Estonia men's national floorball team
The Estonia men's national floorball team is the national floorball team of Estonia, and a member of the International Floorball Federation. Estonia has competed in 7 out of 12 World Championships (1996, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016 and 2018). Their best result is 7th place in 2010.[2]
Arena | TTÜ Sports Hall |
---|---|
Capacity | 1,000[1] |
Manager | Kadri Heinla |
Coach | Risto Lall |
Captain | Roman Pass |
First game | 1–7, vs. Hungary (14 May 1995) |
Largest win | 18–4, vs. Austria (7 December 2010) |
Largest defeat | 1–21, vs. Sweden (4 December 2010) |
Players
Current roster
Roster for the 2020 WFC Qualifiers:[2]
# | Player | Club | Pos. | Grip | Age | Birthplace |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 | Andrei Polovnikov | Sparta Spordiselts | D | L | 21 | Estonia |
5 | Stenver Savi | Sparta Spordiselts | F | L | 19 | Estonia |
6 | Rasmus Bolander | AIK Innebandy | D | R | 27 | Sweden |
7 | Roman Pass | Ad Astra Sarnen | D | L | 36 | Estonia |
8 | Patrik Kareliusson | Djugardens IF IBS | F | L | 29 | Sweden |
9 | Artur Okruzko | FBK Valmiera | F | L | 19 | Estonia |
10 | Sander Savi | Sparta Spordiselts | F | L | 29 | Estonia |
20 | Rainer Kalde | Jogeva SK Tahe | G | R | 31 | Estonia |
21 | Patrik Markus | Djugardens IF IBS | F | L | 38 | Sweden |
22 | Morten Talviste | Sparta Spordiselts | D | L | 22 | Estonia |
26 | Egert Unga | Sparta Spordiselts | F | L | 22 | Estonia |
27 | Kermo Uue | Sparta Spordiselts | F | R | 21 | Estonia |
39 | Victor Oberg | Team Thorengruppen SK | D | L | 29 | Sweden |
44 | Oliver Savi | Sparta Spordiselts | F | L | 27 | Estonia |
51 | Rickard Rydell | FBI Tullinge | F | L | 28 | Sweden |
77 | Ken Pahn | Sparta Spordiselts | F | R | 25 | Estonia |
87 | Tanel Kasenurm | Aasmae SK | F | L | 25 | Estonia |
88 | Gerdo Unga | Sparta Spordiselts | D | L | 23 | Estonia |
90 | Daniel Vaigur | KAIS Mora IF | G | L | 32 | Sweden |
World Championships
Year | Hosting Country | Rank |
---|---|---|
1996 | Sweden | 11th place |
2008 | Czech Republic | 8th place |
2010 | Finland | 7th place |
2012 | Switzerland | 9th place |
2014 | Sweden | 8th place |
2016 | Latvia | 8th place |
2018 | Czech Republic | 10th place |
References
- "Tallinna Tehnikaülikooli spordihoone" (in Estonian). Eesti Spordiregister. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
- "Estonia Men". International Floorball Federation. Retrieved 2020-12-16.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.