Lethbridge Herald

GOLD FOR CANADA

CANADA DEFEATS SWEDEN 3-1

- John Chidley-Hill

Tyler Steenberge­n redirected in Connor Timmins' pass to break a tie with 1:40 left and Canada beat Sweden 3-1 to win the world junior hockey championsh­ip.

Canadian Tyler Steenberge­n dropped to one knee and pumped his fist after putting away the winner in the gold-medal game of the world junior hockey championsh­ip.

It was Steenberge­n’s first goal of the tournament and came with 1:40 to play in the third period to lead Canada to a 3-1 victory over Sweden on Friday night.

After more than 18 minutes of scoreless play in the third, defenceman Connor Timmins sent a long pass in from the point, finding Steenberge­n to the left of Sweden’s net.

Rarely used in the tournament except on the power play, Steenberge­n deflected the puck into the net, bringing the raucous crowd to its feet and breaking a deadlock that seemed destined for overtime.

Captain Dillon Dube also scored for Canada, while Alex Formenton added an empty-net goal 26 seconds after Steenberge­n struck.

Carter Hart made 35 saves, tying Jimmy Waite and Stephane Fiset for most career wins by a Canadian goalie at the world juniors.

Hart had become one of the most popular players at the tournament, thanks to his many idiosyncra­sies. In particular, his insistence on being the last player to leave the ice after a period and the lengths he would go to insure that he was last off made him an internet darling.

Tim Soderlund was the lone scorer for Sweden. Filip Gustavsson stopped 26-of-28 shots.

Trent Frederic scored four times to lead the United States past the Czech Republic 9-3 earlier Friday in the bronze-medal game.

Loud “Let’s go Canada!” chants began within the first minute of the game. It was the largest indoor crowd of the tournament by a wide margin, with at least 80 per cent of the seats at KeyBank Center filled. Poor attendance throughout the event, aside form the recordsett­ing 44,592 fans at the first-ever outdoor game, was an ongoing issue.

Sweden outshot Canada 16-9 in a scoreless first period, but both teams’ speed was on full display with several end-to-end rushes and quick passing plays by both teams. This is exactly the sort of team head coach Dominique Ducharme and the executives at Hockey Canada had envisioned when they began assembling their roster in St. Catharines, Ont., in mid-December: fast, applying constant pressure to their opponents and creating breakaways from turnovers.

That speed was noticeable on Canada’s opening goal of the night. Jordan Kyrou carried the puck down the centre of the ice, passing to Dube on his left wing, who snapped the puck past Gustavsson at the 1:49 mark of the second.

Soderlund responded with about seven minutes left in the second, breaking down the right wing while Sweden was down a player. He ripped a wrist shot over Hart’s glove hand to tie it 1-1.

The Swedes dominated play in the second, with Canada struggling to get shots on net and forcing too many passes. By the end of the period Sweden had outshot Canada 25-18 even though the Canadians had two power plays.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Canada forward Dillon Dube (9) hoists the trophy after wining the gold medal, defeating Sweden in the final at the IIHF World Junior Championsh­ip, Friday, in Buffalo, N.Y.
Canadian Press photo Canada forward Dillon Dube (9) hoists the trophy after wining the gold medal, defeating Sweden in the final at the IIHF World Junior Championsh­ip, Friday, in Buffalo, N.Y.

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