowak
K. Tkachuk (M. Modano, B. Rafalski) – 11:201–0
K. Tkachuk (B. Guerin, M. Modano) – 21:562–0
2–127:14 – D. Afanasenkov (A. Chubarov, S. Gonchar)
2–240:36 – D. Zubrus (A. Yashin, D. Kasparaitis)
S. Gomez (K. Tkachuk) – 44:253–2
K. Tkachuk (B. Guerin, M. Modano) – 44:474–2
4–351:04 – I. Kovalchuk (S. Samsonov, A. Kovalev) (PP)
K. Tkachuk (M. Modano, B. Rafalski) (EN) – 59:055–3
10 minPenalties6 min
21Shots21
8 September 2004
19:00
Slovakia  Flag of Slovakia.svg0–5
(0–0, 0–4, 0–1)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 18,786
Game reference
Ján Lašák (out 31:48)
Rastislav Staňa (in 31:48)
Goalies Martin Brodeur Referees:
Don Van Massenhoven
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Jean Morin
Pierre Racicot
0–122:28 – V. Lecavalier (B. Richards, E. Brewer) (PP)
0–225:26 – J. Iginla (J. Sakic, E. Brewer)
0–331:29 – R. Smyth (V. Lecavalier, D. Heatley)
0–431:48 – J. Sakic (J. Iginla, M. Lemieux)
0–547:49 – J. Iginla (M. Lemieux, J. Sakic)
8 minPenalties8 min
23Shots26

Semi-finals

All times are local (UTC-5 / UTC-4).

10 September 2004
18:00
United States  Flag of the United States.svg1–2
(0–0, 1–0, 0–2)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul
Attendance: 18,064
Game reference
Robert Esche Goalies Miikka Kiprusoff Referees:
Marc Joannette
Don Koharski
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
D. Weight (S. Gomez, P. Martin) (PP) – 32:571–0
1–145:04 – O. Jokinen (T. Numminen)
1–256:06 – S. Koivu (O. Väänänen, T. Selänne)
8 minPenalties8 min
17Shots12
11 September 2004
18:30
Czech Republic  Flag of the Czech Republic.svg3–4 (OT)
(0–0, 1–2, 2–1, 0–1)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,273
Game reference
Tomáš Vokoun Goalies Roberto Luongo Referees:
Paul Devorski
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Jean Morin
Pierre Racicot
0–131:15 – E. Brewer (K. Draper, J. Thornton)
0–234:25 – M. Lemieux (V. Lecavalier, B. Richards) (PP)
P. Čajánek (M. Hejduk, M. Ručinský) – 35:071–2
M. Havlát (T. Kaberle, M. Hejduk) (PP) – 47:212–2
2–353:47 – K. Draper (J. Thornton)
P. Eliáš (M. Havlát) – 53:533–3
3–463:45 – V. Lecavalier (R. Smyth)
2 minPenalties2 min
40Shots24

Final

Time is Eastern Daylight-Saving Time (UTC-4).

14 September 2004
19:00
Silver medal icon.svg Finland  Flag of Finland.svg2–3
(1–1, 1–1, 0–1)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Gold medal icon.svg Air Canada Centre, Toronto
Attendance: 19,370
Game reference
Miikka Kiprusoff Goalies Martin Brodeur Referees:
Paul Devorski
Stephen Walkom
Linesmen:
Greg Devorski
Brad Lazarowich
0–10:52 – J. Sakic (M. Lemieux, E. Brewer)
R. Hahl (T. Lydman, A. Berg) – 6:341–1
1–223:15 – S. Niedermayer (K. Draper, J. Thornton)
T. Ruutu (T. Lydman) – 39:002–2
2–340:34 – S. Doan (J. Thornton, A. Foote)
2 minPenalties2 min
29Shots33

Ranking and statistics


 2004 World Cup of Hockey winners 
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg
Canada
1st title

Tournament awards

Final standings

1Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
2Flag of Finland.svg  Finland
3Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic
4Flag of the United States.svg  United States
5Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden
6Flag of Russia.svg  Russia
7Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia
8Flag of Germany.svg  Germany

[1]

Scoring leaders

PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
Flag of Sweden.svg Fredrik Modin 44482
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Vincent Lecavalier 62578
Flag of the United States.svg Keith Tkachuk 551623
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Martin Havlat 53362
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Joe Sakic 63362
Flag of Finland.svg Kimmo Timonen 61562
Flag of the United States.svg Mike Modano 50660
Flag of Sweden.svg Daniel Alfredsson 40662
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Milan Hejduk 53252
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Patrik Elias 532510

Leading goaltenders

PlayerMIPGAGAASVS%
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Martin Brodeur 30051.000.961
Flag of the United States.svg Rick DiPietro 6011.000.941
Flag of Finland.svg Miikka Kiprusoff 36591.500.939
Flag of Sweden.svg Tommy Salo 6022.000.895
Flag of Russia.svg Ilya Bryzgalov 18072.340.897
Flag of the United States.svg Robert Esche 238102.530.909
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Roberto Luongo 6432.820.925
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Tomas Vokoun 302152.980.881
Flag of Russia.svg Maxim Sokolov 6033.010.893
Flag of Germany.svg Olaf Kolzig 180103.340.905

See also

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The 2013 IIHF Women's World Championship was the 15th world championship sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and was the last world championship before the 2014 Winter Olympics. The tournament was hosted in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and was primarily played in small community arenas, including the Nepean Sportsplex, but most games were held in Scotiabank Place arena.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ice hockey at the 1998 Winter Olympics – Men's tournament</span>

The men's ice hockey tournament at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, was the 19th Olympic Championship. The Czech Republic, which emerged from the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, won its first winter gold medal, becoming only the seventh nation to win Olympic ice hockey gold. The tournament, held from February 7 to February 22, was played at the Big Hat and Aqua Wing arenas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 IIHF World Championship</span> 2020 edition of the IIHF World Championship

The 2020 IIHF World Championship would have been hosted by Switzerland from 8 to 24 May 2020, as the IIHF announced on 15 May 2015 in Prague, Czech Republic.

The 2016 World Cup of Hockey was an international ice hockey tournament. It was the third installment of the National Hockey League (NHL)-sanctioned competition, 12 years after the second World Cup of Hockey in 2004. It was held from September 17 to September 29 at Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario. Canada won the championship, defeating Team Europe in the best-of-three final.

The men's tournament in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics was held in Gangneung, South Korea between 14 and 25 February 2018. Twelve countries qualified for the tournament; eight of them did so automatically by virtue of their ranking by the International Ice Hockey Federation, one, South Korea, automatically qualified as hosts, while the three others took part in a qualification tournament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ice hockey at the 2002 Winter Olympics – Men's tournament</span>

The men's tournament marked the second Olympic Games where the National Hockey League took a break to allow all its players the opportunity to play.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship</span> International sports tournament

The 2017 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship was the 20th and final IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, an international inline hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The World Championship runs alongside the 2017 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I tournament and took place between 25 June and 1 July 2017 in Bratislava, Slovakia at the Ondrej Nepela Arena. The tournament was won by the United States, earning their seventh World Championship title. Finland finished in second place and the Czech Republic in third after defeating Sweden in the bronze medal match.

References

  1. podnieks p. 20