Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host country | Canada |
Dates | April 3 - April 9 |
Teams | 8 |
Venue(s) | 7 (in 7 host cities) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Canada (6th title) |
Runner-up | United States |
Third place | Finland |
Fourth place | Sweden |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 20 |
Goals scored | 148 (7.4 per match) |
Attendance | 57,444 (2,872 per match) |
Scoring leader(s) | Krissy Wendell (13 points) |
← 1999
2001 →
|
The 2000 IIHF World Women's Championships was held April 3–9, 2000 in the Ontario towns of Mississauga, Barrie, Kitchener, London, Niagara Falls, Oshawa and Peterborough, Canada. Final games were played at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga. Team Canada won their 6th consecutive gold medal at the World Championships defeating the United States in a repeat of the previous five finals.
In one of the cloest finals competed, Canada took the tournament with a 2-1 final win, in overtime. Finland picked up their sixth consecutive bronze medal, with a win over Sweden.
This year's tournament also counted as qualification for the Salt Lake Olympics. With six automatic berths available, all four semi-finalists were assured Olympic participation. In the consolation round China defeated Germany and Russia defeated Japan, to join them.
With the promotion and relegation format now in use, the top seven nations were joined by Japan, the winner of Group B in 1999.
The eight participating teams were divided up into two seeded groups as below. The teams played each other once in a single round robin format. The top two teams from the group proceeded to the Final Round, while the remaining teams played in the Consolation Round.
All times local
All times local
Qualified for 2002 Winter Olympic Games Qualification
World Championship Group B was played again with an eight team tournament which was hosted by Latvia in Liepāja and Riga. Kazakhstan won the tournament winning the final stage round robin by 3 points to win the competition and to ensure their Promotion to the main World Championship in 2001.