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Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League (Chinese: 中華冰球聯盟, abbreviated as CIHL) is a Taiwanese highest ice hockey league based out of Taipei. Founded in 2004, it is run by the Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey Federation. The league is divided into two divisions (The Open Division for local players, and The International Division for foreigners ...
The arena was opened on 1 December 2005. The main arena has an adjustable floor space: its minimum floor space is 60m × 30m, and can be extended to 80m × 40m. The Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League (CTIHL) plays out of the auxiliary arena, which is a 60m × 30m ice skating rink. The basement now houses two large gas turbine power generators to ...
Chinese Taipei: 21–27 March 2017 3rd place (37th overall) Women: Div. IIBQ Chinese Taipei: 12–17 December 2016 1st place (33rd overall) Asian WG Japan: 18–26 February 2017 6th place (2nd in Division I)
The Chinese Taipei national ice hockey team is the national men's ice hockey team of the Republic of China (Taiwan). The team is controlled by the Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey Federation and is a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). Chinese Taipei is currently ranked 41st in the IIHF World Ranking and competes in the Division IIB.
2010 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia; Tournament details; Host country Taiwan Venue(s) Taipei Arena (in 1 host city): Dates: March 29 – April 2: Teams: 9: Final positions; Champions Chinese Taipei (2nd title)
The Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League has existed as Taiwan's top level league since 2004. Prior to that, in some years, a national championship was contested. The Chinese Taipei national team has participated in the IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia in 2008 through 2016, and the Asian Winter Games in 2011 and 2017.
This page was last edited on 28 December 2019, at 01:57 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Chinese Taipei women's national ice hockey team played its first game in November 2014 at the 2015 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia Division I tournament. [3] [4] Chinese Taipei won their opening game of the tournament against Hong Kong and went on to win their three other games which included a second win against Hong Kong and two wins against Thailand.