2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia explained

Tourney Name:IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia
Year:2013
Size:150px
Country:Thailand
Dates:16–24 March 2013
Num Teams:10
Type:ih
Winners:TPE
Count:3
Second:HKG
Third:MGL
Games:28
Goals:293
Nextseason:2014

The 2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia was the 6th IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, an annual international ice hockey tournament held by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). It took place between 16 March and 24 March 2013 in Bangkok, Thailand. The Chinese Taipei won the tournament after defeating Hong Kong in the final and Mongolia finished in third after defeating Kuwait in the bronze medal match. The defending champions, the United Emirates were knocked out of the playoff round in the quarterfinals by Hong Kong.

Overview

The 2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia began on 16 March 2013 in Bangkok, Thailand.[1] The tournament was split into two groups of five for the preliminary round, with both groups competing in a round robin format. Group A consists of Chinese Taipei, Kuwait, Malaysia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates. While Group B is made up of Hong Kong, India, Macau, Mongolia and Singapore. After the preliminary round all five teams from Group A enter the quarterfinals along with the top three teams from Group B.[2]

Chinese Taipei won the tournament after they defeated Hong Kong 4–2 in the final, claiming their third IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia title.[3] Mongolia finished third after winning the bronze medal game against Kuwait.[3] Khaled Al Suwaidi of the United Arab Emirates was named the tournament's top goaltender by the IIHF directorate. Thai Likit Neimwann was named the top defenceman and Ban Kin Loke of Malaysia was selected as the top forward.[3] Jasper Tang of Hong Kong finished the tournament as the top scorer with 19 points including nine goals and ten assists.[4] Chinese Taipei's Ting Pang-Keng was the leading goaltender based on save percentage with a percentage of 0.937.[5]

Group stage

Group A

All times local. (UTC+7:00)

Group B

All times local. (UTC+7:00)

Playoff round

Quarter-finals

All times local. (UTC+7:00)

Semifinals

All times local. (UTC+7:00)

Bronze medal game

Time is local. (UTC+7:00)

Gold medal game

Time is local. (UTC+7:00)

Statistics

Scoring leaders

List shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals, assists, and the lower penalties in minutes.[4]

Player
7 9 10 19 +21 0 F
7 11 6 17 +16 8 F
7 4 13 17 +15 6 F
7 4 12 16 +16 33 F
7 8 6 14 +19 2 F
7 6 8 14 +18 6 F
5 10 3 13 +4 8 F
7 10 3 13 +16 2 F
7 9 4 13 +18 2 F
7 5 7 12 +16 2 F
7 5 7 12 +20 4 F

Leading goaltenders

Only the top goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.[5]

Player
271:09 95 6 1.33 93.68
345:13 155 13 2.26 91.61
392:53 156 18 2.75 88.46
244:22 101 12 2.95 88.12
184:10 63 8 2.61 87.30

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistics . International Ice Hockey Federation . 2013-08-24 .
  2. Web site: Format . International Ice Hockey Federation . 2013-08-24 .
  3. Web site: Chinese Taipei wins in Bangkok . International Ice Hockey Federation . 2013-03-25 . Martin . Merk . 2013-08-24 . https://archive.today/20130824084526/http://www.iihf.com/home-of-hockey/news/news-singleview/recap/7619.html?tx_ttnews=204&cHash=70d63e0507 . 2013-08-24 . live .
  4. Web site: Scoring Leaders . International Ice Hockey Federation . 2013-08-24 .
  5. Web site: Goalkeepers . International Ice Hockey Federation . 2013-08-24 .