It’s always a great story seeing countries work their way up from lower levels of international competition to gain the privilege of playing at the Men’s World Championship, something Poland and Great Britain have already earned the right to do so in 2024. Unfortunately, that involves relegation from teams in the current pool. Now that Slovenia and Hungary have clinched last-place finishes in their groups, they’ll be headed back to D1A, the second tier of the IIHF Men’s Worlds, for 2024.
They’ll join Italy, South Korea, and Romania in next year’s D1A tournament as both teams will try and earn re-promotion to the top level of competition for 2025. They’ll also be joined by Japan, who won promotion in the D1B tournament this year.
Slovenia is no stranger to this process. They bounced up and down between the D1A and top-tier play every year between 2010 and 2017 before failing to earn promotion from the D1A tournament in 2018 and 2019. With COVID pausing relegation (and canceling the next two D1A tournaments altogether), this was Slovenia’s first appearance with the top group in six years.
For the first time since 2008, though, Slovenia failed to secure a single point at the Worlds, losing all seven of their round-robin games in regulation. They had a 3-2 lead against Kazakhstan with 10 minutes left in today’s game, but the Kazakhs scored twice in five minutes to take the regulation win.
Former Pittsburgh Penguins prospect Jan Drozg tied for the Slovak lead in scoring at the tournament with three goals in seven games.
For Hungary, it was a tougher pill to swallow. They lost a do-or-die game against Austria today in a shootout, which, had they won, would have relegated Austria instead. The two teams ended up tied with a 0-5-1-1 record, but Hungary lost the goal differential tiebreaker by nine thanks to three 7-1 blowouts at the hands of the Americans, Swedes, and Finns.