1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships

The top Championship Group A tournament took place in Czechoslovakia from 28 April to 10 May 1992, with games played in Prague and Bratislava.The Swiss prevailed, making the top 4 for the first time since 1953, and moved on to meet a Swedish team that had shut-out the Russians.[1][2] New entrants Greece, Israel, Luxembourg and Turkey iced teams in a secondary tier of Group C. South Africa appeared for the first time since 1966.In Group B, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia made their final World Championship appearance before the breakup of that nation.The hosts, led by Scot Tony Hand and Canadian Kevin Conway, won all five games easily.
CzechoslovakiaSwedenFinlandSwitzerlandJarkko VarvioIce Hockey World ChampionshipsInternational Ice Hockey Federation1993 competitionPragueBratislavadissolution of Czechoslovakia1992 OlympicsAlbertvilleRussiaCanadaGermanyshootoutMats SundinGreeceIsraelLuxembourgTurkeySouth AfricaSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslaviathe breakup of that nationFederal Republic of YugoslaviaCroatiaSloveniaSportovní hala ČSTVZimný štadiónUnited StatesPolandNorwayFrancePeter ForsbergMikael AnderssonRoger HanssonLars KarlssonTimo PeltomaaTimo JutilaArto BlomstenGoaltenderTommy SöderströmDefencemanRóbert ŠvehlaForwardMarkus KettererFrantišek MusilPetr HrbekMikko MäkeläDieter HegenTomáš JelínekMika NieminenTimo SaarikoskiRauli RaitanenDavid DelfinoPetr BřízaRon HextallKlagenfurtAustriaNetherlandsDenmarkBulgariaRomaniaYugoslaviaGreat BritainTony HandKevin ConwayNorth KoreaAustraliaHungaryBelgiumSouth KoreaJohannesburgWorld JuniorsWomen's ChampionshipsCzechia2024 ChampionshipKazakhstanLatviaSlovakiaSwitzerland 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 winners