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IIHF Continental Cup
Current season or competition:
2022–23 IIHF Continental Cup
ContinentalCupLogo
Formerly IIHF European Cup
Sport Ice hockey
Founded 1997
Most recent champion(s) Flag of Slovakia HK Nitra
(1st title)
Most championships Flag of Belarus Yunost Minsk (3)
Qualification Champions Hockey League
Official website iihf.com
Founder IIHF

The Continental Cup is a second-level ice hockey tournament for European clubs (behind Champions Hockey League), begun in 1997 after the discontinuing of the European Cup. It was intended for teams from countries without representatives in the European Hockey League, with participating teams chosen by the countries' respective ice hockey associations. Hans Dobida served as chairman of the Continental Cup until 2018.[1]

Format[]

The competition began in 1997–98 with 42 clubs from 26 countries, which expanded to 48 teams for the next two years. The tournament was played in seeded rounds of qualifying groups. There were three rounds of qualifying groups, with winners of qualifying groups progressing to the next round. The three winners of the third round groups entered the semifinals, along with the host club. The first round was held in September, the second in October, the third in November and the finals in December.

In the 2000–01 season, with the European Hockey League on hiatus, the Continental Cup became the de facto European club championship. The format remained the same, with 36 teams from 27 countries.

With the beginning of the IIHF European Champions Cup from 2004 to 2005, participants included national champions of countries not in the Super Six (the top six European nations according to the IIHF World Ranking), as well as teams from Super Six leagues, which included HC Dynamo Moscow and HKm Zvolen.

Winners[]

Season Winner Runner-up Third Host
1997–98 Flag of Slovakia TJ VSŽ Košice Flag of Germany Eisbären Berlin Flag of Finland Ilves Flag of Finland Tampere
1998–99 Flag of Switzerland HC Ambrì-Piotta Flag of Slovakia HC Košice Flag of Russia Avangard Omsk Flag of Slovakia Košice
1999–2000 Flag of Switzerland HC Ambrì-Piotta Flag of Germany Eisbären Berlin Flag of Russia Ak Bars Kazan Flag of Germany Berlin
2000–01 Flag of Switzerland ZSC Lions Flag of United Kingdom London Knights Flag of Slovakia Slovan Bratislava Flag of Switzerland Switzerland Zurich
2001–02 Flag of Switzerland ZSC Lions Flag of Italy Milano Vipers Flag of Slovakia HKm Zvolen Flag of Switzerland Zurich
2002–03 Flag of Finland Jokerit Flag of Russia Lokomotiv Yaroslavl Flag of Switzerland HC Lugano Flag of Switzerland Lugano
Flag of Italy Milan
2003–04 Flag of Slovakia Slovan Bratislava [[Image:{{{flag alias-1995}}}|22x20px|border|Flag of Belarus]] HK Gomel Flag of Switzerland HC Lugano Flag of Belarus Gomel
2004–05 Flag of Slovakia HKm Zvolen Flag of Russia Dynamo Moscow Flag of Hungary Alba Volán Székesfehérvár Flag of Hungary Székesfehérvár
2005–06 Flag of Russia Lada Togliatti Flag of Latvia HK Riga 2000 Flag of Switzerland ZSC Lions Flag of Hungary Székesfehérvár
2006–07 [[Image:{{{flag alias-1995}}}|22x20px|border|Flag of Belarus]] Yunost Minsk Flag of Russia Avangard Omsk Flag of Finland Ilves Flag of Hungary Székesfehérvár
2007–08 Flag of Russia Ak Bars Kazan Flag of Latvia HK Riga 2000 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazzinc-Torpedo Flag of Latvia Riga
2008–09 Flag of Slovakia MHC Martin Flag of France Dragons de Rouen Flag of Italy HC Bolzano Flag of France Rouen
2009–10 Flag of Austria Red Bull Salzburg [[Image:{{{flag alias-1995}}}|22x20px|border|Flag of Belarus]] Yunost Minsk Flag of United Kingdom Sheffield Steelers Flag of France Grenoble
2010–11 [[Image:{{{flag alias-1995}}}|22x20px|border|Flag of Belarus]] Yunost Minsk Flag of Austria Red Bull Salzburg Flag of Denmark SønderjyskE Ishockey Flag of Belarus Minsk
2011–12 Flag of France Dragons de Rouen[2] [[Image:{{{flag alias-1995}}}|22x20px|border|Flag of Belarus]] Yunost Minsk Flag of Ukraine HC Donbass Flag of France Rouen
2012–13 Flag of Ukraine HC Donbass Flag of Belarus Metallurg Zhlobin Flag of France Dragons de Rouen Flag of Ukraine Donetsk
2013–14 Flag of Norway Stavanger Oilers Flag of Ukraine HC Donbass Flag of Italy HC Asiago Flag of France Rouen
2014–15 Flag of Belarus Neman Grodno Flag of Germany Fischtown Pinguins Flag of France Ducs d'Angers Flag of Germany Bremerhaven
2015–16 Flag of France Dragons de Rouen Flag of Denmark Herning Blue Fox Flag of Poland GKS Tychy Flag of France Rouen
2016–17 Flag of United Kingdom Nottingham Panthers Flag of Kazakhstan Beibarys Atyrau Flag of Denmark Odense Bulldogs Flag of Italy Ritten
2017–18 Flag of Belarus Yunost Minsk Flag of Kazakhstan Nomad Astana Flag of United Kingdom Sheffield Steelers Flag of Belarus Minsk
2018–19 Flag of Kazakhstan Arlan Kokshetau Flag of United Kingdom Belfast Giants Flag of Poland GKS Katowice Flag of United Kingdom Belfast
2019–20 Flag of Denmark SønderjyskE Ishockey Flag of United Kingdom Nottingham Panthers Flag of Belarus Neman Grodno Flag of Denmark Vojens
2020–21 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[3]
2021–22 Flag of Poland Cracovia Flag of Kazakhstan Saryarka Karagandy Flag of Denmark Aalborg Pirates Flag of Denmark Aalborg
2022–23 Flag of Slovakia HK Nitra Flag of France Ducs d'Angers Flag of Wales Cardiff Devils Flag of France Angers

Medals (1997-2023)[]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Flag of Slovakia Slovakia5128
2Flag of Belarus Belarus4419
3Flag of Switzerland Switzerland4037
4Flag of Russia Russia2327
5Flag of France France2226
6Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom1337
7Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan1315
8Flag of Denmark Denmark1135
9Flag of Ukraine Ukraine1113
10Flag of Austria Austria1102
11Flag of Finland Finland1023
Flag of Poland Poland1023
13Flag of Norway Norway1001
14Flag of Germany Germany0303
15Flag of Latvia Latvia0202
16Flag of Italy Italy0123
17Flag of Hungary Hungary0011
Totals (17 nations)25252575

IIHF Federation Cup[]

The Federation Cup was an official European ice hockey club competition created in 1995. It was the second European competition for club teams, intended for those teams who could not qualify for the European Cup, especially for those from Eastern European countries. It was the direct predecessor of the IIHF Continental Cup, which was played two seasons later.

Format[]

In the first year of competition, 13 Eastern European teams from twelve countries participated in the tournament. In a KO-system with three qualifying groups, which qualifies the four participants in the finals. The following year was played in the same mode. Due to the increased number of participants (some Western European clubs had registered for the competition), an additional qualifying round was introduced.

Federation Cup winners[]

Season Winner Score Runner-up Host
1994–95 Flag of Russia Salavat Yulaev Ufa 4–1 Flag of the Czech Republic HC Pardubice Ljubljana, Flag of Slovenia Slovenia
1995–96 Flag of Italy AS Mastini Varese 4–3 Flag of Russia Metallurg Magnitogorsk Trenčín, Flag of Slovakia Slovakia

See also[]

References[]

  1. International Ice Hockey Federation (19 May 2018). Congress approves Statutes changes. Press release.
  2. International Ice Hockey Federation (15 January 2012). Le Miracle de Rouen. Press release.
  3. "IIHF cancels Continental Cup", IIHF, 25 August 2020. 

External links[]

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at IIHF Continental Cup. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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