1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships


The 1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 17th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship and was held in Gävle, Sweden. Canada won the gold medal, its sixth championship, while Sweden won silver, and the combined team of the Czech and Slovak Republics won bronze. Peter Forsberg of Sweden scored a tournament record 31 points, while teammate Markus Näslund's 13 goals also set a tournament record.

Final standings

The 1993 tournament was a round-robin format, with the top three teams winning gold, silver and bronze medals respectively. As the tournament was ongoing, the nation of Czechoslovakia was dissolved into two separate nations, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, on New Years Day, 1993. The team remained unified throughout the tournament, however the Czechoslovakian flag and anthem were replaced with the flag and anthem of the International Ice Hockey Federation on January 1. Meanwhile, the former Soviet Union, which had competed in 1992 as the Commonwealth of Independent States was replaced in this tournament by Russia.
RankTeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
7610371712
7610531512
Czech and Slovak Republics
742138279
4743032238
5733131207
6723226206
7716016372
870709830

Japan was relegated to Pool B for 1994.

Results

Scoring leaders

Tournament awards

Pool B

Eight teams contested the second tier this year in Lillehammer and Hamar Norway from December 27 to January 5. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games.
;Standings
RankTeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
176013913135 - 45 - 17 - 16 - 44 - 21 - 111 - 0
276104911124 - 55 - 07 - 08 - 47 - 19 - 19 - 0
37421231891 - 50 - 53 - 16 - 30 - 07 - 36 - 1
47430262381 - 70 - 71 - 32 - 16 - 39 - 17 - 1
57340263064 - 64 - 83 - 61 - 24 - 35 - 25 - 3
67151172832 - 41 - 70 - 03 - 63 - 45 - 33 - 4
77151163731 - 11 - 93 - 71 - 92 - 53 - 55 - 1
87160104620 - 110 - 91 - 61 - 73 - 54 - 31 - 5
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Switzerland was promoted to Pool A and the Netherlands was relegated to Pool C for 1994.

Qualification for Pool C

Nine countries played a qualification tournament from November 10 to 15, for a spot in the C Pool. Five teams played in Riga Latvia while the remaining four played in Minsk Belarus, with the first place teams playing each other in Riga. Greece was the only competitor who was not making their debut.
;Riga Group
TeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
440071582 - 112 - 310 - 047 - 1
431046661 - 24 - 311 - 030 - 1
4220462143 - 123 - 46 - 334 - 2
4130242720 - 100 - 113 - 621 - 0
4040413201 - 471 - 302 - 340 - 21
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;Minsk Group
TeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
330024061 - 03 - 020 - 0
321017140 - 14 - 013 - 0
312019720 - 30 - 419 - 0
303005200 - 200 - 130 - 19
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Qualification Game

'' won the right to participate in Pool C.

Pool C

Eight teams were divided into two round robin groups, with placement games to follow. The tournament took place from December 30 to January 3, in Odense and Esbjerg Denmark.

Preliminary Round

;Group A
TeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
330038369 - 216 - 113 - 0
3111151532 - 95 - 58 - 1
301292421 - 165 - 53 - 3
302142410 - 131 - 83 - 3
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;Group B
TeamGPWLTGFGAPTS
3201231059 - 15 - 59 - 4
3111121731 - 96 - 35 - 5
3111151235 - 53 - 67 - 1
3021102114 - 95 - 51 - 7
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Placement Games

was promoted to Pool B for 1994.