Bandyliiga

Bandyliiga
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2015-16
Formerly Jääpallon SM-sarja
(1908-1991)
Sport Bandy
Founded 1908
No. of teams 9
Country Finland Finland
Continent European Union Europe
Most recent
champion(s)
Botnia-69
(4th title)
Most titles HIFK Bandy
(17 titles)
Relegation to Suomisarja
Official website finbandy.fi

Bandyliiga (Finnish) or Bandyligan (Swedish; English: Bandy League) is the top level of bandy in Finland. The league was founded in 1908 and the 2014-15 season is the 105th season of the Bandyliiga. The present name has been used since the 1991/1992 season. The league has ten teams and Mikkelin Kampparit are the reigning champions.

History

The competitive side of bandy in Finland was organized in 1907 and the first Finnish championship series was played in the winter of 1908. The very first title was won by Polyteknikkojen Urheiluseura, who beat IFK Helsingfors in the final match with a score of 8-3. The championship was decided as a cup competition until 1931. The league was played as single round-robin tournament with various numbers of divisions up until the 1969-70 season, when the current double round-robin format was introduced. The season was split into regular season and playoffs in the 1976-77 season.[1]

The competition has been played every year since 1908, with the exceptions of 1918, 1940 and 1942, when the competition was cancelled first due to Finnish civil war and then due to Winter War and the Continuation war. An unofficial wartime league was played during those years.[1]

In 2008 Bandyliiga celebrated its 100th anniversary with a grand final match of the season, when Oulun Luistinseura beat Tornion Palloveikot in a penalty shoot-out and claimed the Finnish championship.[1]

The 2014-15 season of Bandyliiga ended with Mikkelin Kampparit taking their second championship title. Kampparit beat HIFK 6-3 in the final, played in HIFK's homeground Kallio Ice Rink.[2]

Current teams

Team Stadium City Founded
Borgå Akilles Bollplan Porvoo 1902
Botnia-69 Åggelby konstisbana Helsinki 1969
HIFK Bandy Kallio Ice Rink Helsinki 1897
Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura Viitaniemen tekojäärata Jyväskylä 1962
Mikkelin Kampparit Hännin kenttä Mikkeli 1972
Narukerä Porin tekojäärata Pori 1964
OLS Raksilan tekojäärata Oulu 1880
Warkauden Pallo -35 Kämäri Varkaus 1935
Veiterä Kisapuiston tekojäärata Lappeenranta 1950

Updated for 2014-15 season.[3]

Recent champions

Season Champion Runner-up Third placed
2014-15 Mikkelin Kampparit HIFK Veiterä
2013-14 Oulun Luistinseura Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura Akilles
2012-13 HIFK Narukerä Mikkelin Kampparit
2011-12 Mikkelin Kampparit Narukerä HIFK
2010-11 HIFK Mikkelin Kampparit Narukerä
2009-10 HIFK Oulun Luistinseura Narukerä
2008-09 Oulun Luistinseura HIFK Oulun Palloseura
2007-08 Oulun Luistinseura Tornion Palloveikot Warkauden Pallo -35
2006-07 Tornion Palloveikot HIFK Narukerä
2005-06 Tornion Palloveikot Oulun Luistinseura Narukerä
2004-05 Tornion Palloveikot Narukerä Oulun Luistinseura
2003-04 Tornion Palloveikot Oulun Luistinseura Warkauden Pallo -35

Updated as of season 2014-15.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Yleistä tieto bandyliigasta". finbandy.fi (in Finnish). Finnish Bandy Federation.
  2. Virtanen, Ari (14 March 2015). "Kampparit juhli Suomen mestaruutta HIFK:n kotikentällä". Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Sanoma Oy. HS. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
  3. "Liigajoukkueet". finbandy.fi (in Finnish). Finnish Bandy Federation. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  4. "Joukkuetilastot". finbandy.fi (in Finnish). Finnish Bandy Federation. Retrieved 18 November 2014.

External links

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