Six teams vie for promotion
by Andy Potts|29 APR 2023
Action as Great Britain (white) and Poland (red) play an exhibition game in February. The teams meet again in World Championship Division IA in Nottingham this week.
photo: © Dean Woolley (EIHL)
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Two places in the World Championship top division are up for grabs in Nottingham this week. Host nation Great Britain and rival Italy were relegated from the elite group a year ago and are looking for an instant return. But they will face competition from a Korean team looking to reprise the highs of 2018, a newly-promoted Poland, last year’s bronze medallist Lithuania and a rejuvenated Romania.
 

Italy

With Iron Mike Keenan behind the bench, Italy is hoping for an immediate return to the top division after last year’s relegation. The veteran head coach is back in action for the first time since he left Kunlun Red Star in November 2017, and returns to international hockey for the first time since the 1993 World Championship. His Italian players do not have the stellar quality of Keenan’s Canada Cup winning teams, but there is plenty of World Championship experience here. Thursday’s 5-3 victory over Korea in an exhibition game in Nottingham saw Alex Petan, Luca Frigo, Daniel Tedesco and Brandon McNally among the scorers in a game dominated by Italy’s power play.

Great Britain

The host nation led Austria 3-1 in a top-flight survival showdown last year, only to fall to defeat in the third period. This time, Pete Russell’s team is buoyed by the return of star forward Liam Kirk, who was unavailable in Tampere due to injury. In 2021, he led the World Championship in goals and GB fans are looking to him to fire the team back to the top. New faces on the roster include defender Nathanael Halbert, Nottingham-born but Canadian trained, plus fellow dual-nats Sam Ruopp and Johnny Curran. However, there’s no room for Ben Davies, scorer of the memorable overtime winner against France in 2019 as Britain grabbed its first top-flight victory for more than half a century. The warm-ups were encouraging, with the Brits splitting two games against Latvia before beating Hungary twice in the past 10 days. And head coach Russell arrives days after leading Ravensburg Towerstars to the DEL2 championship in Germany.

Lithuania

In 2019, Lithuania placed last in Division IA and faced relegation. However, the pandemic and then the suspension of Russia and Belarus earned the Baltic nation a reprieve – and the team made the most of its opportunity. Last year brought bronze, Lithuania’s best ever result in IIHF play. Emilijus Krakauskas was the leading scorer on that team with 6 (4+2) points. However, this season saw him play just one game for Lausanne in the Swiss League. Defender Simonas Valivonas, 16, could complete the rare distinction of playing U18, U20 and men’s World Championship tournaments in the same season. He’s divided his club campaign between Odense’s youth system and adult hockey with Energija Elektrenai in the Latvian championship.
 

Korea

Incoming head coach Woo Jae Kim is looking to bring the good times back to a Korean team that played at the 2018 Olympics and featured in that year’s World Championship top division. Kim was an assistant on those teams. However, results this year have been tough: heavy back-to-back losses against Kazakhstan last week followed losses in February against Italy, Hungary and a 0-10 horror show against Slovenia. Jungwoo Jeon, top scorer in last year’s tournament, could lead the offence again after helping Anyang Halla to win the Asia League this season. Sanghoon Shin is in good form, with 52 (30+22) points for Atlanta Gladiators in the ECHL.
 

Poland

Poland impressed last year in Division IB, and looked a class above its rivals in Tychy. Now there’s a sense that Polish hockey is returning to the level where it belongs, and recent results bear that out. In April, the Poles won exhibition games against top tier opposition from Latvia, Slovenia and Hungary, suggesting that the newly-promoted team will be no pushover in Nottingham. Alan Lyszczarczyk was Poland’s top scorer a year ago. Look out for a strong defence as well: in Division IB, the Poles allowed just four goals in four games with goalie John Murray impressive throughout.
 

Romania

The Romanians finished fifth in last season’s competition, failing to win a game in Ljubljana. Scoring was a problem, with just eight goals in four games. Yevgeni Skachkov had a hand in five of them, but the 38-year-old is not part of the squad coming to Nottingham. Slovak head coach Julius Penzes’ team draws heavily on players representing Romanian clubs in Hungary’s cross-border Erste Liga: Corona Brasov and Csikszerada provide most of the personnel for the championship. This season sees several new players join the roster: goalie Szilard Beres and forwards Andrei Dan Filip, Vladislav Teamriuc, Balazs Gajdo, Matyas Kovacs, Zoltan Molnar and Yevgeni Lymansky are all in line for World Championship debuts on a new-look roster.