Estonia | |
Badge: | Coat of arms of Estonia.svg |
Association: | Estonian Bandy Association |
Coach: | Frank Lundin |
First Game: | Finland 22 – 0 Estonia Helsinki, 17 January 1923 |
Largest Win: | Estonia 20 – 0 Harbin, 31 January 2018 |
Largest Loss: | Finland 22 – 0 Estonia Helsinki, 17 January 1923 |
World Champ2 Name: | Bandy World Championship |
World Champ2 Apps: | 15 |
World Champ2 First: | 2003 |
World Champ2 Best: | 8th (2003) |
Leftarm1: | 024093 |
Body1: | ffffff |
Rightarm1: | 024093 |
Shorts1: | 000000 |
Leftarm2: | ffffff |
Body2: | 024093 |
Rightarm2: | ffffff |
Shorts2: | 000000 |
Estonian national bandy team competed for the first time during the first period of Estonian independence, in the interwar years 1918–1940. Estonia played six international friendlies against Finland between 1923 and 1934,[1] losing them all.[2]
Estonia got occupied by the Soviet Union in 1944 and regained its independence in 1991. The modern Estonian Bandy Association was founded in 2001 and joined the Federation of International Bandy in 2002.
The re-established national bandy team participated in the annual Bandy World Championship for the first time in 2003.[3] [4] Estonia won the Davos Cup in 2016[5] but was disqualified from the 2016 Bandy World Championship.
Games | Finish | |
---|---|---|
8th place | ||
Group B, 5th place | ||
Group B, 4th place | ||
Group B, 6th place | ||
Division B, 6th place | ||
Group B, 4th place | ||
Division B, 2nd place | ||
- | ||
- | ||
Group C, 1st place | ||
Sweden and Norway 2013, Vänersborg / N/A | Division B, 5th place | |
Division B, 2nd place | ||
Division B, 2nd place | ||
Division B, | ||
Division B, 6th place | ||
Division B, 3rd place | ||
Division B, 1st place | ||
Division A |