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Spengler Cup
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2024 Spengler Cup
Spengler Cup logo
SportIce hockey
Founded1923
FounderDr. Carl Spengler
First season1923
Organising bodyHC Davos
MottoThe Peak of Hockey
No. of teams6
CountriesSwitzerland, Canada, various other European countries
Venue(s)Eisstadion Davos (Davos, Switzerland)
Most recent
champion(s)
Switzerland HC Davos (16th)
Most titlesSwitzerland HC Davos
Canada Team Canada
(16 each)
QualificationInvitation only
TV partner(s)SUI: Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen
Europe: Eurosport 2
RUS: Match TV & NTv2
GER: Sport1
CAN: TSN & RDS
USA: ESPN+
CZE / SVK / HUN: Sport1
DEN: TV2
SLO: Šport TV
SRB / CRO / BIH / MNE / MKD: Arena Sport
GBR: Viaplay
Official websitewww.spenglercup.ch/en

The Spengler Cup is an annual invitational ice hockey tournament held in Davos, Switzerland. First held in 1923, the Spengler Cup is often cited as the oldest invitational ice hockey tournament in the world. The event is hosted by the Swiss team HC Davos and played each year in Davos from 26 December to 31 inclusively. Currently, all games are held at the Eisstadion Davos.

It was originally devised by Dr. Carl Spengler as a means to promote teams from German-speaking Europe, who might have suffered ostracism in the aftermath of World War I. Eventually, the tournament grew well beyond expectations. Many of Europe's most prestigious clubs and national programs have appeared, including Soviet, Czechoslovak, Swedish, German, and Finnish powerhouses. Through its history, club or national teams from 13 countries have won the tournament, with HC Davos tied with Team Canada in winning the most cups as a club (16) while various teams from Switzerland have won the most cups for one country (21).

Among non-European organizations, Team Canada, Team USA, nationally ranked U.S. collegiate teams, reigning AHL Calder Cup and Ontario Hockey Association champions, and even Team Japan (in 1971, building international experience before playing as hosts of the 1972 Sapporo Winter Olympics) have competed for the Spengler Cup. Since at least 1990, Team Canada has been the only participant from North America, with the exception of the AHL's Rochester Americans in 1996 and 2013. Future participation of the AHL has been discussed by tournament organisers and the league.[1]

In the 2018 tournament, Finnish club team KalPa from the city of Kuopio defeated Team Canada 2–1 in the final. The game was decided in the 8th round of a shootout, the first series of game-winning shots in tournament history that determined the winner of the Spengler Cup.

The Spengler Cup tournament was not played in 2020 or 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the 2023 tournament, HC Davos defeated Czech club team Dynamo Pardubice 5–3 in the final.

History

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The former Spengler Cup trophy on display at the Hockey Hall of Fame, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Many participating teams are club teams, rather than national teams, where a club team might have players from many nations on the roster. The first tournament was won in 1923 by the Oxford University Ice Hockey Club, composed of Canadians studying at the University of Oxford.[2]

The first 24 tournaments were dominated by host HC Davos (7 wins, 12 runners-up) and the Czechoslovak club team LTC Prague (7 wins, 2 runners-up). The LTC Prague team was shut down by the Czechoslovak communist authorities after players defected at the 1948 Spengler Cup tournament. Between 1965 and 1983, the tournament was dominated by various Czechoslovak and Soviet teams. Since joining the tournament in 1984, Team Canada has been the dominant participant, with 16 wins and 10 runners-up. Team Canada is made up of Canadians predominantly playing in Europe, as the tournament occurs during the NHL and AHL seasons, though active NHL stars Joe Thornton and Rick Nash played for HC Davos during the 2004–05 NHL lockout.

From its inception until 1978, the tournament was played on an outdoor rink. The outdoor rink still exists outside the indoor arena, and is one of the largest outdoor rinks in the world. Starting in 1978, all tournament games have been played indoors.

The Spengler Cup was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While the tournament was scheduled to return in 2021, Team Canada withdrew from the competition due to problems scheduling a quarantine isolation period before the start of play, and HC Ambrì-Piotta withdrew from the competition due to COVID-19 cases among the club's players.[3][4] The 2021 event was ultimately cancelled on 25 December due to COVID cases within HC Davos.[5]

Sponsorship

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The Spengler Cup is the second-largest sporting event in Switzerland, after tennis' Swiss Indoors in Basel. The tournament had a budget of CHF 11 million in 2016. About 40% of the total tournament budget amount comes from corporate sponsors.[6] Since 1985, UBS has been the main sponsor and presenting partner of the Spengler Cup.[7] Other current major sponsors are Würth, Schenker Storen, Škoda, Calanda, and Hostpoint.ch – each of whom, along with UBS, are the main tournament sponsor of one of the six teams each year.

International broadcasts

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The Spengler Cup is broadcast on Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen in Switzerland, on Eurosport 2 in most of Europe, on Match TV and NTv2 in Russia, on Sport1 in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary, on Šport TV in Slovenia, on TSN and RDS in Canada and on the streaming service Viaplay in the United Kingdom.

Spengler Cup winners

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Year Winner Runner-up
1923 United Kingdom  Oxford University Weimar Republic  Berlin SC
1924 Weimar Republic  Berlin SC Switzerland  HC Davos
1925 United Kingdom  Oxford University Switzerland  HC Davos
1926 Weimar Republic  Berlin SC Switzerland  HC Davos
1927 Switzerland  HC Davos Weimar Republic  Berlin SC
1928 Weimar Republic  Berlin SC United Kingdom  Cambridge University
1929 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1930 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1931 United Kingdom  Oxford University Weimar Republic  Berlin SC
1932 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague
United Kingdom  Oxford University1
Switzerland  HC Davos (3rd place)
1933 Switzerland  HC Davos French Third Republic  Paris Rapides
1934 Italy  Diavoli Rossoneri Milano United Kingdom  Oxford University
1935 Italy  Diavoli Rossoneri Milano Switzerland  HC Davos
1936 Switzerland  HC Davos Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague
1937 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1938 Switzerland  HC Davos Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague
1939 Tournament not held due to World War II
1940
1941 Switzerland  HC Davos Nazi Germany  Berlin SC
1942 Switzerland  HC Davos Switzerland  Zürcher SC
1943 Switzerland  HC Davos Switzerland  Zürcher SC
1944 Switzerland  Zürcher SC Switzerland  HC Davos
1945 Switzerland  Zürcher SC Switzerland  HC Davos
1946 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1947 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1948 Czechoslovakia  LTC Prague Switzerland  HC Davos
1949 Tournament not held due to high Cold War tensions
1950 Italy  Diavoli Rossoneri Milano Sweden  AIK Stockholm
1951 Switzerland  HC Davos West Germany  Preussen Krefeld
1952 West Germany  EV Füssen Switzerland  Zürcher SC
1953 Italy  HC Milano Inter Switzerland  HC Davos
1954 Italy  HC Milano Inter West Germany  EV Füssen
1955 Czechoslovakia  Rudá Hvězda Brno Switzerland  HC Davos
1956 Tournament not held for financial reasons[8]
1957 Switzerland  HC Davos Czechoslovakia  Rudá Hvězda Brno
1958 Switzerland  HC Davos Italy  Diavoli Rossoneri Milano
1959 France  ACBB Paris West Germany  EV Füssen
1960 France  ACBB Paris Switzerland  HC Davos
1961 France  ACBB Paris West Germany  EV Füssen
1962 Czechoslovakia  Sparta Prague West Germany  EV Füssen
1963 Czechoslovakia  Sparta Prague Austria  Klagenfurt AC
1964 West Germany  EV Füssen Sweden  Modo Hockey
1965 Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava Sweden  VIK Västerås HK
1966 Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava Belgium  CP Liège
1967 Soviet Union  Lokomotiv Moscow Canada  Kingston Aces
1968 Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava Sweden  Rögle BK
1969 Soviet Union  Lokomotiv Moscow Switzerland  HC Davos
1970 Soviet Union  SKA Leningrad Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava
1971 Soviet Union  SKA Leningrad Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava
1972 Czechoslovakia  HC Slovan Bratislava Soviet Union  Torpedo Gorkiy
1973 Czechoslovakia  HC Slovan Bratislava Soviet Union  Traktor Chelyabinsk
1974 Czechoslovakia  HC Slovan Bratislava Polish People's Republic  Team Poland
1975 Czechoslovakia  Czechoslovak Olympic Team Finland  Team Finland
1976 Soviet Union  USSR B Czechoslovakia  Czechoslovakia B
1977 Soviet Union  SKA Leningrad Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava
1978 Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava Sweden  AIK Stockholm
1979 Soviet Union  Krylya Sovetov Moscow West Germany  Düsseldorfer EG
1980 Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow Czechoslovakia  TJ Vítkovice
1981 Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow Switzerland  HC Davos
1982 Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow
1983 Soviet Union  Dynamo Moscow Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava
1984 Canada  Team Canada Czechoslovakia  Dukla Jihlava
1985 Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow Canada  Team Canada
1986 Canada  Team Canada Soviet Union  Sokil Kiev
1987 Canada  Team Canada Soviet Union  Krylya Sovetov Moscow
1988 United States  USA Selects Canada  Team Canada
1989 Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow Sweden  Färjestad BK
1990 Soviet Union  Spartak Moscow Canada  Team Canada
1991 Soviet Union  / Russia  CSKA Moscow Switzerland  HC Lugano
1992 Canada  Team Canada Sweden  Färjestad BK
1993 Sweden  Färjestad BK Switzerland  HC Davos
1994 Sweden  Färjestad BK Switzerland  HC Davos
1995 Canada  Team Canada Russia  Lada Togliatti
1996 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Davos
1997 Canada  Team Canada Sweden  Färjestad BK
1998 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Davos
1999 Germany  Kölner Haie Russia  Metallurg Magnitogorsk
2000 Switzerland  HC Davos Canada  Team Canada
2001 Switzerland  HC Davos Canada  Team Canada
2002 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Davos
2003 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Davos
2004 Switzerland  HC Davos Czech Republic  Sparta Prague
2005 Russia  Metallurg Magnitogorsk Canada  Team Canada
2006 Switzerland  HC Davos Canada  Team Canada
2007 Canada  Team Canada Russia  Salavat Yulaev Ufa
2008 Russia  Dynamo Moscow Canada  Team Canada
2009 Belarus  Dinamo Minsk Switzerland  HC Davos
2010 Russia  SKA Saint Petersburg Canada  Team Canada
2011 Switzerland  HC Davos Latvia  Dinamo Riga
2012 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Davos
2013 Switzerland  Genève-Servette HC Russia  CSKA Moscow
2014 Switzerland  Genève-Servette HC Russia  Salavat Yulaev Ufa
2015 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Lugano
2016 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  HC Lugano
2017 Canada  Team Canada Switzerland  Team Switzerland
2018 Finland  KalPa Kuopio Canada  Team Canada
2019 Canada  Team Canada Czech Republic  HC Oceláři Třinec
2020 Tournament not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022 Switzerland  HC Ambrì-Piotta Czech Republic  Sparta Prague
2023 Switzerland  HC Davos Czech Republic  Dynamo Pardubice
2024

Notes

1 Oxford University and LTC Prague play to a 0–0 score after overtime. Both teams are declared winners.[8]

Performances

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By club

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Performance in the Spengler Cup by club
Club Won Runner-up Years won Years runner-up
Switzerland  HC Davos 16 25 1927, 1933, 1936, 1938, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1951, 1957, 1958, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2011, 2023 1924, 1925, 1926, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1937, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1953, 1955, 1960, 1969, 1981, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2012
Canada  Team Canada 16 10 1984, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019 1985, 1988, 1990, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2018
Czech Republic  LTC Prague 7 2 1929, 1930, 1932, 1937, 1946, 1947, 1948 1936, 1938
Czech Republic  Dukla Jihlava 5 5 1965, 1966, 1968, 1978, 1982 1970, 1971, 1977, 1983, 1984
Russia  Spartak Moscow 5 1 1980, 1981, 1985, 1989, 1990 1982
United Kingdom  Oxford University 4 1 1923, 1925, 1931, 1932 1934
Russia  SKA Leningrad /
SKA Saint Petersburg
4 0 1970, 1971, 1977, 2010
Germany  Berlin SC 3 4 1924, 1926, 1928 1923, 1927, 1931, 1941
Italy  Diavoli Rossoneri Milano 3 1 1934, 1935, 1950 1958
France  ACBB Paris 3 0 1959, 1960, 1961
Slovakia  HC Slovan Bratislava1 3 0 1972, 1973, 1974
Germany  EV Füssen 2 4 1952, 1964 1954, 1959, 1961, 1962
Switzerland  Zürcher SC 2 3 1944, 1945 1942, 1943, 1952
Sweden  Färjestad BK 2 3 1993, 1994 1989, 1992, 1997
Czech Republic  Sparta Prague 2 2 1962, 1963 2004, 2022
Italy  HC Milano Inter 2 0 1953, 1954
Russia  Lokomotiv Moscow 2 0 1967, 1969
Russia  Dynamo Moscow 2 0 1983, 2008
Switzerland  Genève-Servette HC 2 0 2013, 2014
Czech Republic  Rudá Hvězda Brno 1 1 1955 1957
Russia  Krylya Sovetov Moscow 1 1 1979 1987
Russia  CSKA Moscow 1 1 1991 2013
Russia  Metallurg Magnitogorsk 1 1 2005 1999
Czechoslovakia  Czechoslovak Olympic Team 1 0 1975
Soviet Union  USSR B 1 0 1976
United States  USA Selects 1 0 1988
Germany  Kölner Haie 1 0 1999
Belarus  Dinamo Minsk 1 0 2009
Finland  KalPa Kuopio 1 0 2018
Switzerland  HC Ambrì-Piotta 1 0 2022
Switzerland  HC Lugano 0 3 1991, 2015, 2016
Sweden  AIK Stockholm 0 2 1950, 1978
Russia  Salavat Yulaev Ufa 0 2 2007, 2014
United Kingdom  Cambridge University 0 1 1928
France  Paris Rapides 0 1 1933
Germany  Preussen Krefeld 0 1 1951
Austria  Klagenfurt AC 0 1 1963
Sweden  Modo Hockey 0 1 1964
Sweden  VIK Västerås HK 0 1 1965
Belgium  CP Liège 0 1 1966
Canada  Kingston Aces 0 1 1967
Sweden  Rögle BK 0 1 1968
Russia  Torpedo Gorkiy 0 1 1972
Russia  Traktor Chelyabinsk 0 1 1973
Polish People's Republic  Team Poland 0 1 1974
Finland  Team Finland 0 1 1975
Czechoslovakia  Czechoslovakia B 0 1 1976
Germany  Düsseldorfer EG 0 1 1979
Czech Republic  TJ Vítkovice 0 1 1980
Ukraine  Sokil Kiev2 0 1 1986
Russia  Lada Togliatti 0 1 1995
Latvia  Dinamo Riga 0 1 2011
Switzerland  Team Switzerland 0 1 2017
Czech Republic  HC Oceláři Třinec 0 1 2019
Czech Republic  Dynamo Pardubice 0 1 2023

Notes

1 Slovakia was a part of Czechoslovakia until 1993, so HC Slovan Bratislava in the 1970s represented both communist Czechoslovakia and the Slovak Socialist Republic.
2 Ukraine was a Soviet republic at the time, so Sokil Kiev represented both the Soviet Union and Soviet Ukraine.

By nation

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Performance by nation
Nation Winners Runners-up
  Switzerland 21 32
  Czechoslovakia1 19 10
  Canada2 16 11
  Soviet Union3 13 5
  Germany4 6 10
  Italy5 5 1
  Russia6 4 5
  United Kingdom 4 2
  France7 3 1
  Sweden 2 8
  Finland 1 1
  Belarus 1 0
  United States 1 0
  Czech Republic 0 4
  Austria 0 1
  Belgium 0 1
  Latvia 0 1
  Poland 0 1

Notes

1 Includes hockey clubs from the First Czechoslovak Republic, the Third Czechoslovak Republic, the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, and the last Czech and Slovak Federative Republic based in today's Czechia and Slovakia, and Czechoslovak national teams.
2 Includes the runner-up 1967 Kingston Aces of the Ontario Hockey Association.
3 Includes hockey clubs based in today's Russia and Ukraine, and Soviet national teams.
4 Includes hockey clubs from the Weimar Republic, the Third Reich, Allied-occupied Germany, West Germany, and today's united Federal Republic.
5 Includes hockey clubs from the Kingdom of Italy and today's Italian Republic.
6 Includes CSKA Moscow's Cup win in 1991.
7 Includes hockey clubs from the French Third Republic, the Fourth Republic, and today's Fifth Republic.

References

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  1. ^ "WILLIAMS: Developing a European audience – the AHL has eyes on Spengler Cup". EP Rinkside. 21 December 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  2. ^ The Isis, 23 Jan. 1924, page 19. (Future Prime Minister of Canada Lester Pearson was a member of the Oxford University team in the spring of 1923; however, he returned to Canada in the summer of 1923 and therefore did not compete in the first Spengler Cup played at the end of December 1923 and early January 1924. See: Pearson, Lester B. Mike : The Memoirs of the Right Honourable Lester B. Pearson. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972, page 50.)
  3. ^ "Hockey Canada withdraws from 2021 Spengler Cup, citing COVID-19 concerns". Sportsnet. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  4. ^ "Canada and Ambri are replaced, Slovan Bratislava moves up". SpenglerCup.ch. 20 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  5. ^ Ellis, Steven. "Spengler Cup Cancelled for Second Straight Year". The Hockey News. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  6. ^ Ruch, Fabian (2015-12-23). "Ein Berner vermarktet den Spengler-Cup". Berner Zeitung (in German). ISSN 1424-1021. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  7. ^ "Presenting and gold partner – Spengler Cup". www.spenglercup.ch. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  8. ^ a b SpenglerCup.ch
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