Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Canada, Russia square off again at worlds

- CAROL SCHRAM

COLOGNE, GERMANY Russia reached the podium at the last two world hockey championsh­ips but was forced to watch as the archrival Canadians took their perch on the top step.

The hockey powerhouse­s will meet again in Saturday’s semifinal at Cologne’s Lanxess Arena with Russia looking to eliminate any chance of its longtime foe winning gold for a third straight year.

Russia has looked very strong at the tournament, even though star forwards Alex Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin are not with the team. Artemi Panarin has 14 points in seven games and Russia leads all teams with 38 goals scored and just nine against. Goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y has recorded three of Russia’s four shutouts.

Team Canada head coach Jon Cooper said he’s not planning to make any major adjustment­s ahead of the showdown.

“I’m not a big believer in changing your game plan,” he said. “We’ve got a pretty good thing going right now. The guys are believing in what we’re doing. Some of the big keys will be special teams, who’s going to bend and who’s going to break.

“This is Canada versus Russia — may the best team win.”

Finland and Sweden will face off in Saturday’s other semifinal. The medal games are set for Sunday.

Canada hasn’t won three straight gold medals at this tournament since the early 1950s. The Czech Republic was the last team to three-peat (1999-2001).

Canada went 6-0-1-0 in the preliminar­y round to finish with a tournament-high 19 points, with the only loss coming in overtime to Switzerlan­d. Canada edged Germany 2-1 in Thursday’s quarterfin­al.

The Russians, meanwhile, went undefeated in their first six games before dropping a 5-3 decision to the United States in their final game of the preliminar­y round. Russia bounced back by shutting out the Czechs 3-0 in the quarterfin­als.

Russia won bronze as the host country in Moscow last year after dropping a 6-1 decision to Canada in the 2015 championsh­ip game. Russia last won gold in 2014.

“I’ve played against Russia a million times,” Canada forward Matt Duchene said. “They’re a high-octane offence. They like to make plays. If you play into their transition game, they’re going to crush you.”

Duchene is one of seven players on this year’s Canadian team who won gold two years ago in Prague.

“It was a big test for us,” Canada forward Nathan MacKinnon said of that game. “They had a really good team. They had Ovechkin, Malkin, a lot of good players, and we dominated, which was fun. That’s definitely the best memory.”

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Jon Cooper

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