2011 IIHF 12 Nations Tournament

2011 12 Nations Invitational Tournament Series
12 Nations Tournament
Tournament details
Host country  Finland
Dates August 24–31
Teams 12
Venue(s) 2

The IIHF 12 Nations Invitational Tournament Series was held in Vierumäki, Finland (August 24-31), Courchevel, France (August 28-30), and Füssen, Germany (November 9-13). The competing nations will be the national women's teams. This is a new tournament introduced by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The goal is to close the large gaps in skill between countries by providing more competitive opportunities. The eight competing countries in Vierumaki, Finland are Canada, United States, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Switzerland, Slovakia and Japan. France, Germany, Norway and the Czech Republic also played in a mini-tournament simultaneously in Courchevel, France. Teams from Group B and C played in the tournament held in Füssen.

There were no medals awarded at the tournament, and its main purpose was to develop players from countries attempting to qualify for the Olympic Games in 2014.[1]

Mistaken Identity. The name of the tournament was mistakenly printed on several publications and websites as the "IIHF 8 Nations Tournament". The "IIHF 12 Nations Invitational Tournament Series" was the official name for the tournament.

Participating nations

Group A
Group B
Group C

Group A/B

Round robin

The teams exchanged goals late in the second period. Brianna Decker scored for the US, while Jayna Hefford replied with a power play goal. Afterwards, Genevieve Lacasse and Jessie Vetter made a combined 31 saves in the third period and overtime, forcing a shootout between the rivals. In the first five rounds of said shootout, Hefford and Kelli Stack traded goals. Afterwards, Hefford proceeded to give Canada another lead as she scored again in the shootout. Jennifer Wakefield followed to beat Vetter for the game winner.[2]

August 24

Date Teams Result Notes
August 24 USA vs. Russia USA, 12-0[3] Hat trick scored by Hilary Knight
August 24Canada vs. Switzerland Canada, 16-0[4]Jayna Hefford scored a hat trick
August 24 Finland vs. Japan Finland, 7-0
August 24 Sweden vs. Slovakia Sweden, 4-1

August 25

Date Teams Result Notes
August 25 USA vs. JapanUSA, 13-0[5] Kelli Stack and Jen Schoullis each scored a hat trick
August 25Canada vs. Russia Canada, 14-1[6]Meghan Agosta scored a hat trick and added two assists
August 25 Finland vs. Slovakia Finland, 2-0
August 25 Sweden vs. Switzerland Sweden, 4-2

August 27

Date Teams Result Notes
August 27 USA vs. Switzerland USA, 11-1
August 27Canada vs. Slovakia Canada, 11-0[7]Vicki Bendus registered a hat trick and added one assist
Canada outshot Slovakia 73-8
August 27 Finland vs. Russia Finland, 2-1
August 27 Sweden vs. Japan Sweden, 8-2

August 28

Date Teams Result Notes
August 28 USA vs. Canada USA, 4-0[8] Shutout by Molly Schaus
August 28 Sweden vs. Russia Sweden, 4-3
August 28 Finland vs. Switzerland Finland, 12-0
August 28 Slovakia vs. Japan Slovakia, 4-0

August 30

Date Teams Result Notes
August 30 Canada vs. Finland Canada, 3-2 Caroline Ouellette had three assists[9]
August 30 USA vs. Sweden USA, 2-0

August 31

Date Teams Result Notes
August 31 Sweden vs. CanadaSweden, 6-4 Canada lost for just the second time in 66 all-time international meetings against Sweden by a 6-4 mark.[10]
August 31 USA vs. Finland USA, 6-0 Molly Schaus and Jessie Vetter both played and shared the shutout[11]

[12]

September 2 and 3

Date Teams Result Notes
September 2 Sweden vs. FinlandSweden, 3-1
September 3 Sweden vs. FinlandSweden, 4-2

Group C

All games for Group C were contested at the Olympic Ice Rink in Courchevel, France from August 28-30. Norway players Helene Martinsen led all Group C players in scoring with 8 points, while teammate Andrea Dalen ranked second in Group C scoring with 6 points.[13]

Schedule

Date Teams Result Notes
August 28 France vs. GermanyGermany, 2-1
August 28 Czech Republic vs. NorwayNorway, 5-3
August 29 Czech Republic vs. GermanyGermany, 4-1
August 29 France vs. NorwayNorway, 6-1
August 30 Germany vs. NorwayGermany, 4-3 (OT)

Group B/C

The tournament was played in Füssen, Germany from November 9-13.

Round robin

All teams took part in four games.

November 9

Date Teams Result Notes
November 9 Russia vs. Czech RepublicRussia, 1-0
November 9 Japan vs. NorwayNorway, 4-3 SO
November 9 Switzerland vs. FranceSwitzerland, 2-1
November 9 Slovakia vs. GermanyGermany, 3-0

November 10

Date Teams Result Notes
November 10 Switzerland vs. Czech RepublicCzech Republic, 6-3
November 10 France vs. SlovakiaSlovakia, 1-0
November 10 Norway vs. RussiaNorway, 3-2
November 10 Germany vs. JapanJapan, 3-1

November 12

Date Teams Result Notes
November 12 Switzerland vs. NorwayNorway, 5-3
November 12 Slovakia vs. Czech RepublicCzech Republic, 4-2
November 12 Russia vs. GermanyGermany, 3-2 SO
November 12 Japan vs. FranceJapan, 5-1

November 13

Date Teams Result Notes
November 13 Norway vs. SlovakiaNorway, 3-1
November 13 Czech Republic vs. JapanJapan, 2-1
November 13 Russia vs. FranceRussia, 7-1
November 13 Germany vs. SwitzerlandGermany, 2-1

References

External news story

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