Ice hockey at the 1998 Winter Olympics

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The mens gold medal game: Russia vs Czech Republic
The mens gold medal game: Russia vs Czech Republic

Contents

[edit] Overview

1998 was the first year that featured women in ice hockey competition. It was greatly anticipated that the women's gold medal match would feature Canada versus the United States. Canada was favored to come out on top as they had having won all the competitions in previous years in women's hockey, and the United States perpetually finishing second, while no other national teams could match their level of play. However, the United States beat Canada in the final became the first country to win gold in women's ice hockey at the Olympics.

1998 was the first year that the modern NHL took a break to allow its players to participate in the Olympics, allowing the United States and Canada to field teams with professionals of top calibre, as the European teams were doing since the IIHF first allowed professionals into the Olympics.

Both Canada and the United States were heavily favoured; they had previously faced off in the final of the 1996 World Cup of Hockey. The United States left the tournament being remembered as the ugly Americans. After a below-expectations performance in the tournament which included only one win, several American players trashed their hotel rooms (the US squad did not stay in the Olympic village), and they left without apologizing. The Canadian team, despite a strong start in the round robin, failed to play well after losing their semifinal match, and disappointed Canadians who wished for Wayne Gretzky to get an Olympic medal, playing a lacklustre bronze medal game.

Memorably, during the shootout in their semifinal match against the Czech Republic, Canadian coach Marc Crawford opted to have defenseman Ray Bourque shoot in the shootout instead of NHL legends Wayne Gretzky and Steve Yzerman. Hockey commentators alternatively criticized Crawford's decision (Bourque, like the other four Canadian shooters, failed to score) and praised it on the grounds that Bourque was one of hockey's most accurate shooters at the time and Gretzky had always been surprisingly mediocre on breakaways. Thanks to the goaltending of Dominik Hašek who was considered the best goaltender throughout Olympic play, the Czech Republic won the shootout and went on to win the semi-final en route to winning the gold medal.

Japanese fans were disappointed when their adopted hero, Paul Kariya, a Canadian of Japanese heritage and one of Team Canada's best stars, failed to make the games due to a vicious crosscheck by Gary Suter during regular season NHL play. The Canadian media has accused Suter and other American players of deliberately attempting to injure Canadian players in the final NHL games leading up to the Olympics. The Japanese shifted their attentions to a Canadian player of Japanese extraction, Vicky Sunohara, and were pleased with a vicarious silver medal from Canada's women's team.

The format of the men's tournament was also criticized because the National Hockey League clubs would not release their players for the preliminary round. This severely hampered the campaigns of Germany and Slovakia, both of whom failed to qualify for the final group stage. Also the final group stage was criticized as being meaningless since all of the teams qualified for the quarter-finals.

The format was eventually changed for the 2006 tournament in an effort to address these criticisms.

Games were played at The Big Hat and Aqua Wing Arena.

[edit] US Men's hotel vandalism

An unknown number of players on the U.S. men's hockey team trashed their rooms at the Olympic athlete's village on February 19 morning, after they were eliminated from the Olympic tournament by losing to the Czech Republic 4-1 about 10 hours earlier. Ten chairs were broken, and three fire extinguishers were emptied inside three apartments. Six of the chairs and one of the fire extinguishers were then thrown from the fifth floor into the courtyard below. One door was dented, as were several walls. Floors and beds were also damaged. No one was injured by the vandalism. No one had ever confessed and no one had ever been punished.

U.S. captain Chris Chelios was at a restaurant when the rooms were damaged. He wrote a $3000 check for damages and apologized for his teammates, allowing those responsible to remain anonymous.

"Maybe what they're talking about are the chairs." Jeremy Roenick said. "The chairs and furniture that we had were definitely not made for NHL players. The chairs would fall apart right there, just sitting on them. We went through nine chairs with five guys in the apartment. It was ridiculous."

"That wasn't anything," thundered U.S. assistant coach Lou Vairo. "Who hasn't broken a few chairs? I bet you guys [the media] have busted some furniture when you see the wife's credit card bill at the end of the month."

"This wasn't vandalism or wanton destruction of property," Bob Goodenow said. "This wasn't nearly as bad as people are making it out to be. I saw it. Some folding chairs got broken. They were weak and break when you lean back on them. The fire extinguisher, there's no excuse for that. There's no excuse for any of it. I'm not condoning it, but it wasn't as bad as it appears."

[edit] Men

1998 was the first year that the modern NHL took a break to allow its players to participate in the Olympics, as the European leagues had done since the IIHF first allowed professionals into the Olympics.

Gold: Silver: Bronze:
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic
Josef Beránek
Jan Čaloun
Roman Čechmánek
Jiří Dopita
Roman Hamrlík
Dominik Hašek
Milan Hejduk
Milan Hnilička
Jaromír Jágr
František Kučera
Robert Lang
David Moravec
Pavel Patera
Libor Procházka
Martin Procházka
Robert Reichel
Martin Ručínský
Vladimír Růžička-C
Jiří Šlégr
Richard Šmehlík
Martin Straka
Jaroslav Špaček
Petr Svoboda
Flag of Russia Russia
Pavel Bure
Valeri Bure
Mikhail Shtalenkov
Alexei Gusarov
Alexei Yashin-C
Dmitri Yushkevich
Alexei Zhamnov
Alexei Zhitnik
Valeri Kamensky
Darius Kasparaitis
Andrei Kovalenko
Igor Kravchuk
Sergei Krivokrasov
Boris Mironov
Dmitri Mironov
Aleksey Morozov
Sergei Nemchinov
German Titov
Andrei Trefilov
Oleg Shevtsov
Sergei Gonchar
Sergei Fedorov
Valeri Zelepukin
Flag of Finland Finland
Teemu Selänne
Aki Berg
Tuomas Grönman
Raimo Helminen
Sami Kapanen
Saku Koivu-C
Jari Kurri
Janne Laukkanen
Jere Lehtinen
Juha Lind
Jyrki Lumme
Jarmo Myllys
Mika Nieminen
Janne Niinimaa
Teppo Numminen
Ville Peltonen
Kimmo Rintanen
Ari Sulander
Jukka Tammi
Esa Tikkanen
Kimmo Timonen
Antti Törmänen
Juha Ylönen

[edit] Preliminaries

[edit] Group A

Top team (shaded) advanced to the final round.

Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 3 2 0 1 14 11 5
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia 3 1 1 1 9 9 3
Flag of Italy Italy 3 1 2 0 11 11 2
Flag of Austria Austria 3 0 1 2 9 12 2
  • February 7
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 5:3 Flag of Italy Italy
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia 2:2 Flag of Austria Austria
  • February 8
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia 4:3 Flag of Italy Italy
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 5:5 Flag of Austria Austria
  • February 10
Flag of Italy Italy 5:2 Flag of Austria Austria
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 4:3 Flag of Slovakia Slovakia


[edit] Group B

Top team (shaded) advanced to the final round.

Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
Flag of Belarus Belarus 3 2 0 1 14 4 5
Flag of Germany Germany 3 2 1 0 7 9 4
Flag of France France 3 1 2 0 5 8 2
Flag of Japan Japan 3 0 2 1 5 10 1
  • February 7
Flag of Belarus Belarus 4:0 Flag of France France
Flag of Japan Japan 1:3 Flag of Germany Germany
  • February 9
Flag of Japan Japan 2:5 Flag of France France
Flag of Belarus Belarus 8:2 Flag of Germany Germany
  • February 10
Flag of Germany Germany 2:0 Flag of France France
Flag of Japan Japan 2:2 Flag of Belarus Belarus


[edit] Consolation Round

[edit] 13th Place Match

  • February 11
Flag of Japan Japan 4:3 Flag of Austria Austria


[edit] 11th Place Match

  • February 11
Flag of France France 5:1 Flag of Italy Italy


[edit] 9th Place Match

  • February 11
Flag of Germany Germany 4:2 Flag of Slovakia Slovakia


[edit] Final Round

[edit] Group A

Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
Flag of Canada Canada 3 3 0 0 12 3 6
Flag of Sweden Sweden 3 2 1 0 11 7 4
Flag of the United States United States 3 1 2 0 8 10 2
Flag of Belarus Belarus 3 0 3 0 4 15 0
  • February 13
Flag of Canada Canada 5:0 Flag of Belarus Belarus
Flag of Sweden Sweden 4:2 Flag of the United States United States
  • February 14
Flag of the United States United States 5:2 Flag of Belarus Belarus
Flag of Canada Canada 3:2 Flag of Sweden Sweden
  • February 16
Flag of Sweden Sweden 5:2 Flag of Belarus Belarus
Flag of Canada Canada 4:1 Flag of the United States United States

[edit] Group B

Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
Flag of Russia Russia 3 3 0 0 15 6 6
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 3 2 1 0 12 4 4
Flag of Finland Finland 3 1 2 0 11 9 2
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 3 0 3 0 6 25 0
  • February 13
Flag of Russia Russia 9:2 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 3:0 Flag of Finland Finland
  • February 15
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 8:2 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
Flag of Russia Russia 4:3 Flag of Finland Finland
  • February 16
Flag of Finland Finland 8:2 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
Flag of Russia Russia 2:1 Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic


[edit] Medal Round

[edit] Quarterfinals

  • February 18
Flag of Canada Canada 4:1 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 4:1 Flag of the United States United States
Flag of Sweden Sweden 1:2 Flag of Finland Finland
Flag of Russia Russia 4:1 Flag of Belarus Belarus

[edit] Semifinals

  • February 20
Flag of Canada Canada 1:2 Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic
Flag of Finland Finland 4:7 Flag of Russia Russia

[edit] Bronze Medal Game

  • February 21
Flag of Finland Finland 3:2 Flag of Canada Canada

[edit] Gold Medal Game

  • February 21
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic 1:0 Flag of Russia Russia


[edit] Leading scorers

Rk Team GP G A Pts PIM
1 Flag of Finland Teemu Selänne 5 4 6 10 8
2 Flag of Finland Saku Koivu 6 2 8 10 4
3 Flag of Russia Pavel Bure 6 9 0 9 2
4 Flag of Kazakhstan Alexander Koreshkov 7 3 6 9 2
5 Flag of France Philippe Bozon 4 5 2 7 4
6 Flag of Kazakhstan K. Shafranov 7 4 3 7 6
7 Flag of Austria Dominik Lavoie 4 5 1 6 8
8 Flag of Finland Jere Lehtinen 6 4 2 6 2
9 Flag of Russia Alexei Yashin 6 3 3 6 0
10 Flag of France Serge Poudrier 6 2 4 6 4
11 Flag of Russia Sergei Fedorov 6 1 5 6 8


[edit] Final Rankings

  1. Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic
  2. Flag of Russia Russia
  3. Flag of Finland Finland
  4. Flag of Canada Canada
  5. Flag of Sweden Sweden
  6. Flag of the United States United States
  7. Flag of Belarus Belarus
  8. Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
  9. Flag of Germany Germany
  10. Flag of Slovakia Slovakia
  11. Flag of France France
  12. Flag of Italy Italy
  13. Flag of Japan Japan
  14. Flag of Austria Austria

[edit] Women

1998 was the first time the Winter Olympics featured Women's Ice Hockey.

The victory of United States of America versus Canada in the Gold Medal final, was a major event in International Women's Hockey. Before this, Canada was the only team to ever win major international competitions.


Gold: Silver: Bronze:
Flag of the United States United States

Chris Bailey
Laurie Baker
Alana Blahoski
Lisa Brown-Miller
Karyn Bye
Colleen Coyne
Sara Decosta
Tricia Dunn
Cammi Granato
Katie King
Shelley Looney
Sue Merz
Allison Mleczko
Tara Mounsey
Vicki Movsessian
Angela Ruggiero
Jenny Potter
Jen Schmidgall
Sarah Tueting
Gretchen Ulion
Sandra Whyte

Flag of Canada Canada

Jennifer Botterill
Therese Brisson
Cassie Campbell
Judy Diduck
Nancy Drolet
Lori Dupuis
Danielle Goyette
Geraldine Heaney
Jayna Hefford
Becky Kellar
Katheryn Mccormack
Karen Nystrom
Lesley Reddon
Manon Rhéaume
France St-Louis
Laura Schuler
Fiona Smith
Vicky Sunohara
Hayley Wickenheiser
Stacy Wilson

Flag of Finland Finland

Sari Fisk
Kirsi Hänninen
Satu Huotari
Marianne Ihalainen
Johanna Ikonen
Sari Krooks
Emma Laaksonen
Sanna Lankosaari
Katja Lehti
Marika Lehtimäki
Riikka Nieminen
Marja-Helena Pälvilä
Tuula Puputti
Karoliina Rantamäki
Tiia Reima
Katja Riipi
Päivi Salo
Maria Selin
Liisa-Maria Sneck
Petra Vaarakallio

1st and 2nd (Shaded Gold) Advanced to Gold Medal Game
3rd and 4th Place (Shaded Green) Advanced to Bronze Medal Game

Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
Flag of the United States United States 5 5 0 0 33 7 10
Flag of Canada Canada 5 4 1 0 28 12 8
Flag of Finland Finland 5 3 2 0 27 10 6
Flag of the People's Republic of China China 5 2 3 0 10 15 4
Flag of Sweden Sweden 5 1 4 0 10 21 2
Flag of Japan Japan 5 0 5 0 2 45 0

[edit] Preliminary round

8 February
Sweden Flag of Sweden 0 – 6 Flag of Finland Finland Aqua Wing (2,208)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Marina Zenk
P. Vaarakallio (S. Huotari) 8:35
J. Ikonen (M. Selin) (pp) 15:17
Second period
T. Reima (S. Fisk) 2:35
R. Nieminen (T. Reima) 14:07
Third period
S. Krooks 15:11
J. Ikonen 18:20
Game stats
8 February
Canada Flag of Canada 13 – 0 Flag of Japan Japan Aqua Wing (4,597)
First period Ref: Flag of the United States Victoria Renfer-Kale
D. Goyette (H. Wickenheiser) 5:46
G. Heaney 15:42
J. Diduck (S. Wilson, C. Campbell) 17:05
Second period
D. Goyette (S. Wilson, T. Brisson) 4:23
T. Brisson (H. Wickenheiser) 8:12
C. Campbell (J. Diduck) 11:22
S. Wilson (D. Goyette) 15:43
B. Kellar (V. Sunohara) 16:14
H. Wickenheiser (S. Wilson) (pp) 18:08
Third period
J. Diduck (C. Campbell) 13:52
F. St-Louis (G. Heaney, B. Kellar) (pp) 15:26
D. Goyette 16:21
F. Smith (F. St-Louis) (pp) 18:06
Game stats
8 February
China Flag of the People's Republic of China 0 – 5 Flag of the United States United States Aqua Wing (3,255)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Laurie Taylor-Boulton
C. Granato (G. Ulion, J. Schmidgall) (pp) 7:39
K. Bye (T. Mounsey) (pp) 19:17
Second period
T. Mounsey (K. King) 14:53
Third period
J. Schmidgall (K. Bye) 11:05
C. Granato (K. King) 16:20
Game stats
9 February
Finland Flag of Finland 11 – 1 Flag of Japan Japan Aqua Wing (4,972)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Laurie Taylor-Boulton
S. Lankosaari (K. Riipi, S. Krooks) 3:54
K. Riipi (S. Lankosaari) 18:45
Second period
T. Reima (S. Fisk, K. Hänninen) 7:22
K. Hänninen (pp) 13:29
K. Hänninen (R. Nieminen, J. Ikonen) (pp) 18:23
Third period
K. Rantamäki 5:43
Hatanaka A. (Fujiwara S., Yoshimi N.) (pp) 8:28
R. Nieminen (K. Lehto) 9:06
S. Krooks 9:52
K. Hänninen (R. Nieminen) (pp) 10:42
K. Lehto (R. Nieminen) 12:55
R. Nieminen (S. Fisk, M. Lehtimäki) 14:40
Game stats
9 February
United States Flag of the United States 7 – 1 Flag of Sweden Sweden Aqua Wing (3,607)
First period Ref: Flag of Finland Manuela Groeger
P. Morelius (T. Sjölander, E. Holst) (pp) 10:02
L. Baker (S. Merz) 16:27
Second period
K. Bye (S. Merz, T. Mounsey) (pp) 12:39
K. King (A. Blahoski) 14:36
S. Merz 16:20
K. Bye (sh) 18:39
Third period
G. Ulion (C. Granato) (pp) 14:28
S. Looney (sh) 15:30
Game stats
9 February
Canada Flag of Canada 2 – 0 Flag of the People's Republic of China China Aqua Wing (2,713)
First period Ref: Flag of Switzerland Sandra Dombrowski
no scoring
Second period
D. Goyette (H. Wickenheiser) 4:38
V. Sunohara (G. Heaney) (pp) 15:38
Third period
no scoring
Game stats
11 February
Sweden Flag of Sweden 3 – 5 Flag of Canada Canada Aqua Wing (5,429)
First period Ref: Flag of the United States Victoria Renfer-Kale
D. Goyette 9:30
K. Nystrom (N. Drolet) 10:06
Second period
N. Drolet (B. Kellar) (pp) 6:23
M. Rooth (L. Almblad) 8:38
T. Brisson (sh) 15:05
P. Burholm (E. Holst) (pp) 18:11
Third period
D. Goyette (H. Wickenheiser, S. Wilson) 0:34
T. Månsson (T. Sjölander) 2:11
Game stats
11 February
Japan Flag of Japan 1 – 6 Flag of the People's Republic of China China Aqua Wing (5,863)
First period Ref: Flag of Finland Manuela Groeger
no scoring
Second period
Yang X. (Li X., Liu H.) 12:21
Guo W. (Yang Q.) 12:35
Zhang L. (Lu Y.) 13:45
Third period
Sato M. (Obikawa M.) (pp) 2:25
Guo W. (Gong M.) (pp) 6:31
Sang H. (Xu L.) 12:24
Guo W. (Liu H.) 15:19
Game stats
11 February
United States Flag of the United States 4 – 2 Flag of Finland Finland Aqua Wing (3,688)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Marina Zenk
V. Movsessian (K. King) 2:48
K. Hänninen (K. Lehto, R. Nieminen) (pp) 18:09
Second period
K. Bye (J. Schmidgall) 1:22
R. Nieminen (sh) 5:27
T. Mounsey (K. Bye, S. Merz) (pp) 6:49
G. Ulion (K. Bye) 16:56
Third period
no scoring
Game stats
12 February
China Flag of the People's Republic of China 3 – 1 Flag of Sweden Sweden Aqua Wing (3,670)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Marina Zenk
no scoring
Second period
T. Sjölander (L. Almblad) 11:10
Third period
Zhang L. (Yang X., Liu H.) 6:42
Liu H. (Wang W.) 10:38
Yang X. (Zhang L., Guo W.) 18:08
Game stats
12 February
United States Flag of the United States 10 – 0 Flag of Japan Japan Aqua Wing (5,015)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Laurie Taylor-Boulton
S. Looney 3:55
A. Mleczko (S. Merz) 9:08
S. Whyte (C. Granato) 13:32
S. Looney (G. Ulion, J. Schmidgall) (pp) 14:14
A. Mleczko (L. Brown-Miller, S. Looney) 14:36
Second period
K. King (L. Baker, C. Bailey) 9:18
K. King (A. Blahoski, L. Baker) 19:34
Third period
L. Baker (C. Granato) (pp) 5:37
K. Bye (T. Mounsey, G. Ulion) (pp) 11:46
K. King (L. Baker) 13:03
Game stats
12 February
Finland Flag of Finland 2 – 4 Flag of Canada Canada Aqua Wing (3,133)
First period Ref: Flag of Switzerland Sandra Dombrowski
T. Brisson (V. Sunohara) (pp) 12:45
G. Heaney (N. Drolet) (pp) 16:50
Second period
T. Brisson (F. St-Louis) 8:53
P. Vaarakallio (S. Fisk) 13:25
D. Goyette (G. Heaney, J. Diduck) 16:26
Third period
K. Rantamäki (P. Vaarakallio) 13:32
Game stats
14 February
Japan Flag of Japan 0 – 5 Flag of Sweden Sweden Aqua Wing (6,009)
First period Ref: Flag of Switzerland Sandra Dombrowski
G. Andersson (pp) 10:58
E. Holst (J. Elfsberg) 18:33
Second period
M. Gustafsson (Å. Elfving) 5:34
M. Rooth (G. Andersson, E. Holst) (pp) 11:15
Third period
E. Holst (M. Rooth) 19:18
Game stats
14 February
Finland Flag of Finland 6 – 1 Flag of the People's Republic of China China Aqua Wing (5,638)
First period Ref: Flag of the United States Victoria Renfer-Kale
J. Ikonen 1:08
M. Lehtimäki (K. Hänninen) 9:56
Second period
S. Fisk (M. Lehtimäki) 4:37
Liu H. (Wang W.) 4:50
R. Nieminen (sh) 7:57
Third period
M. Lehtimäki (K. Hänninen) 4:20
R. Nieminen 17:09
Game stats
14 February
Canada Flag of Canada 4 – 7 Flag of the United States United States Aqua Wing (5,872)
First period Ref: Flag of Finland Manuela Groeger
L. Dupuis (V. Sunohara) (pp) 3:01
C. Granato (pp) 19:20
Second period
no scoring
Third period
L. Dupuis (T. Brisson) (pp) 1:24
J. Hefford (L. Dupuis) (pp) 5:28
T. Brisson (S. Wilson, H. Wickenheiser) (pp) 5:53
L. Baker (K. King) 7:05
C. Granato (G. Ulion, T. Mounsey) (pp) 10:57
J. Schmidgall (C. Granato) (pp) 12:25
T. Dunn (A. Mleczko) 12:48
L. Brown-Miller (A. Mleczko) 17:06
L. Baker (en) 18:58
Game stats

[edit] Bronze Medal Game

17 February
Finland Flag of Finland 4 – 1 Flag of the People's Republic of China China Big Hat (7,412)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Laurie Taylor-Boulton
Yang X. 9:27
Second period
S. Fisk (R. Nieminen, K. Lehto) 3:07
J. Ikonen (P. Vaarakallio, K. Rantamäki) 7:08
S. Lankosaari (K. Riipi, S. Krooks) 10:15
Third period
R. Nieminen (M. Lehtimäki) (en) 19:52
Game stats

[edit] Gold Medal Game

17 February
United States Flag of the United States 3 – 1 Flag of Canada Canada Big Hat (8,626)
First period Ref: Flag of Canada Marina Zenk
no scoring
Second period
G. Ulion (S. Whyte, S. Merz) (pp) 2:38
Third period
S. Looney (S. Whyte, G. Ulion) (pp) 10:57
D. Goyette (H. Wickenheiser, G. Heaney) (pp) 15:59
S. Whyte (en) 19:52
Game stats

[edit] Final Rankings

  1. Flag of the United States United States
  2. Flag of Canada Canada
  3. Flag of Finland Finland
  4. Flag of the People's Republic of China China
  5. Flag of Sweden Sweden
  6. Flag of Japan Japan