The 1910 Ice Hockey European Championship was the first ice hockey tournament for European countries associated to the International Ice Hockey Federation. It was also the first official ice hockey tournament between national teams in history.

The tournament was played between January 10, and January 12, 1910, in Les Avants, near Montreux, Switzerland, and it was won by Great Britain.

The British team was commonly identified as "England" in contemporary accounts,[1] but the IIHF recognizes this team as "Great Britain."

The Oxford Canadians, a team made up of Canadian students from Oxford University, also participated in the tournament, but their games did not count in the final standings of the tournament. They took part in three games, against Switzerland, Belgium, and Germany, winning all of them handily. On the final day of the tournament, the schedule was changed due to poor ice conditions. Great Britain was not prepared to play the Canadians at the new time, and the organizers declared this a forfeit.[2]

Results

January 10

Team #1 Score Team #2
Great Britain  1-1  Belgium
Switzerland  1-8 Canada Oxford Canadians
Great Britain  1-0  Germany
Switzerland  0-1  Belgium

January 11

Team #1 Score Team #2
Germany  5-3  Belgium
Switzerland  1-5  Great Britain
Canada Oxford Canadians 4-0  Germany

January 12

Team #1 Score Team #2
Canada Oxford Canadians forfeit*  Great Britain
Canada Oxford Canadians 6-0  Belgium
Switzerland  1-9  Germany
  • Oxford Canadians won by forfeit.

Final standings

ใ€€ GP W T L GF GA DIF Pts
 Great Britain 321072+55
 Germany 3201145+94
 Belgium 311156-13
  Switzerland 3003215-130

Top Goalscorer

Werner Glimm (Germany), 4 goals

 European Championship 1910 winner 

Great Britain
First title

References

  1. โ†‘ Gordon, David S.; Harris, Martin C. Lion in Winter: A Complete Record of Great Britain at the Olympic, World and European Ice Hockey Championships 1910-1981. p. 20.
  2. โ†‘ Gordon, David S.; Harris, Martin C. Lion in Winter: A Complete Record of Great Britain at the Olympic, World and European Ice Hockey Championships 1910-1981. p. 26.
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