1986 Ice Hockey World Championships

Attracting little notice at the time, Brett Hull made his debut in international hockey for the United States.It would appear that if Canadian coach Dave King had invited him to play in Moscow, the college student with dual citizenship, would have happily chosen a different path.[1][2] Poland, needing a win of four goals or more on the final day, tied, and were relegated Played in Eindhoven 20–29 March.On the last day of competition, four different nations were in danger of relegation, with a myriad of tie breaking scenarios.Source: [1] Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 50% of their team's minutes are included in this list.
Soviet UnionSwedenCanadaFinlandSergei MakarovIce Hockey World ChampionshipsLuzhniki Palace of SportsCSKA Ice PalaceMoscowice hockeyBrett HullDave KingDave PetersonCzechoslovakiaUnited StatesWest GermanyPolandEindhovenEast GermanySwitzerlandFranceNetherlandsAustriaYugoslaviaPuigcerdaNorwayRomaniaDenmarkSouth KoreaBulgariaNorth KoreaHungaryAustraliaGoaltenderPeter LindmarkDefencemanViacheslav FetisovForwardVladimir KrutovAlexei KasatonovIgor LarionovEuropean championshipsVladimír RůžičkaJiří HrdinaVyacheslav BykovAnders CarlssonThomas SteenBrent SutterYevgeni BelosheikinDominik HašekChris TerreriJacques CloutierHannu KamppuriWayback Machine1992 World Junior Ice Hockey ChampionshipsCzechia2024 ChampionshipGermanyGreat BritainKazakhstanLatviaSlovakiaSwitzerland 1998Norway 1999Russia 2000Germany 2001Sweden 2002Finland 2003Czech Republic 2004Austria 2005Latvia 2006Russia 2007Canada 2008Switzerland 2009Germany 2010Slovakia 2011Finland / Sweden 2012Sweden / Finland 2013Belarus 2014Czech Republic 2015Russia 2016Germany / France 2017Denmark 2018Slovakia 2019Switzerland 2020Latvia 2021Finland 2022Finland / Latvia 2023Czechia 2024Sweden / Denmark 2025Switzerland 2026Germany 2027France 2028Division IDivision IIDivision IIIDivision IVTeam appearancesMedalistsAttendanceAwards winnersIce Hockey European Championships