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Helsinki and Porvoo, Finland, 17-24 March The 1991 World Championship was the 17th ever. It was the fifth World Championship held in Finland. The opening of the tournament was conducted by Prime Minister Harri Holkeri. The World Championships were played on a new...
No documentation from the 1990 tournament has been found. The new World Cup champion is the Russian team Zorkij who in the final defeated the Swedish team Vetlanda BK with 5-2.
Unfortunately, we have not been able to get hold of the organizer’s documentation for the men’s World Cup tournament in 1989. However, it was an all-Swedish final where Västerås SK became cup champions by beating Sandvikens AIK with 3-0.
Ljusdal, Sweden The 1988 edition of the FIB World Cup for men was decided according to plan in Ljusdal and this year Swedish Vetlanda BK became champion. The team took some nice wins on the way to the final victory. The team met Sirius, Helsinki and Stockholm on the...
Moscow, USSR, 29 January-5 February This tournament was the 16th World Championship ever. All games were played indoors for the first time. The arena was Olimpiskij, a multipurpose arena built for the 1980 Summer Olympics. Norway, USSR, Sweden, Finland and USA...
Ljusdal, Sweden Västerås SK won the most even of the four groups in the group stage in the tournament in Ljusdal. Västerås ended up on 4 points, the same as second placed Motala and third placed Selånger. In the quarterfinals, Västerås faced the Russian team Yenisei...
Stockholm and 9 other cities, Sweden, 31 January-8 February The World Championship 1987 was the 15th tournament of all time. The tournament had five teams participating and was held in the cities of Stockholm, Gothenburg, Katrineholm, Köping, Motala, Örebro,...
Ljusdal, Sweden BOLTIC DEFENDED THE WORLD CUP TITLE! IF Boltic from Karlstad, Sweden defended the World Cup title in Ljusdal after the victory 1985. There was a tight group round when Boltic ended up in second place after Khabarovsk. Khabarovsk won the game in the...
Ljusdal, Sweden 1985 meant several news for the World Cup tournament in Ljusdal. The match times were extended from 2×30 min to 2×35 and ice preparation between each match. That meant more than 32 hours of bandy in less than three days. There were, however,...