International & European Hockey Research and Information Thread

Theokritos

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All these votings are a bit confusing.

Information taken from the book “Malá Encyklopedie Ledniho Hokeje” (The small encyclopedia of ice hockey). Hopefully I got it all right.

Czechoslovakia Golden Stick voting: This started in 1968 as an award given by the weekly sports magazine Gól that covered both football and hockey (Soviet equivalent was the Футбол-Хоккей (Football-Hockey) magazine).

Fortunately we got the full voting results from both the annual Gól poll (click) as well as the annual Футбол-Хоккей poll (click).

The coaches voted for the 10 best players in each quarter of the league season. Domestic and international performances were taken into account. Ten points was given to the guy they had in first place, nine points to the second, etc. At the end of the season, journalists were allowed to vote. The journalist votes was a summary vote for the entire season.

This chimes with what DN28 has said in another thread. There are still questions remaining though (while the Soviet voting system is "solved": the votes were all journalists and they submitted a 1-2-3 ballot at the end of the season).

TOP: This Czechoslovakian “best player of the year award” since 1977/78 was given by another weekly football and hockey magazine, named TIP Sport. The ones who voted were all the league coaches, national team coaches and people in the coaching committee. They voted for the best goalie, defenseman and forward (coaches from 1982/83). I believe both domestic and international games were taken into account here.The top player on the initial ballot got 20 points, the runner-up 15, then 10, 5 and 3 points.Then in the final “positional voting” when the candidates had been choosen, the players got 3,2 and 1 point.

Great info together with what MadArcand has posted recently. I will give it a closer look later today.

Anketa Internacionálu: This was an award given to the best Czechoslovakian athlete chosen from the two most popular sports in the country, football and hockey. The award was first handed out in 1965 initiated by the daily newspaper Mladá Fronta. Those who voted were only former national team players from these two sports. The first twenty years of winners in the hockey section included:

1965 – Jiri Holik
1966 – Vladimir Nadrchal
1967 – Jan Suchý
1968 – Jan Suchý
1969 – Vacláv Nedomanský
1970 – Frantisek Pospisil
1971 - Frantisek Pospisil
1972 - Frantisek Pospisil
1973 – Jiri Holecek
1974 – Jiri Holik
1975 – Jiri Holecek
1976 – Milan Nový
1977 – Ivan Hlinka
1978 – Vladimir Martinec
1979 – Vladimir Martinec
1980 – Milan Nový
1981 – Milan Nový
1982 – Jiri Králik
1983 – Jiri Králik
1984 – Igor Liba
1985 – Vladimir Ruzicka

News to me and probably the rest of the community. Thanks a lot for these!

Izvestija Golden Stick voting: This one was approved by the IIHF. Those who voted included the national federations and European sports journalists. It came about from an initiative taken by the Soviet Ice Hockey Federation and the daily newspaper Izvestija.
It was awarded during the Izvestija tournament each year. First place gave 3 points, second gave 2 and third place 1 point.

Two notes:
1) Before conducting their first poll in 1979 the paper seems to have reached out to the IIHF president and got his approval to do this. I've even seen a picture of him handing over the Golden Stick award to a Soviet player who won it at the occasion of the following Izvestia Cup in Moscow. But this "IIHF approval" seems to have been more symbolic than anything else, it's not like this is an official IIHF award or something. When researching the Golden Stick earlier on I actually asked Szymon Szemberg of the IIIHF via mail what he could tell me about the tournament Golden Stick and his answer was: "Nothing. We don't have anything about that tournament award in our records."
2) There was at least one season when the poll was not done among journalists but among representatives of the various hockey federations. One ballot per federation plus two from IIHF representatives.

Logically the voters (European journalists) must have voted for the international games only. It seems illogical that a Swedish journalist for example would take Czech and Soviet league play into consideration when they hardly had any opportunity to see any of these domestic games.

Well, I do believe that Swedish journalists took both domestic and international play into consideration when ranking Swedish players. Same for Soviet and Czechoslovak journalists and everybody else. Other than that your reasoning is perfectly valid.
 
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Theokritos

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In the 9th year of the expert weekly magazine for football and hockey Tip's poll for the best hockey players of Czechoslovakia on the positions of goalie, defenseman and forward, the winners were the NT members Dominik Hasek, Mojmir Bozik & Igor Liba. The basis was expert rating by the hockey union head coach Karel Gut (based on league matches), rating by the NT coaches Jan Starsi and Frantisek Pospisil, and by the coaches of league teams (after the whole season was over). The point rating in the coaches/expert voting (1st to 5th place) was as follows: 20-15-10-5-3 points. In the poll, journalists/experts choose the 3 best for each position and these receive 3-2-1 points.[/I]

TOP: This Czechoslovakian “best player of the year award” since 1977/78 was given by another weekly football and hockey magazine, named TIP Sport. The ones who voted were all the league coaches, national team coaches and people in the coaching committee. They voted for the best goalie, defenseman and forward (coaches from 1982/83). I believe both domestic and international games were taken into account here.The top player on the initial ballot got 20 points, the runner-up 15, then 10, 5 and 3 points.Then in the final “positional voting” when the candidates had been choosen, the players got 3,2 and 1 point.

Priceless information, although it strikes me as a rather complex and confusing voting system. Regardless, the following final results for the 1985-1986 season are obviously the "positional" ones based on the system where players were ranked 1-2-3 on each ballot:

Goalie:
1. Hasek 53
2. Briza 27
3. Sindel 25
4. Svarny 19
5. Lang 10
6. Svoboda 3

Defense:
1. Bozik 43
2. Slanina 33
3. Stavjana 23
4. Benak 11
5. Bondra 10
6. Kadlec 8
7. Prochazka 8
8. Radvan 1

Forward:
1. Liba 53
2. Ruzicka 51
3. Vodila 11
4. Rosol 11
5. Hrdina 6
6. Janecky 3
7.-8. Lala & Valek 1

Let's do the math.

Goalies: 53+27+25+19+10+3=137 points.
Defencemen: 43+33+23+11+10+8+8+1=137 points.
Forwards: 53+51+11+11+6+3+1+1=137 points.

If each ballot contained 3+2+1=6 points for goalies and the same for defencemen and the same for forwards, then dividing the number of total points (137) by the number of points per ballot (6) should give us the number of ballots they used, right? But unfortunately this does not work out: 137 / 6 = 22.8333. Am I overlooking something here or is there still a piece of information missing about the voting system?
 

DN28

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Anketa Internacionálu: This was an award given to the best Czechoslovakian athlete chosen from the two most popular sports in the country, football and hockey. The award was first handed out in 1965 initiated by the daily newspaper Mladá Fronta. Those who voted were only former national team players from these two sports. The first twenty years of winners in the hockey section included:

1965 – Jiri Holik
1966 – Vladimir Nadrchal
1967 – Jan Suchý
1968 – Jan Suchý
1969 – Vacláv Nedomanský
1970 – Frantisek Pospisil
1971 - Frantisek Pospisil
1972 - Frantisek Pospisil
1973 – Jiri Holecek
1974 – Jiri Holik
1975 – Jiri Holecek
1976 – Milan Nový
1977 – Ivan Hlinka
1978 – Vladimir Martinec
1979 – Vladimir Martinec
1980 – Milan Nový
1981 – Milan Nový
1982 – Jiri Králik
1983 – Jiri Králik
1984 – Igor Liba
1985 – Vladimir Ruzicka
...

Now this is interesting. Jiri Holik started his international career very early, his 1st WC was already in 1964 - one year earlier than for example Jan Suchy, Vaclav Nedomansky or his older brother Jaroslav - and he was only 19 years old. I assume this poll was done only by few journalists from Mlada fronta as it was not so comprehensive as golden stick voting, nevertheless him winning it so young is a nice accomplishment.

On top of that, in Miloslav Jensik´s Chronicles of Czech hockey chapter about following season (1965-66) I found his citation of the Stadion magazine according to him was Jiri Holik "the best player of Czechoslovakia in World Championship". Holik was only 5th best in points on his own team in that WC...

This all suggests two things: that Holik was in the contention of the best CS player right from the beganning of his career, and that he was performing his famous two-way play also right from the start - not that it was something he developped when he was older. (because if not, how would you explain it? his offensive numbers both domestical and international are not very impressive at this time)
 
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MadArcand

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Priceless information, although it strikes me as a rather complex and confusing voting system. Regardless, the following final results for the 1985-1986 season are obviously the "positional" ones based on the system where players were ranked 1-2-3 on each ballot:



Let's do the math.

Goalies: 53+27+25+19+10+3=137 points.
Defencemen: 43+33+23+11+10+8+8+1=137 points.
Forwards: 53+51+11+11+6+3+1+1=137 points.

If each ballot contained 3+2+1=6 points for goalies and the same for defencemen and the same for forwards, then dividing the number of total points (137) by the number of points per ballot (6) should give us the number of ballots they used, right? But unfortunately this does not work out: 137 / 6 = 22.8333. Am I overlooking something here or is there still a piece of information missing about the voting system?
Those numbers I posted are final totals - they include the 3-2-1 stuff AND the 20-15-10-5-3 both.

E.g Hasek got 15 + 38 = 53

Goalies, D-men and forwards all have 84 of the 3-2-1 points total, meaning 14 voters participated.
 

Theokritos

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Those numbers I posted are final totals - they include the 3-2-1 stuff AND the 20-15-10-5-3 both.

E.g Hasek got 15 + 38 = 53

Goalies, D-men and forwards all have 84 of the 3-2-1 points total, meaning 14 voters participated.

Okay, so they had ONE preliminary list determined by the coaches, I misunderstood that. Would be great to see the detailed results for both voting rounds/sections once you have time to post them. No hurry though. :cheers:
 

MadArcand

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Okay, so they had ONE preliminary list determined by the coaches, I misunderstood that. Would be great to see the detailed results for both voting rounds/sections once you have time to post them. No hurry though. :cheers:

Goalies:
Preliminary ranking:

Briza 20
Hasek 15
Svarny 10
Sindel 5
J. Svoboda 3
Poll:
Hasek 38
Sindel 20
Lang 10
Svarny 9
Briza 7

Defensemen:
Preliminary ranking:

Bozik 20
Slanina 15
Bondra 10
Stavjana 5
A. Kadlec 3
Poll:
Bozik 23
Slanina 18
Stavjana 18
Benak 11
Prochazka 8
A. Kadlec 5
Radvan 1

Forwards:
Preliminary ranking:

Liba 20
Ruzicka 15
Vodila 10
Rosol 5
Janecky 3
Poll:
Ruzicka 36
Liba 33
Rosol 6
Hrdina 6
Vodila 1
Lala 1
Valek 1

Coaches:
No points given, just stated that Selvek and Kovacs were rated the top coaching team.
 

Theokritos

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Goalies:
Preliminary ranking:

...

Now that was fast, thanks a lot. Some interesting differences. From an earlier post of yours:

The basis was expert rating by the hockey union head coach Karel Gut (based on league matches), rating by the NT coaches Jan Starsi and Frantisek Pospisil, and by the coaches of league teams (after the whole season was over)

Based on league matches - does this apply only to the rating by Karel Gut or to the ratings by the other two too? Seems like a really complex voting system, just like the Czechoslovak Golden Stick voting apparently.
 

MadArcand

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Now that was fast, thanks a lot. Some interesting differences. From an earlier post of yours:



Based on league matches - does this apply only to the rating by Karel Gut or to the ratings by the other two too? Seems like a really complex voting system, just like the Czechoslovak Golden Stick voting apparently.
The way it's written, only to Gut's voting. But I wouldn't bet on that being definitely the case.
 

Theokritos

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The way it's written, only to Gut's voting. But I wouldn't bet on that being definitely the case.

And the league coaches voted separately later on? And the other two voted together with Gut or somewhere in between?

Sorry in case I ask you questions the book don't allow you to answer.
 

MadArcand

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And the league coaches voted separately later on? And the other two voted together with Gut or somewhere in between?

Sorry in case I ask you questions the book don't allow you to answer.

Well, we know there were 14 voters. 12 head coaches + 2 NT coaches should be it.

The way it looks, it seems Gut determined the 20-..-3 point ranking, and the 14 voted in the 3-2-1 system. Seems kinda heavy on input by just one man.
 

Theokritos

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Well, we know there were 14 voters. 12 head coaches + 2 NT coaches should be it.

The way it looks, it seems Gut determined the 20-..-3 point ranking, and the 14 voted in the 3-2-1 system. Seems kinda heavy on input by just one man.

This way it makes sense, though it's really a stange system and gives heavy impact to one man indeed as you point out.

So only coaches voting in this one, no journalists?
 

VMBM

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Here are the goalie stats from the 1981-83 World Championships and 1984 Olympics. These are taken mostly from the books Suuri Jääkiekkoteos 3 and Suuri Jääkiekkoteos 4, but I had to get some of the stats from elsewhere too, since there was some information missing (e.g. GP for the 1981 WHC) and an odd error. I hope they are at least close to being correct, but notify, if you see something wrong.

1981 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|18|1|94.5
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|174|13|92.6
3|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|8|237|23|90.3
4|Karel Lang|Czechoslovakia|7|197|20|89.9
5|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|5|243|72|88.9
6|Phil Myre|Canada|7|150|17|88.7
7|Jaromir Sindel|Czechoslovakia|2|53|6|88.7
8|Ed Walsh|USA|4|137|16|88.4
9|John Garrett|CAN|3|143|17|88.2
10|Karl Friesen|West Germany|4|164|20|87.9
11|Bernhard Engelbrecht|West Germany|4|149|20|86.6
12|Hannu Lassila|Finland|4|163|24|85.3
13|John de Bryn|Netherlands|2|144|23|84.1
14|Greg Moffett|USA|5|140|27|80.8
15|Ted Lenssen|Netherlands|6|219|45|79.5
16|Reino Sundberg*|Sweden|1|12|7|41.7
* NOTE: played only 1 game

1982 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|60|1|98.3
2|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|10|238|17|92.8
3|Gilles Meloche|Canada|5|156|14|91.0
4|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|7|209|20|90.4
5|Greg Millen|Canada|5|139|14|89.9
6|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|8|184|19|89.6
7|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|7|174|20|88.5
8|Göte Wälitalo|Sweden|4|127|15|88.1
9|Karl Friesen|West Germany|7|250|30|88.0
10|Jim Corsi|Italy|7|315|38|87.9
11|Glen Resch|USA|4|153|21|86.2
12|Steve Janaszak|USA|3|104|17|83.6
13|Hannu Lassila|Finland|2|48|11|77.0
14|Nick Sanza*|Italy|1|25|6|76.0
15|Karel Lang*|Czechoslovakia|1|6|3|50.00
* NOTE: played only 1 game

1983 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|145|4|97.24
2|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|4|237|15|93.67
3|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|8|238|16|93.28
4|Erich Weishaupt|West Germany|5|176|13|92.61
5|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|73|6|91.78
6|Dominik Hasek**|Czechoslovakia|2|58|5|91.38
7|Rick Wamsley|Canada|10|331|30|90.94
8|Pelle Lindbergh**|Sweden|9|276|27|90.22
9|Kari Takko|Finland|6|244|25|89.75
10|Karl Friesen|West Germany|5|192|21|89.06
11|Jim Corsi|Italy|10|403|50|87.59
12|Rene Bielke|East Germany|10|263|36|86.31
13|Göte Wälitalo*|Sweden|1|29|5|82.76
14|Nick Sanza*|Italy|1|28|6|78.57
15|Ingolf Spantig*|East Germany|1|13|4|69.23
* NOTE: played only 1 game
** not eligible in the project, of course, but interesting nevertheless!

1984 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Jiri Kralik*|Czechoslovakia|1|25|0|100
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|6|112|4|96.43
3|Jaromir Sindel|Czechoslovakia|6|185|9|95.14
4|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|17|1|94.12
5|Rolf Ridderwall|Sweden|6|130|9|93.08
6|Mario Gosselin|Canada|7|174|14|91.95
7|Adriano Tancon|Italy|4|125|12|90.40
8|Marc Behrend|USA|4|102|11|89.22
9|Karl Friesen|West Germany|5|142|16|88.73
10|Kari Takko|Finland|5|156|19|87.82
11|Jorma Valtonen|Finland|2|48|6|87.50
12|Göte Wälitalo|Sweden|3|52|7|86.54
13|Cveto Pretnar|Yugoslavia|5|234?**|37|84.19
14|Robert Mason|USA|3|63|10|84.13
15|Bernhard Engelbrecht*|West Germany|1|30|5|83.33
16|Wlodzimierz Olszewski|Poland|6|179|32|82.12
17|Darren Eliot|Canada|2|11|2|81.82
18|Gabriel Samolej|Poland|3|64|12|81.25
19|Marco Capone|Italy|3|100|19|81.00
20|Michael Rudmann|Austria|5|165|37|77.57
21|Jörn Goldstein|Norway|5|98|26|73.47
22|Jim Martinsen|Norway|3|60|17|71.67
* NOTE: played only 1 game
** the book actually has "34" SOG, which obviously can't be right


No question that Vladislav Tretyak was in a terrific form in 1981-84 (except for the 1982 WHC), but I think his numbers also show that the Soviet national team was just so very strong during this time period too; it was hard to get many shots on goal - let alone good scoring chances - against the Soviets especially in the early 1980s.
Note also the Finnish goalie Hannu Kamppuri. I always thought that he was a good netminder. And he had to face so much more 'rubber' than USSR's, CSSR's, and Sweden's goalies. But that had already been the fate of Finnish goalies for decades, of course.

By the way, Tretyak's English Wikipedia page is fairly informative; there are his Soviet League stats & stats from the major international tournaments, but unfortunately there are no save percentages but rather Goals against averages. I don't know where those were gotten from, but they show that his GAA improved clearly in the 1980s (both on CSKA & ntl team), indicating also that the Soviets (and probably Tretyak too) were at their strongest in the early 1980s (post Lake Placid).
 
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Theokritos

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Well, we know there were 14 voters. 12 head coaches + 2 NT coaches should be it.

12 teams in the league, 12 head coaches. Plus 2 national team coaches. Makes perfect sense.

BTW what is the job and role of the "hockey union head coach"?

Seems so, given the not so huge number of voters. The voters - when not explicitly specified as coaches - are referred to just as 'experts'.

So it seems to have worked like this:
1) At the end of the Czechoslovak league season (the playoffs ended on March 21 in 1986) Karel Gut ranked the top 6 goalies, top 6 defencemen and top 6 forwards for "Tipsport" magazine.
2) After the conclusion of the World Championship (on April 28 in 1986) each of the 12 head coaches of the Czechoslovak league clubs and the two coaches of the Czechoslovak national team ranked the top 3 goalies, top 3 defencemen and top 3 forwards.

Let's take a look at the differences between the two rankings. Golden Stick voting is also included for reference:

Goaltenders | Karel Gut: | 14 coaches: | Golden Stick:
Bříza|1st (20pts) |7/42 (16.7%) |25 (4th)
Hašek|2nd (15pts) |38/42 (90.5%) |587 (1st)
Švárny|3rd (10pts) |9/42 (21.4%) |14 (5th)
Šindel|4th (5pts) |20/42 (47.6%) |213 (2nd)
J.Svoboda|5th (3pts) |—|—
Lang|—|10/42 (23.9%) |35 (3rd)
Fürbacher|—|—|7 (6th)
Cagaš|—|—|4 (7th)

Hašek won the vote of the 14 coaches and the Golden Stick voters (mostly journalists) by an overwhelming margin. Gut however had Bříza ahead of him. Outlier opinion or justified based on league play? If it's the latter then almost everybody but Gut must have placed a massive premium on international performance. An argument against this: Hašek played in 9 out of 10 games at the 1986 World Championship, but Czechoslovakia only finished 5th there.

Šindel is the clear #2 with both the coaches and the journalists. Gut on the other hand has him lower too. Same question arises as above and this time we're in a position to answer it: Šindel played in one single game at the World Championship, a disappointing 1-2 defeat against Poland. No way that game earned him a great boost in anybody's eyes. Therefore the difference in the ranking of Šindel has nothing to do with domestic vs international performance, Gut just saw things in a different way than the majority of the other voters did.

Lang did a bit better than Bříza in both the coaches' poll and the journalists' poll, he arguably earned the #3 rank. Gut didn't have him in the top 5 though.

Bříza got his share of votes in both polls, but Gut rated him much higher than anyobdy else did that season. I guess we can conclude that his goaltender ranking is definitely an outlier in almost every regard.

Defencemen | Karel Gut: | 14 coaches: | Golden Stick:
BožÃ­k|1st (20pts) |23/42 (54.8%) |227 (2nd)
Slanina|2nd (15pts) |18/42 (42.9%) |225 (3rd)
J.Bondra|3rd (10pts) |—|—
Stavjaňa|4th (5pts) |18/42 (42.9%) |228 (1st)
A.Kadlec|5th (3pts) |5/42 (11.9%) |41 (7th)
Benák|—|11/42 (26.2%) |116 (4th)
Procházka|—|8/42 (19.0%) |68 (5th)
Radvan|—|1/42 (2.4%) |—
Hořava|—|—|42 (6th)

There is effectively a three-way tie in Golden Stick voting between Stavjaňa, BožÃ­k and Slanina. The coaches have a similiar result, but with a slight edge for BožÃ­k. Gut has BožÃ­k 1st and Slanina 2nd, but Stavjaňa is only 4th. Maybe the latter has had a good World Championship after Gut had submitted his ranking? Other notable differences: Both the coaches and the journalists have Benák as #4 and Procházka as #5 behind the leading three. Gut has neither of them in his top 5. On the other hand he ranks Juraj Bondra (older brother of Peter Bondra BTW) as #3 while neither the coaches nor the journalists gave him any love at all.

Forwards | Karel Gut: | 14 coaches: | Golden Stick:
Liba|1st (20pts) |33/42 (78.6%) |779 (2nd)
Růžička|2nd (15pts) |36/42 (85.7%) |883 (1st)
Vodila|3rd (10pts) |1/42 (2.4%) |217 (5th)
Rosol|4th (5pts) |6/42 (14.3%) |488 (4th)
Janecký|5th (3pts) |—|41 (7th)
Hrdina|—|6/42 (14.3%) |629 (3rd)
Válek|—|1/42 (2.4%) |47 (10th)
Lála|—|1/42 (2.4%) |10 (15th)
Pašek|—|—|144 (6th)

Liba and Růžička were the consensus top-two according to all three rankings. Gut had Liba (strong season domestically, but didn't stand out at the World Championship) ahead, the others preferred Růžička (who was good in the Czechoslovak league and led his team in scoring at the World Championship). Next the Golden Stick voters ranked Hrdina a step ahead of Rosol (the coaches had both tied) and Rosol a step ahead of Vodila. Gut however liked Rosol more than Hrdina and Vodila even more than both. But who knows, based on league play alone it's possibly a reasonable ranking. Some of the other decisions by Gut however are more obviously questionale/outliers (goaltenders, Bondra instead of Benák).
 

MadArcand

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Briza was easily the best goalie in the league stat-wise, though - .917 SV% (Hasek was 2nd with .902), 2.17 GAA (Hasek 4th with 3.08, 2nd was Svarny with 2.93...).

Anyway, the rankings by Gut were calculated by some formula - there is top-12 goalies, top-15 D-men and top-25 forwards listed, and they fit with his ranking and are ordered by some mysterious calculated stats:

Goalies (minutes played/GA/saves/GAA/SV%/mysterious calculated stat*):
* - supposedly GAA x (100 - SV%)
IMAG1443.jpg


D-men (GP/G/A/+ pts/- pts/mysterious calculated stat):
IMAG1444.jpg


Forwards (same as D-men):
IMAG1445.jpg
 

DN28

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Here are some goalie stats from the 1981-83 World Championships and 1984 Olympics. These are taken mostly from the books Suuri Jääkiekkoteos 3 and Suuri Jääkiekkoteos 4, but I had to get some of the stats from elsewhere too, since there was some information missing (e.g. GP for the 1981 WHC) and an odd error. I hope they are at least close to being correct, but notify, if you see something wrong.

EDIT:
I did a top 5 for every tournament plus the stats for the goalies (outside top 5) who are relevant or in other ways interesting for this project.

1981 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|18|1|94.5
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|174|13|92.6
3|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|8|237|23|90.3
4|Karel Lang|Czechoslovakia|7|197|20|89.9
5|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|5|243|72|88.9
* NOTE: played only 1 game

1982 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|60|1|98.3
2|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|10|238|17|92.8
3|Gilles Meloche|Canada|5|156|14|91.0
4|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|7|209|20|90.4
5|Greg Millen|Canada|5|139|14|89.9
6|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|8|184|19|89.6
7|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|7|174|20|88.5

1983 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|145|4|97.24
2|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|4|237|15|93.67
3|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|8|238|16|93.28
4|Erich Weishaupt|West Germany|5|176|13|92.61
5|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|73|6|91.78
6|Dominik Hasek*|Czechoslovakia|2|58|5|91.38
8|Pelle Lindbergh*|Sweden|9|276|27|90.22
* not eligible in the project, of course, but interesting nevertheless!

1984 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Jiri Kralik*|Czechoslovakia|1|25|0|100
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|6|112|4|96.43
3|Jaromir Sindel|Czechoslovakia|6|185|9|95.14
4|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|17|1|94.12
5|Rolf Ridderwall|Sweden|6|130|9|93.08
* NOTE: played only 1 game

No question that Vladislav Tretyak was in a terrific form in 1981-84 (except for the 1982 WHC), but I think his numbers also show that the Soviet national team was just so very strong during this time period too; it was hard to get many shots on goal - let alone good scoring chances - against the Soviets especially in the early 1980s.
Note also the Finnish goalie Hannu Kamppuri. I always thought that he was a good netminder. And he had to face so much more 'rubber' than USSR's, CSSR's, and Sweden's goalies. But that had already been the fate of Finnish goalies for decades, of course.

By the way, Tretyak's English Wikipedia page is fairly informative; there are his Soviet League stats & stats from the major international tournaments, but unfortunately there are no save percentages but rather Goals against averages. I don't know where those were gotten from, but they show that his GAA improved clearly in the 1980s (both on CSKA & ntl team), indicating also that the Soviets (and probably Tretyak too) were at their strongest in the early 1980s (post Lake Placid).

As for czechoslovak goalies, those numbers are correct.
 

Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
12,538
4,911
Here are some goalie stats from the 1981-83 World Championships and 1984 Olympics.
...

Official Reports of the 1972 and 1980 Olympic Winter Games include goaltender stats:

1972 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Mike Curran|United States|5|209|15|92.8
2|Vladimír Dzurilla|Czechoslovakia|5|94|7|92.6
3|Leif Holmqvist|Sweden|3|89|7|92.1
4|Vladislav Tretyak|Sovie Union|5|146|13|91.1
5|Carl Abrahamsson|Sweden|2|60|6|90.0
6|Jorma Valtonen|Finland|5|164|24|85.4
7|Walery Kosyl|Poland|5|141|26|81.6
8|Jiří Holeček|Czechoslovakia|2|32|6|81.3
9|Andrzej Tkacz|Poland|2|65|13|80.0
Source (p.484)

1980 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|William Löfqvist|Sweden|2|54|1|98.1
2|Karel Lang|Czechoslovakia|1|29|2|93.1
3|James Craig|United States|7|178|15|91.6
4|Antero Kivelä|Finland|3|100|10|90.0
5|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|5|86|9|89.5
6|Paul Pageau|Canada|4|93|11|88.2
7|Bob Dupuis|Canada|3|56|7|87.5
8|Pelle Lindbergh|Sweden|5|142|18|87.3
9|Jiří Králik|Czechoslovakia|5|98|15|84.7
10|Jorma Valtonen|Finland|4|97|15|84.5
11|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|4|50|8|84.0
Source (p.106 on scrollbar)

Also checked the 1968, 1976 and 1988 reports, but there is nothing to be found there beyond the game results.
 
Last edited:

DN28

Registered User
Jan 2, 2014
629
576
Prague
I am not sure if you have full data for scoring in CS league. In case you depend on Czech wikipedia, there are many seasons wrong. The most reliable source about czechoslovak statistics is http://avlh.sweb.cz/ . I also counted average amount of goals scored per game in a season which better illustrates how good season one player had since scoring environment has been constantly changing. Hence I´ll post it here.

1961-1962 (8.45 goals per game)
1. Jozef Golonka - 50 points (31+19) / 29 games
2. Josef Vimmer - 45 points (38+7) / 32 games
3. Jaroslav Volf - 44 points (32+12) / 32 games
4. Jindřich Lidický - 44 points (22+22) / 31 games
5. Jiří Dolana - 42 points (33+9) / 29 games
6. Jaroslav Jiřík - 41 points (31+10) / 31 games
7. Luděk Bukač - 41 points (27+14) / 32 games
8. Josef Klíma - 41 points (26+15) / 30 games
9. Ján Starší - 38 points (27+11) / 27 games
10. Jan Klapáč - 38 points (25+13) / 32 games

1962-1963 (7.75 goals per game)
1. Jiří Dolana - 41 points (27+14) / 30 games
2. Jaroslav Walter - 39 points (24+15) / 32 games
3. Jiří Hříbal - 36 points (22+14) / 30 games
4. Ján Starší - 34 points (21+13) / 32 games
5. Jaroslav Volf - 32 points (28+4) / 32 games
6. Jozef Golonka - 32 points (23+9) / 15 games
7. Jaroslav Jiřík - 32 points (23+9) / 28 games
8. Luděk Bukač - 31 points (23+8) / 28 games
9. Stanislav Prýl - 29 points (23+6) / 31 games
10. Václav Pantůček - 28 points (23+5) / 25 games

1963-1964 (8.69 goals per game)
1. Josef Černý - 55 points (43+12) / 32 games
2. Vlastimil Bubník - 44 points (30+14) / 24 games
3. Jan Klapáč - 43 points (33+10) / 32 games
4. Jozef Golonka - 43 points (28+15) / 29 games
5. Jiří Dolana - 39 points (30+9) / 30 games
6. Jaroslav Volf - 38 points (26+12) / 30 games
7. Jindřich Lidický - 38 points (24+14) / 32 games
8. Stanislav Prýl - 37 points (27+10) / 32 games
9. Jaroslav Walter - 37 points (23+14) / 31 games
10. František Vaněk - 35 poins (20+15) / 29 games

1964-1965 (8.28 goals per game)
1. Jan Klapáč - 42 points (34+8) / 32 games
2. Stanislav Prýl - 42 points (26+16) / 32 games
3. Václav Nedomanský - 41 points (31+10) / 32 games
4. Jozef Golonka - 41 points (22+19) / 23 games
5. Jaroslav Holík - 39 points (20+19) / 32 games
6. Milan Kokš - 39 points (14+25) / 31 games
7. Zdeněk Špaček - 38 points (32+6) / 32 games
8. Vladimír Brada - 37 points (27+10) / 32 games
9. Miroslav Vlach - 36 points (27+9) / 32 games
10. Vlastimil Bubník - 36 points (23+13) / 31 games

1965-1966 (8.12 goals per game)
1. Jaroslav Holík - 65 points (28+37) / 36 games
2. Jozef Golonka - 57 points (38+19) / 35 games
3. Václav Nedomanský - 53 points (39+14) / 36 games
4. Jan Klapáč - 51 points (40+11) / 36 games
5. Milan Kokš - 51 points (30+21) / 36 games
6. Josef Černý - 47 points (34+13) / 34 games
7. Ján Starší - 46 points (27+16) / 33 games
8. Zdeněk Špaček - 38 points (28+10) / 36 games
9. Jaroslav Jiřík - 37 points (26+11) / 35 games
10. Josef Vimmer - 36 points (27+9) / 36 games

1966-1967 (7.58 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 60 points (40+20) / 34 games
2. Jaroslav Holík - 59 points (25+34) / 34 games
3. Jan Klapáč - 52 points (39+13) / 35 games
4. Jan Havel - 45 points (26+19) / 35 games
5. Josef Vimmer - 44 points (35+9) / 33 games
6. Jozef Golonka - 38 points (18+20) / 35 games
7. Jiří Dolana - 34 points (27+7) / 34 games
8. Stanislav Prýl - 34 points (25+9) / 36 games
9. Luděk Bukač - 34 points (20+14) / 35 games
10. Jiří Holík - 33 points (22+11) / 34 games

1967-1968 (7.59 goals per game)
1. Jan Havel - 53 points (38+13) / 36 games
2. Václav Nedomanský - 34 goals
3. Jan Klapáč - 29 goals
4. Josef Vimmer - 27 goals
5. Jaroslav Holík - 25 goals
6. Jan Suchý - 24 goals
7. František Ševčík - 23 goals
8. Josef Cvach - 22 goals
9. Josef Černý - 22 goals
10. Jan Hrbatý - 21 goals
- unfortunately we don´t have full points for this season, only for leading scorer and then goals; however, there is good reason to believe that Jaroslav Holik and Jan Suchy could have been higher (possibly 2nd or 3rd) considering that both always had much more assists than goals (which is clear about Suchy but little surprising about Holik, I never knew that he was good playmaker which his goals/assists ratio suggests)
- anyway, this was 1st Suchy´s peak season; Top 10 in points for the first time, All-star WC defenseman for the first time + Stadion magazine declared him "clearly the best hockey player of the season" after his team won the league title

1968-1969 (7.68 goals per game)
1. Jan Suchý - 56 points (30+26) / 34 games
2. Václav Nedomanský - 50 points (28+22) / 36 games
3. Jiří Holík - 47 points (29+18) / 36 games
4. Jan Hrbatý - 46 points (26+20) / 36 games
5. Josef Černý - 45 points (30+15) / 36 games
6. Jozef Golonka - 45 points (23+22) / 32 games
7. Jaroslav Holík - 44 points (20+24) / 35 games
8. Jaroslav Jiřík - 41 points (35+6) / 32 games
9. Richard Farda - 38 points (22+16) / 36 games
10. Ivan Hlinka - 38 points (21+17) / 36 games

1969-1970 (7.17 goals per game)
1. Jiří Kochta - 52 points (25+27) / 35 games
2. Josef Černý - 46 points (32+14) / 34 games
3. Jan Havel - 44 points (30+14) / 34 games
4. Jan Suchý - 44 points (21+23) / 36 games
5. Václav Nedomanský - 42 points (29+13) / 35 games
6. Jan Hrbatý - 41 points (23+18) / 36 games
7. Jiří Holík - 40 points (23+17) / 35 games
8. Jaroslav Holík - 39 points (18+21) / 33 games
9. František Pospíšil - 38 points (13+25) / 36 games
10. Vladimír Martinec - 36 points (22+14) / 34 games

1970-1971
- regular season (7.13 goals per game)
1. Václav Mařík - 49 points (25+24) / 36 games
2. Václav Nedomanský - 46 points (31+15) / 33 games
3. Jan Havel - 45 points (32+13) / 35 games
4. Richard Farda - 44 points (25+19) / 35 games
5. František Pospíšil - 42 points (10+32) / 36 points
6. Vladimír Martinec - 39 points (20+19) / 34 games
7. Bedřich Brunclík - 38 points (23+15) / 35 games
8. Ivan Hlinka - 38 points (20+18) / 36 games
9. Jaroslav Jiřík - 37 points (25+12) / 31 games
10. Miroslav Klapáč - 37 points (20+17) / 34 games

- play-offs (5.77 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 10 points (7+3) / 7 games
2. Richard Farda - 10 points (5+5) / 8 games
3. Milan Nový - 9 points (7+2) / 9 games
4. Josef Černý - 9 points (2+7) / 8 games
5. Josef Augusta - 7 points (5+2) / 8 games
6. Jiří Holík - 7 points (3+4) / 8 games
7. František Pospíšil - 7 points (2+5) / 9 games
8. Jaroslav Jiřík - 6 points (6+0) / 8 games
9. Oldřich Machač - 6 points (4+2) / 8 games
10. Josef Vimmer - 6 points (3+3) / 9 games

- full season (7.02 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 56 points (38+18) / 40 games
2. Richard Farda - 54 points (30+24) / 43 games
3. Václav Mařík - 49 points (25+24) / 36 games
4. František Pospíšil - 49 points (12+37) / 45 games
5. Jan Havel - 45 points (32+13) / 35 games
6. Josef Černý - 44 points (18+26) / 41 games
7. Jaroslav Jiřík - 43 points (31+12) / 39 games
8. Milan Nový - 40 points (23+17) / 42 games
9. Vladimír Martinec - 39 points (20+19) / 34 games
10. Bedřich Brunclík - 38 points (23+15) / 35 games

1971-1972 (6.25 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 53 points (36+17) / 36 games
2. Ivan Hlinka - 52 points (33+19) / 36 games
3. Jan Klapáč - 42 points (29+13) / 36 games
4. František Pospíšil - 42 points (15+27) / 35 games
5. Jaroslav Holík - 41 points (16+25) / 36 games
6. Vladimír Martinec - 40 points (23+17) / 35 games
7. Josef Černý - 35 points (20+15) / 35 games
8. Jaroslav Nedvěd - 32 points (21+11) / 36 games
9. Bohuslav Šťastný - 31 points (20+11) / 36 games
10. Jiří Holík - 29 points (15+14) / 36 games

1972-1973
- regular season (6.58 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Martinec - 49 points (26+23) / 34 games
2. Július Haas - 46 points (32+14) / 33 games
3. Milan Nový - 44 points (30+14) / 35 games
4. Václav Nedomanský - 39 points (22+17) / 34 games
5. Jiří Holík - 37 points (21+16) / 36 games
6. Jiří Novák - 36 points (18+18) / 34 games
7. Ivan Hlinka - 35 points (24+11) / 33 games
8. Bohuslav Šťastný - 34 points (26+8) / 32 games
9. Richard Farda - 34 points (14+20) / 36 games
10. Petr Otte - 34 points (13+21) / 34 games

- play-offs (6.14 goals per game)
1. Bohuslav Šťastný - 14 points (6+8) / 12 games
2. Milan Nový - 12 points (9+3) / 10 games
3. Václav Haňka - 12 points (5+7) / 12 games
4. Vladimír Veith - 11 points (5+6) / 12 games
5. Jiří Holík - 10 points (7+3) / 10 games
6. Stanislav Prýl - 10 points (4+6) / 12 games
7. Eduard Novák - 9 points (6+3) / 9 games
8. Jiří Novák - 9 points (4+5) / 12 games
9. Miroslav Miklošovič - 8 points (5+3) / 11 games
10. Václav Nedomanský - 8 points (4+4) / 11 games

- full season (6.54 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 56 points (39+17) / 45 games
2. Vladimír Martinec - 55 points (31+24) / 46 games
3. Július Haas - 51 points (35+16) / 36 games
4. Bohuslav Šťastný - 48 points (32+16) / 44 games
5. Jiří Holík - 47 points (28+19) / 46 games
6. Václav Nedomanský - 47 points (26+21) / 45 games
7. Jiří Novák - 45 points (22+23) / 46 games
8. Josef Paleček - 41 points (26+15) / 44 games
9. Jan Hrbatý - 39 points (15+24) / 40 games
10. Eduard Novák - 37 points (24+13) / 45 games

1973-1974 (6.87 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 76 points (46+30) / 43 games
2. Vladimír Martinec - 57 points (31+26) / 44 games
3. Ivan Hlinka - 53 points (26+27) / 39 games
4. Milan Nový - 51 points (35+16) / 38 games
5. Július Haas - 50 points (24+26) / 42 games
6. Zdeněk Mráz - 50 points (23+27) / 43 games
7. Bedřich Brunclík - 50 points (23+27) / 44 games
8. Jaroslav Mec - 45 points (30+15) / 41 games
9. Jaroslav Holík - 44 points (18+26) / 43 games
10. Eduard Novák - 43 points (23+20) / 37 games

1974-1975 (6.48 goals per game)
1. Ivan Hlinka - 79 points (36+43) / 44 games
2. Milan Nový - 67 points (45+22) / 44 games
3. Marián Šťastný - 61 points (36+25) / 41 games
4. Josef Ulrych - 60 points (34+26) / 44 games
5. Jiří Novák - 51 points (24+27) / 44 games
6. Bedřich Brunclík - 44 points (24+20) / 42 games
7. Vladimír Martinec - 42 points (29+13) / 40 games
8. Eduard Novák - 41 points (29+12) / 44 games
9. Václav Mařík - 40 points (19+21) / 44 games
10. Jan Hrbatý - 40 points (17+23) / 44 games

1975-1976 (6.68 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 57 points (32+25) / 32 games
2. Vladimír Martinec - 48 points (23+25) / 32 games
3. Ivan Hlinka - 45 points (25+20) / 30 games
4. Eduard Novák - 42 points (26+16) / 32 games
5. Václav Mařík - 37 points (12+25) / 32 games
6. Vincent Lukáč - 34 points (17+17) / 28 games
7. Jiří Bubla - 34 points (11+23) / 31 games
8. Bohuslav Ebermann - 32 points (19+13) / 31 games
9. František Černík - 32 points (17+15) / 32 games
10. Petr Brdička - 31 points (21+10) / 32 games

1976-1977 (7.18 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 93 points (59+34) / 44 games
2. Vincent Lukáč - 79 points (48+31) / 42 games
3. Eduard Novák - 63 points (37+26) / 44 games
4. Bohuslav Ebermann - 60 points (31+29) / 44 games
5. Ivan Hlinka - 58 points (39+19) / 42 games
6. Miroslav Klapáč - 57 points (30+27) / 44 games
7. Peter Šťastný - 54 points (25+29) / 44 games
8. Jiří Novák - 52 points (30+22) / 39 games
9. Marián Šťastný - 52 points (29+23) / 44 games
10. Václav Mařík - 51 points (21+30) / 44 games

1977-1978 (6.77 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 73 points (40+33) / 44 games
2. Ivan Hlinka - 72 points (33+39) / 43 games
3. Jaroslav Pouzar - 62 points (42+20) / 43 games
4. Vincent Lukáč - 58 points (36+22) / 42 games
5. Peter Šťastný - 54 points (31+23) / 42 games
6. Jiří Bubla - 51 points (22+29) / 44 games
7. Eduard Novák - 49 points (37+12) / 44 games
8. Marián Šťastný - 48 points (30+18) / 44 games
9. Jozef Lukáč - 48 points (29+19) / 44 games
10. Libor Havlíček - 44 points (18+26) / 43 games

1978-1979 (6.94 goals per game)
1. Marián Šťastný - 73 points (39+34) / 40 games
2. Vladimír Martinec - 62 points (42+20) / 45 games
3. Milan Nový - 57 points (33+24) / 44 games
4. Peter Šťastný - 55 points (32+23) / 39 games
5. Anton Šťastný - 53 points (31+22) / 43 games
6. Vincent Lukáč - 52 points (27+25) / 38 games
7. Eduard Novák - 41 points (22+19) / 44 games
8. Ladislav Svozil - 41 points (19+22) / 44 games
9. Libor Havlíček - 40 points (17+23) / 43 games
10. Miloš Holaň - 39 points (27+12) / 44 games

1979-1980 (7.20 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 66 points (36+30) / 44 games
2. Vincent Lukáč - 64 points (43+21) / 41 games
3. Jaroslav Pouzar - 63 points (40+23) / 44 games
4. Anton Šťastný - 56 points (30+26) / 43 games
5. Jiří Novák - 52 points (26+26) / 40 games
6. Jaroslav Vlk - 50 points (31+19) / 41 games
7. Peter Šťastný - 50 points (26+24) / 41 games
8. Marián Šťastný - 49 points (28+21) / 36 games
9. Ladislav Svozil - 49 points (19+30) / 44 games
10. Vladimír Martinec - 47 points (27+20) / 35 games

1980-1981 (7.48 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 71 points (32+39) / 44 games
2. Jiří Lála - 60 points (40+20) / 44 games
3. Vincent Lukáč - 56 points (29+27) / 35 games
4. Miroslav Fryčer - 55 points (33+22) / 34 games
5. Jaroslav Pouzar - 55 points (29+26) / 42 games
6. Jindřich Kokrment - 54 points (20+34) / 44 games
7. Dárius Rusnák - 51 points (32+19) / 44 games
8. Norbert Král - 51 points (22+29) / 41 games
9. Ivan Hlinka - 49 points (21+28) / 40 games
10. Ladislav Svozil - 49 points (16+33) / 41 games

1981-1982 (7.00 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 67 points (29+38) / 44 games
2. Jaroslav Vlk - 54 points (21+33) / 38 games
3. Igor Liba - 53 points (35+18) / 44 games
4. Jindřich Kokrment - 53 points (22+31) / 43 games
5. František Černík - 51 points (28+23) / 41 games
6. Jiří Lála - 50 points (24+26) / 42 games
7. Vladimír Růžička - 49 points (27+22) / 44 games
8. Miloš Říha - 43 points (24+19) / 40 games
9. Jiří Šejba - 42 points (24+18) / 40 games
10. František Černík - 41 points (25+16) / 42 games

1982-1983 (7.46 goals per game)
1. Vincent Lukáč - 68 points (49+19) / 42 games
2. Pavel Richter - 64 points (20+44) / 44 games
3. Jiří Lála - 60 points (38+22) / 44 games
4. Ladislav Svozil - 57 points (29+28) / 44 games
5. Libor Havlíček - 56 points (11+45) / 40 games
6. František Černý - 54 points (34+20) / 43 games
7. Karel Holý - 54 points (23+31) / 43 games
8. Jaroslav Vlk - 53 points (17+36) / 39 games
9. Jozef Lukáč - 52 points (19+33) / 44 games
10. František Černík - 50 points (23+27) / 44 games

1983-1984 (6.97 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 54 points (31+23) / 44 games
2. Vladimír Caldr - 51 points (26+25) / 38 games
3. Vincent Lukáč - 50 points (30+20) / 41 games
4. Jiří Lála - 50 points (26+24) / 44 games
5. Jiří Hrdina - 49 points (16+33) / 44 games
6. František Černík - 48 points (25+23) / 44 games
7. Dušan Pašek - 47 points (28+19) / 40 games
8. Petr Rosol - 45 points (26+19) / 44 games
9. Dárius Rusnák - 45 points (23+22) / 40 games
10. Vladimír Kýhos - 45 points (12+33) / 35 games

1984-1985 (7.03 goals per game)
1. Miroslav Ihnačák - 66 points (35+31) / 43 games
2. Ján Vodila - 63 points (29+34) / 43 games
3. Vladimír Růžička - 60 points (38+22) / 41 games
4. Petr Rosol - 54 points (32+22) / 40 games
5. Igor Liba - 54 points (28+26) / 44 games
6. Oldřich Válek - 53 points (38+15) / 43 games
7. Vladimír Kameš - 51 points (25+26) / 40 games
8. Jaroslav Vlk - 50 points (27+23) / 40 games
9. Zdeněk Čech - 47 points (30+17) / 43 games
10. Vincent Lukáč - 47 points (28+19) / 38 games

1985-1986
- regular season (7.04 goals per game)
1. Igor Liba - 54 points (25+29) / 34 games
2. Vladimír Růžička - 51 points (28+23) / 34 games
3. Ján Vodila - 45 points (28+17) / 27 games
4. Jiří Hrdina - 45 points (26+19) / 34 games
5. Vladimír Caldr - 42 points (16+26) / 33 games
6. Otakar Janecký - 41 points (21+20) / 34 games
7. Petr Rosol - 39 points (22+17) / 30 games
8. Miroslav Ihnačák - 32 points (16+16) / 22 games
9. Josef Táflík - 31 points (18+13) / 34 games
10. Václav Sýkora - 31 points (15+16) / 34 games

- play-offs (7.38 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 22 points (13+9) / 9 games
2. Jiří Lála - 17 points (8+9) / 12 games
3. Petr Rosol - 16 points (9+7) / 10 games
4. Jiří Otoupalík - 14 points (11+3) / 12 games
5. Alexander Prát - 14 points (4+10) / 12 games
6. Igor Liba - 13 points (6+7) / 14 games
7. Dárius Rusnák - 13 points (4+9) / 12 games
8. Otakar Janecký - 12 points (5+7) / 13 games
9. Robert Vršanský - 12 points (3+9) / 13 games
10. Oldřich Válek - 11 points (8+3) / 13 games

- full season (7.12 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 73 points (41+32) / 43 games
2. Igor Liba - 67 points (31+36) / 48 games
3. Petr Rosol - 55 points (31+24) / 40 games
4. Ján Vodila - 54 points (36+18) / 38 games
5. Otakar Janecký - 53 points (26+27) / 47 games
6. Vladimír Caldr - 53 points (19+34) / 44 games
7. Jiří Hrdina - 49 points (28+21) / 40 games
8. Jiří Lála - 43 points (18+25) / 35 games
9. Vladimír Svitek - 40 points (20+20) / 47 games
10. Dárius Rusnák - 40 points (18+22) / 39 games

1986-1987
- regular season (6.73 goals per game)
1. Dušan Pašek - 45 points (18+27) / 32 games
2. David Volek - 43 points (22+21) / 33 games
3. Vladimír Růžička - 39 points (24+15) / 32 games
4. Ján Vodila - 37 points (20+17) / 34 games
5. Rostislav Vlach - 36 points (24+12) / 34 games
6. Jiří Hrdina - 36 points (18+18) / 31 games
7. Otakar Janecký - 35 points (13+22) / 34 games
8. Jiří Šejba - 34 points (23+11) / 34 games
9. František Černý - 34 points (22+12) / 34 games
10. Ján Jaško - 33 points (25+8) / 34 games

- play-offs (7.55 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Jeřábek - 16 points (7+9) / 12 games
2. František Černý - 15 points (7+8) / 11 games
3. Lumír Kotala - 13 points (5+8) / 12 games
4. Jiří Lála - 12 points (6+6) / 8 games
5. Ján Jaško - 11 points (8+3) / 8 games
6. Jaroslav Hübl - 11 points (7+4) / 11 games
7. Vladimír Růžička - 11 points (5+6) / 7 games
8. Radek Kampf - 11 points (5+6) / 11 games
9. Stanislav Mikulenka - 11 points (4+7) / 12 games
10. Petr Rosol - 11 points (3+8) / 8 games

- full season (6.90 goals per game)
1. David Volek - 52 points (27+25) / 39 games
2. Vladimír Růžička - 50 points (29+21) / 39 games
3. Dušan Pašek - 50 points (21+29) / 38 games
4. František Černý - 49 points (29+20) / 45 games
5. Vladimír Jeřábek - 46 points (25+21) / 46 games
6. Ján Jaško - 44 points (33+11) / 42 games
7. Ján Vodila - 44 points (23+21) / 41 games
8. Rostislav Vlach - 43 points (28+15) / 41 games
9. Jiří Hrdina - 43 points (20+23) / 37 games
10. Jiří Lála - 43 points (20+23) / 39 games

1987-1988
- regular season (7.17 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 53 points (32+21) / 34 games
2. Jiří Lála - 48 points (20+28) / 28 games
3. Petr Rosol - 42 points (20+22) / 33 games
4. Jiří Dudáček - 41 points (17+24) / 34 games
5. Igor Liba - 40 points (14+26) / 30 games
6. Vladimír Kameš - 39 points (21+18) / 33 games
7. Radim Raděvič - 39 points (12+27) / 34 games
8. Dárius Rusnák - 37 points (14+23) / 31 games
9. Otakar Janecký - 36 points (14+22) / 34 games
10. Milan Nový - 36 points (13+23) / 34 games

- play-offs (7.88 goals per game)
1. Jiří Lála - 20 points (10+10) / 10 games
2. Vladimír Kameš - 19 points (12+7) / 13 games
3. Vladimír Caldr - 19 points (7+12) / 10 games
4. Ján Vodila - 18 points (10+8) / 12 games
5. Igor Liba - 18 points (7+11) / 12 games
6. Oldřich Válek - 17 points (11+6) / 11 games
7. David Volek - 17 points (11+6) / 12 games
8. Milan Nový - 17 points (11+6) / 13 games
9. Jiří Kučera - 15 points (6+9) / 9 games
10. Peter Slanina - 14 points (8+6) / 12 games

- full season (7.35 goals per game)
1. Jiří Lála - 68 points (30+38) / 38 games
2. Vladimír Růžička - 65 points (38+27) / 44 games
3. Vladimír Kameš - 58 points (33+25) / 46 games
4. Igor Liba - 58 points (21+37) / 42 games
5. Milan Nový - 53 points (24+29) / 47 games
6. Vladimír Caldr - 53 points (17+36) / 42 games
7. Jiří Dudáček - 51 points (23+28) / 39 games
8. Dárius Rusnák - 51 points (17+34) / 44 games
9. Otakar Janecký - 49 points (20+29) / 44 games
10. Radim Raděvič - 49 points (17+32) / 44 games

1988-1989
- regular season (7.34 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 61 points (31+30) / 34 games
2. Jiří Lála - 49 points (19+30) / 33 games
3. František Černý - 43 points (20+23) / 34 games
4. Jiří Šejba - 42 points (25+17) / 34 games
5. Vladimír Jeřábek - 41 points (20+21) / 34 games
6. Otakar Janecký - 41 points (12+29) / 34 games
7. Radek Ťoupal - 39 points (21+18) / 31 games
8. Robert Reichel - 39 points (19+20) / 34 games
9. Peter Bondra - 37 points (27+10) / 32 games
10. Robert Kron - 36 points (21+15) / 32 games

- play-offs (7.73 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 23 points (15+8) / 11 games
2. Radek Ťoupal - 19 points (8+11) / 12 games
3. Jiří Šejba - 17 points (13+4) / 10 games
4. Oldřich Válek - 17 points (8+9) / 10 games
5. Jiří Lála - 17 points (8+9) / 12 games
6. Petr Kaňkovský - 15 points (7+8) / 12 games
7. Oto Haščák - 14 points (2+12) / 10 games
8. Milan Razým - 13 points (10+3) / 10 games
9. Petr Rosol - 13 points (2+11) / 9 games
10. Otakar Janecký - 13 points (1+12) / 10 games

- full season (7.43 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 84 points (46+38) / 45 games
2. Jiří Lála - 66 points (27+39) / 45 games
3. Jiří Šejba - 59 points (38+21) / 44 games
4. Radek Ťoupal - 58 points (29+29) / 43 games
5. Otakar Janecký - 54 points (13+41) / 44 games
6. Otto Haščák - 50 points (14+36) / 43 games
7. František Černý - 49 points (23+26) / 44 games
8. Robert Reichel - 48 points (23+25) / 44 games
9. Vladimír Jeřábek - 48 points (22+26) / 44 games
10. Zdeno Cíger - 48 points (18+30) / 43 games

1989-1990
- regular season (7.49 goals per game)
1. Robert Reichel - 71 points (43+28) / 44 games
2. Jiří Doležal - 58 points (31+27) / 43 games
3. Ľubomír Kolník - 54 points (30+24) / 44 games
4. Martin Hosták - 53 points (26+27) / 44 games
5. Petr Rosol - 53 points (20+33) / 39 games
6. Vladimír Jeřábek - 52 points (23+29) / 44 games
7. Jaromír Jágr - 50 points (22+28) / 42 games
8. Otakar Janecký - 50 points (22+28) / 44 games
9. Peter Bondra - 46 points (29+17) / 42 games
10. Robert Kron - 44 points (22+22) / 39 games

- play-offs (7.59 goals per game)
1. Evžen Musil - 14 points (6+8) / 11 games
2. Oto Haščák - 14 points (3+11) / 9 games
3. Robert Reichel - 12 points (6+6) / 8 games
4. Vladimír Jeřábek - 11 points (5+6) / 8 games
5. Vladimír Petrovka - 11 points (5+6) / 11 games
6. Petr Fabián - 11 points (4+7) / 8 games
7. Jiří Doležal - 11 points (4+7) / 11 games
8. Peter Bondra - 10 points (7+3) / 7 games
9. Roman Horák - 10 points (7+3) / 9 games
10. Petr Rosol - 10 points (5+5) / 7 games

- full season (7.51 goals per game)
1. Robert Reichel - 83 points (49+34) / 52 games
2. Jiří Doležal - 69 points (35+34) / 54 games
3. Martin Hosták - 63 points (30+33) / 55 games
4. Vladimír Jeřábek - 63 points (28+35) / 52 games
5. Petr Rosol - 63 points (25+38) / 46 games
6. Ľubomír Kolník - 62 points (37+25) / 53 games
7. Jaromír Jágr - 59 points (30+29) / 51 games
8. Peter Bondra - 56 points (36+20) / 49 games
9. Oto Haščák - 56 points (16+40) / 48 games
10. Vladimír Kameš - 53 points (19+34) / 50 games
 
Last edited:

DN28

Registered User
Jan 2, 2014
629
576
Prague
Few comments:

From 1966 scoring started to decrease under 8 goals per game. During 70s scoring was always under 7 goals per game except for 1976-77 when it peaked at 7.18 gpg (which coincides with Novy´s monstrous 93 points in 44 games) and except for 1979-80. Season 1971-72 was historically lowest (only 6.25 gpg). During 80s scoring begun to increase over 7 goals per game but never got over 8 gpg, again except for 2 seasons (1986-87, 1983-84) when it was lower (under 7 gpg).

Vaclav Nedomansky during his prime always finished in top 5 regular season scoring. Milan Novy has the most scoring titles of all - 6x scoring champion in regular season. Jozef Golonka appears to be best Czechoslovak at least in the 1st half of 60s.

Defensemen who finished top 10 scoring: Jan Suchy 3x times (includin 1 win!), Frantisek Pospisil 3x times, Jiri Bubla 2x times + Oldrich Machac and Peter Slanina 1x in play-off.

10 Best seasons (in my opinion):

1968-1969 (7.68 goals per game)
1. Jan Suchý - 56 points (30+26) / 34 games

1971-1972 (6.25 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 53 points (36+17) / 36 games

1973-1974 (6.87 goals per game)
1. Václav Nedomanský - 76 points (46+30) / 43 games

1974-1975 (6.48 goals per game)
1. Ivan Hlinka - 79 points (36+43) / 44 games

1975-1976 (6.68 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 57 points (32+25) / 32 games

1976-1977 (7.18 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 93 points (59+34) / 44 games

1977-1978 (6.77 goals per game)
1. Milan Nový - 73 points (40+33) / 44 games
2. Ivan Hlinka - 72 points (33+39) / 43 games

1978-1979 (6.94 goals per game)
1. Marián Šťastný - 73 points (39+34) / 40 games

1988-1989
- full season (7.43 goals per game)
1. Vladimír Růžička - 84 points (46+38) / 45 games
 
Last edited:

Robert Gordon Orr

Registered User
Dec 3, 2009
978
2,039
1967-1968 (7.59 goals per game)
1. Jan Havel - 53 points (38+13) / 36 games
2. Václav Nedomanský - 34 goals
3. Jan Klapáč - 29 goals
4. Josef Vimmer - 27 goals
5. Jaroslav Holík - 25 goals
6. Jan Suchý - 24 goals
7. František Ševčík - 23 goals
8. Josef Cvach - 22 goals
9. Josef Černý - 22 goals
10. Jan Hrbatý - 21 goals
- unfortunately we don´t have full points for this season, only for leading scorer and then goals; however, there is good reason to believe that Jaroslav Holik and Jan Suchy could have been higher (possibly 2nd or 3rd) considering that both always had much more assists than goals (which is clear about Suchy but little surprising about Holik, I never knew that he was good playmaker which his goals/assists ratio suggests)
- anyway, this was 1st Suchy´s peak season; Top 10 in points for the first time, All-star WC defenseman for the first time + Stadion magazine declared him "clearly the best hockey player of the season" after his team won the league title

Excellent list, thanks for posting it.

Czech newspapers had the following scoring list in 1967/68:

1. Havel - 54 points (39+15)
2. Nedomanský - 50 pts (33+17)
3. Jar.Holik - 45 pts (26+19)
4. Kochta - 44 pts (22+22)
5. Klapác - 42 pts (29+13)
6. Wimmer - 39 pts (27+12)
7. Suchý - 38 pts (24+14)
8. Golonka - 37 pts (17+20)
9. Cerný - 36 pts (24+12)
10. Lidický - 36 pts (15+21)
11. Hrbatý - 35 pts (21+14)
12. Kepák - 35 pts (17+18)
13. Cvach - 34 pts (23+11)
14. Hejma - 34 pts (17+17)
15. Sevcik - 32 pts (23+9)
16. Bavor - 32 pts (16+16)
17. Jirik - 31 pts (16+15)
18. Grandtner - 29 pts (18+11)
18. Jar.Nedved - 29 pts (18+11)
20. Kasták - 29 pts (16+13)
 

DN28

Registered User
Jan 2, 2014
629
576
Prague
Excellent list, thanks for posting it.

Czech newspapers had the following scoring list in 1967/68:

1. Havel - 54 points (39+15)
2. Nedomanský - 50 pts (33+17)
3. Jar.Holik - 45 pts (26+19)
4. Kochta - 44 pts (22+22)
5. Klapác - 42 pts (29+13)
6. Wimmer - 39 pts (27+12)
7. Suchý - 38 pts (24+14)
8. Golonka - 37 pts (17+20)
9. Cerný - 36 pts (24+12)
10. Lidický - 36 pts (15+21)
11. Hrbatý - 35 pts (21+14)
12. Kepák - 35 pts (17+18)
13. Cvach - 34 pts (23+11)
14. Hejma - 34 pts (17+17)
15. Sevcik - 32 pts (23+9)
16. Bavor - 32 pts (16+16)
17. Jirik - 31 pts (16+15)
18. Grandtner - 29 pts (18+11)
18. Jar.Nedved - 29 pts (18+11)
20. Kasták - 29 pts (16+13)

Well that´s a bit surprising. In almost all other seasons Jar. Holik had more assists than goals which was not very common at the time. I´d expect Suchy to have more assists too.

Anyway, thanks! We now have complete scoring for Czechoslovaks.
 
Last edited:

Iain Fyffe

Hockey fact-checker
Well that´s a bit surprising. In almost all other seasons Jar. Holik had more assists than goals which was not very common at the time. I´d expect Suchy to have more assists too.
The SIHR database does not have complete stats from 1967/68, but it has most of them, and of the players that have complete scoring records there were 854 goals and 643 assists, meaning the league just did not award many assists.
 

DN28

Registered User
Jan 2, 2014
629
576
Prague
The SIHR database does not have complete stats from 1967/68, but it has most of them, and of the players that have complete scoring records there were 854 goals and 643 assists, meaning the league just did not award many assists.

Definitely. Which hurts chances for defensemen and playmakers to really shine in scoring.
 

VMBM

And it didn't even bring me down
Sep 24, 2008
3,798
754
Helsinki, Finland
1971 WHC goalie stats

Here are the goalie stats from the 1971 World Championships according to the book "Ã…rets ishockey 1971". I had to dig up the GP stats separately (plus count the SV%), but luckily the book also has the games' box-scores (with lineups) from the tournament.

1971 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Jiri Holecek|Czechoslovakia|8|216|12|94.4
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|4|80|6|92.5
3|Jorma Valtonen|Finland|6|223|17|92.4
4|Marcel Sakac|Czechoslovakia|3|85|8|90.6
5|Christer Abrahamsson|Sweden|9|284|27|90.5
6|Viktor Konovalenko|Soviet Union|7|165|18|89.1
7|Toni Kehle|West Germany|8|319|39|87.8
8|Dick Tomasoni|USA|2|48|6|87.5
9|Mike Curran|USA|2|71|9|87.3
10|Carl Wetzel|USA|8|299|38|87.3
11|Josef Schramm|West Germany|4|167|23|86.2
12|Urpo Ylönen|Finland|4|171|25|85.4
13|William Löfqvist*|Sweden|1|29|6|79.3
* NOTE: played only 1 game


I also decided to overcome my 'laziness' and did all of the goalie stats from the 1981-83 World Championships and 1984 Olympics. Not sure if they really add anything to the discussion, but there you go anyway:

1981 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|18|1|94.5
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|174|13|92.6
3|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|8|237|23|90.3
4|Karel Lang|Czechoslovakia|7|197|20|89.9
5|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|5|243|72|88.9
6|Phil Myre|Canada|7|150|17|88.7
7|Jaromir Sindel|Czechoslovakia|2|53|6|88.7
8|Ed Walsh|USA|4|137|16|88.4
9|John Garrett|CAN|3|143|17|88.2
10|Karl Friesen|West Germany|4|164|20|87.9
11|Bernhard Engelbrecht|West Germany|4|149|20|86.6
12|Hannu Lassila|Finland|4|163|24|85.3
13|John de Bryn|Netherlands|2|144|23|84.1
14|Greg Moffett|USA|5|140|27|80.8
15|Ted Lenssen|Netherlands|6|219|45|79.5
16|Reino Sundberg*|Sweden|1|12|7|41.7
* NOTE: played only 1 game

1982 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|60|1|98.3
2|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|10|238|17|92.8
3|Gilles Meloche|Canada|5|156|14|91.0
4|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|7|209|20|90.4
5|Greg Millen|Canada|5|139|14|89.9
6|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|8|184|19|89.6
7|Peter Lindmark|Sweden|7|174|20|88.5
8|Göte Wälitalo|Sweden|4|127|15|88.1
9|Karl Friesen|West Germany|7|250|30|88.0
10|Jim Corsi|Italy|7|315|38|87.9
11|Glen Resch|USA|4|153|21|86.2
12|Steve Janaszak|USA|3|104|17|83.6
13|Hannu Lassila|Finland|2|48|11|77.0
14|Nick Sanza*|Italy|1|25|6|76.0
15|Karel Lang*|Czechoslovakia|1|6|3|50.00
* NOTE: played only 1 game

1983 World Championships
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|7|145|4|97.24
2|Hannu Kamppuri|Finland|4|237|15|93.67
3|Jiri Kralik|Czechoslovakia|8|238|16|93.28
4|Erich Weishaupt|West Germany|5|176|13|92.61
5|Vladimir Myshkin|Soviet Union|3|73|6|91.78
6|Dominik Hasek**|Czechoslovakia|2|58|5|91.38
7|Rick Wamsley|Canada|10|331|30|90.94
8|Pelle Lindbergh**|Sweden|9|276|27|90.22
9|Kari Takko|Finland|6|244|25|89.75
10|Karl Friesen|West Germany|5|192|21|89.06
11|Jim Corsi|Italy|10|403|50|87.59
12|Rene Bielke|East Germany|10|263|36|86.31
13|Göte Wälitalo*|Sweden|1|29|5|82.76
14|Nicola Sanza*|Italy|1|28|6|78.57
15|Ingolf Spantig*|East Germany|1|13|4|69.23
* NOTE: played only 1 game
** not eligible in the project, of course, but interesting nevertheless!

1984 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Jiri Kralik*|Czechoslovakia|1|25|0|100
2|Vladislav Tretyak|Soviet Union|6|112|4|96.43
3|Jaromir Sindel|Czechoslovakia|6|185|9|95.14
4|Vladimir Myshkin*|Soviet Union|1|17|1|94.12
5|Rolf Ridderwall|Sweden|6|130|9|93.08
6|Mario Gosselin|Canada|7|174|14|91.95
7|Adriano Tancon|Italy|4|125|12|90.40
8|Marc Behrend|USA|4|102|11|89.22
9|Karl Friesen|West Germany|5|142|16|88.73
10|Kari Takko|Finland|5|156|19|87.82
11|Jorma Valtonen|Finland|2|48|6|87.50
12|Göte Wälitalo|Sweden|3|52|7|86.54
13|Cveto Pretnar|Yugoslavia|5|234?**|37|84.19
14|Robert Mason|USA|3|63|10|84.13
15|Bernhard Engelbrecht*|West Germany|1|30|5|83.33
16|Wlodzimierz Olszewski|Poland|6|179|32|82.12
17|Darren Eliot|Canada|2|11|2|81.82
18|Gabriel Samolej|Poland|3|64|12|81.25
19|Marco Capone|Italy|3|100|19|81.00
20|Michael Rudmann|Austria|5|165|37|77.57
21|Jörn Goldstein|Norway|5|98|26|73.47
22|Jim Martinsen|Norway|3|60|17|71.67
* NOTE: played only 1 game
** the book actually has "34" SOG, which obviously can't be right
 
Last edited:

Theokritos

Global Moderator
Apr 6, 2010
12,538
4,911
More goaltender stats sourced from the Finnish hockey yearbook Jääkiekkokirja ("Ice Hockey Book"). See links below.

1965 World Championship
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Leif Holmqvist|Sweden|2|41|0|100.0
2|Vladimír Dzurilla|Czechoslovakia|6|113|6|94.69
3|Viktor Zinger|Soviet Union|2|45|3|93.33
4|Ken Broderick|Canada|5|138|11|92.02
5|Peter Kolbe|East Germany|5|198|17|91.41
6|Viktor Konovalenko|Soviet Union|5|105|10|90.47
7|Juhani Lahtinen|Finland|6|216|23|89.35
8|Urpo Ylönen|Finland|1|31|4|87.09
9|Kjell Svensson|Sweden|6|128|17|86.71
10|Vladimír Nadrchal|Czechoslovakia|2|30|4|86.66
11|Tom Haugh|United States|7|317|44|86.11
PDF: Jääkiekkokirja 1965-1966 (p.161)

1967 World Championship
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Viktor Zinger|Soviet Union|2|36|2|94.44
2|Urpo Ylönen|Finland|5|188|11|94.14
3|Viktor Konovalenko|Soviet Union|6|112|7|93.75
4|Carl Wetzel|United States|7|289|20|93.07
5|Jiří Holeček|Czechoslovakia|4|76|6|92.10
6|Kjell Svensson|Sweden|3|79|7|91.13
7|Seth Martin|Canada|6|143|13|90.90
8|Peter Kolbe|East Germany|6|230|25|89.13
9|Vladimír Nadrchal|Czechoslovakia|5|110|12|89.09
10|Klaus Hirche|East Germany|3|123|14|88.61
11|Wayne Stephenson|Canada|3|16|2|87.50
12|Leif Holmqvist|Sweden|4|111|15|86.48
13|Hans Schmengler|West Germany|5|211|29|86.25
14|Juhani Lahtinen|Finland|2|84|13|84.52
15|Günther Knauss|West Germany|4|140|27|80.71
16|Tom Haugh|United States|1|9|3|66.66
PDF: Jääkiekkokirja 1967-1968 (p.120)

1968 Olympics
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Viktor Zinger|Soviet Union|2|27|1|96.29
2|Wayne Stephenson|Canada|3|49|3|93.87
3|Viktor Konovalenko|Sweden|5|121|9|92.56
4|Hans Dahllöf|Sweden|1|24|2|91.66
5|Patrick Rupp|United States|7|202|18|91.08
6|Ken Broderick|Canada|5|128|12|90.62
7|Urpo Ylönen|Finland|7|233|23|90.12
8|Leif Holmqvist|Sweden|6|136|16|88.23
9|Vladimír Dzurilla|Czechoslovakia|7|126|16|87.30
10|Josef Schramm|West Germany|7|192|33|82.81
11|Klaus Hirche|East Germany|5|97|17|82.47
12|Dieter Pürschel|East Germany|6|172|31|81.97
13|James Logue|United States|1|42|10|76.19
14|Günther Knauss|West Germany|2|9|4|55.55
PDF: Jääkiekkokirja 1968-1969 (p.191)

1969 World Championship
Rank|Goalie|Country|GP|SOG|GA|SV%
1|Miroslav Lacký|Czechoslovakia|3|42|2|95.23
2|Ken Dryden|Canada|2|52|3|94.23
3|Gunnar Bäckman|Sweden|2|31|2|93.54
4|Vladimír Dzurilla|Czechoslovakia|9|211|18|91.46
5|Leif Holmqvist|Sweden|8|197|17|91.37
6|Viktor Zinger|Soviet Union|10|221|21|90.49
7|Wayne Stephenson|Canada|8|253|25|90.11
8|Urpo Ylönen|Finland|10|350|49|86.0
9|Mike Curran|United States|10|516|74|85.65
10|Lasse Kiili|Finland|1|18|3|83.33
11|Mark Rexe|Canada|1|10|2|80.0
12|Viktor Puchkov|Soviet Union|3|9|2|77.77
PDF: Jääkiekkokirja 1969-1970 (p.118)

1966 and 1970 WHC stats are missing because the yearbook didn't feature individual goaltender stats in those years.
 
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