Mirotvor Schwartz
THE HISTORY OF ICE HOCKEY
This is one of my thematic stamp exhibits. Unlike my topical collection “ICE HOCKEY ON STAMPS”, it only includes stamps (as well as souvenir sheets, covers and other philatelic items) that depict specific competitions and events. The stamps with bizarre subjects like Disney characters or children playing hockey (or with no subject but ice hockey itself) are not included, for they have absolutely nothing to do with hockey history.
The exhibit is organized chronologically: all competitions and events are listed in the order in which they occurred.
If a competition has been depicted on a philatelic item, its description also includes links to specific players and coaches, who have achieved some success at the competition (either individually or as a part of a medal-winning team), provided said players have been depicted philatelically as well, albeit not in conjunction with said competition. Every individual link will take you to a different page, where you’ll be able to see all the stamps that depict this player or coach. Moreover, the page will also include a link to the individual’s Wikipedia or hockeyDB.com page.
Enjoy!
Mirotvor Schwartz (pashtet71@yahoo.com)
1892/93 1907/08 1908/09 1909/10 1912/13 1913/14 1915/16 1917/18 1918/19 1920/21 1923/24 1926/27 1927/28 1928/29 1929/30 1930/31 1931/32 1934/35 1937/38 1938/39 1942/43 1943/44 1945/46 1946/47 1947/48 1950/51 1951/52 1952/53 1953/54 1954/55 1955/56 1956/57 1957/58 1958/59 1959/60 1960/61 1961/62 1962/63 1963/64 1964/65 1965/66 1966/67 1967/68 1968/69 1969/70 1970/71 1971/72 1972/73 1973/74 1974/75 1975/76 1976/77 1977/78 1978/79 1979/80 1980/81 1981/82 1982/83 1983/84 1984/85 1985/86 1986/87 1987/88 1988/89 1989/90 1990/91 1991/92 1992/93 1993/94 1994/95 1995/96 1996/97 1997/98 1998/99 1999/2000 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2005/06 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16 2016/17 2017/18
On May 15, 1893, the first Stanley Cup was awarded to the Montreal Hockey Club of the Amateur Hockey Association of Canada.
On May 15, 1908, the International Ice Hockey Federation was formed.
On November 15, 1908, the Czech Ice Hockey Association joined the IIHF.
On December 4, 1909, the Montreal Canadiens were founded.
On January 4, 1912, the Austrian Ice Hockey Association was founded.
In 1914, the Austrian Ice Hockey Association joined the IIHF.
Montreal Canadiens (NHA) - Portland Rosebuds (PCHA) 3-2
On November 26, 1917, the National Hockey League was formed.
The Toronto Arenas became one of the NHL teams.
NHL 1917/18
December 19, 1917: Montreal Wanderers - Toronto Arenas 10:9
First Half: 2.Toronto Arenas, 4.Montreal Wanderers (1.Montreal Canadiens, 3.Ottawa Senators)
Second Half: 1.Toronto Arenas (2.Montreal Canadiens, 3.Ottawa Senators)
NHL Championship: 1.Toronto Arenas (2.Montreal Canadiens)
STANLEY CUP 1918
Toronto Arenas (NHL) - Vancouver Millionaires (PCHA) 3-2
The Toronto Arenas were renamed as Toronto St Patricks in 1919.
SUMMER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1920 (Antwerp)
1.Canada
(2.USA, 3.Czechoslovakia)
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1924 (Chamonix)
1.Canada
(2.USA, 3.Great Britain)
STANLEY CUP 1924
Montreal Canadiens (NHL) - Calgary Tigers (WCHL) 2-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Howie Morenz)
EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP 1927 (Vienna)
1.Austria
(2.Belgium, 3.Germany)
1927
On February 14, 1927, Conn Smythe renamed the Toronto St Patricks into Toronto Maple Leafs.
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1928 (St Moritz)
(1.Canada, 2.Sweden, 3.Switzerland)
Babe Siebert (Montreal Maroons)
1.Montreal Canadiens (Howie Morenz) (1st in Canadian)
2.Boston Bruins (Eddie Shore) (1st in American, won the Stanley Cup)
8.Montreal Maroons (Babe Siebert) (5th in Canadian)
(3.New York Rangers (2nd in American, lost in the Stanley Cup Final))
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 2-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Howie Morenz)
2.Boston Bruins (Eddie Shore)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1931 (Krynica-Zdroj, Poland)
3.Austria (won European Championship title as best European team)
(1.Canada, 2.USA)
STANLEY CUP 1931
Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 3-2
1.Montreal Canadiens (Howie Morenz)
On November 12, 1931, Maple Leaf Gardens was opened.
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1932 (Lake Placid)
3.Germany (Martin Schrottle)
(1.Canada, 2.USA)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1935 (Davos)
(1.Canada, 2.Switzerland, 3.Great Britain)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1938 (Prague)
3.Czechoslovakia (Bohumil Modry)
(1.Canada, 2.Great Britain)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1939 (Zurich - Basel)
(1.Canada, 2.USA, 3.Switzerland)
The beginning of the Original Six era (1942-67) in the NHL.
Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Bill Durnan, Maurice Richard)
On February 17, 1946, the first exhibition ice hockey match in the Soviet Union was played by Physical Culture Institute students after a bandy game. This is generally considered the birthday of the Soviet and Russian hockey.
STANLEY CUP 1946
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Bill Durnan, Maurice Richard)
2.Boston Bruins (Milt Schmidt)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1947 (Prague)
Austria - Sweden 2:1
1.Czechoslovakia (Bohumil Modry)
2.Sweden
3.Austria
SOVIET CHAMPIONSHIP (DIVISION B) 1947/48
3.Dynamo Sverdlovsk
(NOTE: The stamp depicts a training match conducted by the team during the season)
(1.Dzerzhinets Chelyabinsk (promoted to Division A), 2.SKIF Leningrad)
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1948 (St Moritz)
2.Czechoslovakia (Bohumil Modry)
3.Switzerland
(1.Canada)
FRIENDLY INTERNATIONAL SERIES 1948 (Moscow)
Game 1
Team Moscow (USSR) - LTC Prague (Czechoslovakia) 6:3
(Vsevolod Bobrov - Bohumil Modry)
Overall: Team Moscow - LTC Prague 1-1 (with 1 tie)
WINTER WORLD STUDENT GAMES 1951 (Poiana - Brasov, Romania)
(1.Czechoslovakia, 2.Romania, 3.Hungary)
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1952 (Oslo)
(1.Canada, 2.USA, 3.Sweden)
Kitchener-Waterloo Flying Dutchmen - Penticton V’s 4-1
STANLEY CUP 1953
Game 4
Boston Bruins - Montreal Canadiens 3:7
(Gordie Henry - Maurice Richard)
Overall
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Maurice Richard)
2.Boston Bruins (Gordie Henry, Milt Schmidt)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1954 (Stockholm)
USSR - Canada 7:2
(Vsevolod Bobrov (USSR))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the right only. The player on the left is added by the stamp designer)
1.USSR (Nikolai Puchkov, Vsevolod Bobrov, Alexei Guryshev)
2.Canada
(3.Sweden)
Kitchener-Waterloo Flying Dutchmen – Fort Williams Beavers 4-1
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1956 (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1.USSR
(Nikolai Puchkov, Vsevolod Bobrov, Alexei Guryshev)
3.Canada (represented by Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen)
(2.USA)
WINTER WORLD STUDENT GAMES 1956 (Warsaw)
(1.USSR, 2.Czechoslovakia, 3.Poland)
STANLEY CUP 1956
Montreal Canadiens - Detroit Red Wings 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Maurice Richard, Claude Provost)
2.Detroit Red Wings (Glenn Hall, Red Kelly, Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay, Johnny Bucyk)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1957 (Moscow)
2.USSR (Nikolai Puchkov, Vsevolod Bobrov, Alexei Guryshev, Veniamin Alexandrov)
(1.Sweden, 3.Czechoslovakia)
STANLEY CUP 1957
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Maurice Richard, Claude Provost)
October 19, 1957. Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 3:1
(Maurice Richard (Montreal Canadiens) scores his 500th goal)
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Henri Richard, Jean Beliveau, Claude Provost, Maurice Richard) (won the Stanley Cup)
2.New York Rangers (Gump Worsley, Harry Howell)
3.Detroit Red Wings (Terry Sawchuk, Red Kelly, Gordie Howe)
5.Chicago Black Hawks (Glenn Hall)
6.Toronto Maple Leafs (Frank Mahovlich)
STANLEY CUP 1958
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-2
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Maurice Richard, Claude Provost)
2.Boston Bruins (Allan Stanley, Johnny Bucyk)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1959 (Czechoslovakia)
2.USSR (Nikolai Puchkov, Veniamin Alexandrov, Alexei Guryshev)
(1.Canada, 3.Czechoslovakia)
STANLEY CUP 1959
Montreal Canadiens - Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Maurice Richard, Claude Provost)
2.Toronto Maple Leafs (Johnny Bower, Tim Horton, Allan Stanley, Frank Mahovlich)
FRIENDLY INTERNATIONAL GAME 1959 (Moscow)
CSK MO Moscow (USSR) - Brockton (USA) 12:3
(Harold Songin (Brockton))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the left only. The player on the right is added by the stamp designer)
CSK MO (Nikolai Puchkov, Veniamin Alexandrov)
Brockton (Harold Songin)
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1960 (Squaw Valley)
2.Canada (represented by Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen)
3.USSR (Nikolai Puchkov, Veniamin Alexandrov)
4.Czechoslovakia
(1.USA)
STANLEY CUP 1960
Montreal Canadiens - Toronto Maple Leafs 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Maurice Richard, Claude Provost)
2.Toronto Maple Leafs (Johnny Bower, Red Kelly, Allan Stanley, Tim Horton, Frank Mahovlich)
WINTER FRIENDLY ARMIES’ SPARTAKIAD 1961 (Bydgoszcz - Torun, Poland)
1.USSR (Nikolai Puchkov, Veniamin Alexandrov)
(2.Czechoslovakia, 3.Romania)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1961 (Geneva - Lausanne)
3.USSR (Viktor Konovalenko, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov)
(1.Canada, 2.Czechoslovakia)
WINTER SOVIET PEOPLES’ SPARTAKIAD 1962 (Sverdlovsk)
1.Moscow (Yevgeni Mishakov, Alexei Guryshev)
(2.Russian Federation, 3.Leningrad)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1963 (Stockholm)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov)
3.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla)
(2.Sweden)
FRIENDLY INTERNATIONAL GAME 1963 (Moscow)
USSR - Windsor Bulldogs (Canada) 9:0
(Veniamin Alexandrov (USSR))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the right only. The player on the left is added by the stamp designer)
USSR (Viktor Konovalenko, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov)
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1964 (Innsbruck)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov)
3.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla)
9.Poland
12.Romania
13.Austria
16.Hungary
(2.Sweden)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1965 (Tampere)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Viktor Zinger, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Vaclav Nedomansky)
(3.Sweden)
STANLEY CUP 1965
Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 4-3
1.Montreal Canadiens (Gump Worsley, Noel Picard, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer, Claude Provost)
2.Chicago Black Hawks (Glenn Hall, Pierre Pilote, Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Phil Esposito)
WINTER UNIVERSIADE 1966 (Turin)
1.USSR (Yuri Lyapkin)
3.Czechoslovakia (Josef Horesovsky)
(2.Romania)
WINTER SOVIET PEOPLES’ SPARTAKIAD 1966 (Gorky)
1.Moscow (Alexander Yakushev)
(2.Sverdlovsk Region, 3.Kemerovo Region)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1966 (Ljubljana)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Viktor Zinger, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov, Viktor Polupanov, Vladimir Vikulov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Vaclav Nedomansky)
3.Canada (Ken Broderick, Barry MacKenzie, Marshall Johnston)
STANLEY CUP 1966
Montreal Canadiens - Detroit Red Wings 4-2
1.Montreal Canadiens (Gump Worsley, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer, Claude Provost)
2.Detroit Red Wings (Roger Crozier, Gordie Howe, Paul Henderson)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1967 (Vienna)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Viktor Zinger, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov, Viktor Polupanov, Vladimir Vikulov, Alexander Yakushev)
3.Canada (Barry MacKenzie, Marshall Johnston, Gary Dineen)
(2.Sweden)
The first post-Original-Six-era expansion in the NHL.
WINTER OLYMPICS / WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1968 (Grenoble)
Final Round
Czechoslovakia - USSR 5:4
(Vladimir Dzurilla, Oldrich Machac, Vaclav Nedomansky - Yevgeni Mishakov)
(Josef Horesovsky - Yuri Moiseev)
USSR - Canada 5:0
(Anatoli Firsov, Viktor Polupanov, Vladimir Vikulov - Ken Broderick, Barry MacKenzie, Gary Dineen)
(Yevgeni Mishakov - Marshall Johnston)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Viktor Zinger, Alexander Ragulin, Veniamin Alexandrov, Anatoli Firsov, Viktor Polupanov, Vladimir Vikulov, Yevgeni Mishakov, Yuri Moiseev)
Anatoli Firsov (USSR)
2.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Josef Horesovsky, Frantisek Pospisil, Oldrich Machac, Jan Hrbaty, Vaclav Nedomansky)
3.Canada (Ken Broderick, Marshall Johnston, Barry MacKenzie, Gary Dineen)
8.East Germany
9.Yugoslavia
12.Romania
14.France
STANLEY CUP 1968
Montreal Canadiens - St Louis Blues 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Gump Worsley, Serge Savard, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer, Claude Provost)
2.St Louis Blues (Glenn Hall, Doug Harvey, Noel Picard)
EUROPEAN JUNIOR (U-19) CHAMPIONSHIP 1968/69 (Garmisch-Partenkirchen)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Maltsev)
2.Sweden (Borje Salming)
3.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Novak)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1969 (Stockholm)
1.USSR
(Viktor Zinger, Alexander Ragulin, Vladimir Vikulov, Alexander Maltsev, Anatoli Firsov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Alexander Yakushev, Yevgeni Mishakov)
Viktor Zinger (USSR)
3.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Josef Horesovsky, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Jan Hrbaty, Vaclav Nedomansky)
(2.Sweden)
STANLEY CUP 1969
Montreal Canadiens - St Louis Blues 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Gump Worsley, Serge Savard, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer, Claude Provost)
2.St Louis Blues (Jacques Plante, Glenn Hall, Noel Picard)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL B) 1970 (Bucharest)
(1.USA (promoted to Pool A), 2.West Germany, 3.Norway)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1970 (Stockholm)
USSR - Czechoslovakia 3:1
(Valeri Kharlamov - Vladimir Dzurilla, Jan Hrbaty)
1.USSR
(Viktor Konovalenko, Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Ragulin, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Vikulov, Viktor Polupanov, Anatoli Firsov, Alexander Maltsev, Yevgeni Mishakov, Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Shadrin)
3.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Josef Horesovsky, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Jan Hrbaty, Vaclav Nedomansky)
(2.Sweden)
STANLEY CUP 1970
Game 4
Boston Bruins - St Louis Blues 4:3 (OT)
(Bobby Orr - Glenn Hall, Noel Picard)
Overall: Boston Bruins - St Louis Blues 4-0
1.Boston Bruins (Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito, Johnny Bucyk, Wayne Cashman)
2.St Louis Blues (Glenn Hall, Jacques Plante, Noel Picard)
February 11, 1971. Montreal Canadiens - Minnesota North Stars 6:2
(Jean Beliveau (Montreal Canadiens) scores his 500th goal)
1.Boston Bruins (Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito, Johnny Bucyk, Wayne Cashman) (1st in East)
2.New York Rangers (Brad Park, Tim Horton) (2nd in East)
3.Chicago Black Hawks (Tony Esposito, Pat Stapleton, Bill White, Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita) (1st in West, lost in the Stanley Cup Final)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1971 (Bern - Geneva)
Czechoslovakia - USSR 5:2
(Vladimir Shadrin (USSR))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the left only. The skier on the right is added by the stamp designer)
1.USSR (Viktor Konovalenko, Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Ragulin, Yuri Lyapkin, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Vikulov, Alexander Maltsev, Anatoli Firsov, Yevgeni Mishakov, Vladimir Shadrin)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Frantisek Pospisil, Oldrich Machac, Josef Horesovsky, Vaclav Nedomansky, Ivan Hlinka)
(3.Sweden)
STANLEY CUP 1971
Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 4-3
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Guy Lapointe, Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer, Frank Mahovlich, Pete Mahovlich)
2.Chicago Black Hawks (Tony Esposito, Pat Stapleton, Bill White, Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita)
WINTER OLYMPICS 1972 (Sapporo)
Final Round
USSR - Czechoslovakia 5:2
(Alexander Yakushev - Jiri Holecek)
(Alexander Maltsev (USSR))
1.USSR (9 points in 5 games)
1.USSR
(Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Ragulin, Yevgeni Mishakov, Alexander Maltsev, Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Vikulov, Anatoli Firsov, Valeri Kharlamov, Boris Mikhailov, Vladimir Shadrin)
Vladislav Tretiak (USSR)
3.Czechoslovakia (Vladimir Dzurilla, Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Josef Horesovsky, Vaclav Nedomansky, Ivan Hlinka)
7.West Germany
9.Japan
(2.USA)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1972 (Prague)
1.Czechoslovakia
(Jiri Holecek, Vladimir Dzurilla, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Josef Horesovsky, Vaclav Nedomansky, Ivan Hlinka)
2.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Ragulin, Vladimir Vikulov, Alexander Maltsev, Valeri Kharlamov, Boris Mikhailov, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Yevgeni Mishakov, Vsevolod Bobrov (head coach))
3.Sweden (Borje Salming)
SUMMIT SERIES (CANADA (NHL) - USSR) 1972
A “GO CANADA!” card sent from Canada to Moscow for moral support.
Game 2
Canada - USSR 4:1
(Tony Esposito, Frank Mahovlich, Guy Lapointe, Serge Savard, J.P. Parise, Stan Mikita, Pete Mahovlich, Paul Henderson, Bill White, Wayne Cashman, Yvan Cournoyer, Bill Goldsworthy, Phil Esposito, Ron Ellis, Brad Park, Pat Stapleton (Canada))
Game 7
USSR - Canada 3:4
(Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Shadrin - Tony Esposito, Brad Park, Phil Esposito, Bill Goldsworthy)
Game 8
USSR - Canada 5:6
(Paul Henderson, Yvan Cournoyer - Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Vladimir Shadrin)
(Paul Henderson, Yvan Cournoyer (Canada))
(Ron Ellis (Canada))
Overall
Canada - USSR 4-3 (with 1 tie)
(Phil Esposito - Valeri Kharlamov)
Canada (Tony Esposito, Ken Dryden, Brad Park, Bill White, Serge Savard, Guy Lapointe, Pat Stapleton, Phil Esposito, Paul Henderson, Yvan Cournoyer, J.P. Parise, Ron Ellis, Bill Goldsworthy, Frank Mahovlich, Pete Mahovlich, Wayne Cashman, Stan Mikita)
USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Alexander Ragulin, Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Shadrin, Valeri Kharlamov, Boris Mikhailov, Alexander Maltsev, Vladimir Vikulov, Yevgeni Mishakov, Vsevolod Bobrov (head coach))
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1973 (Moscow)
1.USSR
(Vladislav Tretiak, Alexander Ragulin, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Alexander Maltsev, Vsevolod Bobrov (head coach))
2.Sweden (Borje Salming, Mats Ahlberg)
3.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Josef Horesovsky, Vaclav Nedomansky, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
STANLEY CUP 1973
Montreal Canadiens - Chicago Black Hawks 4-2
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Guy Lapointe, Henri Richard, Guy Lafleur, Yvan Cournoyer, Frank Mahovlich, Pete Mahovlich)
2.Chicago Black Hawks (Tony Esposito, Pat Stapleton, Bill White, Stan Mikita)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1974 (Helsinki)
USSR - Czechoslovakia 3:1
(Alexander Maltsev (USSR))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the left only. The player on the right is added by the stamp designer)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Alexander Maltsev, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Vsevolod Bobrov (head coach))
2.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Vaclav Nedomansky, Ivan Hlinka)
3.Sweden (Mats Ahlberg)
SUMMIT SERIES (CANADA (WHA) - USSR) 1974
A “GO CANADA!” card sent from Canada to Moscow for moral support (addressed to Andre Lacroix (Canada))
Another “GO CANADA!” card sent from Canada to Moscow for moral support.
USSR - Canada 4-1 (with 3 ties)
USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Valeri Kharlamov, Alexander Maltsev, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Boris Mikhailov, Vladimir Vikulov)
Canada (Pat Stapleton, Bobby Hull, Andre Lacroix, Gordie Howe, Paul Henderson, Frank Mahovlich)
WINTER FRIENDLY ARMIES’ SPARTAKIAD 1975 (Leningrad)
1.USSR (Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Viktor Zhluktov, Nikolai Puchkov (head coach))
(2.Czechoslovakia, 3.Poland)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1975 (Munich - Dusseldorf)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Alexander Maltsev, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Vladimir Vikulov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
3.Sweden (Mats Ahlberg)
WINTER OLYMPICS 1976 (Innsbruck)
First Round
West Germany - Switzerland 5:1
(Alois Schloder (West Germany))
Final Round
USSR - USA 6:2
(Boris Mikhailov - Jim Warden, John Taft)
Finland - West Germany 5:3
(Matti Rautiainen - Alois Schloder)
USSR - Czechoslovakia 4:3
(Vladimir Shadrin - Jiri Novak)
1.USSR (10 points in 5 games)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Sergei Babinov, Yuri Lyapkin, Alexander Maltsev, Boris Mikhailov, Alexander Yakushev, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Shadrin, Viktor Zhluktov)
Alexander Maltsev (USSR)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
3.West Germany (Udo Kiessling, Alois Schloder)
4.Finland (Matti Rautiainen)
5.USA (Jim Warden, John Taft)
6.Poland
7.Romania
8.Austria
11.Switzerland
12.Bulgaria
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1976 (Katowice)
1.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Vladimir Dzurilla, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
2.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Lyapkin, Sergei Babinov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Viktor Zhluktov, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Alexander Maltsev, Helmuts Balderis)
3.Sweden (Mats Ahlberg)
STANLEY CUP 1976
Montreal Canadiens - Philadelphia Flyers 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Guy Lapointe, Guy Lafleur, Yvan Cournoyer, Pete Mahovlich)
2.Philadelphia Flyers (Bernie Parent)
WINTER FRIENDLY ARMIES’ SPARTAKIAD 1977
1.Czechoslovakia (Milan Chalupa)
2.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Vikulov, Viktor Zhluktov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Yuri Moiseev (assistant coach))
(3.Romania)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1977 (Vienna)
Helmuts Balderis (USSR), Best Forward
1.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Vladimir Dzurilla, Oldrich Machac, Frantisek Pospisil, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Vincent Lukac, Ivan Hlinka)
2.Sweden (Mats Ahlberg)
3.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Sergei Babinov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Shadrin, Alexander Yakushev, Helmuts Balderis, Viktor Zhluktov, Alexander Maltsev)
STANLEY CUP 1977
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-0
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Guy Lapointe, Guy Lafleur, Pete Mahovlich)
2.Boston Bruins (Brad Park, Johnny Bucyk, Wayne Cashman)
1.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
2.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Sergei Babinov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Helmuts Balderis, Alexander Maltsev, Vladimir Kovin, Vladimir Vikulov)
3.Sweden (Goran Lindblom)
THE COLDEN PUCK TROPHY 1978 (Izhevsk)
An annual Soviet children’s tournament.
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1978 (Prague)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Helmuts Balderis, Viktor Zhluktov, Alexander Maltsev, Sergei Makarov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jiri Holecek, Oldrich Machac, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
3.Canada (Marcel Dionne, Marshall Johnston (assistant coach))
STANLEY CUP 1978
Montreal Canadiens - Boston Bruins 4-2
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Guy Lapointe, Guy Lafleur, Yvan Cournoyer)
2.Boston Bruins (Brad Park, Wayne Cashman)
Conn Smythe Trophy: Larry Robinson (Montreal Canadiens)
EUROPEAN JUNIOR (U-18) CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL B) 1979 (Miercurea Ciuc, Romania)
(1.Norway (promoted to Pool A), 2.Romania, 3.Yugoslavia)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL B) 1979 (Galati, Romania)
(1.Netherlands (promoted to Pool A), 2.East Germany, 3.Romania)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1979 (Moscow)
First Round
Group 1
Sweden - West Germany 7:3
USSR - Sweden 9:3
1.USSR (qualified for Final Round)
2.Sweden (qualified for Final Round)
3.West Germany
Group 2
Canada - USA 6:3
Czechoslovakia - Finland 5:0
1.Czechoslovakia (qualified for Final Round)
2.Canada (qualified for Final Round)
3.USA
4.Finland
1.USSR
(Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Babinov, Sergei Starikov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Viktor Zhluktov, Helmuts Balderis, Sergei Makarov, Alexander Yakushev, Alexander Skvortsov)
Helmuts Balderis (USSR)
2.Czechoslovakia (Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Ivan Hlinka)
3.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Mats Naslund)
4.Canada
5.Finland
6.West Germany
7.USA
STANLEY CUP 1979
Montreal Canadiens - New York Rangers 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Ken Dryden, Serge Savard, Larry Robinson, Guy Lapointe, Guy Lafleur)
2.New York Rangers (Phil Esposito)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Babinov, Sergei Starikov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Viktor Zhluktov, Helmuts Balderis, Sergei Makarov, Alexander Maltsev)
Valeri Kharlamov (USSR)
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the left only. The player on the right is added by the stamp designer)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Sindel, Milan Chalupa, Jiri Novak, Vincent Lukac)
(3.Finland)
WINTER OLYMPICS 1980 (Lake Placid)
Final Round
USA - USSR 4:3
(Mark Johnson - Vladislav Tretiak)
(Jim Craig, Bill Baker - Alexander Skvortsov)
(Rob McClanahan (USA))
(Rob McClanahan - Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Starikov)
(Dave Silk (USA))
USSR - Sweden 9:2
(Vladimir Myshkin - Mats Ahlberg)
1.USA
(Jim Craig, Mike Ramsey, Bill Baker, Mark Johnson, Rob McClanahan, Dave Silk, Mark Wells)
Jim Craig (USA)
Mike Ramsey, Mark Wells (USA)
2.USSR
(Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Starikov, Boris Mikhailov, Valeri Kharlamov, Vladimir Krutov, Sergei Makarov, Alexander Maltsev, Viktor Zhluktov, Helmuts Balderis, Alexander Skvortsov)
Vladislav Tretiak (USSR)
3.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Mats Naslund, Mats Ahlberg)
7-8.Romania
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1981 (Gothenburg - Stockholm)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Babinov, Vladimir Krutov, Alexander Maltsev, Viktor Zhluktov, Sergei Makarov, Alexander Skvortsov)
2.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Anders Eldebrink, Goran Lindblom, Mats Naslund)
3.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Milan Chalupa, Ivan Hlinka)
WINTER SOVIET PEOPLES’ SPARTAKIAD 1982
(Under-18 (Norilsk): 1.Moscow, 2.Sverdlovsk Region, 3.Moscow Region)
(Under-16 (Krasnoyarsk): 1.Belarus, 2.Bashkortostan, 3.Moscow)
USSR - Czechoslovakia 9:4
(Vladislav Tretiak, Yuri Vozhakov, Sergei Babinov, Viktor Zhluktov - Ladislav Kolda, Vincent Lukac)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Babinov, Yuri Vozhakov, Alexander Maltsev, Igor Larionov, Vladimir Krutov, Sergei Svetlov, Viktor Zhluktov, Alexander Skvortsov)
3.Czechoslovakia (Milan Chalupa, Miloslav Horava, Ladislav Kolda, Vincent Lukac)
(2.Finland)
WORLD JUNIOR (U-20) CHAMPIONSHIP 1982/83 (Leningrad)
2.Czechoslovakia (Dominik Hasek, Antonin Stavjana, Frantisek Pospisil (head coach))
3.Canada (Mario Lemieux, Steve Yzerman)
(1.USSR)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL C) 1983 (Budapest)
(1.Netherlands, 2.Hungary (both promoted to Pool B), 3.China)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1983 (West Germany)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Babinov, Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Alexander Maltsev, Igor Larionov, Helmuts Balderis, Viktor Zhluktov, Sergei Makarov, Alexander Skvortsov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Dominik Hasek, Milan Chalupa, Vincent Lukac)
3.Canada (Marcel Dionne, Darryl Sittler)
STANLEY CUP 1983
New York Islanders - Edmonton Oilers 4-0
(Billy Smith, Butch Goring (New York Islanders))
1.New York Islanders (Billy Smith, Tomas Jonsson, Denis Potvin, Bryan Trottier, Butch Goring, Mike Bossy)
2.Edmonton Oilers (Andy Moog, Grant Fuhr, Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Jari Kurri)
1.USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Starikov, Sergei Makarov, Igor Larionov, Vladimir Krutov, Viktor Zhluktov, Alexander Skvortsov, Viktor Tyumenev)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Sindel, Dominik Hasek, Miloslav Horava, Milan Chalupa, Vincent Lukac)
3.Sweden (Goran Lindblom, Thomas Rundqvist)
NHL 1983/84
December 20, 1983. New Jersey Devils - Montreal Canadiens 0:6
(Guy Lafleur (Montreal) scores his 500th goal)
1.Edmonton Oilers (Andy Moog, Grant Fuhr, Wayne Gretzky, Jari Kurri, Mark Messier)) (1st in Smythe, won the Stanley Cup)
2.New York Islanders (Billy Smith, Denis Potvin, Tomas Jonsson, Butch Goring, Mike Bossy, Bryan Trottier) (1st in Patrick, lost in the Stanley Cup Final)
3.Boston Bruins (Ray Bourque, Jim Schoenfeld, Dave Silk) (1st in Adams)
WINTER OLYMPICS 1984 (Sarajevo)
First Round
Group A
USSR - Sweden 10:1
(Vladislav Tretiak, Sergei Starikov, Sergei Makarov - Goran Lindblom)
1.USSR (advanced to Final Round)
2.Sweden (advanced to Final Round)
Group B
Canada - USA 4:2
(Kirk Muller, Dave Tippett - Mark Fusco, Scott Fusco, Paul Guay)
2.Canada (advanced to Final Round)
4.USA
Final Round
USSR - Canada 4:0
(Alexander Skvortsov, Vladimir Kovin - Mario Gosselin, Kevin Dineen)
(Kevin Dineen (Canada))
USSR - Czechoslovakia 2:0
(Sergei Makarov - Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Vladimir Kyhos)
(Viktor Tyumenev - Milan Chalupa)
(Igor Larionov - Milan Chalupa)
1.USSR
(Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Viktor Tyumenev, Vladimir Kovin, Alexander Skvortsov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Milan Chalupa, Vincent Lukac, Vladimir Kyhos)
3.Sweden (Goran Lindblom, Thomas Rundqvist, Tomas Sandstrom)
4.Canada (Mario Gosselin, Kevin Dineen, Kirk Muller, Dave Tippett)
7.USA (Mark Fusco, Scott Fusco, Paul Guay)
11-12.Yugoslavia
1.USSR (Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Mylnikov, Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Sergei Makarov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Svetlov, Viktor Zhluktov, Anatoli Semenov, Alexander Skvortsov)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Sindel, Antonin Stavjana, Vincent Lukac)
3.Finland (Raimo Helminen)
INTERNATIONAL FRIENDLY 1984 (Moscow)
(played right after IZVESTIA TROPHY)
The Farewell Game for Vladislav Tretiak, Valeri Vasiliev and Alexander Maltsev (all - USSR):
USSR - Team Europe 7:3
USSR (Vladislav Tretiak, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Mylnikov, Sergei Starikov, Valeri Vasiliev, Vladimir Krutov, Sergei Makarov, Igor Larionov, Alexander Maltsev, Anatoli Semenov, Sergei Svetlov, Viktor Zhluktov, Alexander Skvortsov)
Team Europe (Anders Eldebrink (Sweden), Vincent Lukac (Czechoslovakia))
WINTER FRIENDLY ARMIES’ SPARTAKIAD 1985 (Minsk)
(1.USSR, 2.Czechoslovakia, 3.Romania)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1985 (Prague)
1.Czechoslovakia
(Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Antonin Stavjana, Vincent Lukac)
2.Canada (Mario Lemieux, Kevin Dineen, Steve Yzerman, Kirk Muller)
3.USSR (Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Mylnikov, Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Viktor Tyumenev, Sergei Svetlov, Vladimir Kovin, Alexander Skvortsov)
Czechoslovakia - USSR 3:1
(Antonin Stavjana - Anatoli Semenov)
1.Czechoslovakia (Dominik Hasek, Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Antonin Stavjana, Frantisek Pospisil (assistant coach))
2.USSR (Sergei Mylnikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Anatoli Semenov, Sergei Svetlov, Viktor Tyumenev)
3.Sweden (Anders Eldebrink, Jonas Bergqvist)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1986 (Moscow)
1.USSR (Sergei Mylnikov, Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Sergei Svetlov, Viktor Tyumenev)
2.Sweden (Anders Eldebrink, Tomas Jonsson, Thomas Rundqvist, Jonas Bergqvist)
3.Canada (Denis Potvin, Marcel Dionne, Kirk Muller)
STANLEY CUP 1986
Montreal Canadiens - Calgary Flames 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Patrick Roy, Larry Robinson, Chris Chelios, Mats Naslund)
2.Calgary Flames (Hakan Loob)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1987 (Vienna)
1.Sweden (Anders Eldebrink, Magnus Svensson, Jonas Bergqvist, Thomas Rundqvist, Hakan Loob, Tomas Sandstrom)
2.USSR (Sergei Mylnikov, Vitalijs Samoilovs (reserve), Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Sergei Svetlov, Anatoli Semenov)
3.Czechoslovakia (Dominik Hasek, Jaromir Sindel, Miloslav Horava, Antonin Stavjana, Dragomir Kadlec, David Volek, Frantisek Pospisil (assistant coach))
WINTER OLYMPICS 1988 (Calgary)
First Round
Group B
West Germany - Czechoslovakia 2:1
(Karl Friesen - David Volek)
USSR - USA 7:5
(Sergei Svetlov - Greg Brown, Brian Leetch)
(Sergei Mylnikov - Allen Bourbeau)
(Todd Okerlund (USA))
1.USSR (advanced to Final Round)
2.West Germany (advanced to Final Round)
3.Czechoslovakia (advanced to Final Round)
4.USA
Final Round
Canada - West Germany 8:1
(Andy Moog - Udo Kiessling)
USSR - Sweden 7:1
(Igor Larionov - Anders Eldebrink)
1.USSR (Sergei Mylnikov, Vitalijs Samoilovs (reserve), Sergei Starikov, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, Sergei Makarov, Anatoli Semenov, Sergei Svetlov)
Vitalijs Samoilovs (USSR) (reserve)
2.Finland
3.Sweden
(Anders Eldebrink, Jonas Bergqvist, Thomas Rundqvist)
4.Canada (Andy Moog)
5.West Germany (Karl Friesen, Udo Kiessling)
6.Czechoslovakia (David Volek)
7.USA (Brian Leetch, Greg Brown, Allen Bourbeau, Todd Okerlund)
11.France (Patrick Foliot)
WINTER UNIVERSIADE 1989 (Sofia)
(1.USSR, 2.Czechoslovakia, 3.Finland)
EUROPEAN JUNIOR (U-18) CHAMPIONSHIP 1989 (Kyiv)
1.USSR (Pavel Bure)
2.Czechoslovakia (Jaromir Jagr)
(3.Finland)
ASIAN WINTER GAMES 1990 (Sapporo)
(1.China, 2.Japan, 3.South Korea)
WINTER SOVIET PEOPLES’ SPARTAKIAD 1990 (Kyiv)
(1.Moscow, 2.Ukraine, 3.Belarus)
SOVIET CHAMPIONSHIP 1989/90
1.Dynamo Moscow (Vladimir Myshkin, Yuri Vozhakov, Anatoli Semenov, Sergei Svetlov, Alexei Kovalev)
2.CSKA Moscow (Sergei Fedorov, Pavel Bure)
11.Torpedo Ust Kamenogorsk (Alexander Shimin, Andrei Sokolov, Igor Zemlyanoi, Mikhail Borodulin, Igor Dorokhin, Alexander Koreshkov, Yerlan Sagymbayev, Konstantin Shafranov)
(3.Khimik Voskresensk)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1990 (Bern - Fribourg)
1.USSR (Sergei Mylnikov, Arturs Irbe, Vladimir Myshkin, Sergei Fedorov, Pavel Bure, Viktor Tyumenev, Sergei Makarov)
2.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Magnus Svensson, Anders Eldebrink, Thomas Rundqvist, Hakan Loob, Patrik Erickson, Mats Sundin)
3.Czechoslovakia (Dominik Hasek, Dragomir Kadlec, Antonin Stavjana, Jaromir Jagr)
Best Goaltender: Arturs Irbe (USSR)
1.USSR (Arturs Irbe, Pavel Bure)
2.USA (Ray LeBlanc, Tim Sweeney)
3.Sweden (Fredrik Stillman, Mats Sundin, Charles Berglund, Patrik Erickson)
LENINGRADSKAYA PRAVDA TROPHY 1991 (Leningrad)
1.USSR (Sandis Ozolins, Mikhail Borodulin, Sergejs Zoltoks)
2.Sweden (Daniel Rydmark, Stefan Ornskrog)
(3.Finland)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1991 (Finland)
1.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Nicklas Lidstrom, Fredrik Stillman, Thomas Rundqvist, Hakan Loob, Jonas Bergqvist, Patrik Erickson, Charles Berglund, Mats Sundin, Mats Naslund)
2.Canada (Joe Sakic)
3.USSR (Vladimir Myshkin, Dmitri Mironov, Pavel Bure, Sergei Makarov)
NHL ALL-STAR GAME 1992 (Philadelphia)
Campbell - Wales 10:6
Campbell (Chris Chelios (Chicago Blackhawks), Larry Robinson (Los Angeles Kings), Brett Hull (St Louis Blues), Wayne Gretzky (Los Angeles Kings), Steve Yzerman (Detroit Red Wings), Jeremy Roenick (Chicago Blackhawks), Sergei Fedorov (Detroit Red Wings))
Wales (Patrick Roy (Montreal Canadiens), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Brian Leetch (New York Rangers), Mario Lemieux (Pittsburgh Penguins), Jaromir Jagr (Pittsburgh Penguins), Bryan Trottier (Pittsburgh Penguins), Mark Messier (New York Rangers), Joe Sakic (Quebec Nordiques))
WINTER OLYMPICS 1992 (Albertville)
Quarterfinal
Czechoslovakia - Sweden 3:1
(Dragomir Kadlec - Patrik Erickson)
Semifinal
CIS - USA 5:2
(Dmitri Mironov - Keith Tkachuk)
1.CIS (Alexei Zhitnik, Dmitri Mironov, Nikolai Borschevsky, Alexei Kovalev)
Nikolai Borschevsky (CIS)
Alexei Zhitnik (CIS)
2.Canada (Eric Lindros, Dave Tippett)
3.Czechoslovakia (Dragomir Kadlec, Robert Svehla, Miloslav Horava, Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
4.USA (Ray LeBlanc, Tim Sweeney, Keith Tkachuk)
Ray LeBlanc, Tim Sweeney (USA)
5.Sweden (Thomas Rundqvist, Patrik Erickson)
Thomas Rundqvist (Sweden)
8.France
11.Poland
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1992 (Prague - Bratislava)
1.Sweden (Fredrik Stillman, Peter Forsberg, Patric Kjellberg, Daniel Rydmark, Mats Sundin)
2.Finland (Janne Laukkanen)
3.Czechoslovakia (Dragomir Kadlec, Robert Svehla, Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1993 (Munich - Dortmund)
Final
Russia - Sweden 3:1
(Igor Varitsky (Russia))
1.Russia (Igor Varitsky, Boris Mikhailov (head coach))
2.Sweden (Fredrik Stillman, Patrik Juhlin, Thomas Rundqvist, Peter Forsberg, Charles Berglund, Jonas Bergqvist)
3.Czech Republic (Roman Turek, Dragomir Kadlec, Antonin Stavjana, Miloslav Horava, Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
STANLEY CUP 1993
Montreal Canadiens - Los Angeles Kings 4-1
1.Montreal Canadiens (Patrick Roy, John LeClair, Kirk Muller)
2.Los Angeles Kings (Wayne Gretzky, Jari Kurri, Tomas Sandstrom)
NHL ALL-STAR GAME 1994 (New York)
East - West 9:8
(Sandis Ozolins, Arturs Irbe (West))
East (Patrick Roy (Montreal Canadiens), John Vanbiesbrouck (Florida Panthers), Brian Leetch (New York Rangers), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Mark Messier (New York Rangers), Eric Lindros (Philadelphia Flyers), Mark Recchi (Philadelphia Flyers), Joe Sakic (Quebec Nordiques))
West (Felix Potvin (Toronto Maple Leafs), Curtis Joseph (St Louis Blues), Arturs Irbe (San Jose Sharks), Chris Chelios (Chicago Blackhawks), Sandis Ozolins (San Jose Sharks), Pavel Bure (Vancouver Canucks), Brett Hull (St Louis Blues), Wayne Gretzky (Los Angeles Kings), Teemu Selanne (Winnipeg Jets), Brendan Shanahan (St Louis Blues), Jeremy Roenick (Chicago Blackhawks), Sergei Fedorov (Detroit Red Wings), Doug Gilmour (Toronto Maple Leafs))
WINTER OLYMPICS 1994 (Lillehammer)
Semifinal
Canada - Finland 5:3
(Brian Savage - Tero Lehtera)
Final
Sweden - Canada 2:2 (3:2 SO)
(Peter Forsberg - Corey Hirsch)
(Tommy Salo, Hakan Algotsson, Tomas Jonsson, Kenny Jonsson, Roger Johansson, Magnus Svensson, Leif Rohlin, Fredrik Stillman, Jonas Bergqvist, Peter Forsberg, Roger Hansson, Patrik Juhlin, Daniel Rydmark, Mats Naslund, Hakan Loob, Stefan Ornskrog, Patric Kjellberg, Niklas Eriksson, Jorgen Jonsson, Andreas Dackell, Christian Due-Boje (reserve), Charles Berglund (reserve) (Sweden))
1.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Hakan Algotsson, Tomas Jonsson, Kenny Jonsson, Roger Johansson, Magnus Svensson, Leif Rohlin, Fredrik Stillman, Christian Due-Boje, Jonas Bergqvist, Peter Forsberg, Roger Hansson, Patrik Juhlin, Daniel Rydmark, Mats Naslund, Hakan Loob, Stefan Ornskrog, Patric Kjellberg, Niklas Eriksson, Jorgen Jonsson, Andreas Dackell, Charles Berglund)
2.Canada (Corey Hirsch, Paul Kariya, Brian Savage)
3.Finland (Janne Laukkanen, Saku Koivu, Raimo Helminen, Tero Lehtera)
8.USA
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1994 (Italy)
1.Canada (Paul Kariya, Brendan Shanahan, Joe Sakic)
2.Finland (Janne Laukkanen, Saku Koivu, Jari Kurri, Raimo Helminen)
3.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Magnus Svensson, Roger Johansson, Fredrik Stillman, Nicklas Lidstrom, Kenny Jonsson, Mats Sundin, Jonas Bergqvist, Roger Hansson, Jorgen Jonsson, Charles Berglund, Andreas Dackell, Stefan Ornskrog, Patrik Juhlin)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL B) 1995 (Bratislava)
1.Slovakia (promoted to Pool A)
(Robert Svehla, Miroslav Satan)
2.Latvia (Karlis Skrastins, Oleg Znarok)
(3.Poland)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1995 (Stockholm - Gavle)
1.Finland (Raimo Helminen, Saku Koivu, Tero Lehtera)
2.Sweden (Tomas Jonsson, Leif Rohlin, Fredrik Stillman, Daniel Alfredsson, Jonas Bergqvist, Charles Berglund, Andreas Dackell, Roger Hansson, Stefan Ornskrog)
3.Canada (Corey Hirsch)
ASIAN WINTER GAMES 1996 (Harbin)
Men
1.Kazakhstan (Yerlan Sagymbayev)
(2.Japan, 3.China)
(Women: 1.China, 2.Japan, 3.Kazakhstan)
STANLEY CUP 1996
Colorado Avalanche - Florida Panthers 4-0
(Sandis Ozolins (Colorado Avalanche))
1.Colorado Avalanche (Patrick Roy, Sandis Ozolins, Joe Sakic, Peter Forsberg)
2.Florida Panthers (John Vanbiesbrouck, Robert Svehla)
East - West 11:7
(Sandis Ozolins (West))
East (John Vanbiesbrouck (Florida Panthers), Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils), Dominik Hasek (Buffalo Sabres), Brian Leetch (New York Rangers), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Robert Svehla (Florida Panthers), John LeClair (Philadelphia Flyers), Wayne Gretzky (New York Rangers), Mark Recchi (Montreal Canadiens), Daniel Alfredsson (Ottawa Senators), Mark Messier (New York Rangers), Peter Bondra (Washington Capitals), Mario Lemieux (Pittsburgh Penguins), Eric Lindros (Philadelphia Flyers))
West (Patrick Roy (Colorado Avalanche), Andy Moog (Dallas Stars), Chris Chelios (Chicago Blackhawks), Sandis Ozolins (Colorado Avalanche), Paul Kariya (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Brett Hull (St Louis Blues), Mats Sundin (Toronto Maple Leafs), Teemu Selanne (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Brendan Shanahan (Detroit Red Wings), Steve Yzerman (Detroit Red Wings), Keith Tkachuk (Phoenix Coyotes), Pavel Bure (Vancouver Canucks))
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1997 (Finland)
1.Canada (Jarome Iginla, Mark Recchi)
2.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Magnus Svensson, Roger Johansson, Jorgen Jonsson)
3.Czech Republic (Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
ALL-STAR GAME 1998 (Vancouver)
North America - World 8:7
(Sandis Ozolins (World))
North America (Patrick Roy (Colorado Avalanche), Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils), Brian Leetch (New York Rangers), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Chris Chelios (Chicago Blackhawks), John LeClair (Philadelphia Flyers), Brendan Shanahan (Detroit Red Wings), Eric Lindros (Philadelphia Flyers), Mark Messier (Vancouver Canucks), Mark Recchi (Montreal Canadiens), Mike Modano (Dallas Stars), Keith Tkachuk (Phoenix Coyotes), Joe Sakic (Colorado Avalanche), Wayne Gretzky (New York Rangers))
World (Dominik Hasek (Buffalo Sabres), Sandis Ozolins (Colorado Avalanche), Dmitri Mironov (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Teemu Selanne (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Peter Forsberg (Colorado Avalanche), Jaromir Jagr (Pittsburgh Penguins), Igor Larionov (Detroit Red Wings), Jari Kurri (Colorado Avalanche), Nicklas Lidstrom (Detroit Red Wings), Saku Koivu (Montreal Canadiens), Daniel Alfredsson (Ottawa Senators), Peter Bondra (Washington Capitals), Mats Sundin (Toronto Maple Leafs), Zigmund Palffy (New York Islanders), Pavel Bure (Vancouver Canucks))
WINTER OLYMPICS 1998 (Nagano)
Men
1.Czech Republic
(Dominik Hasek, Jaromir Jagr, Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
Dominik Hasek (Czech Republic)
2.Russia (Dmitri Mironov, Pavel Bure, Sergei Fedorov)
3.Finland (Janne Laukkanen, Saku Koivu, Teemu Selanne, Jari Kurri, Raimo Helminen)
5-8.Belarus
10.Slovakia
Women
2.Canada (Danielle Goyette, Hayley Wickenheiser)
(1.USA, 3.Finland)
WINTER PARALYMPICS 1998 (Nagano)
(1.Norway, 2.Canada, 3.Sweden)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (POOL B) 1998 (Ljubljana - Jesenice)
Norway - Poland 6:2
5.Norway (promoted to Pool A due to hosting the next championship)
7.Poland
(1.Ukraine, 2.Slovenia, 3.Estonia (all three promoted to qualifying tournament for the next year’s Pool A))
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1998 (Zurich - Basel)
Semifinals
Sweden - Switzerland 2-0
(Peter Forsberg - Martin Pluss)
Final
Sweden - Finland 1-0 (with 1 tie)
(Mats Sundin - Raimo Helminen)
1.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Mats Sundin, Jonas Bergqvist, Peter Forsberg, Patric Kjellberg, Jorgen Jonsson)
2.Finland (Janne Laukkanen, Raimo Helminen)
3.Czech Republic (Patrik Elias, Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
4.Switzerland (Martin Pluss)
North America - World 8:6
(Arturs Irbe (World))
North America (Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Paul Kariya (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Brendan Shanahan (Detroit Red Wings), Wayne Gretzky (New York Rangers), Keith Tkachuk (Phoenix Coyotes), Mark Recchi (Montreal Canadiens), John LeClair (Philadelphia Flyers), Wendel Clark (Tampa Bay Lightning), Mike Modano (Dallas Stars), Eric Lindros (Philadelphia Flyers), Jeremy Roenick (Phoenix Coyotes), Jim Schoenfeld (Phoenix Coyotes, assistant coach))
World (Dominik Hasek (Buffalo Sabres), Arturs Irbe (Carolina Hurricanes), Nicklas Lidstrom (Detroit Red Wings), Teemu Selanne (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Peter Forsberg (Colorado Avalanche), Jaromir Jagr (Pittsburgh Penguins), Peter Bondra (Washington Capitals), Mats Sundin (Toronto Maple Leafs), Pavol Demitra (St Louis Blues))
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 1999 (Norway)
1.Czech Republic (Ivan Hlinka (head coach))
2.Finland (Teemu Selanne, Saku Koivu, Raimo Helminen)
3.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Jorgen Jonsson, Daniel Alfredsson)
NHL ALL-STAR GAME 2000 (Toronto)
World - North America 9:4
World (Roman Turek (St Louis Blues), Tommy Salo (Edmonton Oilers), Nicklas Lidstrom (Detroit Red Wings), Sandis Ozolins (Colorado Avalanche), Teemu Selanne (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Mats Sundin (Toronto Maple Leafs), Jaromir Jagr (Pittsburgh Penguins), Pavel Bure (Florida Panthers), Patrik Elias (New Jersey Devils), Pavol Demitra (St Louis Blues), Miroslav Satan (Buffalo Sabres))
Sandis Ozolins (World)
North America (Curtis Joseph (Toronto Maple Leafs), Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils), Chris Chelios (Detroit Red Wings), Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins), Paul Kariya (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim), Brendan Shanahan (Detroit Red Wings), Steve Yzerman (Detroit Red Wings), Mark Messier (Vancouver Canucks), Mark Recchi (Philadelphia Flyers), John LeClair (Philadelphia Flyers), Scott Gomez (New Jersey Devils), Mike Modano (Dallas Stars), Eric Lindros (Philadelphia Flyers), Joe Sakic (Colorado Avalanche), Jeremy Roenick (Phoenix Coyotes))
Game 7
Colorado Avalanche - New Jersey Devils 3:1
(Ray Bourque (Colorado Avalanche)
Overall: Colorado Avalanche – New Jersey Devils 4-3
1.Colorado Avalanche (Patrick Roy, Greg de Vries, Ray Bourque, Joe Sakic, Peter Forsberg, Chris Drury)
2.New Jersey Devils (Martin Brodeur, Patrik Elias, Scott Gomez, Turner Stevenson)
WORLD JUNIOR (U-20) CHAMPIONSHIP (DIVISION III) 2001/02 (Belgrade)
(1.Estonia, 2.Spain, 3.Yugoslavia (due to restructuring, all pariticipating teams promoted to Division II))
WINTER OLYMPICS 2002 (Salt Lake City)
Men
Quarterfinal
Belarus - Sweden 4:3
(Andrei Mezin, Vasily Pankov - Tommy Salo, Kenny Jonsson)
1.Canada (Martin Brodeur, Curtis Joseph, Joe Sakic, Mario Lemieux, Steve Yzerman, Jarome Iginla, Paul Kariya, Eric Lindros, Brendan Shanahan, Ryan Smyth)
2.USA (Brian Leetch, Chris Chelios, Brett Hull, John LeClair, Mike Modano, Jeremy Roenick, Keith Tkachuk, Chris Drury)
3.Russia (Ilya Bryzgalov (reserve), Maxim Afinogenov, Pavel Bure, Pavel Datsyuk, Sergei Fedorov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Alexei Kovalev, Igor Larionov, Sergei Samsonov)
4.Belarus (Andrei Mezin, Vasily Pankov)
5-8.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Kenny Jonsson, Mats Sundin)
13.Slovakia
Women
1.Canada (Danielle Goyette, Hayley Wickenheiser)
Danielle Goyette (Canada)
8.Kazakhstan
(2.USA, 3.Sweden)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (DIVISION II) 2002
Group B (Novi Sad)
(1.Lithuania (promoted to Division I), 2.Yugoslavia, 3.Spain)
(In Group A (played in Cape Town): 1.Estonia (promoted to Division I), 2.Belgium, 3.Israel)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002 (Sweden)
1.Slovakia
(Jan Lasak, Rastislav Stana, Ladislav Cierny, Richard Lintner, Dusan Milo, Martin Strbak, Lubomir Visnovsky, Peter Bondra, Michal Handzus, Miroslav Hlinka, Ladislav Nagy, Vladimir Orszagh, Zigmund Palffy, Miroslav Satan, Jozef Stumpel)
2.Russia (Maxim Afinogenov, Boris Mikhailov (head coach))
3.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Jorgen Jonsson, Henrik Zetterberg)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (DIVISION I) 2003
Group A (Budapest)
1.Kazakhstan (promoted to Top Division) (Alexander Koreshkov, Andrei Sokolov)
(2.Poland, 3.Hungary)
(In Group B (played in Zagreb): 1.France (promoted to Top Division), 2.Norway, 3.Estonia)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2003 (Finland)
Third-Place Game
Slovakia - Czech Republic 4:2
(Jan Lasak, Rastislav Stana, Robert Svehla, Radoslav Suchy, Lubomir Visnovsky, Martin Strbak, Richard Lintner, Dusan Milo, Ivan Majesky, Ladislav Cierny, Miroslav Satan, Pavol Demitra, Peter Bondra, Zigmund Palffy, Jozef Stumpel, Richard Zednik, Vladimir Orszagh, Miroslav Hlinka, Ladislav Nagy, Branko Radivojevic, Richard Kapus, Peter Sejna (Slovakia))
1.Canada (Patrick Marleau, Ryan Smyth)
2.Sweden (Tommy Salo, Henrik Lundqvist, Peter Forsberg, Jorgen Jonsson, Mats Sundin, Henrik Zetterberg)
3.Slovakia (Jan Lasak, Rastislav Stana, Robert Svehla, Radoslav Suchy, Lubomir Visnovsky, Martin Strbak, Richard Lintner, Dusan Milo, Ivan Majesky, Ladislav Cierny, Miroslav Satan, Pavol Demitra, Peter Bondra, Zigmund Palffy, Jozef Stumpel, Richard Zednik, Vladimir Orszagh, Miroslav Hlinka, Ladislav Nagy, Branko Radivojevic, Richard Kapus, Peter Sejna)
4.Czech Republic
WORLD U18 CHAMPIONSHIP 2004 (Minsk)
1.Russia (Alexander Radulov)
3.Czech Republic (Jaromir Sindel (head coach))
(2.USA)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2004 (Prague - Ostrava)
1.Canada (Ryan Smyth)
2.Sweden (Henrik Lundqvist, Nicklas Lidstrom, Daniel Alfredsson, Peter Forsberg, Jorgen Jonsson)
3.USA (Chris Drury)
DEUTSCHE EISHOCKEY LIGA 2005/06
October 16, 2005. Hamburg Freezers - Iserlohn Roosters 5:1 (Paul Manning - Vitalij Aab)
6.Hamburg Freezers (Paul Manning)
11.Iserlohn Roosters (Vitalij Aab)
(1.Eisbaren Berlin (won playoffs), 2.ERC Ingolstadt, 3.DEG Metro Stars (lost in playoffs final))
WINTER OLYMPICS 2006 (Turin)
Men
1.Sweden
(Henrik Lundqvist, Kenny Jonsson, Nicklas Lidstrom, Daniel Alfredsson, Peter Forsberg, Jorgen Jonsson, Mats Sundin, Henrik Zetterberg)
Daniel Alfredsson (Sweden)
Henrik Zetterberg (Sweden)
2.Finland (Lasse Kukkonen, Mikko Koivu, Saku Koivu, Teemu Selanne)
3.Czech Republic (Dominik Hasek, Jaromir Jagr, Patrik Elias)
5-8.Switzerland
11-12.Italy
Women
Semifinal
Canada - Finland 6:0 (Danielle Goyette (Canada))
1.Canada (Danielle Goyette, Hayley Wickenheiser)
4.Finland
(2.Sweden, 3.USA)
WINTER PARALYMPICS 2006 (Turin)
(1.Canada, 2.Norway, 3.USA)
STANLEY CUP 2006
First Round
Game 3, April 26, 2006: Colorado Avalanche - Dallas Stars 4:3 (OT)
(Jose Theodore (Colorado Avalanche))
Overall: Colorado Avalanche - Dallas Stars 4-1
1.Carolina Hurricanes (Martin Gerber, Mark Recchi)
2.Edmonton Oilers (Sergei Samsonov, Ryan Smyth)
5-8.Colorado Avalanche (Jose Theodore)
9-16.Dallas Stars
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2006 (Riga)
Preliminary Round
Group A: 1.Finland, 2.Czech Republic, 3.Latvia (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Slovenia (to Relegation Round)
Group B: 1.Sweden, 2.Switzerland, 3.Ukraine (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Italy (to Relegation Round)
Group C: 1.Russia, 2.Belarus, 3.Slovakia (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Kazakhstan (to Relegation Round)
Group D: 1.Canada, 2.USA, 3.Norway (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Denmark (to Relegation Round)
1.Sweden (Kenny Jonsson, Henrik Zetterberg, Nicklas Backstrom, Jorgen Jonsson)
2.Czech Republic (Zbynek Michalek)
3.Finland (Lasse Kukkonen, Tuomo Ruutu, Mikko Koivu)
4.Canada
5-8.Belarus, Russia, USA, Slovakia
9-10.Latvia, Switzerland
11-12.Norway, Ukraine
13.Denmark
14.Italy
15.Kazakhstan (Relegated to Division I)
16.Slovenia (Relegated to Division I)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2008 (Halifax - Quebec City)
Final
Russia - Canada 5:4 (OT)
(Sergei Fedorov (Russia))
(Alexander Radulov, Maxim Afinogenov, Andrei Markov, Denis Grebeshkov (Russia))
1.Russia (Denis Grebeshkov, Andrei Markov, Maxim Afinogenov, Sergei Fedorov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Alexander Ovechkin, Alexander Radulov, Danis Zaripov, Sergei Zinovjev)
2.Canada (Jonathan Toews)
3.Finland (Petri Vehanen, Lasse Kukkonen, Mikko Koivu, Saku Koivu, Antti Pihlstrom, Tuomo Ruutu, Teemu Selanne)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2009 (Bern - Kloten)
1.Russia (Ilya Bryzgalov, Denis Grebeshkov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Alexander Radulov, Danis Zaripov, Sergei Zinovjev)
2.Canada (Drew Doughty)
3.Sweden (Kenny Jonsson, Niklas Persson)
WINTER OLYMPICS 2010 (Vancouver)
Men
Preliminary Round
Group A
Switzerland - Norway 5:4 (OT)
(Hnat Domenichelli (Switzerland))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the left only. The player on the right is added by the stamp designer)
3.Switzerland (advanced to Qualification Playoffs)
4.Norway (advanced to Qualification Playoffs)
(1.USA (advanced to Quarterfinals), 2.Canada (advanced to Qualification Playoffs))
Group B
Slovakia - Russia 2:1 (SO)
(Pavol Demitra - Ilya Bryzgalov)
1.Russia (advanced to Quarterfinals)
3.Slovakia (advanced to Qualification Playoffs)
(2.Czech Republic (advanced to Qualification Playoffs))
Final
Canada - USA 3:2 (OT)
1.Canada (Martin Brodeur, Drew Doughty, Sidney Crosby, Jarome Iginla, Patrick Marleau, Corey Perry, Joe Thornton, Jonathan Toews)
Jonathan Toews (Canada)
2.USA (Jonathan Quick (reserve), Ryan Suter, Chris Drury, Zach Parise, David Backes, Ryan Callahan)
3.Finland (Lasse Kukkonen, Jarkko Immonen, Mikko Koivu, Saku Koivu, Tuomo Ruutu, Teemu Selanne, Jukka Jalonen (head coach))
4.Slovakia (Pavol Demitra)
5-8.Russia (Ilya Bryzgalov), Switzerland (Hnat Domenichelli)
9-12.Belarus
9-12.Latvia
9-12.Norway
Women
1.Canada (Tessa Bonhomme, Marie-Philip Poulin, Hayley Wickenheiser)
2.USA (Mark Johnson (head coach))
WINTER PARALYMPICS 2010 (Vancouver)
(1.USA, 2.Japan, 3.Norway)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2010 (Germany)
Final
Czech Republic - Russia 2:1
(Jaromir Jagr (Czech Republic))
1.Czech Republic (Jaromir Jagr)
2.Russia (Denis Grebeshkov, Alexei Emelin, Maxim Afinogenov, Pavel Datsyuk, Sergei Fedorov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Alexander Ovechkin, Artem Anisimov)
3.Sweden (Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Magnus Paajarvi-Svensson, Niklas Persson)
STANLEY CUP 2010
Game 6
Philadelphia Flyers - Chicago Blackhawks 3:4 (OT)
(Patrick Kane (Chicago Blackhawks))
Overall: Chicago Blackhawks - Philadelphia Flyers 4-2
1.Chicago Blackhawks (Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane)
WINTER UNIVERSIADE 2011 (Erzurum)
Men
(1.Russia, 2.Belarus, 3.Canada)
(Women: 1.Canada, 2.Finland, 3.Slovakia)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2011 (Bratislava - Kosice)
Preliminary Round
Group C
Norway - Sweden 5:4 (SO)
(Eerikki Koivu - Magnus Paajarvi)
Group A: 1.Germany, 2.Russia, 3.Slovakia (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Slovenia (to Relegation Round)
Group B: 1.Canada, 2.Switzerland, 3.France (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Belarus (to Relegation Round)
Group C: 1.Sweden, 2.USA, 3.Norway (all advanced to Qualifying Round) 4.Austria (to Relegation Round)
Group D: 1.Czech Republic, 2.Finland, 3.Denmark (all advanced to Qualifying Round), 4.Latvia (to Relegation Round)
Semifinal
Finland - Russia 3:0
(Mikael Granlund - Konstantin Barulin)
(Jarkko Immonen, Antti Pihlstrom - Danis Zaripov)
(Lasse Kukkonen - Alexander Ovechkin)
Third-Place Game
Czech Republic - Russia 7:4
(Zbynek Michalek - Ilya Kovalchuk, Sergei Zinovjev)
Final
Finland - Sweden 6:1
(Mikko Koivu, Jarkko Immonen, Janne Pesonen, Petri Vehanen - Niklas Persson, Jakob Silfverberg)
(Tuomo Ruutu, Jukka Jalonen (head coach) - David Rundblad)
1.Finland (Petri Vehanen, Lasse Kukkonen, Mikael Granlund, Jarkko Immonen, Mikko Koivu, Janne Pesonen, Antti Pihlstrom, Tuomo Ruutu, Jukka Jalonen (head coach))
2.Sweden (Oliver Ekman-Larsson, David Rundblad, Magnus Paajarvi, Niklas Persson, Jakob Silfverberg)
3.Czech Republic (Zbynek Michalek, Patrik Elias, Jaromir Jagr)
4.Russia (Konstantin Barulin, Ilya Kovalchuk, Alexander Ovechkin, Danis Zaripov, Sergei Zinovjev)
5-8.USA, Germany, Canada, Norway (Eerikki Koivu)
9-10.Slovakia, Switzerland
11-12.Denmark, France
13.Latvia
14.Belarus
15.Austria (relegated to Division I)
16.Slovenia (relegated to Division I)
CANADIAN INTERUNIVERSITY SPORT WOMEN’S ICE HOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIP 2012 (Edmonton)
1.Calgary Dinos (Hayley Wickenheiser, Danielle Goyette (head coach))
(2.Montreal Carabins, 3.McGill Martlets)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2012 (Helsinki - Stockholm)
Preliminary Round
Group H: 1.Canada, 2.USA, 3.Finland, 4.Slovakia (all advanced to Quarterfinals), 5.France, 6.Switzerland, 7.Belarus, 8.Kazakhstan (relegated to Division I, Group A)
Group S: 1.Russia, 2.Sweden, 3.Czech Republic, 4.Norway (all advanced to Quarterfinals), 5.Latvia, 6.Germany, 7.Denmark, 8.Italy (relegated to Division I, Group A)
1.Russia
(Konstantin Barulin, Alexei Emelin, Pavel Datsyuk, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Alexander Ovechkin)
2.Slovakia
(Zdeno Chara, Tomas Starosta, Michal Handzus, Marcel Hascak, Michel Miklik, Branko Radivojevic, Miroslav Satan, Tomas Tatar)
Zdeno Chara, Tomas Starosta, Michal Handzus, Marcel Hascak, Michel Miklik, Miroslav Satan, Tomas Tatar (Slovakia)
3.Czech Republic
4.Finland
5-8.Canada, Sweden, Norway, USA
9-10.France, Latvia
11-12.Switzerland, Germany
13-14.Belarus, Denmark
15-16.Kazakhstan, Italy (both relegated to Division I A)
WORLD JUNIOR (U-20) CHAMPIONSHIP 2012/13 (Ufa)
1.USA (Johnny Gaudreau)
3.Russia (Andrei Vasilevskiy, Nikita Kucherov)
(2.Sweden)
KHL 2012/13
1.SKA St Petersburg (Sergei Bobrovsky, Denis Grebeshkov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Maxim Afinogenov, Artemi Panarin) (1st in Bobrov)
2.Ak Bars Kazan (Konstantin Barulin, Alexei Emelin, Danis Zaripov, Jarkko Immonen, Janne Pesonen) (1st in Kharlamov)
3.Avangard Omsk (Sergei Kostitsyn) (1st in Chernyshev)
13.Slovan Bratislava (3rd in Bobrov)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2013 (Stockholm - Helsinki)
1.Sweden (Niklas Persson)
2.Switzerland (Martin Gerber, Reto Berra, Julien Vauclair, Raphael Diaz, Mathias Seger, Philippe Furrer, Patrick von Gunten, Roman Josi, Andres Ambuhl, Thibault Monnet, Nino Niederreiter, Simon Bodenmann, Reto Suri, Martin Pluss, Morris Trachsler, Matthias Bieber, Denis Hollenstein, Simon Moser)
(3.USA)
Men
Preliminary Round
Group C
Sweden - Switzerland 1:0
(Henrik Lundqvist, Nicklas Backstrom - Nino Niederreiter)
1.Sweden (advanced to Quarterfinals)
2.Switzerland (advanced to Qualification Playoffs)
(3.Czech Republic (advanced to Qualification Playoffs))
Quarterfinals
Finland - Russia 3:1
(Sergei Bobrovsky (Russia))
(Alexander Radulov (Russia))
USA - Czech Republic 5:2
(Jonathan Quick, Ryan Suter, Ryan McDonagh, Zach Parise, Ryan Callahan, David Backes - Jaromir Jagr)
Semifinal
Canada - USA 1:0
(Sidney Crosby - Kevin Shattenkirk)
(Jonathan Toews - Ryan McDonagh)
Third-Place Game
Finland - USA 5:0
(Mikael Granlund - Jonathan Quick)
Final
Canada - Sweden 3:0
(Jonathan Toews - Nicklas Backstrom)
(Drew Doughty (Canada))
1.Canada
(Drew Doughty, Matt Duchene, Patrick Marleau, Jonathan Toews, Corey Perry, Sidney Crosby)
2.Sweden (Henrik Lundqvist, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Daniel Alfredsson, Jakob Silfverberg, Nicklas Backstrom, Henrik Zetterberg)
3.Finland (Lasse Kukkonen, Teemu Selanne, Tuomo Ruutu, Jarkko Immonen, Antti Pihlstrom, Mikael Granlund)
4.USA (Jonathan Quick, Ryan Suter, Kevin Shattenkirk, Ryan McDonagh, Zach Parise, Ryan Callahan, David Backes)
5-8.Russia (Sergei Bobrovsky, Pavel Datsyuk, Alexander Radulov)
Pavel Datsyuk (Russia)
5-8.Slovenia
9-12.Switzerland (Nino Niederreiter)
Women
1.Canada (Hayley Wickenheiser, Marie-Philip Poulin, Danielle Goyette (assistant coach))
(2.USA, 3.Switzerland)
WINTER PARALYMPICS 2014 (Sochi)
5.Czech Republic
(1.USA, 2.Russia, 3.Canada)
NHL 2013/14
March 9, 2014. Florida Panthers - Boston Bruins 2:5
(Reilly Smith (Boston Bruins))
(NOTE: This pertains to the player on the right only. The player on the left is added by the stamp designer)
1.Boston Bruins (1st in Atlantic) (Zdeno Chara, Jarome Iginla, Reilly Smith)
2.Anaheim Ducks (1st in Pacific) (Corey Perry, Saku Koivu, Teemu Selanne, Jakob Silfverberg)
3.Colorado Avalanche (1st in Central) (Reto Berra, Matt Duchene, Ryan O’Reilly, Nathan MacKinnon, Patrick Roy (head coach))
29.Florida Panthers (7th in Atlantic)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2014 (Minsk)
1.Russia
(Sergei Bobrovsky, Andrei Vasilevskiy, Alexander Ovechkin, Danis Zaripov, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Artem Anisimov, Vadim Shipachyov, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
2.Finland (Mikko Koskinen, Jarkko Immonen)
(3.Sweden)
November 4, 2014. Minnesota Wild - Pittsburgh Penguins 1:4
(Mikko Koivu - Sidney Crosby)
1.New York Rangers (Henrik Lundqvist, Ryan McDonagh, Mats Zuccarello) (1st in Metropolitan)
2.Montreal Canadiens (Andrei Markov, Alexei Emelin) (1st in Atlantic)
3.Anaheim Ducks (Ilya Bryzgalov, Corey Perry, Jakob Silfverberg) (1st in Pacific)
11.Minnesota Wild (Mikko Koivu) (4th in Central)
15.Pittsburgh Penguins (Sidney Crosby) (4th in Metropolitan)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2015 (Prague - Ostrava)
1.Canada (Matt Duchene, Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Ryan O’Reilly)
2.Russia (Konstantin Barulin, Sergei Bobrovsky, Alexander Ovechkin, Danis Zaripov, Ilya Kovalchuk, Artem Anisimov, Artemi Panarin, Vadim Shipachyov, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
3.USA
4.Czech Republic
5-8.Belarus, Finland, Switzerland, Sweden
9-10.Germany, Slovakia
11-12.France, Norway
13-14.Latvia, Denmark
15-16.Austria, Slovenia
WORLD JUNIOR (U-20) CHAMPIONSHIP 2015/16 (Helsinki)
Final
Finland - Russia 4:3
(Miro Keskitalo, Kasperi Kapanen, Juho Lammikko (Finland))
1.Finland
(Miro Keskitalo, Sebastian Aho, Kasperi Kapanen, Juho Lammikko)
2.Russia
(3.USA)
GAGARIN CUP 2016
Metallurg Magnitogorsk - CSKA Moscow 4-3
1.Metallurg Magnitogorsk (Danis Zaripov)
2.CSKA Moscow (Nikita Zaitsev, Alexander Radulov, Antti Pihlstrom, Stephane Da Costa, Ivan Telegin)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2016 (Moscow - St Petersburg)
Preliminary Round
Group B
Finland - Belarus 6:2
(Mikael Granlund - Sergei Kostitsyn)
1.Finland (qualified for Playoff Round)
6.Belarus
(Also qualified for Playoff Round: 2.Canada, 3.Germany, 4.USA)
Semifinals
Finland - Russia 3:1
(Sebastian Aho - Nikita Zaitsev)
Third-Place Game
Russia - USA 7:2
(Evgeny Kuznetsov - Kyle Connor)
(Nikita Zaitsev - Miles Wood)
Final
Canada - Finland 2:0
(Matt Duchene - Mikko Koskinen)
(Connor McDavid - Esa Lindell)
(Corey Perry (Canada))
1.Canada
(Matt Duchene, Corey Perry, Connor McDavid, Ryan O’Reilly)
2.Finland
(Mikko Koskinen, Esa Lindell, Mikko Koivu, Sebastian Aho, Antti Pihlstrom, Mikael Granlund)
3.Russia
(Sergei Bobrovsky, Nikita Zaitsev, Alexei Emelin, Alexey Marchenko, Alexander Ovechkin, Pavel Datsyuk, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Artemi Panarin, Vadim Shipachyov, Ivan Telegin, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
4.USA (Kyle Connor, Miles Wood)
11-12.Belarus (Sergei Kostitsyn)
1.Canada (Drew Doughty, Sidney Crosby, Matt Duchene, Ryan O’Reilly, Corey Perry, Joe Thornton, Jonathan Toews)
2.Europe (Mats Zuccarello (on the left of the stamp)), Zdeno Chara, Roman Josi, Nino Niederreiter, Tomas Tatar)
3-4.Sweden (Henrik Lundqvist, Nicklas Backstrom, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Jakob Silfverberg)
3-4.Russia (Sergei Bobrovsky, Andrei Vasilevskiy, Alexei Emelin, Alexey Marchenko, Andrei Markov, Nikita Zaitsev, Artem Anisimov, Pavel Datsyuk, Nikita Kucherov, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Alexander Ovechkin, Artemi Panarin, Vadim Shipachyov, Ivan Telegin, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
ASIAN WINTER GAMES 2017 (Sapporo)
(Men: 1.Kazakhstan, 2.South Korea, 3.Japan.
Women: 1.Japan, 2.China, 3.Kazakhstan)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP (DIVISION I, GROUP A) 2017 (Kyiv)
(1.Austria, 2.South Korea (both promoted to World Championship 2018), 3.Kazakhstan)
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2017 (Paris - Cologne)
Preliminary Round
Group A
Russia - Sweden 2:1 (SO)
Germany - USA 2:1
1.USA (qualified for Playoff Round)
2.Russia (qualified for Playoff Round)
3.Sweden (qualified for Playoff Round)
4.Germany (qualified for Playoff Round)
Group B
Finland - Belarus 3:2
Canada - Czech Republic 4:1
Norway - France 3:2
1.Canada (qualified for Playoff Round)
3.Czech Republic (qualified for Playoff Round)
4.Finland (qualified for Playoff Round)
5.France
6.Norway
7.Belarus
(2.Switzerland (qualified for Playoff Round))
Quarterfinal
Canada - Germany 2:1
Semifinals
Canada - Russia 4:2
(Ryan O’Reilly - Andrei Vasilevskiy)
Sweden - Finland 4:1
Third-Place Game
Russia - Finland 5:3
(Ivan Telegin - Mikko Lehtonen)
Final
Sweden - Canada 2:1 (SO)
(Calvin de Haan (Canada))
(Oliver Ekman-Larsson - Alex Killorn)
1.Sweden
(Henrik Lundqvist, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Nicklas Backstrom, William Nylander)
Henrik Lundqvist (Sweden)
William Nylander (Sweden)
2.Canada
(Calvin de Haan, Matt Duchene, Alex Killorn, Mitchell Marner, Nathan MacKinnon, Ryan O’Reilly)
Mitchell Marner (Canada)
3.Russia
(Andrei Vasilevskiy, Nikita Gusev, Artemi Panarin, Nikita Kucherov, Vadim Shipachyov, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Ivan Telegin, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
Andrei Vasilevskiy (Russia)
Nikita Gusev (Russia)
Artemi Panarin (Russia)
Nikita Kucherov (Russia)
Vadim Shipachyov (Russia)
William Nylander (Sweden), Artemi Panarin (Russia), Nathan MacKinnon (Canada)
4.Finland (Mikko Lehtonen, Sebastien Aho)
5-8.USA, Germany, Czech Republic
9-10.France (Stephane Da Costa)
Sebastien Aho (Finland), Stephane Da Costa (France)
11-12.Norway
13-14.Belarus
WINTER OLYMPICS 2018 (Pyeongchang, South Korea)
Men
1.Russia (Alexey Marchenko, Nikita Gusev, Vadim Shipachyov, Pavel Datsyuk, Ilya Kovalchuk, Ivan Telegin, Oleg Znarok (head coach))
(2.Germany, 3.Canada)
Women
2.Canada (Marie-Philip Poulin)
(1.USA, 3.Finland)
GAGARIN CUP 2018
Ak Bars Kazan - CSKA Moscow 4-1
1.Ak Bars Kazan (Andrei Markov, Danis Zaripov)
2.CSKA Moscow (Alexey Marchenko, Ivan Telegin)
IIHF WORLD U-18 CHAMPIONSHIP 2018 (Chelyabinsk - Magnitogorsk)
1.Finland
2.USA
3.Sweden
4.Czech Republic
5-8.Canada, Russia, Slovakia, Belarus
9.Switzerland
10.France
Hockey Players on Stamps (A supplement to this exhibit)