Ice hockey at the 1932 Winter Olympics

The men's ice hockey tournament at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, United States, was the 4th Olympic Championship, also serving as the 6th World Championships. Canada, represented by the Winnipeg Hockey Club, won its fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal and sixth consecutive World Championship. The United States took the silver medal and Germany claimed one of its three all-time hockey medals by taking the bronze (West Germany would win a bronze medal in 1976, and Germany's men's team would win silver in 2018).[1]

Ice hockey at the 1932 Winter Olympics
Tournament details
Host country United States
Dates4–13 February
Teams4
Venue(s)Lake Placid (outdoors)
Final positions
Champions  Canada (4th title)
Runner-up  United States
Third place  Germany
Fourth place Poland
Tournament statistics
Matches played12
Goals scored69 (5.75 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Walter Monson 11 points

Planning

Several disagreements arose between the planners of the hockey games and Paul Loicq, the president of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). The International Society of Olympic Historians felt the dispute came from the Amateur Athletic Union controlling the selection of American teams for the Olympics on behalf of the United States Olympic Committee, and the ensuing power struggle with the IIHF. There was also a disagreement in the number of players on hockey teams.[2] When the 1932 tournament was played, four teams participated, with only two European associations making the trip due to the worldwide Great Depression. The other European teams instead played at the Ice Hockey European Championship 1932.[3]

Medalists

Gold Silver Bronze
 Canada (CAN)
William Cockburn
Clifford Crowley
Albert Duncanson
George Garbutt
Roy Henkel
Vic Lindquist
Norman Malloy
Walter Monson
Kenneth Moore
Romeo Rivers
Hack Simpson
Hugh Sutherland
Stanley Wagner
Alston Wise
 United States (USA)
Osborne Anderson
Johnny Bent
John Chase
John Cookman
Douglas Everett
Franklin Farrel
Joseph Fitzgerald
Edwin Frazier
John Garrison
Gerard Hallock
Robert Livingston
Francis Nelson
Winthrop Palmer
Gordon Smith
 Germany (GER)
Rudi Ball
Alfred Heinrich
Erich Herker
Gustav Jaenecke
Werner Korff
Walter Leinweber
Erich Römer
Martin Schröttle
Marquardt Slevogt
Georg Strobl

Participating nations

The Polish national team during the Olympics.

A total of 48(*) ice hockey players from four nations competed at the Lake Placid Games:

(*) NOTE: Only players who participated in at least one game are counted.

Final tournament

Team GP W T L GF GA
 Canada6510324
 United States6411275
 Germany6204726
 Poland6006334
4 Feb United States1:2 OT
(0:0,0:1,1:0,0:0,0:1)
 Canada
4 Feb Germany2:1
(0:0,1:1,1:0)
 Poland
5 Feb United States4:1
(1:0,2:0,1:1)
 Poland
6 Feb Canada4:1
(2:0,2:0,0:1)
 Germany
7 Feb Canada9:0
(2:0,5:0,2:0)
 Poland
7 Feb United States7:0
(3:0,2:0,2:0)
 Germany
8 Feb United States5:0
(1:0,1:0,3:0)
 Poland
8 Feb Canada5:0
(2:0,1:0,2:0)
 Germany
9 Feb Canada10:0
(5:0,1:0,4:0)
 Poland
10 Feb United States8:0
(2:0,2:0,4:0)
 Germany
13 Feb Germany4:1
(0:0,2:1,2:0)
 Poland
13 Feb United States2:2 OT
(1:1,1:0,0:1,0:0,0:0,0:0)
 Canada

Statistics

Average age

Team Germany was the oldest team in the tournament, averaging 25 years and 6 months. Gold medalists team Canada was the youngest team in the tournament, averaging 24 years and 5 months. Tournament average was 24 years and 9 months.[4]

Top scorer

Team GP G A Pts
Walter Monson 67411

Final ranking

1 Canada (CAN)
2 United States (USA)
3 Germany (GER)
4 Poland (POL)

References

  1. "Ice Hockey at the 1932 Lake Placid Winter Games". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  2. Renson, Roland; Ameye, Thomas (2012). "Stepping out of Coubertin's Shadow: The Count and the 1932 Winter Olympics" (PDF). International Society of Olympic Historians. pp. 20, 22. Retrieved 2019-07-11.
  3. "IIHF Epochs, 1914–1933". International Ice Hockey Federation. Retrieved 2019-07-16.
  4. "Team Canada - Olympics - Lake Placid 1932 - Player Stats". QuantHockey. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
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