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Holiday tradition: B.C. ready for world junior hockey championship

Officially, it's the International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship, but in Canada it's known simply as the world juniors.

The annual holiday tournament of the top teenaged male hockey players has grown from a niche event hosted in boutique European towns, to a cult classic of a sporting spectacle that in Canada at least, rivals major pro sports in audience and attention.

This year, the tournament returns to British Columbia for the first time since 2005/06, with games split between Vancouver and Victoria, starting on Boxing Day Wednesday and concluding Jan. 5 with the bronze and gold-medal games.

Team Canada poses for a photo after defeating Sweden in last year's gold-medal game at Buffalo, N.Y. (Nathan Denette / The Canadian Press)

Here's what you need to know about this year's world juniors: 

Who's playing? 

Ten teams are drawn into two pools for the opening round. Pool A is based in Vancouver, with games at Rogers Arena. Pool B is based in Victoria, with games at the Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre.

POOL A

POOL B

The top four teams in each pool qualify for the quarter-finals on Jan. 2 in Victoria and Vancouver. The winners advance to the Jan. 4 semifinals in Vancouver, with the bronze and gold-medal games the following day.

Canada's head coach, Tim Hunter, speaks to media following the team's recent selection camp at the Q Centre in Victoria. (Chad Hipolito / The Canadian Press)

When does Canada play? 

Canada begins its schedule Wednesday (Boxing Day) against Denmark. The team's opening-round schedule grows increasingly tougher, ramping up to the New Year's Eve clash against Russia. All games start at 8 p.m. ET.

Who are the notable players?

The top teams at the tournament are brimming with talent and the stage is always set for unknowns to emerge. 

Jack Hughes — United States

American Jack Hughes is expected to be a top pick in the next NHL draft and among the top players at the 2019 World Juniors. (Carlos Osorio / The Associated Press)

Kaapo Kakko — Finland

Adam Boqvist — Sweden

Cody Glass — Canada

Centre Cody Glass, left, was cut from the Canadian team a year ago, but is expected to play a key offensive role on this year's squad. (Aaron Lynett / The Canadian Press)

What are the marquee 1st-round matchups? 

U.S. vs. Slovakia —​ Dec. 26 in Victoria

Canada vs. Czech Republic —​ Dec. 29 in Vancouver

Czech Republic forward Filip Zadina scored seven goals in as many games at last year's world junior tournament. (Jeffrey T. Barnes/Associated Press/File)

Canada vs. Russia —​ Dec. 31 in Vancouver

Finland vs. United States — Dec. 31 in Victoria

Canada celebrates its 5-0 goal-medal win over Russia at the 2006 world juniors, the last time B.C. hosted the under-20 tournament. (Ryan Remiorz / CP Photo)

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