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IIHF World Men's Ice Hockey Championship (GROUP B)
15. May 2026. 20:20h
Czech Republic vs Denmark
BCF Arena, Fribourg, CH
2026
15
May
Czechia - Denmark tickets for the 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship in Fribourg
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Czechia - Denmark tickets for the 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship in Fribourg

Looking for tickets for Czechia - Denmark at the 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship? Here you can buy tickets for the BCF Arena game in Fribourg and plan your visit to this Group B evening matchup

Czechia against Denmark opens the evening hockey program in Fribourg

Czechia and Denmark enter a tournament match on May 15 that immediately carries serious weight in Group B. The meeting at BCF Arena begins at 20:20, and the competition schedule confirms that it is the first round and one of two evening matches in Fribourg that day. For Czechia, it is an opportunity to show from the start the status of a national team from the upper tier of world hockey. For Denmark, it is a test of maturity after a season in which it is no longer enough to say that it is only a dangerous outsider. Tickets for this meeting are in demand among fans.

Canada, Sweden, Slovakia, Norway, Slovenia and Italy are also in the same group, so every point is important from the first day. The group format does not leave much room for a poor start to the tournament: teams that want the quarter-finals must win against direct competitors, and against the strongest sides seek at least a point or a match that raises confidence. Czechia enters that framework as a national team that in May 2025 was fifth in the world ranking with 3860 points, while Denmark was eighth with 3625 points. The gap is clear, but not so large that the Danes should be denied a chance in advance.

What is at stake for Czechia

Czechia arrives with high expectations because its hockey core is used to playing matches in which puck control, quick zone entries and a quality power play are required. Radim Rulík, the head coach who also led the Czech national team at the 2026 Olympic tournament, has the profile of a team that can play in several ways: with top NHL forwards when they are available, but also with European players who know the large ice surfaces and the rhythm of international hockey well.

The biggest names defining the Czech attacking identity remain David Pastrňák, Martin Nečas, Tomáš Hertl, Ondřej Palát and Roman Červenka. It is not reasonable to claim in advance exactly who will be in the lineup for this match until the final tournament registration is confirmed, but the most recent major national-team roster shows the direction: Czechia has a combination of creative wingers, centers who can play both ways and defensemen capable of moving the puck out under pressure. Pastrňák finished among the tournament’s standout forwards at the 2025 World Championship with 15 points, a figure that describes well why every Czech match is also viewed through the lens of his performance.

It is especially important for Czechia to avoid a slow start. Denmark is not a team that should be kept level for long, because then its energy and belief that it can take points grow. If Czechia imposes the forecheck early and forces Danish defensemen into uncontrolled clearances, the match can turn into a Czech rhythm of shifts. If, however, Denmark survives the first period without a large deficit, the pressure shifts to the favorites.

Denmark is no longer just a likeable story

Denmark achieved a result in the most recent cycle that changed the impression of its national team. At the 2025 World Championship it finished fourth, after beating Canada 2-1 in the quarter-final. That was not a small sensation but a result that confirmed Denmark knows how to play a closed, disciplined and patient match against a technically stronger opponent. After that it lost the semi-final to Switzerland 7-0 and the third-place match to Sweden 6-2, but the very place in the final four remained a major warning for all favorites.

The Danes have several names who can change the direction of the match in one shift. Nikolaj Ehlers brings explosiveness in transition, Oliver Bjorkstrand finishing from the second attacking line, Lars Eller experience and play through the middle, while Frederik Andersen and Mads Søgaard give the national team serious depth in goal. Mikael Gath, the Swedish coach on the Danish bench, relies on a clear structure: close the middle of the ice, allow the opponent outside shots and wait for a mistake for a counterattack.

For a fan coming to BCF Arena, the key is to watch how Denmark exits its own third. If the first pass is clean, Ehlers and Bjorkstrand can immediately attack the space behind the Czech defensemen. If the Czech forecheck cuts off that first pass, Denmark’s match becomes much harder because it turns into long periods of defending and shifts under pressure.

Key data shaping the preview


  • The match is played on May 15 at 20:20 at BCF Arena in Fribourg.

  • Czechia was fifth with 3860 points according to the most recently published world ranking.

  • Denmark was eighth with 3625 points in the same ranking.

  • Denmark finished the 2025 World Championship in fourth place.

  • Czechia and Denmark also played in 2025 at the world championship, when Czechia won 7-2.



Head-to-head rhythm: Czechia carries the weight of the favorite, Denmark has a fresh warning

The most recent major head-to-head meeting on the world stage ended with a convincing Czech 7-2 victory over Denmark in May 2025. That result shows well what happens when Czechia finds rhythm in the second period and starts punishing lost pucks. But the head-to-head story is not one-dimensional. In February 2026 at the Olympic tournament, Czechia advanced against Denmark only after a tight 3-2 victory in the quarter-final qualification round. That meeting gave the Danes proof that they can stay close even against teams with more individual class.That is exactly why this match has interesting psychology. Czechia knows it has a wider attacking arsenal, a stronger tradition in big matches and a greater number of players used to an elite tempo. Denmark knows there is no longer any reason to enter the match with complexes. If it sticks to the plan, avoids unnecessary penalties and gets a quality night from its goaltender, it can remain in the match until the final minutes.

Czechia will probably look for longer possessions in the attacking third, defensemen rotations at the blue line and shots through traffic in front of goal. Denmark will try to shorten the match: simple decisions, the puck deep when there is no safe exit, a firm block in the middle and quick exits through the wings. It is a classic clash between a national team that wants control and a national team that wants efficiency.

Players worth watching

With Czechia, the eye naturally stops on David Pastrňák. His shot from the face-off circle is one of those details opponents scout for days, yet still find hard to stop when the puck reaches the right place. Martin Nečas gives a different dimension: entering the zone with speed, changing direction and playing between the lines. If the Czech unit on the ice has enough creativity around him, Nečas can open the Danish block without much contact.

On defense, profiles such as Radko Gudas and Filip Hronek are important. Gudas provides hardness, clears the space in front of goal and sends the message that entry into the slot will not be easy. Hronek is more useful when the play needs to be accelerated from defense and a forward found through the neutral zone. In goal, Czechia has names such as Lukáš Dostál, Karel Vejmelka and Daniel Vladař in its more recent national-team squads, which means the coach can choose between goaltenders with experience at a high rhythm.

Denmark depends most on how much space its best forwards will get. Ehlers is most dangerous when he receives the puck in motion, not when he has to stop along the boards and wait for support. Bjorkstrand is a player for finishing, wrist shots and situations when the opponent is late covering the far side. Eller is important for Denmark because he can calm the game, take difficult face-offs and handle minutes against the strongest Czech lines.

Three on-ice duels that can decide the evening


  • The Czech power play against Danish discipline - every Danish penalty can be costly.

  • Ehlers in transition against Czech defensemen - the first two steps can open a clean chance.

  • Traffic in front of the Danish goal - Czechia will look for rebounds and screens on the goaltender.

  • Face-offs in Denmark’s defensive third - a lost face-off can immediately bring pressure.

  • The third period if the score is tight - that is when the Danish structure becomes most dangerous.



BCF Arena: a compact venue in a city that lives hockey

BCF Arena is located at Chem. Saint-Léonard 5 in Fribourg and is the home of HC Fribourg-Gottéron. For the 2026 World Championship, the capacity is listed as 7500 spectators, which is important because the tournament configuration does not have to be the same as the league one. The arena was modernized in a major project that began in 2018, and the opening of the renovated arena is listed for 2020. BCF Arena was also presented as the first ice arena in Switzerland with a Minergie-A certificate.

For a fan, that means one very concrete thing: this is not a huge neutral stadium where sound gets lost. It is a hockey arena with short distances, local fan habits and ice that is the center of local sport every week. When two national teams and fans traveling from Czechia, Denmark and the rest of Europe move into such a space, the match gains tournament energy already from warm-up.

Seats in the stands disappear quickly when an evening slot, national teams with a clear fan base and an arena without endless capacity come together. It is worth securing tickets in time, especially if fans want to sit in the same zone or are traveling in a larger group.

BCF Arena in several verified lines


  • City: Fribourg, Switzerland.

  • Event address: Chem. Saint-Léonard 5.

  • Capacity for the 2026 World Championship: 7500 spectators.

  • Home of the local club: HC Fribourg-Gottéron.

  • Modernization: start of works in 2018, opening of the renovated arena in 2020.

  • Special feature: Minergie-A certificate for the ice arena.

How to get to the arena

The organizers recommend arriving at BCF Arena by public transport because there is no parking for spectators directly next to the arena during the tournament, and traffic restrictions are expected around the arena. The simplest option for fans arriving by train is the Fribourg/Freiburg Poya station, from where it is about a six-minute walk to the arena. The bus connection from Fribourg/Freiburg toward the Fribourg Poya stop is also listed as a practical option, with a short walk to the entrance.

For those arriving by car, it is useful to plan more broadly than the arena itself. The local tourist guide for fans lists the Fribourg-Nord exit from the A12 motorway as practical for reaching the city and the arena zone, but parking should be sought at recommended locations rather than counting on a spot right next to BCF Arena. This is especially important for the evening slot, when fan arrivals overlap with city traffic.

Practical arrival information


  • Train: Fribourg/Freiburg Poya station, then a short walk to the arena.

  • Bus: line toward Fribourg Poya from the direction of Fribourg/Freiburg.

  • Car: plan arrival through the wider city traffic network and follow local instructions.

  • Parking: do not count on spectator parking directly at the arena location.

  • Arrival time: for the evening match it is better to arrive earlier because of entry checks and crowds around the arena.



Fribourg as a hockey base for fans

Fribourg is a city where the French and German language areas of Switzerland meet, and for fans traveling to the match that means an interesting, compact and walkable host. The old town, bridges and position above the Sarine River give it a different character from major sports metropolises. For a one-day arrival, the most important thing is not to lose time on logistics: accommodation and movement are better planned around rail and bus connections than around the idea that everything will be solved by car in front of the arena.

The good side of Fribourg is that a fan can combine the match with several hours in the city without long transfers. An afternoon walk, early dinner and departure toward the Poya zone by public transport form a natural rhythm of the day. Since the match is played at 20:20, most fans will have enough time to arrive without rushing, but the return after the finish should be checked in advance through the current timetable.

What kind of atmosphere to expect

This is the type of match in which the difference between a neutral crowd and fan groups following the national teams will be felt immediately. Czech fans traditionally travel well to major hockey competitions, and Denmark gained an additional reason for optimism after its 2025 result. In a compact arena, every goal, every penalty and every spell of pressure in the final five minutes can sound stronger than it would in a larger venue.

On the ice, a physical but not necessarily chaotic match should be expected. Czechia will try to speed up the rhythm and force Denmark into long defensive shifts. Denmark will want to stay calm, defend the middle and wait for the moment when space opens behind the Czech defense. If Czechia takes an early lead, the match can open up. If Denmark scores first or keeps it 0-0 deep into the second period, the stands could get that nervousness that often suits the outsider.

Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and the evening slot in Fribourg gives the meeting extra appeal for fans who want a full tournament day. For those coming from outside Switzerland, the smartest approach is to connect tickets, accommodation and transport in the same plan, because improvisation around an arena with limited parking can eat up time and nerves.

What could decide it

The first detail is discipline. Denmark must not give Czechia easy minutes with the extra player, especially if Czech shooters get time to set up. The second detail is Denmark’s zone exit. Every lost puck inside the blue line can turn into an extended attack and a shot through traffic. The third detail is goaltender performance. Denmark will almost certainly need an above-average night in goal if it wants to keep the match tight.

Czechia, on the other hand, must be careful not to play the match as if the result is guaranteed. The Danes have already shown they can punish a favorite that loses patience. Czechia must do what it knows best: keep the puck, attack in waves, use the width of the ice and not give Denmark open counterattacks. If it manages to combine pressure and defensive responsibility, it enters the meeting as the clearer candidate for victory.For the neutral viewer, the most interesting thing will be to see whether Denmark can repeat the mentality from its best matches of 2025 and whether Czechia can look right from the start of the tournament like a team that knows what it wants. It is a first-round match, but given the strength of Group B, it can carry a weight that will only be felt a few days later when the calculation of points for the quarter-finals begins.

Sources:

- Competition page 2026 - match schedule, Czechia - Denmark slot, Group B and BCF Arena location.

- Competition page 2026, BCF Arena guide - tournament capacity, modernization, Minergie-A certificate and basic venue data.

- Competition page 2026, mobility for BCF Arena - public-transport recommendation, Fribourg/Freiburg Poya station, bus connection and parking information.- Men’s world hockey ranking - Czechia and Denmark positions and points according to the most recently published ranking.

- Competition page 2025, final standings - Denmark’s fourth place, Czechia’s sixth place and David Pastrňák’s individual performance.

- Competition page 2025, Czechia - Denmark report - 7-2 result and context of the head-to-head meeting.

- Olympic hockey results 2026 - Czech 3-2 victory over Denmark in the qualification round and more recent head-to-head context.

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1 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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