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Konnan511

Viva México: Winter Classic This Sunday

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This Sunday the Division III World Junior tournament starts in Mexico City. Participating teams include Bulgaria, Mexico, New Zealand, North Korea, Serbia, Chinese Taipei (Taiwan), and Turkey. Obviously no major hockey powers there, and an otherwise non-notable tournament.

Except the opening game Sunday night will be a first for a World Junior tournament, in any division. Mexico is playing Bulgaria on an outdoor rink; with free admisison, organisers expect up to 50,000 people to show up.

Of note is that the average temperature for Mexico City in January is 23°C (73°F) during the day and 9°C(48°F) at night. Some would argue that it is way to warm to have an outdoor game, and that ice probably wouldn't work there. However, the Plaza de la Constitución, also known as Zócalo, has had an ice rink built there several times, one that measures 240 by 240 metres (800x800 feet).

So the success of this game should make the NHL consider the possibility of a Winter Classic in a southern US market. After all if Mexico City can host one, Miami or Phoenix should be able to.

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This Sunday the Division III World Junior tournament starts in Mexico City. Participating teams include Bulgaria, Mexico, New Zealand, North Korea, Serbia, Chinese Taipei (Taiwan), and Turkey. Obviously no major hockey powers there, and an otherwise non-notable tournament.

Except the opening game Sunday night will be a first for a World Junior tournament, in any division. Mexico is playing Bulgaria on an outdoor rink; with free admisison, organisers expect up to 50,000 people to show up.

Of note is that the average temperature for Mexico City in January is 23°C (73°F) during the day and 9°C(48°F) at night. Some would argue that it is way to warm to have an outdoor game, and that ice probably wouldn't work there. However, the Plaza de la Constitución, also known as Zócalo, has had an ice rink built there several times, one that measures 240 by 240 metres (800x800 feet).

So the success of this game should make the NHL consider the possibility of a Winter Classic in a southern US market. After all if Mexico City can host one, Miami or Phoenix should be able to.

=4272&cHash=4a579fd583"]El Linko

3ca6f805a4.jpg

Thanks for posting this, it's pretty cool.. Now I wonder who will win?

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I'd go with Serbia or Bulgaria. They're in close proximity to Ukraine :D They also seem like hockey countries to me. I think it'd be awesome if Mexico won it though.

The womens ice hockey team is famous though:

http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/blog/puck_daddy/post/Bulgarian-women-s-ice-hockey-loses-82-0-gives-u?urn=nhl-106362

Yikes.

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in college i played for northwood university acha div III. in our opening game, or warm up game, one season was against the mexican junior team. they werent very good to be totally honest. just imagine a group of college kids that never played a game together before beating a mexican junior team that had been playing together for years. thats about the level of play they were at, and i would imagine this is the same team, but probably new players by now as this was about 4 years ago.

just wanted to give you guys an idea of their skill level...

EDIT: forgot to mention how sweet this is. gotta love seeing hockey expand across the world. it is surprising they were able to put ice down there, i thought it was always hot down there..

Edited by Din758

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Warm temparatures aren't really the problem. You could probably play an outdoor game in 100 degrees F, which I think it was for the Las Vegas game. It would probably be uncomfortable for the players, but the ice woudl hold up. The problem at this year's Winter Classic wasn't the warm weather, it was the rain. They can keep the ice cold, even during warm weather.

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This is awesome! Really great to see the game taken to other countries in the outdoor format no less. I like Serbia to take this with Mexico being the sleeper (home soil!). Wasn't that a Canadian's explanation as to why they will take the WJC next year? laugh.gif

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Wow, I had no idea about this.

I know there are hockey leagues all over the world in non-traditional markets, but you never really hear anything about it here.

A few years back, I remember hearing about a book someone had written about playing hockey in the IIHF D&E championships pool. (sinced renamed Divisions IIB and III) And it actually sounded like crazy fun despite the low skill levels. This year's Division III championships is in South Africa in April, and features Greece, Israel, Luxemborg, Mongolia, South Africa, and Turkey all fighting for the right to maybe move up to IIB at some point.

I'm kind of surprised Israel isn't better. Seems like they should have some Russian/former Soviet areas Jewish hockey players who immigrate there. Even if they weren't good enough to stay in the Russian/Ukraine developmental hockey systems all the way through, you'd think it would be enough to kick start the Israeli team up a level or two. (The Israeli national figure skating teams are actually quite good because of those kinds of immigrants to the country)

And I suspect Greece-Turkey is always a little on the intense side, no matter the sport involved.

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The PRK won Group IIIB last year, beating Armenia in the gold medal game, and pasting Mongolia 22-1 along the way. They advanced to IIA this year, which is going to be a decidedly tougher group. (Mexico, Australia, Belgium, New Zealand, Serbia)

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