Ice Hockey Updated: 2006-02-10 14:30
 Sweden's Maria
Rooth (L) is checked into the boards by Russia's Maria Barykina during the
second period of their ice hockey game at the Torino 2006 Winter Olympic
Games in Turin, Italy February 11, 2006.
[Reuters] | The word “hockey” comes from the old French word "hocquet", meaning "stick".
The origins of ice hockey are unclear, but it is widely accepted that the
British are responsible for bringing hockey to North America. Soldiers stationed
in Nova Scotia, Canada, played the earliest games. In 1879, a group of college
students at McGill University in Montreal organised competitions and developed
the first known set of hockey rules. The sport migrated south to the United
States during the 1890s. The first known hockey games took place between Johns
Hopkins and Yale Universities in 1895. The first Olympic Games to include ice
hockey for men were the Antwerp Games in 1920. However, the first Olympic Winter
Games took place in 1924 in Chamonix.
At the Olympic Winter Games, women compete in an eight-team tournament
(women's hockey was added to the Olympic Winter Games programme in Nagano in
1998), whereas men compete in a 12-team tournament. A team must not have more
than six players on the ice while play is in progress. Typically, these players
are one goalkeeper, two defenders, two wings and one centre. Fewer players can
be on the ice as a result of penalties: a goalkeeper can be replaced by a skater
during a delayed penalty, or at any other time of the game, at the team's risk.
A regular game consists of three 20-minute periods, with a 15-minute
intermission after the first and second periods. Teams change ends for each
period. If a tie occurs in a medal-round game in which a winner must be
determined, a five-minute sudden-victory overtime period is played. In the gold
medal game, a 20-minute sudden-victory period is played subsequent to another
15-minute intermission. In the case of a tie after any sudden-victory period, a
game-winning penalty shoot competition takes place to determine the winner.
LIST OF EVENTS
ice hockey Men ice hockey Women
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