In 1987, the World Junior Hockey Championship was a
round robin tournament. The teams with the top three records won the gold, silver and bronze medals.
Finland had finished their schedule with a 5–1–1 record to lead the tournament with 11 points. Canada entered the game with a 4–1–1 record for nine points, and were tied for third place with
Sweden, who also had nine points; however, Canada held the
head-to-head tiebreaker against the Swedes and therefore had already been assured the bronze medal. The team then in the silver medal position was the host nation
Czechoslovakia, who were the only team to have beaten the Canadians and had a 5–2–0 record for 10 points. A tie between the Canadians and Soviets therefore would not change the medal standings since Czechoslovakia held the head-to-head tiebreaker over Canada, but a Canadian victory against the Soviets would have guaranteed Canada at least the silver. Since Canada and Finland tied their own head-to-head matchup and for first place, had they both finished with eleven points, the championship would have been determined by the next tiebreakers, which were overall
goal differential followed by
goals scored – heading into the game against the Soviets the Canadians had scored four fewer goals than the Finns while conceding the same number. Therefore, simply put, a Canadian victory by five goals or more would assure them of the gold medal. The Soviet Union, entering the game with a 2–3–1 record, had already been eliminated from medal contention. The match-up between the two squads was deliberately scheduled to be the final game of the tournament, as organizers expected at least one of the teams would be playing for the gold medal. The IIHF assigned Norway's Hans Rønning as the referee for this game. The assignment was made based on his neutrality, despite his inexperience officiating at the international level. Upon hearing of Rønning's assignment, Canadian representative Dennis McDonald sought out the IIHF supervisor of officials,
René Fasel, hoping to convince him to select a different referee. Aside from the question of his competence to call a game of this magnitude, the Canadians were concerned about Rønning following an earlier tournament game he had officiated between Canada and the
United States. A wild brawl had broken out during the pre-game warm-ups against the Americans three days earlier. The officials were not on the ice when the melee occurred; however, Rønning ejected one player from each team at random for starting the brawl. By rule, any player who gets into a fight in an international hockey game is automatically ejected from the remainder of the tournament. Canadian captain
Steve Chiasson was thus barred from the game against the Americans, as well as the following game after being assessed a
match penalty. Unable to convince IIHF officials to change the assignment, McDonald was concerned about how the game would be played. Rønning's inexperience at that level was later identified as a significant cause of the brawl, as several stick infractions by both sides had gone unpenalized, causing anger to rise between both teams. Five minutes in,
Theoren Fleury scored the opening goal for Canada. In celebrating the goal, Fleury slid across centre ice on his knees acting as if his stick was a
machine gun and pretended to "open fire" on the Soviet bench.
Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) president
Murray Costello later called it an "inflammatory act, completely unnecessary, lacking any sort of respect." The first period continued in similar fashion with both teams repeatedly
slashing their opponents and Canada emerging with a 3–1 lead. Interviewed by the CBC during the intermission, Fleury described the atmosphere on the ice: "The boys are up for the gold medal. Everybody is so tense. Tempers are flying. It's really tough out there ... I can't believe it. It's so tense. It's so tense." Early in the second period, the game was paused for a moment of silence in memory of four
Swift Current Broncos players who were killed when
their team bus crashed in
Saskatchewan five days previous. There was a drop in intensity in the five minutes of play that followed. However, just after the six-minute mark, following a minor scuffle that sent two players from each team to the penalty box, the teams resumed shoving and slashing at each other. Each team also scored a goal, giving Canada a 4–2 lead halfway through the game.
The brawl The brawl began after a face-off as Shesterikov collided with
Everett Sanipass with 6:07 left in the second period, resulting in a fight between the two. Soviet player Pavel Kostichkin also levelled a two-handed slash at Fleury, leading to another fight. These initial altercations quickly escalated into a
line brawl involving all skaters on the ice for both teams. Returning from a commercial break, Canadian commentator
Don Wittman understated the severity of the fighting by saying "well, we had a real skirmish just moments ago following a face-off." In another fight,
Vladimir Konstantinov levelled a
head-butt that broke
Greg Hawgood's nose;
Brendan Shanahan later described it as "the greatest head-butt I've ever seen".
Stéphane Roy was pummelled by two Soviet players. The remaining players paired off as the officials attempted to break up the fighting. There were at least a dozen separate fights over the entire ice surface. Unable to control the situation, Rønning and his linesmen eventually left the ice under the orders of Czechoslovak officials. In a desperate attempt at ending the brawl, tournament officials had the arena lights turned off, leaving the players to fight in the dark as the fans whistled loudly in disapproval of the entire situation. The whole stadium shouted "My chceme hokej, my chceme hokej", which translates to "We want hockey, we want hockey". By the time the fights had finally broken up, the IIHF declared the game null and void.
Boxscore ==Aftermath==