Saskatoon StarPhoenix

CANADIANS FAIL TO FINN-ISH

So many moments of regret as home side falls in quarter-final at world juniors

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/michael_traikos

FINLAND 2, CANADA 1 (OT)

This will go down as the one that got away.

Canada was 46.4 seconds away from meeting Switzerlan­d in a world junior semifinal when Finland’s Eeli Tolvanen forced overtime by banking in a shot off Aleksi Heponiemi that somehow snuck under the arm of goalie Michael Dipietro.

Just like that, the game turned. Canada, which had led 1-0 from the opening minutes of the second period despite being outplayed, outshot and out-chanced, was on the defensive. Finland took advantage. With 4:43 remaining in overtime, Finland’s Toni Utunen took a drop pass in the slot and rocketed a wrist shot over Dipietro’s shoulder as Canada was stunned 2-1 in the quarter-final.

This game featured it all: two goalies duelling, a last-minute comeback, a penalty shot in overtime. In the end, Finland goalie Ukko-pekka Luukkonen was just too good.

It was a familiar refrain for a Canadian team that, despite starting the tournament by outscoring Denmark, Switzerlan­d and the Czech Republic 23-3 in the round robin, could not put the puck in the net when it needed to the most.

Canada had a chance to win the game in overtime, when defenceman Evan Bouchard was hooked on a breakaway. But Maxime Comtois, who took the penalty shot for the Canadians, could not put the puck past the Finnish goalie.

And so, Canada, which had been given an easy path to the final when Switzerlan­d stunned Sweden 2-0 in the quarters earlier Wednesday, will not win a medal for the first time since 2016.

Coincident­ally, the team lost to Finland in the quarter-final of that year as well.

That year, goaltendin­g had been to blame for Canada’s woes. That was not the case this time.

Dipietro, who stopped 32 shots and had fans chanting his name after the loss, was fantastic. He just didn’t receive any help from his teammates.

Good goaltendin­g can be a difference-maker in these short tournament­s. And it certainly was that on Wednesday night.

This one could have went either way, as Dipietro and Luukkonen went save for save in a goalie battle.

Ian Mitchell scored Canada’s only goal, and Luukkonen stopped everything else Canada threw his way.

Dipietro, meanwhile, could not come up with the big save when his team needed it the most. That’s the rub with being the goaltender for Canada. You tend to only get any notice when you’re cracking under the pressure.

In a year when Canada lacks a dynamic forward or an airtight defence, Dipietro had been leaned on more than usual.

That he not only did it in on home soil, but also in front of a fan base that is closely watching the Vancouver Canucks prospect’s every move, made it even more impressive.

A year ago, Dipietro was cut from the team.

On Wednesday, two nights after being outplayed by Russia’s Pyotr Kochetkov, Dipietro was the reason this one stayed as close as it did.

This wasn’t Canada’s best game. Not by a long shot. The Finns might not have been good in the round robin, but they stepped up against Canada.

Canada was outshot 11-7 in the first period and 12-9 in the second. But Mitchell gave the Canadians a 1-0 lead at 1:30 in the second period.

Barrett Hayton set up the play when he carried the puck into the offensive zone and dangled around a defender with a toedrag deke. He temporaril­y lost the puck, but managed to sweep a pass to a pinching Mitchell, who fired a wrist shot over Luukkonen’s glove for his first of the world juniors.

From there, it was all Dipietro. The 19-year-old’s toughest save came early in the first period when he kicked out his leg and robbed Samuli Vainionpaa on a rebound.

In the end, Finland’s attack was too much.

This one could have went either way, as Dipietro and Luukkonen went save for save in a goalie battle.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Goalie Michael Dipietro reacts after Finland defeated Canada in overtime in the quarter-finals in Vancouver.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Goalie Michael Dipietro reacts after Finland defeated Canada in overtime in the quarter-finals in Vancouver.
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