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Floorball

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A floorball match between powerhouses Sweden (yellow) and Finland (white)

Floorball is an indoor team sport played using composite or carbon sticks with a plastic vented blade where the aim is to put a light plastic ball into the opponent's goal. Floorball is most popular in Sweden, Finland and Switzerland, and is also played in several other countries, such as Norway and the Czech Republic. It is gaining popularity in many other places as well, including some countries outside Europe, such as Canada, Singapore, Japan, Australia and the United States.

Floorball is played in a court by six players per side. The objective of the game is to score goals by playing a plastic ball into the opponent's goal net, which is placed at the opposite end of the rink. The players may control and redirect the ball using a stick with a blade that is often curved at one end. Players must not use their hands, arms or head to play the ball on purpose. One may use other body parts. It is also allowed to play (especially stop) the ball once by foot, but not to score goals or pass to teammates.

A floorball team consists of 5 field players and one goalkeeper, whose primary job is to stop the ball from entering the net, and who is permitted unique gear towards that end. The goalkeeper is not permitted a stick. The playing field is 40 x 20 metres and enclosed by a board with rounded corners (50 cm tall). The goal cages are 1.60 x 1.15 m and 65 cm deep. The sticks are made of plastic or carbon and a bit over 1 metre long. The shaft is no longer than 99 cm and a blade of a different kind of plastic is attached to its end. The ball is made of plastic, is 72 mm in diameter, has a maximum weight of 23 grams, and has 26 holes in it.

A world championship tournament is played every two years. The current reigning world champions are Sweden (women, 2007) and Sweden (men, 2006).

The game

The dimensions of a floorball rink

Floorball as a game comes from northern Europe. It is similar to Bandy, a kind of sport considered the predecessor of ice hockey. Floorball is sometimes likened to ice hockey without the ice skates, but there are considerable differences in the rules. In Switzerland, floorball is commonly considered to be a kind of hockey.

Floorball is usually played on a standard size court (40 x 20 metres) or on a smaller court measuring 24 x 14 m. On a smaller court a team consists of three players and one goalie. The rules do not differ, except for some adjustments for the smaller court. In the initial years of floorball, the goalkeeper was permitted to use a special kind of stick, but today no stick is used.

On the standard court, the game is played by five players and one goalie on each side. The team consists of a larger number of players which can be substituted at any time. A floorball game is usually played over 3 periods of 20 minutes. Time is stopped in the case of time penalties, goals and timeouts. There is a break of ten minutes between the thirds. If the game is part of a tournament, the time may be shortened to 2 x 20 minutes and the break to 5 minutes. In tournaments the rules can vary so that in the last three minutes the clock is only running when the ball is in play, otherwise the clock is now stopped for all stoppage in play in regular games. Each team is allowed a timeout of 30 seconds. There are two referees to oversee the game, each with equal authority.

A floorball. This is a precision type ball, characterized by 1516 tiny dimples that reduce air resistance, as well as friction on the floor.

The stick used in floorball is strictly regulated. The shaft may be at most 105 cm long, and the whole stick must not weigh more than 350 grams. Its material is composite or carbon and it is hollow. Generally lighter sticks are preferred. The ball is made of plastic and is found in a wide variety of colours, the ball is also hollow. It has a diameter of 72 mm and weighs between 20 and 23 grams. There are 26 holes, each of which measuring 11 mm. The goals are 160 cm wide and 115 cm high; their depth is 65 cm.

The goalie wears special equipment. His trousers are long and padded. The shirt is padded and might be long. The goalie is allowed to wear gloves, but a mitt is not permitted. The goalie wears a helmet to protect his face. All the equipment worn by the goalie has the purpose to protect the goalkeeper and must not augment the area as covered by the goalie without the protective wear. The goalie does not have a stick. The field players on the other hand only wear shorts, a shirt, socks and indoor sport shoes. They are allowed shin guards.

Although floorball is not as physical as ice hockey, the sport has evolved in recent years to allow increased levels of bodily contact. For example, shoulder to shoulder checking is permitted when opposing players are competing for a loose ball. Floorball has also seen a rise in checking when the play is concentrated in the corners or along the boards. The best comparison in terms of legal physical contact is soccer, where checking is used improve one's positioning in relation to the ball rather than to remove an opposing player from the play. The purpose of this is to reward dexterity and skill over physical aggression.

If a player commits a foul, a free shot is awarded to the opposing team. There are time penalties of two and five minutes for harder fouls; ten minutes are reserved for unsportsmanlike behaviour. For extreme cases there are match penalties (red card).

History

There are a great number of people that think they invented floorball. It is commonly considered that the roots of floorball go back to the 1950s in the USA. At the time young people played indoors with plastic sticks and a plastic puck. The game was called floor hockey and the first tournament was organized in 1976 in Michigan. Floor hockey with a puck is still played in North America. In Canada, it is credited to Bobby Duncan.

The new sport with the name floorball was first played in Sweden in the early 1970s. It soon gained popularity at schools and in leisure clubs. At that time, the goals were much smaller, but there was no goal keeper.

Floorball soon caught on and in the late 1970s the sport spread across Europe. In the early 1980s many national associations were founded. This created the structures that enabled the young sport to grow faster. At the time of writing (2006) only four countries dominate the international game: Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and the Czech Republic. The gap to other countries, however, is narrowing year by year.

Associations

National associations

The following list shows the year in which a national association was founded.

Championships

World championships

World championships are organised by International Floorball Federation (IFF) and are played in alternate years, with even years for men, and odd years for women.

Men's world championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue Notice
1996  Sweden  Finland  Norway Skellefteå/Uppsala/Stockholm
1998  Sweden  Switzerland  Finland Brno/Prague
2000  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Drammen/Oslo/Sarpsborg HomePage
2002  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Helsinki HomePage
2004  Sweden  Czech Republic  Finland Zürich/Kloten HomePage
InfoWeb
2006  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Malmö/Helsingborg/Stockholm HomePage
2008 Czech Republic
2010 Finland
2012 Switzerland

Medal Table

Country Gold Silver Bronze Medals Participations
 Sweden 6
100%
0
 
0
 
6
100%
6
 Finland 0
 
4
66.7%
2
33.3%
6
100%
6
 Switzerland 0
 
1
16.7%
3
50.0%
4
66.7%
6
 Czech Republic 0
 
1
16.7%
0
 
1
16.7%
6
 Norway 0
 
0
 
1
16.7%
1
16.7%
6

Notes

  1. Includes medals up to and including the 2006 championships.
  2. Under the number of medals is the percentage showing the ratio of won medals to all participations. Red colored shows the highest percentage for the column.

Women's world championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue Notice
1991  Sweden  Finland  Norway Godby/Mariehamn
1999  Finland  Switzerland  Sweden Borlänge
2001  Finland  Sweden  Norway Riga HomePage
2003  Sweden  Switzerland  Finland Berne/Gümligen/Wünnewil HomePage
2005  Switzerland  Finland  Sweden Singapore HomePage
2007  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Frederikshavn HomePage
2009 Sweden
2011 Switzerland

Medal Table

Country Gold Silver Bronze Medals Participations
 Sweden 3
50.0%
1
16.7%
2
33.3%
6
100%
6
 Finland 2
33.3%
3
50.0%
1
16.7%
6
100%
6
 Switzerland 1
16.7
2
33.3%
1
16.7%
4
66.7%
6
 Norway 0
 
0
 
2
33.3%
2
33.3%
6

Notes

  1. Includes medals up to and including the 2007 championships.
  2. Under the number of medals is the percentage showing the ratio of won medals to all participations. Red colored shows the highest percentage for the column.

Men's U19 world championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue Notice
2001  Sweden  Switzerland  Finland Germany
2003  Finland  Sweden  Czech Republic Prague HomePage
2005  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Cesis and Valmiera HomePage
2007 Switzerland
2009 Finland
2011 Norway

Women's U19 world championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue Notice
2004  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Tampere HomePage
2006  Sweden  Finland  Switzerland Naunhof / Leipzig HomePage
2008
2010 Czech Republic
2012 Norway

European championship

Before playing world championships, the European championship was held twice. In 1994 Sweden's men were crowned European champions in Finland; in 1995 Finland's men and Sweden's women were victorious in Switzerland.

North American Floorball Championship

The North American Floorball Championship, created by the Ontario Floorball/Unihockey Federation in association with the United States Floorball Association, is contested each year, currently based on an aggregate scoring system played over two tournaments - East Coast Tournament (Raleigh, NC) and the Canada Cup Floorball Championship (Toronto, Canada).

Asia Pacific Floorball Championship

The Asia Pacific Floorball Championships are played every year in Singapore, created by the Singapore Floorball Association together with the Asia and Oceania Floorball Confederation (AOFC).

Men's APAC championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue
2001  Australia  Singapore
Singapore
2004  Japan  Singapore  Australia Singapore
2005  Japan  Australia  Singapore Singapore
2006  Singapore A  Australia  Singapore B U19 Singapore

Women's APAC championships

Year Gold Silver Bronze Venue
2001  Singapore  Australia
Singapore
2004  Singapore  Japan  Malaysia Singapore
2005  Singapore  Japan  Australia Singapore

Tournaments

European Cup

The European Cup is organized every year in order to establish the best team in Europe. The championship was adjusted to the sports year which runs across two calendar years in 2000. The originally named European Cup is going to be renamed to EuroFloorball Cup in 2008.

Year Men champion Women champion Venue Notice
1993 Sweden Balrog IK Sweden VK Rasket Stockholm (men) / Helsinki (women)
1994 Sweden Balrog IK Sweden Sjöstad IF Chur
1995 Sweden Kista IBK Sweden Sjöstad IF Karlstad
1996 Sweden Balrog IK Sweden Högdalens AIS Stockholm
1997 Sweden Fornudden IB Sweden Högdalens AIS Stockholm
1998 Sweden Warbergs IC-85 Sweden Högdalens AIS Helsinki / Vantaa
1999 Sweden Warbergs IC-85 Finland Tapanilan Erä Bern / Sarnen / Zuchwil / Winterthur
2001 Finland Helsingin IFK Sweden Balrog IK Gothenburg
2002 Sweden Haninge IBK Sweden Balrog IK Solna / Botkyrka
2003 Sweden Haninge IBK Sweden Balrog IK Prague HomePage
2004 Sweden Pixbo Wallenstam IBK Finland SC Classic Weissenfels / Merseburg / Hohenmölsen HomePage
2005 SV Wiler-Ersingen Red Ants Rychenberg Zurich / Adliswil HomePage
2006 Sweden Warbergs IC-85 Sweden IKSU Ostrava HomePage
2007 Sweden AIK UHC Dietlikon Varberg HomePage
2008 Finland
2009 Switzerland
2010 Denmark
2011 not decided yet
2012 Czech Republic

Czech Open

The biggest club team tournament Czech Open is traditional summer tournament held in Prague, Czech republic. It's famous not only for its playing part, but also for great out-field activities.

Federations

Floorball Equipment manufacturers

Communities

Others


Year Men Women Junior Men "B" Women "B"
1993 Sweden IKSU IB Sweden Kristineberg AIS
1994 Sweden Sjostad IF Sweden Sjostad IF
1995 Sweden Fornudden HC Rychenberg Winterthur Finland Challengers-93
1996 Sweden Pixbo IBK HC Rychenberg Winterthur Finland Kirkkonummi Rangers
1997 Sweden Fornudden Czech Republic Tatran Střešovice Sweden Baldersnas IK Sweden IBK Succe
1998 Czech Republic FBC Ostrava Jona-Uznach Flames Team 88 Konolfingen Sweden Storvreta IK I.
1999 Czech Republic Tatran Střešovice Russia VIKA Niznyj Novgorod Russia Niznyj Novgorod Finland Kirkkonummi Rangers
2000 Finland Helsingin IFK Finland SSV Czech Republic SSK Future Sweden Röke IBK
2001 Sweden Pixbo Wallenstam IBK UHC Bern OST Sweden Frosta IBF Czech Republic SSK Future
2002 Sweden Pixbo Wallenstam IBK Sweden Husqvarma IK Czech Republic SSK Future Exel Sweden Roke IBK
2003 Sweden Pixbo Wallenstam IBK Sweden Balrog Oilers Czech Republic SSK Future Exel Finland 1. FB Topgrandma
2004 Sweden Balrog Oilers Czech Republic Tatran Techtex Střešovice Finland Tapanilan Erä Latvia Rubene
2005 Sweden IBK Dalen Finland Galna Finnar Czech Republic SSK Future Latvia SK Cesis/Lekrings Finland Koo-Vee
2006 Sweden Pixbo Wallenstam IBK Czech Republic Triggers CON INVEST Czech Republic Tatran Střešovice Czech Republic FBC Liberec Norway Sagene Ladies
2007 Finland SSV Czech Republic Děkanka Czech Republic FBC Pepino Ostrava Czech Republic Sokol Pardubice Norway Sagene Ladies