Journal Pioneer

‘Super responsibl­e’

Nugent-Hopkins has goal, assist as Canada beats Germany 3-0 at hockey worlds

- BY CAROL SCHRAM

Just hours removed from a tightly contested overtime win over Latvia, Canada took no chances in its final preliminar­y round game at the world hockey championsh­ip.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins had a goal and an assist as Canada finished off its round-robin schedule with a workmanlik­e 3-0 win over Germany on Tuesday.

Less than 18 hours after Connor McDavid’s overtime winner clinched a quarterfin­al berth, Canada controlled Tuesday’s game from start to finish at Jyske Bank Boxen.

“It was a quick turnaround (between games),” said Tyson Jost, who picked up his fourth goal of the tournament in the third period. “You’re not used to that in the National Hockey League.

“I thought we handled it well. No excuses, that’s just hockey. We’re playing the game we love.”

Just 20 seconds into the first period, Brayden Schenn put the Canadians on the board when he directed a pass in the slot from Nugent-Hopkins past sliding

German goaltender Niklas Treutle. Nugent-Hopkins scored his fourth of the tournament at 8:14 of the second period with a shot that went between a screened Treutle’s pads. McDavid, Canada’s leading scorer, picked up his 12th and

13th points of the tournament with assists on Canada’s first two goals.

In the third, Jost rounded out the scoring when he converted a pass into the slot from Joel Edmundson.

Starting in back-to-back games, Darcy Kuemper wasn’t

busy but stayed calm when Germany was able to generate traffic near his crease in the second period. He stopped 12 shots for his first shutout of the tournament.

“I thought we did a good job of taking care of our bodies last night and getting ready to go again,” said Kuemper. “I thought as a team, we played super responsibl­e. We were committed to playing defensivel­y, even starting in the (offensive) zone, all the way back. That’s what we want to build on going into the medal round here, so I think we’re right where we want to be.”

With a quarterfin­al berth already locked down, Tuesday’s game served as a tune-up for the playoff round as coach Bill Peters continued to experiment with line combinatio­ns and work on special teams.

For a fourth-straight game, the power play sputtered. Canada has now failed to score on its last 16 man-advantage opportunit­ies.

“We’ll get it addressed,” said Peters. “We’ll change it again. “We’ll work on it tomorrow when we get into Copenhagen. We’ve got some ice time and it’ll be an area that we definitely have to address. It’ll need to be fixed if we’re going to have the success that we want.”

Kyle Turris, eager to get into action even though his equipment didn’t arrive by game time, made his 2018 Canada debut in borrowed gear and was inserted onto the second power-play unit.

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