2010 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I explained

Type:iih
Year:2010
Country:Sweden
Dates:28 June – 4 July
Cities:1
Winners:Austria
Second:Croatia
Third:Hungary
Fourth:Australia
Games:22
Goals:244
Scoring Leader: Szilard Sandor
Igor Jacmenjak
(16 points)
Nextseason:2011

The 2010 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I was the eighth IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I, an annual international inline hockey tournament. It took place between 28 June and 4 July in Sweden. The games were played in the Färjestads Ishall in Karlstad, with the medal games played in the Löfbergs Lila Arena in Karlstad. Austria won the final against Croatia.

Venues

KarlstadKarlstad
Färjestads Ishall
Capacity: 4,700
Löfbergs Lila Arena
Capacity: 8,647

Nations

The following eight nations qualified for the Division I tournament. One nation from Asia, one nation from Australia, four nations from Europe, and two nations from South America were represented.

Asia
Australia
Europe
South America

Seeding and groups

The seeding in the preliminary round was based on the final standings at the 2009 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship, 2009 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I, and 2010 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I Qualification. The teams were grouped accordingly by seeding at the previous year's tournament (in parentheses is the corresponding seeding):

Group C

Group D

Rosters

Each team's roster for the 2010 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I consisted of at least 8 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 16 skaters and 3 goaltenders.

Preliminary round

Eight participated teams were placed in the following two groups. After playing a round-robin, the top team in each group advanced to the Qualification Games. The last three teams in each group competed in the Playoff Round.

All games were played at the Färjestads Ishall in Karlstad.

Group C

All times are local (UTC+2).

Group D

All times are local (UTC+2).

Playoff round

Quarter-finals

All times are local (UTC+2).

Placement

5/6 placement

Time is local (UTC+2).

7/8 placement

Time is local (UTC+2).

Semi-finals

All times are local (UTC+2).

Bronze medal game

Time is local (UTC+2).

Gold medal game

Time is local (UTC+2).

Ranking and statistics

Final standings

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

Rk.Team
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Tournament Awards

Scoring leaders

List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals. If the list exceeds 10 skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are shown.

PlayerGPGAPts+/−PIMPOS
Szilard Sandor 6 6 10 16 +2 10.5 FW
Igor Jacmenjak 6 5 11 16 +1 9.0 DF
Tomislav Grozaj 6 9 6 15 +3 0 FW
Tamas Lencses 6 7 8 15 +8 3.0 DF
Viktor Tokaji 6 2 10 12 +6 1.5 FW
Alex Pearman 5 7 4 11 +10 3.0 FW
Jose Guilardi 5 6 5 11 +5 4.5 DF
Mario Novak 6 6 5 11 +7 1.5 FW
Sean Jones 6 6 4 10 +3 6.0 FW
Gergely Borbas 6 5 5 10 +2 0 FW
Nathan Finney 5 5 5 10 +9 0 FW
Daniel Oberkofler* 3 3 7 10 +12 0 FW
Trpimir Piragic 6 3 7 10 −2 7.5 FW
Facundo Vadra 5 3 7 10 −4 1.5 DF
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Asterisk (*) denotes that the player's team was demoted to Division I after the qualification games.
Source: IIHF.com
18:01, 4 July 2010 (UTC)

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.

PlayerTOISAGAGAASv%SO
Bernhard Starkbaum* 132:00 52 1 0.27 98.08 2
James Tanner 197:00 89 7 1.28 92.13 1
Jozef Ondrejka** 96:00 75 6 2.25 92.00 0
Mitsuhiro Oue 177:50 131 17 3.44 87.02 0
Krisztian Budai 189:50 147 22 4.17 85.03 0
TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Asterisk (*) denotes that the player's team was demoted to Division I after the qualification games. Two asterisks (**) denote that the player's team was promoted to the Championship Division after the qualification games.
Source: IIHF.com
17:48, 4 July 2010 (UTC)

See also