U20 SM-sarja
Formerly | Nuorten SM-liiga |
---|---|
Sport | Ice hockey |
Founded | 1945 |
Founder | Finnish Ice Hockey Association |
No. of teams | 18 |
Country | Finland |
Most recent champion(s) | Ässät U20 (2023–24) |
Most titles | Tampereen Ilves U20 (22) |
TV partner(s) | Ruutu |
Level on pyramid | 1 |
Relegation to | U20 Mestis |
Related competitions | Liiga |
Official website | U20 SM-sarja |
The U20 SM-sarja ('Under-20 Finnish Championship Series') is the premier junior men’s ice hockey league in Finland. It was previously known as the A-nuorten SM-sarja ('Junior A Finnish Championship Series') during 1945 to 1991 and the Nuorten SM-liiga ('Junior Finnish Championship League') during 1991 to 2020. The league was founded by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association in 1945 and a Finnish Champion in men’s under-20 ice hockey has been named annually since the league’s inaugural season – with the exception of the 2019–20 season, in which the playoffs were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Eighteen to twenty teams compete in the U20 SM-sarja regular season, which is played in a preliminary ranking stage followed by a divisional or group stage.
Teams
[edit]Each team in the U20 SM-sarja is the junior development squad of a professional ice hockey club and shares the club’s name. Most of the senior clubs of U20 teams play in the Liiga, the premier men's ice hockey league in Finland. Notable exceptions include Jokerit, Kiekko-Espoo, Rovaniemen Kiekko (RoKi), and TUTO Hockey, all of which play in the second-tier Mestis.
In conversation, the league and participating teams are referred to as U20, A-nuorten/A-nuoret, or U20-nuorten/U20-nuoret interchangeably – the terms originate in various naming structures used by the Finnish Ice Hockey Association over the history of the league.
2020–21 season
[edit]Note: Oy is an abbreviation of osakeyhtiö, a type of limited company in Finland; Ab is the abbreviation of aktiebolag, the Swedish term for an osakeyhtiö. The abbreviations ry and rf refer respectively to the Finnish and Swedish terms for a registered non-profit organization in Finland (Finnish: rekisteröity yhdistys; Swedish: registrerad förening).
Team name | Club's registered name | Location |
---|---|---|
HPK U20 | HPK Liiga Oy | Hämeenlinna |
Ilves U20 | Ilves Hockey Oy | Tampere |
Jokerit U20 | Jokerit Hockey Club Oy | Helsinki |
Jukurit U20 | Jukurit HC Oy | Mikkeli |
JYP U20 | JYP Jyväskylä Oy | Jyväskylä |
KalPa U20 | KalPa Hockey Oy | Kuopio |
Kiekko-Espoo U20 | Kiekko-Espoo ry | Espoo |
HIFK U20 or Kollit | HIFK Ishockey rf | Helsinki |
KooKoo U20 | KooKoo Hockey Oy | Kouvola |
Kärpät U20 | Oulun Kärpät Oy | Oulu |
Lukko U20 | Rauman Lukko Oy | Rauma |
Pelicans U20 | Lahden Pelicans Oy | Lahti |
RoKi U20 | Rovaniemen Kiekko ry | Rovaniemi |
SaiPa U20 | Liiga-Saipa Oy | Lappeenranta |
Sport U20 | Hockey-Team Vaasan Sport Oy | Vaasa |
Tappara U20 | Tamhockey Oy | Tampere |
TPS U20 | HC TPS Turku Oy | Turku |
TUTO Hockey U20 | TuTo Hockey Oy | Turku |
Ässät U20 | HC Ässät Pori Oy | Pori |
Source:[1]
Renamed, still in U20 SM-sarja
- JyP HT and JyP, now JYP
- Espoo Blues, now Kiekko-Espoo
- Kiekkoreipas, Hockey-Reipas, and Reipas Lahti, now Pelicans
Former clubs
[edit]At present, this list includes only those former clubs which won a Finnish Championship medal while playing in the U20 SM-sarja.[1]
Bold indicates U20 ice hockey team currently active and playing in the U20 Mestis.
- Hämeenlinnan Tarmo, Hämeenlinna
- Helsingin Jääkiekkoklubi (HJK), Helsinki
- Hermes, Kokkola
- Karhu-Kissat (K-Kissat), Helsinki
- KOOVEE, Tampere
- previously called Tampereen Kilpa-Veljet (TK-V)
- Kotkan Työväen Palloilijat (KTP), Kotka
- Kuopion Palloseura (KuPS), Kuopio
- Lauritsalan Kisa (LaKi), Lauritsala
- Mikkelin Palloilijat, Mikkeli
- Porin Pallo-Toverit (PPT), Pori
- Porin Karhut, Pori
- Rauman Hokki, Rauma
- Reipas Lahti, Lahti
- Savonlinnan Pallokerho (SaPKo), Savonlinna
- Tammerfors Bollklubb (TBK), Tampere
- Tampereen Kisa-Toverit (TKT), Tampere
- Tampereen Pallo-Veikot (TPV), Tampere
- Töölön Vesa, Helsinki
- Åbo IFK, Turku (Åbo)
Champions by year
[edit]Year | Champions | Runners-up | Third Place |
---|---|---|---|
1945 | Ilves | K-Kissat | – |
1946 | Ilves | ÅIFK | – |
1947 | Ilves | HJK | – |
1948 | Ilves | Tarmo | HJK |
1949 | Ilves | TBK | HJK |
1950 | K-Kissat | ÅIFK | Ilves |
1951 | TBK | K-Kissat | – |
1952 | Ilves | TBK | – |
1953 | Ilves | Lukko | HJK |
1954 | TBK | K-Kissat | Ilves |
1955 | KuPS | Ilves | TBK |
1956 | Tappara | TKT | KTP |
1957 | Tappara | Hermes | PPT |
1958 | Lukko | Tappara | Tarmo |
1959 | Tappara | TK-V | KalPa |
1960 | Ilves | TK-V | Tarmo |
1961 | Ilves | Tappara | Mikkelin Palloilijat |
1962 | Tappara | Ilves | LaKi |
1963 | Tappara | Ilves | LaKi |
1964 | Tarmo | TuTo | SaiPa |
1965 | Tappara | SaiPa | HPK / TPV |
1966 | Ilves | SaiPa | Rauman Hokki / Töölön Vesa |
1967 | Ilves | SaPKo | HIFK / Karhut |
1968 | Tappara | TPS | SaiPa |
1969 | TPS | Tappara | Reipas |
1970 | SaiPa | Ilves | Tappara |
1971 | KOOVEE | Ässät | Tappara |
1972 | Tappara | Jokerit | Ilves |
1973 | Tappara | Ilves | Ässät |
1974 | Ilves | Reipas | SaiPa |
1975 | Tappara | KOOVEE | Ilves |
1976 | Ilves | KOOVEE | Ässät |
1977 | Ilves | TPS | Kärpät |
1978 | Ilves | Kärpät | TPS |
1979 | Kärpät | Tappara | TPS |
1980 | Ässät | Jokerit | TPS |
1981 | Ilves | Tappara | Kärpät |
1982 | Ilves | HIFK | Tappara |
1983 | HIFK | Ilves | TPS |
1984 | HIFK | Ilves | TPS |
1985 | Kärpät | HIFK | TPS |
1986 | Tappara | Ilves | HIFK |
1987 | HIFK | Tappara | Kärpät |
1988 | Jokerit | Tappara | Kärpät |
1989 | K-Espoo | Tappara | HIFK |
1990 | K-Espoo | Tappara | HIFK |
1991 | Ilves | HIFK | JyP HT |
1992 | TPS | Ilves | Ässät |
1993 | Ilves | TPS | Ässät |
1994 | Ilves | TPS | JyP HT |
1995 | JyP HT | Ilves | K-Espoo |
1996 | Jokerit | KalPa | K-Espoo |
1997 | JyP HT | HPK | Ässät |
1998 | TPS | Jokerit | Tappara |
1999 | Jokerit | Ilves | TPS |
2000 | Jokerit | TPS | Lukko |
2001 | Tappara | HIFK | JYP |
2002 | SaiPa | TPS | HIFK |
2003 | HIFK | Jokerit | Blues |
2004 | Tappara | JYP | HIFK |
2005 | Ilves | TPS | JYP |
2006 | JYP | Kärpät | Blues |
2007 | Pelicans | Blues | HIFK |
2008 | KalPa | Ässät | JYP |
2009 | Blues | TPS | Lukko |
2010 | Kärpät | HIFK | Ilves |
2011 | JYP | Blues | Ilves |
2012 | HIFK | Jokerit | HPK |
2013 | HPK | Blues | Lukko |
2014 | Blues | Kärpät | Ässät |
2015 | TPS | HPK | Blues |
2016 | Ilves | Blues | KalPa |
2017 | HPK | Ässät | Lukko |
2018 | KalPa | Kärpät | HIFK |
2019 | Kärpät | Blues | Sport |
2020 | Playoffs cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||
2021 | Lukko | Kärpät | Tappara / TPS |
2022 | Lukko | KalPa | TPS |
2023 | Tappara | Jokerit | TPS |
2024 | Ässät | TPS | Tappara |
Source:[1]
Awards
[edit]In 2010, the Finnish Ice Hockey Association standardized the award categories across the top leagues in each competition class under its administration: the Mestis, the Naisten Liiga, the U20 SM-sarja, the U18 SM-sarja (B-nuorten SM-sarja), and the U16 SM-sarja (C-nuorten SM-sarja). New trophies were created for award categories not previously used by a league and existing awards were renamed after iconic players in Finnish ice hockey.[3]
- Player of the Year: Teemu Selänne Trophy
- Rookie of the Year: Yrjö Hakala Trophy
- Best Goaltender: Jorma Valtonen Trophy
- Best Defenseman: Reijo Ruotsalainen Trophy
- Best Forward: Saku Koivu Trophy
- Point Scoring Leader: Kari Jalonen Trophy
- Top Goal Scorer: Arto Javanainen Trophy
- Playoffs MVP: Ville Peltonen Trophy
- Fair-Play/Gentlemanly Player: Jere Lehtinen Trophy
- Best Plus–minus: Raimo Helminen Trophy
- Coach of the Year: Hannu Aravirta Trophy
- All-Star First & Second Teams
- Fair-Play Team
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Suomen Jääkiekkoliitto; Jääkiekkon SM-liiga Oy (2020). Aaltonen, Juha (ed.). Jääkiekkokirja 2021: Suomen Jääkiekkoliiton ja Liiga Kausijulkaisu 2020–2021 (PDF) (in Finnish). Helsinki: Uusi Suomi/Kiekkolehti. pp. 215–217, 231. ISSN 0784-3321. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
- ^ Mennander, Pasi (29 March 2013). "Tällainen on Legacy Bowl, Nuorten SM-liigan uusi palkintopokaali". Finnish Ice Hockey Association (in Finnish). Retrieved 15 June 2021.
- ^ "Jääkiekkoliitto uudisti palkinnot: Pokaaleihin nimet Selänne, Koivu, Räty, Javanainen..." MTV Uutiset (in Finnish). 14 November 2010. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
External links
[edit]- League information and statistics from EliteProspects.com and EuroHockey.com and HockeyArchives.info (in French)