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Date | 4 January 1987 | |||||||||||||||
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Arena | Zimný Štadión Piešťany | |||||||||||||||
City | Piešťany, Czechoslovakia |
The Punch-up in Piestany was a bench-clearing brawl between Canada and the Soviet Union during the final game of the 1987 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Piešťany, Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia) on January 4, 1987. The incident resulted in the ejection of both teams from the tournament, and while the Soviets had already been eliminated from medal contention, the disqualification cost Canada a medal – potentially the gold. The brawl is famous for officials turning off the arena lights in a desperate attempt to end the 20-minute melee. Much of the blame was placed on Norwegian referee Hans Rønning, who had been selected for the game based on his perceived neutrality rather than experience.
Following the brawl, the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) suspended the players involved for 18 months and the coaches for three years. The players' suspensions were later reduced to six months on appeal, allowing several players from both teams to return for the 1988 tournament in Moscow. Both nations won medals in 1988, with Canada taking the gold and the Soviets winning silver.
The brawl dramatically raised the profile of the World Junior Hockey Championships in Canada, where it is now one of the top events on the annual sports calendar. The fervent nationalism displayed by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) analyst Don Cherry in the aftermath of the incident led to a sharp rise in his own popularity with Canadian fans. Several players in the game went on to play in the National Hockey League (NHL), including Theoren Fleury, Mike Keane, Everett Sanipass, Brendan Shanahan, Luke Richardson, Pierre Turgeon, and Glen Wesley for Canada and Sergei Fedorov, Vladimir Konstantinov, and Alexander Mogilny for the Soviets. Of these players, three (Fedorov, Shanahan, and Turgeon) would eventually be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.