1930 World Ice Hockey Championships | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Host nations | France / Austria / Germany |
Dates | 29 January–10 February |
Teams | 12 |
Venue(s) | 3 (in 3 host cities) |
Champions | Canada (4 titles) |
Tournament statistics | |
Games played | 12 |
Goals scored | 50 (4.17 per game) |
The 1930 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships were held between January 30 and February 10, 1930 in Chamonix, France, Vienna, Austria, and Berlin, Germany. This event was the first world championships independent of hockey at the Olympics.[1]
Canada, represented by the Toronto CCMs, beat the German team in the gold medal match by a score of 6 to 1 to win the title.[2]
Germany won their first European Championship, defeating Switzerland in Berlin two to one. The lone game in Vienna was played to determine the European Bronze, Austria shutout Poland two to zero to round out the medals.[3]
Final tournament[]
First round | |||||
31. January 1930 | Chamonix | Germany | – | Great Britain | 4:2 |
31. January 1930 | Chamonix | Hungary | – | Italy | 2:0 |
31. January 1930 | Chamonix | France | – | Belgium | 4:1 |
Quarterfinals | |||||
1. February 1930 | Chamonix | Poland | – | Japan | 5:0 |
1. February 1930 | Chamonix | Switzerland | – | Czechoslovakia | 3:1 |
1. February 1930 | Chamonix | Germany | – | Hungary | 4:1 |
1. February 1930 | Chamonix | France | – | Austria | 1:2 |
Semifinals | |||||
2. February 1930 | Chamonix | Switzerland | – | Austria | 2:1 |
2. February 1930 | Chamonix | Germany | – | Poland | 3:1 |
4th place | |||||
5. February 1930 | Vienna | Austria | – | Poland | 2:0 |
Final | |||||
9. February 1930 | Berlin | Germany | – | Switzerland | 2:1 |
Final[]
10. February 1930 | Berlin | Germany | – | Canada | 1:6 |
The tournament was a direct knock-out playoff. The Canadian team was considered so dominant that it did not participate in the knock-out tournament. Canada was put into the gold medal final game, and the tournament was played to determine an opponent.[3]
Warm winter weather melted the ice in Chamonix, France and forced the Ligue Internationale de Hockey sur Glace officials to move the tournament to Berlin, Germany, and the Sportpalast (which had artificial ice). Additionally, the fourth place match was played in Vienna, Austria, making this the only world hockey championship tournament to take place in three different countries.[3]
The Canadian team lost to Austria 1-0 on February 7 (in Vienna) in an exhibition match. The loss to Austria was the first time any Canadian team had lost to a European team.[4]