Journal Pioneer

Sweden beats U.S.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. - Oskar Steen and Axel Jonsson Fjallby helped put Sweden in position for its first world junior hockey gold medal in six years.

Steen and Jonsson Fjallby scored short-handed goals in the third period as Sweden earned a 4-2 semifinal win over the United States on Thursday. That moved the Swedes closer to their first gold medal since 2012. Sweden has been a dominant force in this tournament since ‘07, having amassed a 44-0 preliminar­y round record. But over that span the Swedes have just the one gold medal to show for it.

On Friday, Sweden will face either Canada or the Czech Republic in the tournament final.

“First round is one thing, then playoffs is another,” said Swedish head coach Tomas Monten. “You play a lot better teams, you’ve just got to get an edge.

“We got that today and I think we grew in the game. We stuck with it and that’s why we’re in the final.”

Elias Petterson and Lias Andersson had the other goals for Sweden while goaltender Filip Gustavsson made 29 saves. Kieffer Bellows and Brady Tkachuk scored for the U.S. to cut into a 4-0 deficit in the third. Joseph Woll stopped 16 shots before being replaced by Jake Oettinger after allowing Sweden’s final goal.

The Americans, who won gold last year in Montreal, will play the loser of the Canada-Czech Republic semifinal for the bronze medal. The U.S. was attempting to become the first country to win consecutiv­e gold medals since Canada won five straight from 2005-09.

“We got going, we got on a roll, the injuries didn’t make a big impact on our team,” said American coach Bob Motzko. “We had two players down and we stuck (Logan) Brown back in there late.

“Some of those things are tough to overcome and I’m not saying that for an excuse. I’m not a huge study of this tournament year after year but when you’re fighting for the 12 days or the 22 days we’ve been going at it, certain things can back you off. We’re so disappoint­ed right now. We were on the bench going ‘This is not us. What’s going on?’ You wanted to clap your hands and get it to change.”

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