Finland men's national under-18 ice hockey team
| Nickname | Pikkuleijonat (The little Lions) |
|---|---|
| Association | Suomen jääkiekkoliitto |
| Head coach | Jussi Ahokas |
| Team colors | |
| First international | |
| Finland 10–1 East Germany (Yaroslavl, Soviet Union; 1 April 1967) Sweden 8–1 Finland (Bremerhaven, West Germany; 1 April 1977) | |
| Biggest win | |
| Finland 28–0 Italy (Tychy, Poland; 1 April 1979) | |
| Biggest defeat | |
| Soviet Union 14–2 Finland (Bremerhaven, West Germany; 2 April 1977) | |
| IIHF World U18 Championship | |
| Appearances | 23 (first in 1999) |
| Best result | Gold: 1999, 2000, 2016, 2018 |
| Medal record | ||
|---|---|---|
| World U-17 Hockey Challenge | ||
| 1990 Canada | ||
| 1995 Canada | ||
| 2018 Canada | ||
| 1998 Canada | ||
| 2022 Canada | ||
| European Youth Olympic Winter Festival | ||
| 1999 Slovakia | Team | |
| 2013 Romania | Team | |
| 2022 Finland | Team | |
| 2007 Spain | Team | |
| 2011 Czech Republic | Team | |
| 1997 Sweden | Team | |
| 2001 Finland | Team | |
| 2003 Slovenia | Team | |
| 2009 Poland | Team | |
| 2015 Austria\Liechtenstein | Team | |
| 2019 Bosnia and Herzegovina | Team | |
| 2023 Italy | Team | |
The Finland men's national under-18 ice hockey team is the men's national under-18 ice hockey team of Finland. The team is controlled by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association, a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation. The team represents Finland at the IIHF World U18 Championships.
International competitions
IIHF European U18 / U19 Championships
| Tournament | Rank |
|---|---|
| 1967 Yaroslavl, Russian SFSR | |
| 1968 Tampere | 4th |
| 1969 Garmisch-Partenkirchen / Bavaria | 4th |
| 1970 Geneva | 4th |
| 1971 Prešov, Slovak SR | 4th |
| 1972 Boden / Luleå / Skellefteå | 4th |
| 1973 Leningrad, Russian SFSR | 4th |
| 1974 Herisau / Appenzell / Ausserrhoden | |
| 1975 Grenoble | 4th |
| 1976 Kopřivnice / Opava, Czech SR | |
| 1977 Bremerhaven / Bremen | 4th |
| 1978 Vantaa | |
| 1979 Tychy / Katowice | |
| 1980 Brno / Hradec Králové, Czech SR | 4th |
| 1981 Minsk, Belorussian SSR | 4th |
| 1982 Ängelholm / Tyringe | 4th |
| 1983 Oslo | |
| 1984 Rosenheim / Garmisch-Partenkirchen / Füssen / Bad Tölz / Bavaria | 4th |
| 1985 Anglet | 5th |
| 1986 Düsseldorf / Ratingen / Krefeld / North Rhine-Westphalia | |
| 1987 Tampere / Kouvola / Hämeenlinna | 4th |
| 1988 Frýdek-Místek / Vsetín / Olomouc / Přerov, Czech SR | |
| 1989 Kiev, Ukrainian SSR | |
| 1990 Örnsköldsvik / Sollefteå | 4th |
| 1991 Spišská Nová Ves / Prešov, Slovak SR | |
| 1992 Lillehammer / Hamar | 4th |
| 1993 Nowy Targ / Oswiecim | 4th |
| 1994 Jyväskylä | 4th |
| 1995 Berlin | |
| 1996 Ufa | |
| 1997 Znojmo / Třebíč | |
| 1998 Malung / Mora |
IIHF World U18 Championships
| Tournament | Rank |
|---|---|
| 1999 Füssen / Kaufbeuren | |
| 2000 Kloten / Weinfelden | |
| 2001 Heinola / Helsinki / Lahti | |
| 2002 Piešťany / Trnava | 4th |
| 2003 Yaroslavl | 7th |
| 2004 Minsk | 7th |
| 2005 České Budějovice / Plzeň | 7th |
| 2006 Ängelholm / Halmstad | |
| 2007 Tampere / Rauma | 7th |
| 2008 Kazan | 6th |
| 2009 Fargo | |
| 2010 Minsk / Babruysk | |
| 2011 Crimmitschau / Dresden | 5th |
| 2012 Brno / Znojmo / Břeclav | 4th |
| 2013 Sochi | |
| 2014 Lappeenranta / Imatra | 6th |
| 2015 Zug / Lucerne | |
| 2016 Grand Forks | |
| 2017 Poprad / Spišská Nová Ves | |
| 2018 Chelyabinsk / Magnitogorsk | |
| 2019 Örnsköldsvik / Umeå | 7th |
| 2020 Plymouth / Ann Arbor | Cancelled[1] |
| 2021 Frisco / Plano | 4th |
| 2022 Landshut / Kaufbeuren | |
| 2023 Basel / Porrentruy | 5th |
| 2024 Espoo / Vantaa | 5th |
| 2025 Frisco / Allen | 5th |
| 2026 Piešťany / Bratislava |
References
- ^ Steiss, Adam. "2020 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship cancelled". iihf.com. IIHF. Retrieved 21 March 2020.