Canada Bandy has been played in Canada since the 1980s, but is not nearly as popular as ice hockey in this country. Friendlies are played against the United States. The Canadian bandy federation is called
Canada Bandy.
China The
China Bandy Federation was set up in 2014. Since them, China has since participated in a number of world championship tournaments, with men's, women's and youth teams. China Bandy is mainly financed by private resources. The development of the sport in China is supported by the
Harbin Sport University.
Czechia A team from Prague in present-day Czechia became Austrian national bandy champions in 1911. Czechia has been playing in the
World Championship since
2016. As a way of preparing as well as possible for international matches, the Czechs have invented modified rules for games on ice hockey rinks, a variety called
short bandy, which differs from rink bandy. The Czech (former rink bandy) national league is now called
Liga českého národního bandy.
Estonia Bandy as an organized sport was played in Estonia in the 1910s to 1930s and the country had a
national championship for some years. The
national team played friendlies against Finland in the 1920s and 1930s. The sport was played sporadically during the Soviet occupation 1944–1991. It has since then become more organized again, partly through exchange with Finnish clubs and enthusiasts. As of 2018, Estonia takes part in both the
Bandy World Championship for men, and the
Women's Bandy World Championship.
Finland Bandy as an organized sport was introduced to Finland from Russia in the 1890s. Finland has been playing bandy friendlies against Sweden and Estonia since its independence in 1917. The first
men's Finnish national championships were held in 1908 and was the first national Finnish championship held in any team sport. National champions have been named every year except for three years in the first half of the 20th century when Finland was at war. The top national league is called
Bandyliiga and is semi-professional. The best players turn fully professional by being recruited by clubs in Sweden or Russia. As of the 2020–21 season, Bandyliiga consisted of the following teams:
Akilles,
Botnia-69,
HIFK,
JPS,
Kampparit,
Narukerä,
OLS,
Veiterä and
WP 35. Finland was an original member of the Federation of International Bandy and is the only country besides Russia/Soviet Union and Sweden to have won a Bandy World Championship, which it did in
2004. The
Federation of International Bandy (FIB) is planning for a major premiere for indoor bandy in Finland in 2023 with the venue taking place at an indoor arena in
Lappeenranta. When the arena is ready, an international inauguration is to take place with a 4-nation bandy tournament. Participants will include teams from Russia, Sweden, Norway and Finland. The tournament is scheduled for 20–22 January 2023.
Germany between LSC and Berliner Schlittschuh-Klub 1909 Bandy was played in Germany in the early 20th century, including by
Crown Prince Wilhelm, but the interest died out in favour of ice hockey. The Leipziger Sportclub, which arguably had the best team, was also the last club to give bandy up. The sport was reintroduced to Germany in the 2010s, with the
German Bandy Federation being founded in 2013. Germany has been participating in the
Bandy World Championship, a competition for male competitors, since
2014.
India Bandy is being played in northern parts of India close to the Himalayas, where there is usually cold weather and snow in the winter time. A national championship is contested every year, but India has yet to send a national team to the World Championships or any other international competition.
Kazakhstan , captain of the
Kazakhstan national bandy team|thumb Bandy has a long history in many parts of
Kazakhstan and it used to be one of the most popular sports in Soviet times. However, after independence it suffered a rapid decline in popularity and only remained in
Oral (often called by the Russian name, "Uralsk"), where the country's only professional club
Akzhaiyk is located. They presently compete in the Russian second tier division, the
Russian Bandy Supreme League. Recently bandy has started to gain popularity again outside of Oral, most notably in
Petropavl and
Khromtau. Those were for example the three Kazakh cities which had players in the team at the
Youth-17, Youth Bandy World Championship for boys in 2016. The capital
Astana has hosted national youth championships in
rink bandy as well as championships in traditional eleven-a-side bandy. In recent years the former capital
Almaty has hosted both the
Asian Winter Games (with bandy on the program) as well as the
Bandy World Championship for men in which Kazakhstan finished 3rd. Plans are being made to reinvigorate the bandy section of the club
Dynamo Almaty, who won the
Soviet Championships in 1977 and 1990 as well as the
European Cup in 1978. Almaty is also the home of the headquarters of the
Asian Bandy Federation. Since bandy began regaining popularity and acceptance, the state has begun supporting bandy.
Medeu in Almaty is the only arena with artificial ice. A second arena in Almaty was built for the
World Championship 2012, but it was taken down afterwards.
Stadion Yunost in
Oral was supposed to get artificial ice for the 2017–18 season. It got delayed but in 2018 it was officially ready for use.
Mongolia The national team took a silver medal at the
2011 Asian Winter Games, which led to being chosen as the best Mongolian sport team of 2011. Mongolia was proud to win the bronze medal of the B division at the
2017 Bandy World Championship after which the
President of Mongolia,
Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj, held a reception for the team.
Netherlands introduced bandy to the Netherlands. Bandy as an organized sport was introduced to the Netherlands in the 1890s by
Pim Mulier and the sport became popular. However, in the 1920s, the interest turned to ice hockey, but in contrast to other countries in central and western Europe, the sport has been continuously played in the Netherlands and since the 1970s, the country has become a member of FIB and games have been more formalised again.
The national team started to compete at the WCS in
1991. However, without a proper venue, only
rink bandy is played within the country. The national governing body is the
Bandy Bond Nederland.
Norway celebrating the bronze medal in
WCS 2006 Bandy as an organized sport was introduced to Norway in the 1910s. The
Swedes contributed largely and clubs sprang up around the capital of Kristiania (present day
Oslo).
Oslo, including neighbouring towns, is in the twenty-first century still the region where bandy enjoys most popularity in Norway. In 1912 the
Norwegians played their first
National Championship, which was played annually up to 1940. During World War II, when Norway was occupied by Germany, illegal bandy was played in hidden places in forests, on ponds and lakes. In 1943, 1944 and 1945, illegal championships were held. In 1946 legal play resumed and still goes on in form of the
Norwegian Bandy Premier League (
Eliteserien). After World War II the number of teams rose, as well as attendance which regularly were in the thousands, but mild winters in the 1970s and 1980s shrunk the league, and in 2003 only five clubs (teams) fought out the 1st division with low attendance numbers and little media coverage. As of 2021 there are 10 teams in the
Norwegian Bandy Premier League. Norway's best result in the
World Championship is a second place in
1965.
Norwegian Championship The Norwegian bandy champion is decided each year by a play-off among the best teams in the Norwegian Bandy Premier League. The first
Norwegian bandy champions was decided in 1912 and the championship has been held almost every year since. Until 1928, the championship was played as 7-a-side bandy.
Russia in
Arkhangelsk In Russia bandy is known as hockey with a ball or simply Russian hockey. A similar game became popular among the Russian nobility in the early 1700s, with the imperial court of
Peter the Great playing a predecessor of modern bandy on
Saint Petersburg's frozen
Neva river. Russians initially played this game using ordinary footwear with sticks made out of juniper wood, but it wasn't until later that ice skates were introduced. Bandy did not become popular among the masses throughout the
Russian Empire until the second half of the 19th century. The predecessor of the current
Russian Bandy Federation was founded in 1898. Bandy is considered a
national sport in Russia and is the only discipline to have official support of the
Russian Orthodox Church. Traditionally the Russians used a longer skate blade than other nations, giving them the advantage of skating faster. However, they would find it more difficult to turn quickly. A bandy skate has a longer blade than an ice hockey skate, and the "Russian skate" is even longer. Though bandy was still played in the
Soviet Union after the
Russian Revolution, they did not partake in any international games for many decades. While agreements had previously been made to play friendlies against
Sweden in the late 1940s, these plans had not come to fruition. The bandy event at the
1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo, Norway, where men's bandy featured as a
demonstration sport, was played without any Soviet team. However, the Soviets reconsidered their position following this competition. When the
Federation of International Bandy was formed in 1955, with the Soviet Union as one of its founding members, the Russians largely adopted the international rules of the game developed in England in the 19th century, with one notable exception. The other countries adopted the border which until then had only been used in Russia. Since the 1950s, when the Soviet Union ended its isolation and started to take part in international sports events, the Soviet Union and then Russia (as its successor country in 1991) has consistently held a top position in the sport of bandy, both as a founding nation of the
International Federation in 1955, and fielding the most successful team in the
Bandy World Championship, the premiere international competition for men, (when counting the previous Soviet Union team and Russia together). The men's Russian professional bandy league is called the
Russian Bandy Super League. The
Russian Bandy Supreme League is the second tier of men's Russian bandy, below the Russian Bandy Super League. In
Sweden, the
Elitserien (literally, the "Elite League") is the highest bandy league in the country for men, while
Bandyallsvenskan is the second division. In
Finland, the highest bandy league for men is the
Bandyliiga. In a similar fashion, Russia, along with Sweden, has emerged as one of the two dominant women's bandy nations internationally, regularly placing first or second at the premier international bandy competition for women, the
Women's Bandy World Championship. After the victory in the
2016 World Championship, the fourth in a row,
President Vladimir Putin received four players of
the national team,
Head Coach and
Vice-President of the
Russian Bandy Federation Sergey Myaus, the Russian Bandy Federation as well as
Federation of International Bandy President
Boris Skrynnik in
The Kremlin. He talked, among other things, about the need to give more support to Russian bandy. It was the first time a
head of state had accepted a meeting to talk about Russian bandy. Attending the meeting were also
Minister of Sport, Tourism and Youth policy Vitaly Mutko and presidential adviser
Igor Levitin. The month after, Igor Levitin held a follow-up meeting.
Russian Championship The men's Russian professional bandy league is called the
Russian Bandy Super League. The
Russian Bandy Supreme League is the second tier of men's Russian bandy, below the Russian Bandy Super League. The
Russian Bandy Super League is the top tier of the Russian bandy league system. It is professional and played every year. The winner in the final becomes
Russian champion. It is considered a continuation of the Soviet Union championship, which was played annually until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Russian Cup The
Russian Cup has been played annually most years since 1937, originally called the Soviet Cup.
Sweden introduced bandy to Sweden. Bandy as an organized sport was introduced to Sweden in 1895. The
Swedish royal family, noblemen and diplomats were among the first players. While the original inspiration mainly came from England, there also were early exchanges with Germany and Russia. Bandy was taken up as one of the sports at the international
Nordic Games held in Sweden semi-annually from 1901.
Swedish championships for men have been played annually since 1907 and Sweden was the first country to have an annual bandy league. In the 1920s students played the game, then it spread across the country and became a largely middle-class sport. The games could attract huge crowds of spectators in those days. After
Slottsbrons IF won the Swedish championship in 1934 it became popular amongst workers in many smaller industrial towns and villages. Where there was a bandy club the local factory corporation also usually sponsored the club to mutual benefit as a successful team led to good PR for the company. Bandy remains the main sport in many of these places. In the mid-20th Century, bandy was the most popular spectator sport in Sweden, drawing huge crowds for most events and having bigger audiences than football or ice hockey. While not having the same numbers now, bandy is increasing the number of spectators in the 2020s, in contrast to many other sports. Bandy in Sweden is famous for its "culture" where both playing bandy and being a spectator requires great fortitude and dedication. A bandyportföljen is the classic accessory for spectating and is typically made of brown leather, well worn, and contains a warm drink in a thermos and/or a bottle of liquor. Bandy is most often played at outdoor arenas during winter time, so the need for spectators to carry flasks or thermoses of 'warming' liquid like
glögg is a natural effect. With the sport moving indoors in recent decades and the arenas urging for non-alcoholic policies for the audiences, this tradition has partly changed, though not without opposition. in
Uppsala, Sweden raises the Swedish Championship trophy for women after their victory against
Skutskär in 2020. A notable tradition is "
annandagsbandy", bandy games played on
Saint Stephen's Day (
annandagen = ’the second day [of Christmas]’), which for many
Swedes is an important
Christmas season tradition and always draws bigger crowds than usual. Games traditionally begin at 1:15 pm.
Swedish Championship In Sweden, the
Elitserien (literally, the "Elite League") is the highest bandy league in the country for men, while
Bandyallsvenskan is the second division. The Elite League is the top tier of Swedish bandy and is fully professional. At the end of the season, a play-off is made to make out the two teams playing the
final match for the Swedish Championship. The Final is played every year on the third Saturday of March. From 1991 to 2012, it was played at
Studenternas Idrottsplats in
Uppsala, often drawing crowds in excess of 20,000. One reason the play-off match was set in Uppsala is because of
IFK Uppsala's success at the beginning of the 20th century. IFK Uppsala won 11 titles in the Swedish Championships between 1907 and 1920, which made them the most successful bandy club in the entire country (now, however, the record is held by
Västerås SK). A contributing factor was also the poor quality of the ice at
Söderstadion, where the finals were held from 1967 to 1989. In 2013 and 2014 the final was played indoors in
Friends Arena, the national stadium for football in
Solna, Stockholm, with a retractable roof and a capacity of 50,000. The first final at Friends Arena in 2013 drew a record crowd of 38,474 when
Hammarby IF Bandy, after ending up in second place in six finals during the 2000s, won their second title. Due to declining attendance from 2015 through 2017
Tele2 Arena in southern Stockholm was chosen as a new venue. However, the new indoor venue failed to attract much more than half of the total capacity. In May 2017 it was announced that the finals will again be held at Studenternas IP in Uppsala from 2018 through at least 2021.
Svenska Cupen (The Swedish Cup) The
Svenska Cupen (),
Svenska Cupen i bandy, takes place exclusively in
Sweden. It is a
single-elimination tournament competition in Swedish bandy and the second-most prominent bandy competition which is open only to domestic Swedish teams, after the national championship. Its inaugural year was 2005. The first women's competition was played in 2019.
Switzerland In the late nineteenth and early 20th century, Switzerland had become a popular place for winter vacations and people went there from all over Europe. Winter sports like skiing, sledding and bandy was played in Geneva and other towns. Students from Oxford and Cambridge went to Switzerland to play each other – the predecessor of the recurring
Ice Hockey Varsity Match was a bandy match played in
St. Moritz in 1885. This popularity for Swiss venues of winter sport may have been a reason, the European Championship was held there in 1913. Bandy has mainly been played as a recreational sport in Switzerland in the 2000s and 2010s. A Swiss men's national team was finally started up in 2017 and a
Swiss women's national team made its international début in the
2018 Women's Bandy World Championship.
Ukraine Bandy was played in Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union. After independence in 1991, it took some years before organized bandy formed again, but
Ukrainian champions have been named annually since 2012.
United Kingdom , an English bandy team in 1913 The first recorded games of what may be considered bandy on ice took place in
The Fens during the great frost of 1813–1814, although it is probable that the game had already been played there in the previous century.
Bury Fen Bandy Club from
Bluntisham-cum-Earith, near
St Ives, was the most successful team, said to have remained unbeaten for a hundred years until the winter of 1890–1891.
Charles Goodman Tebbutt of the Bury Fen Bandy Club was responsible for the first published rules of bandy in 1882, and also for introducing the game into the Netherlands and Sweden, as well as elsewhere in England where it became popular with cricket, rowing, and hockey clubs. Tebbutt's homemade bandy stick can be seen in the
Norris Museum in St Ives. The first
Ice Hockey Varsity Matches between
Oxford University and
Cambridge University were played to bandy rules, even if it was called hockey on the ice at the time. It is sometimes claimed that a national team for England won the
European Bandy Championships in 1913, but that tournament likely never took place. While bandy is often thought to have been a popular sport in England in the decades around 1900, few records seem to have been kept. A statue of a bandy player, designed by Peter Baker, was erected at the village pond of
Earith to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the first documented game in 2013. In March 2004, Norwegian ex-player Edgar Malman invited two big clubs to play a
rink bandy exhibition game in
Streatham, London. Russian Champions and World Cup Winner
Vodnik met Swedish Champions
Edsbyns IF in a match that ended 10–10. In 2010 England became a
Federation of International Bandy member. The national federation is based in Cambridgeshire, the historical heartland. The England Bandy Federation, was set up on 2 January 2017 at a meeting held in the historic old skaters public house, the Lamb and Flag in
Welney in
Norfolk, England, replacing the Bandy Federation of England which had been founded in 2010 but had had dwindling activity. In September 2017, the federation decided to widen its territory to all of the United Kingdom and changed its name to
Great Britain Bandy Association. Great Britain entered a national team in the 2019 World Championships Group B in January and undefeated up to the final, won the silver medal in their final match against Estonia. They were set to return to the 2020 World Championships, but were refused visas to Russia. Since then they have not participated. However, the comeback will come in 2025. In 2022, Great Britain premiered its national women's bandy team at the
2022 Women's Bandy World Championship.
United States Bandy in its original, informal manner disappeared from the North American continent entirely once it and elements from the early game had become absorbed into a new sport of
ice hockey. While ice hockey was growing and organizing in the United States, bandy was doing the same, but only in Europe and Scandinavia. It would not arrive in its organized format in the United States until the 1970s, after its promotion by Russians, Swedes and Finns in an exchange with
softball, a sport which was promoted by Americans during the same time in the Soviet Union, Sweden and Finland. A key-person in the establishment of the sport in America was Bob Kojetin of
Minnesota Softball. The sport is centered in Minnesota, with very few teams based elsewhere. The United States national bandy team has participated in the Bandy World Championships since 1985 and is also regularly playing friendly matches against Canada. The leading organization for bandy in the US is
USA Bandy. The US has a
men's national bandy team and a
women's national bandy team. The first bandy game in the US was played in December 1979 at the Lewis Park Bandy Rink in
Edina, Minnesota. It was a friendly game between the Swedish junior national team and Swedish club team
Brobergs IF.
United States bandy championships have been played annually since the early 1980s, but the sport is not widely covered by American sports media. The championship trophy is called the
Gunnar Cup, named after Gunnar Fast, a Swedish army captain who helped introduce bandy to the United States around 1980.
Playing surfaces While North American ice hockey rinks can be used for playing the bandy variant of
rink bandy, places where the traditional game of bandy can be played require a larger sized playing surface, a
bandy field, and are almost non-existent in North America.
Minnesota is home to the only regulation sized bandy "rink" in North America, the
Guidant John Rose Minnesota Oval, commonly referred to as, "The Oval", and is also the largest outdoor refrigerated skating rink in North America. The rink is 10,219 square meters with more than 800 tons of refrigeration and 135 km of pipes underneath the ice. The ice can be maintained in temperatures up to +10 degrees Celsius. The Oval can hold up to 300 spectators and has hosted
World Cup Speedskating, the
2016 Women's Bandy World Championship, and Aggressive Skating/Biking competitions. The Oval is used mostly for
inline hockey during the summer. ==National bandy federations==