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IIHF World Men's Ice Hockey Championship (GROUP B)
16. May 2026. 20:20h
Slovenia vs Czech Republic
BCF Arena, Fribourg, CH
2026
16
May
Tickets for Slovenia - Czechia, 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship Group B game at BCF Arena Fribourg
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Slovenia - Czechia, 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship Group B game at BCF Arena Fribourg

Looking for tickets for Slovenia - Czechia in Fribourg? Here you can buy tickets for the 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship game at BCF Arena and get useful context on the rankings, Czech depth, Slovenia's game plan, the expected crowd, public transport and arriving without relying on venue parking

Slovenia vs Czechia: an evening in Fribourg that immediately tests Slovenia's limits

Slovenia and Czechia enter the meeting at BCF Arena with completely different starting weights. Czechia arrived at the elite tournament as a national team from the very top of the world ranking, fifth on the IIHF list after the latest update with 3860 points, while Slovenia is in 15th place with 3180 points. That difference is not just a number on paper: it is visible in squad depth, experience in high-tempo matches, and the quality of players who can decide a game with one power play or one zone entry. For Slovenian fans, that is exactly why this is a match worth preparing for. Tickets for this meeting are in demand among fans because Fribourg combines proximity to Slovenia, an attractive opponent, and a time slot in which the arena can turn into a very lively hockey stage.

What is at stake in Group B

The 2026 schedule immediately puts Slovenia to a difficult test. Group B features Canada, Sweden, Czechia, Denmark, Slovakia, Norway, Slovenia, and Italy, and such a group composition leaves little room for a slow start to the tournament. Czechia will be looking for a result that keeps it in the race for the top of the group and a better position before the knockout stage. Slovenia, on the other hand, must collect every minute of stability, because in a group like this even strong resistance against favorites can be important for confidence in matches against more direct rivals.

Slovenia finished 2025 in Group A in 7th place with 4 points and a goal record of 9:29. The key moment was a 3-1 triumph against France in Stockholm, when the goals were scored by Žan Jezovšek, Nik Simšič, and Matic Török, while goaltender Lukas Horak recorded 28 saves. That victory was not only a nice result, but also secured Slovenia's stay in the elite division for 2026. For Edo Terglav's team, that is a valuable base: proof that Slovenia can survive the pressure of a match in which the result matters more than the impression. Czechia was third in Group B in 2025 with 17 points and a goal difference of 35:14, behind Switzerland and the USA, and ahead of Denmark, Germany, Norway, Hungary, and Kazakhstan. In the quarterfinal, it was stopped by a 5-2 defeat against Sweden, but that tournament again showed how quickly Czechia punishes bad line changes, lost battles along the boards, and unnecessary penalties. If Slovenia wants to stay in the match, the first task will be to avoid sequences in which Czechia can score two goals in a few minutes.

  • Czechia is the 5th national team in the world with 3860 points in the latest published IIHF ranking.
  • Slovenia is 15th on the same ranking with 3180 points.
  • Slovenia stayed in the elite division in 2025 with a 3-1 victory against France.
  • Czechia scored 35 goals in 7 group matches in 2025.
  • In the last mutual meeting at the 2023 World Championship, Czechia defeated Slovenia 6-2.


The Slovenian plan: patience, shot blocks, and a goaltender who must see the puck

Slovenia under Edo Terglav cannot afford an open exchange of blows with Czechia. That is not a matter of courage, but of ice mathematics. Czechia has more players who can accelerate through the neutral zone, pull the defense toward themselves, and find the second attacking line. Slovenia therefore must keep its five-man unit compact, clear the space in front of the goaltender, and reduce the number of situations in which Czech forwards receive the puck between the faceoff circles.

The most important Slovenian task will be to enter the match without panic. Against stronger national teams, Slovenia often has to accept that it will spend part of the match defending. But defense is not the same as passivity. If Slovenian defensemen manage to move the puck quickly along the boards and if the centers help low, Czechia will have to build more attacks from the corner and fewer from clean entries through the middle. That is the difference between a match in which the favorite constantly has an open shot and a match in which it must work for every meter. In attack, Slovenia must choose its moments. A quick breakout over the wing, the puck deep behind the Czech goal, and pressure on the second defensive line can bring a penalty, a rebound, or at least a change of rhythm. There are not many cheap goals against Czechia, but they can come from traffic, puck deflections, and second attempts. This is the type of match in which one quality forecheck can be worth almost as much as long domination in possession.

Czech strength: depth, tempo, and danger from special situations

Czechia arrives with the reputation of a national team that knows how to play both with and without the puck. Radim Rulík led the team through the Beijer Hockey Games ahead of the final preparations for the championship, the last major test before the tournament, and the Czech selection regularly combines players from the domestic league with names playing in the strongest North American and European environments. David Pastrňák, Martin Nečas, and Tomáš Hertl were part of the Czech Olympic roster for 2026, and that profile of player describes well the problem awaiting Slovenia: Czechia has individuals who can change a match even when the system is not perfect.

Special attention must be paid to the Czech power play. The Czech national team traditionally uses the width of the ice, rotation on the blue line, and passing through the middle well. Slovenian penalties can therefore be the shortest path to problems. One penalty in the attacking zone or a late battle along the boards can give Czechia two minutes of constant pressure, and then the defense tires quickly. For Slovenia, discipline will be just as important as goaltending form.

Czechia also often creates pressure through the second period. If the first line does not finish the play, the second and third can continue at the same rhythm. That is what separates favorites from teams that rely on short bursts. Slovenia will therefore have to change smartly, avoid long shifts, and make sure its defensemen do not remain on the ice after a lost puck in the neutral zone.

A head-to-head meeting fans remember

The last mutual meeting between these national teams at world level was played on May 18, 2023, in Riga. Czechia won 6-2, but the match was not only a one-way story from the first minute. Slovenia had an energetic start then, but Czechia gradually took control and punished the drop in concentration. That is precisely the lesson Terglav's team must carry into Fribourg: against Czechia it is not enough to play a good first period; it is necessary to survive all three without long empty stretches.

That result also shows how dangerous Czech finishing surges are. When the favorite senses that the opponent is no longer exiting the zone cleanly, wave after wave of attacks begins. Slovenia must recognize the moments when it needs to slow the game down, take a simple icing, win a faceoff, or at least clear the puck far enough to change tired players. In hockey, such details are not always seen in the highlights, but they often decide whether the match will remain open until the last ten minutes.

BCF Arena: a modern arena with clear arrival instructions

BCF Arena is located at Chem. Saint-Léonard 5 in Fribourg and, for the 2026 tournament, has a capacity of 7500 spectators according to the organizers' data. The arena was renovated in a major project that began in 2018, and the opening of the modernized arena was in 2020. A special feature is also the Minergie-A certificate, which is rare for ice arenas and a good example of the Swiss approach to infrastructure: functional, precise, and with an emphasis on energy efficiency. For a fan coming from Slovenia or Czechia, the most important practical message is very clear: there is no parking for spectators at the venue itself during the championship, and traffic restrictions have been announced around BCF Arena. The organizers therefore strongly recommend public transport. This is not a passing note, but key information for planning the arrival. It is worth securing tickets on time, but it is equally worth arranging the route to the arena in advance.

  • Train: Fribourg/Freiburg Poya station, then approximately 6 minutes on foot to BCF Arena.
  • Bus: line number 1 from Fribourg toward Fribourg Poya, then approximately 5 minutes on foot.
  • Parking: the organizers state that there is no parking for spectators at the arena location.
  • Traffic: restrictions around the arena are planned during the event.
  • Address: Chem. Saint-Léonard 5, Fribourg, Switzerland.


Fribourg as a base for a fan weekend

Fribourg is a city that suits a hockey trip well because it is not too large, yet has enough content for the day before or after the match. The old part of the city descends toward the Sarine River, and the combination of French and German linguistic areas gives it a special rhythm. For fans arriving earlier, it is a good idea to leave the car outside the congestion zone and move around by public transport or on foot, because around the arena on match day it does not pay to improvise.

The arena is home to HC Fribourg-Gottéron, a club with strong support among the local public. This means the crowd at BCF Arena knows how to react to every blocked shot, every goaltender save, and every rush toward the boards. For neutral spectators, that is an advantage: even when they are not cheering for the home club, they enter a space accustomed to hockey. For Slovenian and Czech fans, that can be an excellent backdrop, especially because both national teams are not coming to Fribourg as random passers-by, but as part of a group in which every point will be hard earned.

The atmosphere that can be expected

Czech fans traditionally travel well to major hockey tournaments, and Fribourg is close enough for visible support from the stands to be expected. Slovenian fans have an additional motive: the match is on a weekend, within reach by road and rail, against an opponent whose name alone raises interest. Seats in the stands disappear quickly when an attractive time slot, a 7500-spectator arena, and a national team from the world elite come together.

On the ice, a match can be expected in which Czechia will hold the puck more, while Slovenia will look for moments for a quick response. In the stands, an interesting dynamic could therefore emerge: Czech pressure will raise the noise of their fans, while every Slovenian penalty kill survived or dangerous exit from the zone will carry the weight of a small goal. Such matches often live on details that the crowd immediately feels - a blocked shot, a won faceoff in the defensive third, a goaltender stopping a shot through traffic.

Who to pay special attention to

For Slovenia, it is worth following players who can combine physical work and concrete finishing. In the victory over France in 2025, the scorers were Žan Jezovšek, Nik Simšič, and Matic Török, and Lukas Horak had 28 saves. These are data that describe well Slovenia's path to a result: a few precise attacks, a lot of work without the puck, and a goaltender who must keep the team in the match when the pressure rises. For Czechia, the emphasis is on individual class and speed of decision-making. Pastrňák is the type of player who does not need much space for a shot, Nečas can break structure with speed through the middle, and Hertl brings strength and calm in battles. It is not certain that each of these players will be part of the final roster for this match, because national teams for world championships often depend on club seasons and player availability, but their Olympic status shows the level from which Czechia can draw its roster.

  • Slovenia must protect the middle of the ice and not allow clean Czech entries between the circles.
  • Czechia will seek an early goal to force Slovenia to open up the game.
  • The Slovenian goaltender must have a clear view of the first shots, without traffic from his own players in front of him.
  • Slovenia's discipline will be decisive because the Czech power play can quickly change the rhythm.
  • The Slovenian attack can gain the most from a deep puck, forecheck, and rebounds.


The rhythm of the match and key periods

The first period will be the most sensitive for Slovenia. If it withstands the initial pressure and does not concede a quick goal, the match can enter a phase in which Czechia must search longer for a solution. That usually opens space for the favorite's frustration and the occasional Slovenian transition. If Czechia takes an early lead, Slovenia must avoid the worst scenario: a second quick goal and the match moving in a direction where the result is no longer being played for, but only the rhythm is being survived.

The second period could be technically the most demanding. The longer change often punishes bad decisions, and Czechia is good enough to catch a tired Slovenian five-man unit. Here Terglav will have to choose simple solutions: puck out of the zone, safe changes, and no risky passes through the middle. The third period, if the score remains close, can be a space for Slovenian pressure without major possession - one faceoff, one shot from the blue line, one scramble in front of the goal. Ticket sales for this match are underway, and for fans who want to experience the meeting live, the most important thing is to combine two decisions: secure a seat in the arena and head toward BCF Arena by public transport. Fribourg will not be a place for arriving by car to the entrance at the last moment. A better plan is to arrive earlier, walk to the arena from Poya station, and enter without stress.

Practical advice for match day

The best fan plan for this meeting is simple: check the timetable toward Fribourg/Freiburg Poya, allow a few minutes on foot to the arena, and avoid relying on parking next to BCF Arena. Since the organizers mention traffic restrictions in the surrounding area, the arrival time should be planned with a buffer. In the arena, the biggest crowd will probably be immediately before the start, especially if a larger number of Slovenian and Czech fans arrive on the same trains or buses.

For those coming with children or in a larger group, it is wise to determine a meeting point in advance outside the most crowded entrance and agree on the return toward Poya station immediately after the match. A hockey day in Fribourg can be very pleasant if the logistics are solved before the first faceoff. On the ice, Slovenia will seek a match of patience, Czechia a match of control, and the stands will get a meeting that immediately at the start of the group shows how merciless elite hockey is toward every detail.

Sources: - IIHF - 2026 World Championship schedule, confirmation of the Slovenia - Czechia fixture, Group B, and venue at BCF Arena.

- IIHF - men's world ranking, used ranking and points of Czechia and Slovenia after the latest published update.

- IIHF - 2025 World Championship results and standings, used performances of Slovenia and Czechia, goal differences, points, and group matches.

- IIHF - report "Slovenia's happy hockey day", used data on Slovenia's 3-1 victory against France, scorers, and Lukas Horak's saves.

- Ice Hockey Federation of Slovenia - preparations for "Mission Fribourg", used context of the Slovenian national team, Group B, and work under Edo Terglav. - Český hokej - roster announcement for the 2026 Beijer Hockey Games, used context of Czech final preparations and the role of Radim Rulík.

- IIHF - BCF Arena Fribourg and Mobility BCF Arena, used data on capacity for the 2026 championship, address, public transport, walking distances, and lack of parking for spectators.

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