Sport: | Ice hockey |
Founded: | 1985 |
Inaugural: | as Naisten I-divisoona, 1985–86 as Naisten Mestis, 2012–13 |
Founder: | Finnish Ice Hockey Association |
Administrator: | Jesse Nuutinen |
Teams: | 8 |
Country: | Finland |
Champion: | HIFK Akatemia |
Champ Season: | 2023–24 |
Tv: | Leijonat.tv |
Promotion: | Auroraliiga |
Relegation: | Naisten Suomi-sarja |
Naisten Mestis (; from, 'Championship series') is the second-highest women's national ice hockey league in Finland. Founded as the Naisten I-divisioona in 1985 by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association, when the number of teams playing in the top-tier national league was limited, the league was renamed Naisten Mestis prior to the 2012–13 season.
The Naisten Mestis season format has changed many times since the founding of the league in 1985. The current format was first published by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association in 2022. At that time, the intent was to fully implement the format for the 2023–24 season, but adjustments have been necessary with regards to number of teams and the postseason.
Since 2023, both the Auroraliiga (called during 1982–2017 and during 2017–2024) and Naisten Mestis are intended to operate with ten teams and have regular seasons comprising quadruple round-robin tournament systems in which each team plays 36 games.[1]
In the postseason, the top-two teams in the Naisten Mestis are meant to vie for promotion to the Auroraliiga in a qualification series against the lowest ranked Auroraliiga teams. Similarly, the bottom-two teams in the Naisten Mestis must defend their league places in a relegation series against the top-two teams from the Naisten Suomi-sarja.[1]
The Finnish Ice Hockey Association intended for the Naisten Mestis to comprise ten teams in the 2023–24 season, however, opperating costs led two teams – KJT Haukat and Kiilat – that qualified for the season to decline participation in the league.[1] [2] KJT Haukat qualified after finishing fourth in the 2022–23 Naisten Mestis regular season but the team ceased operations in May 2023, citing a lack of players willing to commit to an increased game schedule and insuficient financial resources.[3] Kiilat Haapajärvi qualified after placing second in the 2023 Naisten Suomi-sarja final but dropped out of the league due to financial concerns and instead remained in the Naisten Suomi-sarja for the 2023–24 season.[2]
Of the eight teams that participated in the 2023–24 season, five were the teams (teams, i.e. secondary or developmental teams) of clubs playing in the Naisten Liiga. Only APV, PaRa, and SaiPa – the three teams from clubs without Naisten Liiga teams – declared their willingness to vie for promotion to the Naisten Liiga in the postseason qualification series, meaning no qualifiers would be held if at least one of those teams did not end the season ranked in the top-three of the Naisten Mestis.[4]
Ultimately, the akatemia teams of HIFK, Kiekko-Espoo, and KalPa finished the season at the top of league standings and no Naisten Liiga qualifiers were held in the 2024 postseason.[5]
Excepting the ten teams of the Naisten Liiga, all women's ice hockey teams competing at the national level began the season in the Naisten Mestis qualifiers . The Naisten Mestis qualifiers, which were contested during September to December 2022, involved eighteen teams divided into three groups of five to seven teams. In the closed groups, each team played every other team at least twice. The top eight teams at the end of the qualifiers continued in the Naisten Mestis and the remaining teams filled the ranks of the Naisten Suomi-sarja.[1]
The top-two teams from the Naisten Suomi-sarja would join the eight Naisten Mestis teams for the 2023–23 season to fill all ten available slots.[1]
KeuPa HT won the qualification series against Kärpät Akatemia in the 2024 postseason to gain promotion to the Naisten Mestis for the 2024–25 season; Kärpät Akatemia was relegated to the Naisten Suomi-sarja for the 2024–25 season.[6]
In May 2024, the women's department of Panelian Raikas (PaRa) entered into a cooperation agreement with Lukko, an ice hockey club in Rauma that had suspended the operation of its Naisten Liiga team following the 2022–23 season. The PaRa team active in the Naisten Mestis was renamed Lukko/PaRa and its sister-team in the Naisten Suomi-sarja was renamed PaRa/Lukko.[7]
Team | Location | Home venue(s) | Head coach | Captain | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
APV | Alavus | Alavus Areena | |||
HIFK Akatemia | Helsinki | & Hanna Soukko | |||
HPK Akatemia | Hämeenlinna | Hämeenlinnan harjoitushalli, Jääliikuntakeskus Hakio | |||
KalPa Akatemia | Kuopio | ||||
Kiekko-Espoo Akatemia | Espoo | Tapiolan harjoitusareena | |||
KeuPa HT | Keuruu | ||||
Lukko/PaRa | Rauma | Eurajoen jäähalli | |||
SaiPa | Lappeenranta | Kisapuisto 2 |
The teams that participated in the Naisten Mestis regular season, listed by overall rank at the end of the season.
The manner in which the Mestis Championship is won has changed many times since the founding of the league in 1985. It has, for example, been awarded to the most successful team in the regular season, the winner of Mestis playoffs (which have repeatedly changed format or not been held), or to the team able to win promotion through the Naisten Liiga qualification/relegation series. The winner of the Naisten Mestis has not been historically guaranteed a place in the Naisten Liiga for the following season.
Season | First Place | Second Place | Third Place | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2015–16 | Blues/ (Espoo) | Pelicans 2000 (Lahti) | Hermes (Kokkola) | |
2016–17 | Sport (Vaasa) | Rovaniemen Kiekko (Rovaniemi) | (Kuusankoski) | |
2017–18 | TPS (Turku) | Sport (Vaasa) | JYP (Jyväskylä) | |
2018–19 | JYP (Jyväskylä) | Hermes (Kokkola) | APV (Alavus) | |
2019–20 | Seasons suspend due to the COVID-19 pandemic | |||
2020–21 | ||||
2021–22 | HIFK Akatemia (Helsinki) | Kiekko-Espoo Akatemia (Espoo) | Kärpät Akatemia (Oulu) | |
2022–23 | HIFK Akatemia (Helsinki) | Kiekko-Espoo Akatemia (Espoo) | HPK Akatemia (Hämeenlinna) | |
2023–24 | HIFK Akatemia (Helsinki) | Kiekko-Espoo Akatemia (Espoo) | KalPa Akatemia (Kuopio) |
Content in this article is translated from the existing Finnish Wikipedia article at ; see its history for attribution.