List of Finnish bandy champions
Finnish bandy champion is the title given to the team winning the play-off at the end of Bandyliiga, the highest bandy league in Finland.
Bandy was the first team sport, for which a Finnish championship was contested. This was in early 1908 (while the first Finnish championship in association football were played later the same year). The league and the championship are administrated by Finland's Bandy Association.[1]
Finnish Workers' Sports Federation had its own Finnish bandy championship tournament 1924–1955.
Winners through the years
Men
- Notes
- ↑ No official Finnish bandy championship was arranged in 1942, but an unofficial "war time league" was played. IFK Helsingfors won this.
Women
The first women's championships were only played in 1979. No women's championships were played 1993–2005.[2]
- 1979 Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 1980 Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 1981 Lauttasaaren Pyrintö
- 1982 Oulun Luistinseura
- 1983 Oulun Luistinseura
- 1984 Lauttasaaren Pyrintö
- 1985 Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 1986 IFK Helsingfors
- 1987 IFK Helsingfors
- 1988 Oulun Luistinseura
- 1989 Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 1990 Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 1991 Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 1992 Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 1993–2005 no women's championships
- 2006 Botnia-69, Helsinki
- 2007 Botnia-69, Helsinki
- 2008 Botnia-69, Helsinki
- 2009 Botnia-69, Helsinki
- 2010 Tornion Palloveikot
- 2011 IFK Helsingfors
- 2012 Lappeenrannan Veiterä
- 2013 Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 2014 Sudet
Titles
Men's titles per club
Helsingfors IFK (HIFK) has won the most titles as of 2014.[3]
- 17: IFK Helsingfors
- 16: Warkauden Pallo -35
- 16: Oulun Luistinseura
- 14: Sudet
- 7: Oulun Palloseura
- 6: Tornion Palloveikot
- 5: Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi
- 4: Lappeenrannan Veiterä
- 4: Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 4: Botnia-69, Helsinki
- 2: Akilles, Porvoo
- 2: Polyteknikkojen Urheiluseura, Helsinki
- 2: Käpylän Urheilu-Veikot, Helsinki
- 2: Viipurin Palloseura
- 2: Mikkelin Kampparit
- 1: Mikkelin Palloilijat
- 1: Lappeenrannan Urheilu-Miehet
- 1: Porin Narukerä
Women's titles per club
- 5: Jyväskylän Seudun Palloseura
- 4: Botnia-69
- 3: Oulun Luistinseura
- 3: IFK Helsingfors
- 3: Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 2: Lautasaaren Pyrintö
- 1: Tornion Palloveikot
- 1: Lappeenrannan Veiterä
- 1: Veitsiluodon Vastus
- 1: Sudet
Men's and women's titles the same year
Double Titles | Club | Years |
---|---|---|
2 | Oulun Luistinseura | 1982, 1983 |
2 | IFK Helsingfors | 1987, 2011 |
Final matches for the Finnish Workers' Sports Federation 1924–1955
|
Finnish champions vs. Finnish Workers champions 1947–1953
Final matches between the official Finnish champions and Finnish Workers' Sports Federation's bandy champions 1947–1953. 1947–1953: 1947 Porin Pallo-Toverit, 1948–1952 Turun Pyrkivä and 1953 Oulun Työväen Palloilijat.. .
See also
Sources
- Voitto Raatikainen: Talviurheilun sankarit, Tulos- ja tilastoliite s.460
- MMM 1981 s.445
- Urheilumme Kasvot 3 Palloilu
- Martti Jukola: Urheilun Pikku Jättiläinen, 1951
References
- ↑ "The Finnish Bandy Federation, in English". Finnish Bandy Association. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
- ↑ "Nuorten ja naisten mestarit" (PDF). Finland's Bandy Association. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
- ↑ Suomen Jääpalloliitto (2011). Jääpallokirja 2012. Suomen Jääpalloliitto. p. 88. ISSN 0784-0411.