Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1933 Ice Hockey World Championships

1933 edition of the World Ice Hockey Championships

1933 Ice Hockey World Championships

1933 edition of the World Ice Hockey Championships

FieldValue
year1933
countryCzechoslovakia
dates18–26 February
num_teams12
venues1
cities1
typeih
winnersUSA
count1
secondCanada
second-flagvar1921
thirdCzechoslovakia
fourthAustria
games33
goals115
scoring_leaderTCH Josef Malecek 13 points
prevseason1932
nextseason1934

| second-flagvar = 1921

The 1933 Ice Hockey World Championships were held between February 18 and February 26, 1933, in Prague, Czechoslovakia.

By winning its first world championship, the United States deprived Canada of the world title for the first time in tournament history. The American team, the Massachusetts Rangers, was mostly made up of university students and led by standout performances of Gerry Cosby in goal and team captain Ben Langmaid on defence. Canada was represented by the Toronto National Sea Fleas, winners of the 1932 Allan Cup, and coached by the controversial hockey personality Harold Ballard. The teams met on February 26 at Zimní stadión on Štvanice island. Tied 1-1 after 45 minutes of regulation time on goals by Sherman Forbes for the United States and an equalizer by Canadian Tim Kerr, defenceman John Garrison beat Canadian goalie Ron Geddes at the 6-minute mark of a dramatic "non-sudden death" overtime period.

Ten nations played in three groups, with the top two in each group advancing to the second round to join Canada and the United States, who both were automatically qualified through to the next round. In the second round, eight teams played in two groups; the top two teams from each group advancing to the semifinals, where the top qualifier in each group were seeded against the second qualifier in the opposing group. The winners of the semifinal matches played in the gold medal game, while the losers played for third place.

Fifth and sixth places were decided by a match between the third-place finishers in the two second ground groups; similarly seventh and eighth places were decided between the two last-place finishers in the second round groups. For the final four places, two classification matches were played between the bottom four finishers in the first round, which provided the seedings for the ninth and eleventh-place matches.

First round

Group A

DateResultP1P2P3
18 Feb3 - 00 - 0
18 Feb8 - 02 - 0
19 Feb2 - 01 - 0
19 Feb2 - 11 - 1
20 Feb7 - 12 - 1
20 Feb3 - 11 - 0

Group B

DateResultP1P2P3
18 Feb6 - 01 - 0
19 Feb2 - 00 - 0
20 Feb1 - 00 - 0

Group C

DateResultP1P2P3
18 Feb5 - 13- 0
19 Feb1 - 01 - 0
20 Feb3 - 01 - 0

Second round

Group D

DateResultP1P2P3OT1OT2OT3
21 Feb1 - 00 - 00 - 00 - 00 - 0
21 Feb5 - 01 - 02 - 02 - 0
22 Feb4 - 02 - 00 - 02 - 0
22 Feb4 - 00 - 02 - 02 - 0
23 Feb3 - 11 - 01 - 01 - 1
23 Feb2 - 00 - 00 - 02 - 0

Group E

USA-Poland at in Prague
DateResultP1P2P3
21 Feb7 - 01 - 0
21 Feb1 - 01 - 0
22 Feb4 - 03 - 0
22 Feb1 - 01 - 0
23 Feb3 - 12 - 0
23 Feb6 - 01 - 0

Third round

Consolation Matches

DateResultP1P2P3
24 Feb3 - 22 - 2
24 Feb2 - 01 - 0
  • Romania and Latvia qualified for the 9th/10th Place play-off, Belgium and Italy qualified for the 11th/12th Place play-off.

Semi-Finals

DateResultP1P2P3
25 Feb4 - 02 - 0
25 Feb4 - 02 - 0
  • USA and Canada qualified for the Gold Medal Match, Austria and Czechoslovakia qualified for the Bronze Medal Match.

Final round

11th/12th Place play-off

DateResultP1P2P3
25 FebW / O
  • Belgium declined to play, so Italy were awarded the win.

9th/10th Place play-off

DateResultP1P2P3
25 Feb1 - 01 - 0

7th/8th Place play-off

DateResultP1P2P3
24 Feb1 - 10 - 0

5th/6th Place play-off

DateResultP1P2P3
24 Feb1 - 10 - 0

Bronze Medal Match

DateResultP1P2P3OT1OT2
26 Feb2 - 00 - 00 - 00 - 0

Gold Medal Match

DateResultP1P2P3OT
26 Feb****2 - 11 - 10 - 0

Final Rankings – World Championship

RFTeam
1
2
3
4
5
5
7
7
9
10
11
12

Championship team

MedalCountryPlayersGold
United StatesGerry Cosby, John Garrison, Ben Langmaid, Winthrop Palmer, Frank Holland, Larry Sanford, Channing Hillard, Stewart Iglehart, Sherman Forbes, Jim Breckinridge; Trainer: Walter A. Brown

Legacy

The United States' oldest active college hockey award, the Walter Brown Award, was created in 1953 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of this championship team and its coach, the eponymous Walter A. Brown.

A team photograph, and a gold medal on loan from the family of Sherman Forbes, are currently on display at The Sports Museum in Boston, Massachusetts.

Sources

References

References

  1. Holland, Dave. (2008). "Canada on Ice; The World Hockey Championships, 1920 – 2008". Canada On Ice productions.
  2. . (March 22, 2021). ["UMass’ Trivigno garners 2021 Walter Brown Award as best American-born college hockey player in New England"](https://www.uscho.com/2021/03/22/umass-trivigno-garners-2021-walter-brown-award-as-best-american-born-college-hockey-player-in-new-england/). *US College Hockey Online*.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1933 Ice Hockey World Championships — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report