Ice hockey is the most popular sport in Latvia. Its professional league is the
Latvian Hockey Higher League, held since 1931. In Latvia there are also several amateur hockey leagues. Ice hockey has been played in Latvia since the 1920s. Latvia is a member of the
International Ice Hockey Federation (
IIHF), its national team has participated in several World Championships and the 1936 Winter Olympic Games. After Latvia was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, its membership in the IIHF was interrupted. Latvians had a significant role in establishing ice hockey in the Soviet Union. Latvia's
Dinamo Rīga team was one of eleven teams which played in the first Soviet championship tournament in the winter of 1946/1947. The Latvian
Harijs Mellups was the
goaltender for the Soviet Union National team in its first international game in 1948. Latvian hockey experienced a decline in the 1960s, with Dinamo Rīga being relegated from the Soviet High League (
vysshaya liga) to the first league and then even to the second league. It began a comeback in the 1970s, under the coach
Viktor Tikhonov who would later go on to coach CSKA Moscow and the Soviet national team. In the 1973/1974 season, Dinamo Rīga returned to the Elite League where it stayed until the end of Soviet Union in 1991. In 1975,
Viktor Hatulev of Dinamo Rīga became the first ice hockey player from the Soviet Union
drafted by the
National Hockey League (NHL) but never had a chance to play, as Soviet players were not allowed to play for foreign teams.
Helmuts Balderis was the brightest Latvian hockey star of the 1970s and 1980s, and achieved all-time scoring records (scoring 333 goals in Soviet championships) for Latvian forwards. He was the leading scorer in the Soviet Elite League twice (1977 and 1983) and the Player of the Year once (1977). Balderis also played for the Soviet National team, being on the losing side of the
Miracle on Ice game in 1980 but winning the
World Championships on other occasions (1978, 1979 and 1983). Balderis was named the best forward of the 1977 Ice Hockey World Championship. Despite his continuing high scoring results, he was not selected for the Soviet National team for the 1984 Winter Olympics, possibly because of political or national reasons (in those years the Soviet team consisted of sportsmen only from Moscow ice hockey teams, any other Soviet cities or Soviet republics were not represented). Thus Balderis became the all-time top scorer among those Soviet ice hockey forwards who played for the national team but had never been awarded the Olympic gold medal. Goaltenders
Vitālijs Samoilovs and
Artūrs Irbe also starred for the Soviet team in the 1980s, Irbe was the best goaltender of the 1990 Ice Hockey World Championship. Samoilovs was the backup goaltender on the gold medal-winning Soviet team at the
1988 Winter Olympic Games. The best season for Dinamo Rīga came in 1987/1988, the first season when the Soviet Elite League instituted an NHL-style
playoff system. Dinamo Rīga finished third in the regular season and upset Dynamo Moscow in the semi-finals, before losing to CSKA Moscow, the perennial Soviet champions of the 1980s, in the finals. After Latvia regained independence in 1991, Latvia restored its membership in the
IIHF and the Latvian national team returned to international competitions. As a new team, they were initially placed in the C Pool (third division) of the World Championships and had to qualify for the higher level competitions. They debuted in the B Pool in 1994 and the top-level A Pool in 1997. Latvia has played in the A Pool championship since then. The best results were three 7th-place finishes in 1997, 2004 and 2009, before winning their first medal as hosts of the 2023 tournament, where Latvia finished 3rd. The Latvian team has produced some upsets over the top teams in World Championships, defeating the USA thrice (in 1998, 2001, and 2023), Sweden in 2023, and arch-rival Russia twice (in 2000 and 2003). Latvia competed in the
2002 Winter Olympics, the
2006 Winter Olympics and the
2010 Winter Olympics. As of 2019, twenty four Latvian ice hockey players have played in
NHL. The first of them was
Helmuts Balderis, who came to play in
Minnesota North Stars team at the age of 36 in the
1989–90 season.
Sandis Ozoliņš,
Artūrs Irbe,
Sergejs Žoltoks and
Kārlis Skrastiņš have arguably been the most successful ones. Ozoliņš is the only Latvian to win the
Stanley Cup, in the
1995–96 season with the
Colorado Avalanche. Ozoliņš and Irbe have played in NHL
All-Star Games. Other Latvian players who have played in NHL include
Aleksandrs Kerčs,
Grigorijs Panteļejevs,
Pēteris Skudra,
Viktors Ignatjevs,
Herberts Vasiļjevs,
Kaspars Astašenko,
Raitis Ivanāns,
Jānis Sprukts,
Harijs Vītoliņš,
Mārtiņš Karsums,
Oskars Bārtulis,
Artūrs Kulda,
Kaspars Daugaviņš,
Zemgus Girgensons,
Kristers Gudļevskis,
Ronalds Ķēniņš,
Rūdolfs Balcers,
Teodors Bļugers and
Elvis Merzļikins. The
2006 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships was held in Latvia. The Latvia men's national team won their first ever medal at the
2023 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships which Latvia also hosted, defeating the United States 4-3 in overtime to win the bronze. The following day was declared a national holiday, with 50,000 fans attending their welcome rally in Riga. == Basketball ==