A record twenty countries participated in the World Championships of 2019. Blue means Division A countries, red Division B countries and green the other FIB members. Latvia, which was relegated from Division A in 2016, made a late cancellation in 2017.
The old outdoor arena in Västerås, Sweden, where Finland won in 2004 for the first and only time.
Zinkensdamms IP, Stockholm, Sweden. Venue for the final at the XXVIth championships in 2006
ABB Arena Syd in Västerås, Sweden, host for the XXIXth championships in 2009

The Bandy World Championship is a competition for the men's teams of bandy-playing nations. The tournament is administrated by the Federation of International Bandy. It is distinct from the Bandy World Cup, a club competition, and from the Women's Bandy World Championship. A Youth Bandy World Championship also exists separately from the senior competition and has competitions in both the male and female categories.

The 2020 Bandy World Championship for Division A was scheduled to be played in Irkutsk, Russia in 2020 but was postponed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2021 Bandy World Championship for Division A and B was initially scheduled to be played in Syktyvkar, Russia, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The tournament was rescheduled for Division B to 8–13 March 2022 and for Division A to 27 March–3 April 2022. However, in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Finland and Sweden withdrew from the tournament, which was then cancelled completely. Subsequent tournaments have taken place without the participation of Russia.

History

Although bandy has been played since the 19th century, the first men's world championships were only played as recently as 1957, and the first women's championships not until 2004.

Before this, friendlies had been played regularly between the Nordic countries. A film from British Pathé created in 1935 called "Ice Hockey At Helsingfors On Sleeve As Ice Hockey At Halsingfors News In A Nutshell (1935)" shows an international bandy match between women bandy players from Finland and women bandy players from Sweden being played outdoors at Helsingfors Ice Stadium (Helsinki) in Finland where the narrator corrects the misconception that it is an international women's ice hockey game. Helsingfors is the Swedish name for Helsinki and comes from the name of the surrounding parish, Helsinge (etymological origin of the Finnish name Helsinki) and the rapids (in Swedish: fors), which flowed through the original town.

A bandy tournament for men was held as a demonstration sport at the 1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo, but this had no world championship status. A four-nation tournament in 1954 for men was played in Moscow, this was the first time the Soviet Union met teams from other countries and the first time the new, jointly agreed rules were used, however this was not called a world championship. The international federation was founded in 1955 by the four countries which had men's national bandy teams who had played in Moscow.

The first ever men's Bandy World Championship was organised in 1957 in association with the 50th anniversary of the Ball Association of Finland, which at the time was the governing body of bandy in Finland. It was played at the Helsinki Olympic Stadium.

From 1961 to 2003, the men's championships were played every two years, but since then has been played annually. (During the period 1972–1990, the Rossiya Tournament was held for national teams in the years when there was no world championship. This was always played in the Soviet Union and arranged by newspaper Sovetskaya Rossiya. It was affectionately called "the small world championship".)

Participating nations

For a long time, only four countries competed at the world championships: the Soviet Union, Sweden, Finland and Norway, with the Soviet Union dominating. More countries have joined the tournaments in recent decades, starting with the United States in 1985. The interest in the sport has spread to other parts of Europe, North America and Asia, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 also opened the way for separate national teams from the former Soviet republics. Somalia became the first team from Africa to compete, in the 2014 tournament in Irkutsk. The record number of participants is 20, set in 2019.

Denmark, Switzerland, Armenia and Poland are countries that a few years ago expressed interest in participating in future tournaments. Denmark and Poland have left FIB, while Switzerland debuted in the 2019 edition, as did Great Britain. Armenia wished to participate in the 2011, but was not allowed to, as the tournament format at the time only allowed twelve teams and several more wanted to come. Of the countries which still have not taken part, India was also denied in 2011. Most probably also Lithuania. The reason for the 2011 tournament having only eleven teams, was a late cancellation from Australia, another country no longer an FIB member.

With more nations competing, Group B was created in 1991. In 2012 there was a Group C for the first time as 14 countries participated. Group C was abolished in 2013, when instead two sub-groups of Group B were created. In 2014 there were two sub-groups also in Group A, increasing the number of teams in that division from six to eight. The number of groups is not fixed, it is changed from year to year and there are discussions about reinstating a Group C. Japan and Kyrgyzstan attended their first World Championships in 2012, Ukraine joined in 2013, Germany and Somalia made their debuts in 2014, China in 2015, and the Czech Republic in 2016. Russia, Finland, Sweden, Kazakhstan, Norway, USA and Belarus usually play in group A. Until 2011, the best team in group B Went into a playoff match with the team which came bottom of the A-group, replacing them if they won. In 2004 the B-pool was played in a location separate from group A for the first time, at the City Park Ice Rink in Budapest. In 2013 this happened again as Vetlanda hosted the B-pool, whereas Vänersborg was the main venue of the A-pool with three matches played at other locations, Trollhättan, Gothenburg and Oslo. In 2015 and 2016 the tournaments were separated in time while in the same cities. The Division B matches are shorter in time, except for the end matches.

Participation details

1957-2001

Team57616365676971737577798183858789919395979901
Belaruspart of Soviet Union7th
Canada6th6th7th7th
Finland2nd3rd2nd4th2nd3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd2nd2nd3rd4th3rd3rd2nd3rd
Hungary8th7th8th8th
Kazakhstanpart of Soviet Union4th4th5th4th
Netherlands7th8th9th
Norway4th4th2nd4th4th4th4th4th4th4th4th4th4th4th4th3rd5th5th4th5th
Russiasee Soviet Union2nd2nd2nd1st1st
Soviet Union1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st2nd2nd1st3rd1st1stdefunct
Sweden3rd2nd3rd3rd3rd2nd2nd2nd2nd2nd2nd1st1st2nd1st3rd2nd1st1st1st3rd2nd
United States5th5th5th5th5th6th6th6th6th
Total teams3444434444444555888967

2003-2026

Team03040506070809101112131415161718192022232526Total
Belarus6th7th6th6th6th6th6th7th7th6th7th6th6th8th15
Canada9th8th8th8th8th7th8th8th8th8th9th14th16
China15th16th17th12th18th5
Czech Republic15th16th15th16th10th9th6
Germany15th12th9th7th7th7thx7th7th8th9
Estonia8th10th10th12th12th10th9th12th11th10th9thDSQ14th11th9thx15
Finland4th1st4th3rd3rd3rd3rd3rd2nd4th4th4th4th2nd3rd3rd3rdx2nd2nd2nd42
Great Britain10th8th7th3
Hungary8th11th9th10th13th13th10th10th9th10th11th10th10th10th8th11th9th6th5th6th24
Japan13th13th12th13th13th12th10th12th15th9
Kazakhstan3rd4th3rd4th4th4th4th4th4th3rd3rd3rd3rd4th5th4th4thx4th22
Kyrgyzstan14th1
Latvia8th9th10th8th9th10th9th9th7th8th13th14th12
Mongolia11th11th12th12th11th14th14th12th11th13th12th11
Netherlands9th11th9th10th9th11th11th9th11th11th12th13th11th14th15th9th8th13th8th6th5th24
Norway5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th5th4th6th5thx3rd3rd3rd40
Russia2nd3rd2nd1st1st1st2nd2nd1st2nd1st1st1st1st2nd1st1stx22
Slovakia15th16th11th9th10th5
Somalia17th16th17th18th16th20th18th7
Sweden1st2nd1st2nd2nd2nd1st1st3rd1st2nd2nd2nd3rd1st2nd2ndx1st1st1st42
Switzerland19th17th11th9th11th4
Ukraine14th16th11th13th14th17th10th10th8
United States7th6th7th7th7th7th7th6th6th6th7th6th8th7th6th5th6thx5th4th4th29
Total teams91111121213131111141417161818162010 (18*)111011

*18 teams were enrolled in 2020, but only 10 (the B division) could participate (teams marked with "x" could not participate).

Debut of national teams

YearDebuting teamsSuccessor teams
TeamsNo.Cum.
1957Finland, Soviet Union, Sweden33
1961Norway14
1963-04
1965-04
1967-04
1969-04
1971-04
1973-04
1975-04
1977-04
1979-04
1981-04
1983-04
1985United States15
1987-05
1989-05
1991Canada, Hungary, Netherlands38
1993Russia08Soviet Union
1995Kazakhstan19
1997-09
1999-09
2001Belarus110
2003Estonia111
2004-011
2005-011
2006Mongolia112
2007Latvia113
2008-013
2009-013
2010-013
2011-013
2012Japan, Kyrgyzstan215
2013Ukraine116
2014Somalia, Germany218
2015China119
2016Czech Republic120
2017-020
2018Slovakia121
2019Great Britain, Switzerland223
2020-2022-023
2023-023
2025-023
2026-023

Competition format

Originally, the competition was played as an all-meet-all round-robin tournament. Starting in 1983, semifinals and a final was added to follow the round-robin stage.

When the number of participating nations increased, the championship was split up in two groups from 2003 onwards, A and B, with the better teams in Group A. The winner of Group B for some years played a game against the least successful team of Group A to determine qualification for Group A for next year, but in 2016, 2017, and 2018 winning Group B has been directly qualifying for group A for the following year while the last placed team of Group A is automatically relegated to Group B.

Broadcasting

The interest is biggest in Sweden, Finland and Russia. On several occasions it was shown on Eurosport 2.

The games are also viewable via online streaming.

Results

No.YearHostFinal venue (host city) *Gold medalResultSilver medalBronze medalResultFourth placeTeams
I1957 DetailsFinlandOlympic Stadium (Helsinki)Soviet UnionRound-robin (6–1)FinlandSwedenRound-robinOnly three teams participated3
II1961 DetailsNorwayBislett Stadium (Oslo)Soviet UnionRound-robin (2–1)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (4–3)Norway4
III1963 DetailsSwedenSkogsvallen (Nässjö)Soviet UnionRound-robin (6–1)FinlandSwedenRound-robin (12–0)Norway4
IV1965 DetailsSoviet UnionCentral Stadium (Sverdlovsk)Soviet UnionRound-robin (4–0)NorwaySwedenRound-robin (1–2)Finland4
V1967 DetailsFinlandRaatti Stadium (Oulu)Soviet UnionRound-robin (1–1)FinlandSwedenRound-robin (2–1)Norway4
VI1969 DetailsSwedenVinterstadion (Örebro) and Studenternas IP (Uppsala)Soviet UnionRound-robin (4–2, 2–1)SwedenFinlandRound-robinOnly three teams participated3
VII1971 DetailsSwedenVinterstadion (Örebro) and Söderstadion (Stockholm)Soviet UnionRound-robin (2–2, 2–1)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (6–1, 7–1)Norway4
VIII1973 DetailsSoviet UnionCentral Dynamo Stadium (Moscow)Soviet UnionRound-robin (5–1, 1–0)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (3–2, 3–4)Norway4
IX1975 DetailsFinlandPohjan stadion (Tornio) and Hänninhauta (Mikkeli)Soviet UnionRound-robin (1–3, 7–2)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (2–1, 2–2)Norway4
X1977 DetailsNorwayValle Hovin (Oslo) and Marienlyst Stadion (Drammen)Soviet UnionRound-robin (2–3, 3–2)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (5–1, 2–4)Norway4
XI1979 DetailsSwedenVänersborgs isstadion (Vänersborg) and Spånga IP (Stockholm)Soviet UnionRound-robin (4–3, 4–2)SwedenFinlandRound-robin (8–2, 6–2)Norway4
XII1981 DetailsSoviet UnionCentral Lenin Stadium (Khabarovsk)SwedenRound-robin (6–1, 1–3)Soviet UnionFinlandRound-robin (6–1, 5–1)Norway4
XIII1983 DetailsFinlandOulunkylä Ice Rink (Helsinki)Sweden9–3Soviet UnionFinland4–1Norway4
XIV1985 DetailsNorwayValle Hovin (Oslo)Soviet Union5–4 (a.e.t.)SwedenFinland6–2Norway5
XV1987 DetailsSwedenSöderstadion (Stockholm)Sweden7–2FinlandSoviet Union11–3Norway5
XVI1989 DetailsSoviet UnionOlympic Stadium (Moscow)Soviet Union12–2FinlandSweden6–0Norway5
XVII1991 DetailsFinlandOulunkylä Ice Rink (Helsinki)Soviet Union4–3SwedenFinland8–0Norway8
XVIII1993 DetailsNorwayHamar Olympic Hall (Hamar)Sweden8–0RussiaNorway5–3Finland8
XIX1995 DetailsUnited StatesJohn Rose Minnesota Oval (Roseville)Sweden6–4RussiaFinland3–2Kazakhstan8
XX1997 DetailsSwedenRocklunda IP (Västerås)Sweden10–5RussiaFinland9–3Kazakhstan9
XXI1999 DetailsRussiaTrud Stadium (Arkhangelsk)Russia5–0FinlandSweden9–1Norway6
XXII2001 DetailsFinland SwedenRaksila Ice Rink (Oulu)Russia6–1SwedenFinland3–2Kazakhstan7
XXIII2003 DetailsRussiaTrud Stadium (Arkhangelsk)Sweden5–4RussiaKazakhstan4–1Finland9
XXIV2004 DetailsSweden HungaryRocklunda IP (Västerås)Finland5–4 (a.e.t.)SwedenRussia5–2Kazakhstan11
XXV2005 DetailsRussiaTrudovye Rezervy Stadium (Kazan)Sweden5–2RussiaKazakhstan5–3Finland11
XXVI2006 DetailsSwedenZinkensdamms IP (Stockholm)Russia3–2SwedenFinland7–4Kazakhstan12
XXVII2007 DetailsRussiaKhimik Stadium (Kemerovo)Russia3–1SwedenFinland5–4 (a.e.t.)Kazakhstan12
XXVIII2008 DetailsRussiaOlympic Stadium (Moscow)Russia6–1SwedenFinland8–3Kazakhstan13
XXIX2009 DetailsSwedenABB Arena South (Västerås)Sweden6–1RussiaFinland7–3Kazakhstan13
XXX2010 DetailsRussiaIce Palace Krylatskoye (Moscow)Sweden6–5 (a.e.t.)RussiaFinland4–3 (a.e.t.)Kazakhstan11
XXXI2011 DetailsRussiaTrudovye Rezervy Stadium (Kazan)Russia6–1FinlandSweden14–3Kazakhstan11
XXXII2012 DetailsKazakhstanMedeu (Almaty)Sweden5–4RussiaKazakhstan10–5Finland14
XXXIII2013 DetailsSweden NorwayArena Vänersborg (Vänersborg)Russia4–3SwedenKazakhstan6–3Finland14
XXXIV2014 DetailsRussiaTrud Stadium (Irkutsk)Russia3–2SwedenKazakhstan5–3Finland17
XXXV2015 DetailsRussiaArena Yerofey (Khabarovsk)Russia5–3SwedenKazakhstan8–6Finland16
XXXVI2016 DetailsRussiaTrud Stadium (Ulyanovsk)Russia Russia6–1FinlandSweden4–0Kazakhstan18
XXXVII2017 DetailsSwedenGöransson Arena (Sandviken)Sweden4–3RussiaFinland11–1Norway Norway18
XXXVIII2018 DetailsRussia ChinaArena Yerofey (Khabarovsk)Russia5–4SwedenFinland8–4Kazakhstan16
XXXIX2019 DetailsSwedenArena Vänersborg (Vänersborg)Russia6–5 (a.e.t.)SwedenFinland8–2Kazakhstan20
XL2020 DetailsRussiaDivision A cancelled10 (18**)
XLI2022 DetailsRussiaCancelled-
XLII2023 DetailsSwedenEriksson Arena (Växjö)Sweden3–1FinlandNorway5–1Kazakhstan11
XLIII2025 DetailsSwedenSparbanken Lidköping Arena (Lidköping)Sweden5–3FinlandNorway12–1United States10
XLIV2026 DetalisFinlandNarukerä Ice Rink (Pori)Sweden9–1FinlandNorway8–3United States11

* For 1959–1981 championships, there are listed venues (host cities) of the decisive matches of round-robin tournaments (i.e. matches between champions and runners-up for each tournament), not final matches. ** 18 teams were enrolled in 2020, but only 10 (the B division) could participate.

Kyrgyzstan and Japan were the newcomers in 2012. Here, the Kyrgyzstan team defend their goal when Japan is about to make a corner stroke. Kyrgyzstan has yet to make another world championship appearance.

Medal table

Countries in italics no longer compete at the World Championships.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Sweden1519842
2Soviet Union142117
3Russia129122
4Finland1112234
5Norway0145
6Kazakhstan0066
Totals (6 entries)424242126

Consecutive wins

The most consecutive gold medals were won by the Soviet Union with 11. Russia has won four consecutive gold medals and Sweden has won three consecutive gold medals.

Final arenas (since 1983)

Until 1981, the championship was always decided by round-robin games, so only since 1983 there have been designated venues for the championship final game.

No.TimesCountryArenaCityYearsNote
12FinlandOulunkylä Ice RinkHelsinki1983, 1991
12RussiaTrud StadiumArkhangelsk1999, 2003
12SwedenRocklunda IPVästerås1997, 2004
12RussiaOlympic StadiumMoscow1989, 2008Indoor arena
12RussiaTrudovye Rezervy StadiumKazan2005, 2011
12RussiaArena YerofeyKhabarovsk2015, 2018Indoor arena
12SwedenArena VänersborgVänersborg2013, 2019Indoor arena
81NorwayValle HovinOslo1985
81SwedenSöderstadionStockholm1987
81NorwayHamar Olympic HallHamar1993Indoor arena
81United StatesJohn Rose Minnesota OvalRoseville1995
81FinlandRaksila Ice RinkOulu2001
81SwedenZinkensdamms IPStockholm2006
81RussiaKhimik StadiumKemerovo2007
81SwedenABB Arena SouthVästerås2009Indoor arena
81RussiaIce Palace KrylatskoyeMoscow2010Indoor arena
81KazakhstanMedeuAlmaty2012
81RussiaTrud StadiumIrkutsk2014
81RussiaTrud StadiumUlyanovsk2016
81SwedenGöransson ArenaSandviken2017Indoor arena
81SwedenEriksson ArenaVäxjö2023Indoor arena
81SwedenSparbanken Lidköping ArenaLidköping2025Indoor arena
81FinlandNarukerä Ice RinkPori2026

External links

  • . Archived from the original on 2009-10-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)