Estonia men's national ice hockey team
| Nickname(s) | Pääsukesed (Swallows) |
|---|---|
| Association | Estonian Ice Hockey Association |
| General manager | Jüri Rooba |
| Head coach | Petri Skriko |
| Assistants | Kaupo Kaljuste Mikko Mäenpää |
| Captain | Robert Rooba |
| Most games | Lauri Lahesalu (182) |
| Top scorer | Andrei Makrov (82) |
| Most points | Andrei Makrov (148) |
| Home stadium | Tondiraba Ice Hall |
| Team colors | |
| IIHF code | EST |
| Ranking | |
| Current IIHF | 28 (27 May 2024) |
| Highest IIHF | 23 (2007) |
| Lowest IIHF | 29 (2014–15) |
| First international | |
| Finland 2–1 Estonia (Helsinki, Finland; 20 February 1937) | |
| Biggest win | |
| Estonia 27–1 South Africa (Barcelona, Spain; 16 March 1994) Estonia 26–0 Bulgaria (Tallinn, Estonia; 6 November 2015) | |
| Biggest defeat | |
| Slovenia 16–0 Estonia (Ljubljana, Slovenia; 21 April 2001) | |
| IIHF World Championships | |
| Appearances | 30 (first in 1994) |
| Best result | 19th (1998) |
| International record (W–L–T) | |
| 96–115–13 | |
The Estonian men's national ice hockey team is the ice hockey team representing Estonia internationally. The team is controlled by the Estonian Ice Hockey Association (Estonian: Eesti Jäähokiliit), a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation.