2001 IIHF Women's World Championship
The 2001 IIHF Women's World Championships was held April 2–8, 2001 in six cities in the state of Minnesota . Venues included the Ice Center in Plymouth , the Mariucci Arena in Minneapolis , the Recreation Centre in Rochester , the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud , the Columbia Arena in Fridley , and the Schwan Super Rink , in Blaine . Team Canada won their seventh consecutive gold medal at the World Championships defeating the United States . Russia upset Finland 2–1 to capture their first medal in women's hockey.[ 1]
Teams
With the promotion and relegation format now in use, the top seven nations were joined by Kazakhstan, the winner of Group B in 2000.
World Championship Group A
The eight participating teams were divided up into two seeded groups as below. The teams played each other once in a single round robin format. The top two teams from the group proceeded to the Final Round, while the remaining teams played in the Consolation Round.
First round
Group A
Standings
Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification
1
Canada
3
3
0
0
29
1
+28
6
Advanced to Final round
2
Russia
3
2
0
1
12
7
+5
4
3
Sweden
3
1
0
2
3
17
−14
2
Sent to Consolation round
4
Kazakhstan
3
0
0
3
3
22
−19
0
Results
All times local
April 2, 2001 4:00 pm Sweden 0 – 3 ( 0 – 0, 0 – 2, 0 – 1 ) Russia Recreation Centre, Rochester Attendance: 300
April 2, 2001 7:30 pm Kazakhstan 0 – 11 ( 0 – 4, 0 – 4, 0 – 3 ) Canada Recreation Centre, Rochester Attendance: 301
April 3, 2001 4:00 pm Sweden 3 – 1 ( 1 – 0, 1 – 1, 1 – 0 ) Kazakhstan Recreation Centre, Rochester Attendance: 303
April 3, 2001 7:30 pm Canada 5 – 1 ( 2 – 0, 3 – 1, 0 – 0 ) Russia Recreation Centre, Rochester Attendance: 520
April 5, 2001 4:05 pm Canada 13 – 0 ( 4 – 0, 6 – 0, 3 – 0 ) Sweden Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis Attendance: 1178
April 5, 2001 7:30 pm Russia 8 – 2 ( 3 – 0, 1 – 1, 4 – 1 ) Kazakhstan Schwan's Super Rink, Blaine Attendance: 301
Group B
Standings
Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification
1
United States
3
3
0
0
35
0
+35
6
Advanced to Final round
2
Finland
3
2
0
1
12
17
−5
4
3
China
3
0
1
2
6
20
−14
1
Sent to Consolation round
4
Germany
3
0
1
2
2
18
−16
1
Results
All times local
April 2, 2001 4:00 pm Finland 7 – 6 ( 4 – 3, 1 – 1, 2 – 2 ) China NHC, St. Cloud Attendance: 300
April 2, 2001 7:30 pm Germany 0 – 13 ( 0 – 5, 0 – 6, 0 – 2 ) United States NHC, St. Cloud Attendance: 301
April 3, 2001 4:00 pm Finland 5 – 2 ( 0 – 1, 3 – 1, 2 – 0 ) Germany NHC, St. Cloud Attendance: 300
April 3, 2001 7:30 pm United States 13 – 0 ( 6 – 0, 3 – 0, 4 – 0 ) China NHC, St. Cloud Attendance: 581
April 5, 2001 7:30 pm China 0 – 0 ( 0 – 0, 0 – 0, 0 – 0 ) Germany Ice Center, Plymouth Attendance: 300
April 5, 2001 7:35 pm United States 9 – 0 ( 3 – 0, 5 – 0, 1 – 0 ) Finland Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis Attendance: 4421
Playoff round
Consolation round 5–8 place
April 6, 2001 4:00 pm China 4 – 1 ( 2 – 0, 1 – 1, 1 – 0 ) Kazakhstan Columbia Arena, Fridley Attendance: 301
April 6, 2001 7:30 pm Sweden 2 – 6 ( 1 – 2, 1 – 1, 0 – 3 ) Germany Columbia Arena, Fridley Attendance: 305
Consolation round 7–8 place
April 8, 2001 12:00 pm Kazakhstan 1 – 3 Sweden Schwan's Super Rink, Blaine Attendance: 305
Consolation round 5–6 place
April 8, 2001 12:00 pm Germany 1 – 0 ( 1 – 0, 0 – 0, 0 – 0 ) China Columbia Arena, Fridley
Final round
Semifinals
April 7, 2001 3:08 pm Canada 8 – 0 ( 2 – 0, 2 – 0, 4 – 0 ) Finland Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis Attendance: 1603
April 7, 2001 7:38 pm United States 6 – 1 ( 2 – 1, 3 – 0, 1 – 0 ) Russia Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis Attendance: 2582
Match for third place
April 8, 2001 4:00 pm Russia 2 – 1 ( 1 – 0, 1 – 1, 0 – 0 ) Finland Mariucci Arena, Minneapolis Attendance: 1558
Final
2001 IIHF World Women Championship winners
Canada 7th title
Statistics
Scoring leaders
Goaltending leaders
Final standings
Rosters
Medal
Team
Players
Canada
Sami Jo Small , Becky Kellar , Colleen Sostorics , Therese Brisson , Cheryl Pounder , Caroline Ouellette , Danielle Goyette , Jayna Hefford , Jennifer Botterill , Nancy Drolet , Correne Bredin , Dana Antal , Kelly Bechard , Tammy Shewchuk , Gina Kingsbury , Kim St-Pierre , Vicky Sunohara , Isabelle Chartrand , Cassie Campbell , Geraldine Heaney [ 2]
United States
Sara DeCosta , Winny Brodt , Angela Ruggiero , Nicki Luongo , Karyn Bye , Sue Merz , A.J. Mleczko , Jenny Schmidgall , Julie Chu , Shelley Looney , Krissy Wendell , Alana Blahoski , Annamarie Holmes , Katie King , Cammi Granato , Natalie Darwitz , Chris Bailey , Tricia Dunn , Carisa Zaban , Sarah Tueting [ 3]
Russia
Maria Misropian , Kristina Petrovskaia , Alena Khomitch , Elena Bobrova , Violetta Simanova , Larisa Mishina , Tatiana Sotnikova , Yulia Gladysheva , Ekaterina Smolentseva , Tatiana Tsareva , Luidmila Yurlova , Irina Gachennikova , Svetlana Trefilova , Svetlana Terentieva , Tatiana Burina , Ekaterina Pashkevich , Olga Savenkova , Oksana Tretiakova , Zhanna Shchelchkova , Irina Votintseva [ 4]
World Championship Division I
World Championship Group B was renamed Division I and was played again with an eight team tournament which was hosted by Briançon in France. Switzerland won the tournament with a 2–1 victory over Japan to see them bounce straight back to the main World Championship in 2003.
Directorate Awards
References
Podnieks, Andrew (2010). IIHF Media Guide & Record Book 2011 . Moydart Press. pp. 26– 7, 231– 2.
External links
Current champions (2024): Canada Tournaments Championships (Top Division)
Qualification Division I Division II Division III