Team Ireland | |
League | Division II IIHF World Championships |
Founded | 1996 |
History | Team Ireland Established 1996 |
Arena | Dundalk Ice Dome |
Capacity | 1,200 |
City | Dundalk, County Louth, Ireland |
President | Mr. William Fay |
General Secretary | Mr. Dean Kelly |
Head coach | Mr. James Tibbets |
Assistant Coach | Mr. Kenneth Redmond |
Physio | Mr. Robert Schistad |
Equipment Manager | Mr. John Crowley |
General Manager | Mr. Anthony Griffin |
Irish men's national ice hockey team is the National Squad run by the Irish Ice Hockey Association. The team gained promotion to Division II of the International Ice Hockey Federation in 2007, but after being pointless in their Division II debut, the team has been relegated to Division III.[1] The team has members from both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland and has a working relationship with the Belfast Giants of the Elite Ice Hockey League and new Irish clubs, Flyers Ice Hockey Club and Dundalk Bulls.
History[]
The Republic of Ireland was accepted into the International Ice Hockey Federation in May 1996 after a nomination by Great Britain and a second by Canada. They have not had a long history of international competition, with the Ireland senior team first competing in 2004.
- First match: March 16, 2004: Reykjavík, Iceland: Mexico 8-3 Ireland
- Largest victory: March 8, 2005: Mexico City, Mexico: Ireland 23-1 Armenia
- Largest defeat: April 11, 2008: Miercurea Ciuc, Romania: Romania 21-1 Ireland
IIHF World Ranking[]
In the IIHF World Ranking, Ireland is ranked 41st out of 49 as of September 2010.
International Competition[]
(statistics, standings, and results taken from the IIHF [2] IIHF Tournament Page)
2004 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III World Championships Reykjavík, Iceland[]
Game 1. Ireland 3 Mexico 8
Game 2. Armenia 1 Ireland 15
Game 3. Ireland 1 Iceland 7
Game 4. Turkey 7 Ireland 4
Final Result: Fourth Place, One Win, Three Losses for 2 points, 23 Goals For, 23 Goals Against
2005 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III World Championships Mexico City, Mexico[]
Game 1. Ireland 23 Armenia 1
Game 2. Luxembourg 8 Ireland 4
Game 3. Ireland 4 South Africa 5
Game 4. Mexico 6 Ireland 1
Final Result: Fourth Place, One Win, Three Losses for 2 points, 32 Goals For, 20 Goals Against
2006 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III World Championships Reykjavík, Iceland[]
Game 1. Ireland 0 Armenia 6
Game 2. Iceland 8 Ireland 0
Game 3. Turkey 2 Ireland 2
Game 4. Ireland 3 Luxembourg 1
Final Result: Fourth Place, One Win, Two Losses, One Tie for 3 points, 5 Goals For, 17 Goals Against
2007 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III World Championships Dundalk, Ireland[]
Game 1. Ireland 11 Mongolia 0
Game 2. Ireland 2 New Zealand 4
Game 3. Ireland 3 South Africa 1
Game 4. Ireland 4 Luxembourg 3 [OT)
Final Result: Second Place Two Wins, One Overtime Win, One Loss for 8 points, 20 Goals For, 8 Goals Against [Team Ireland are Promoted to Division II of the IIHF World Championships]
2008 IIHF Ice Hockey Division II World Championships Miercurea Ciuc, Romania[]
Game 1. Ireland 1 Serbia 13
Game 2. Ireland 4 Bulgaria 7
Game 3. Ireland 1 Belgium 9
Game 4. Ireland 1 Romania 21
Game 5. Ireland 1 Israel 7
Final Result: Sixth Place Zero Wins, Five Losses for 0 points, 8 Goals For, 57 Goals Against [Team Ireland is relegated to the 2009 IIHF World Championship Div III]
2009 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III World Championships Dunedin, New Zealand[]
Game 1. Ireland 3 Greece 7
Game 2. Ireland 3 Luxembourg 8
Game 3. Ireland 5 Mongolia 0(Forfeit)
Game 4. Ireland 1 Turkey 7
Game 5. Ireland 0 New Zealand 9
Final Result: Fifth Place One Win, Four Losses for 3 points, 12 Goals For, 31 Goals Against
2010 IIHF Ice Hockey Division III Group A World Championships Kockelscheuer, Luxembourg[]
Game 1. Ireland 6 Luxembourg 4
Game 2. Greece 1 Ireland 3
Game 3. UA Emirates 2 Ireland 8
Final Result: First Place Three Wins, Zero Losses for 9 points, 17 Goals For, 7 Goals Against
Notable Personnel[]
- Jim Tibbets - Head Coach (former General Manager of the French national ice hockey team)
- Scott Fusco - Assistant Coach (Harvard Crimson hockey player, class of '86, American national men's hockey team 1984 Olympic Member)
Ireland Roster[]
(roster taken from the IIHF [3] IIHF Tournament Page)
Pos. | No. | Player | Team |
---|---|---|---|
GK | 1 | Adam Pepper | Dundalk Bulls |
GK | 25 | Scott Bickerstaff | Belfast Junior Giants |
D | 3 | Patrick McCabe | Flyers IHC |
D | 6 | Timothy Ross O'Driscoll | Rhode Island Storm |
D | 12 | David Gibson | Belfast Junior Giants |
D | 13 | Dean Kelley | Flyers IHC |
D | 16 | Robert Leckey | Belfast Junior Giants |
F | 4 | Stephen Cooper | Flyers IHC |
F | 7 | Ross Bickerstaff | Belfast Junior Giants |
F | 8 | Barry Higgins | Flyers IHC |
F | 9 | Stephen Balmer | Hawks |
F | 10 | Adam Jackson-Wyatt | Vaughan Rangers |
F | 11 | Philip Darcy | Flyers IHC |
F | 15 | Adam McCaul | Partille HK |
F | 17 | Mark Reynolds | Belfast Junior Giants |
F | 18 | Andrew Guest | Toronto Aeros Under 21 AAA |
F | 21 | Christopher Adams | Dublin Wolves |
F | 22 | Mark Morrison | Belfast Giants |
F | 23 | Stephen Adams | Hawks |
F | 24 | Gareth Roberts | Belfast Junior Giants |
Future[]
Early in 2007 Team Ireland moved their headquarters to the Dundalk Ice Dome. It is envisaged that the Ice Dome will become a centre of excellence for ice hockey in the Republic of Ireland and it was here that Team Ireland took silver in the International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships Division III and gained promotion to Division II.