IIHF World U20 Championship Division II | |
2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division II | |
Sport | Ice hockey |
Founded | [[1979 (C-series) 2001 (Division II)]] |
No. of teams | 12 |
Most recent champion(s) | Japan |
Most championship(s) | Hungary and Japan (5 titles) |
Official website | IIHF.com |
The IIHF World U20 Championship Division II is played every year among the ice hockey teams under the age of 20 who were placed in Division II in the previous year.[1][2] Until 2001 the series was known as the C-series.
Results[]
Year | Promoted | Relegated | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
To IIHF U20 Division I | To Division II A | To Division II B | To IIHF U20 Division III | |
2001 | Slovenia | – | – | Estonia |
2002 | Japan, Denmark, Latvia, Croatia | – | – | No relegated teams |
2003 | Estonia, Hungary | – | – | Bulgaria, Mexico |
2004 | Poland, United Kingdom | – | – | Iceland, South Africa |
2005 | Japan, Hungary | – | – | Lithuania, Belgium |
2006 | United Kingdom, Estonia | – | – | New Zealand, China |
2007 | Hungary, Lithuania | – | – | Australia, Serbia |
2008 | Italy, Estonia | – | – | Iceland, China |
2009 | Japan, Croatia | – | – | New Zealand, |
2010 | United Kingdom, Lithuania | – | – | Mexico, Serbia |
2011 | France, Poland | – | – | Iceland, China |
2012 | Ukraine | Romania | South Korea | Mexico |
2013 | Japan | Estonia | Spain | Belgium |
2014 | Hungary | South Korea | Croatia | China |
2015 | United Kingdom | Croatia | Romania | Iceland |
2016 | Hungary | Romania | South Korea | China |
2017 | Lithuania | South Korea | Croatia | Australia |
2018 | Japan | Spain | Netherlands | Turkey |
2019 | Estonia | Serbia | South Korea | Mexico |
References[]
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at IIHF World U20 Championship Division II. 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). |