The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada cruises to victory

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scores twice in 7-1 win over host Denmark at world championsh­ip

- BY CAROL SCHRAM

Connor McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins are showing that the chemistry they’ve built as linemates with the Edmonton Oilers can translate to the internatio­nal stage.

Nugent-Hopkins scored twice and McDavid had three assists as Canada cruised to a 7-1 victory over host Denmark on Monday at the world hockey championsh­ip.

“They played quite a bit together down the stretch at the National Hockey League level and they’ve continued on here internatio­nally,” Canada coach Bill Peters said. “They think the game at a high level and read off each other real well.”

Josh Bailey, Aaron Ekblad, Jordan Eberle, Ryan O’Reilly and Tyson Jost also scored for Canada, which now has two regulation wins and a shootout loss through three games.

Nugent-Hopkins, normally the No. 2 centre in Edmonton, was elevated to the left wing Oilers’ top line late in the NHL season and had 15 points in 13 games playing with McDavid.

The two are clicking again in Denmark. McDavid, who now has seven points through three games, had a hand in both of Nugent-Hopkins’ goals.

“The first one, I got a little lucky with where I placed it,” Nugent-Hopkins said. “I just tried to chip it out and get some speed. Connor drove the net, which drove back the (defenceman) a little bit. I just had to put it five-hole.”

On his second goal, Nugent-Hopkins said: “Connor made a great play on the blue line, again. He created a lot of space and tried to find Schwartzy (Jaden Schwartz). It bounced off the D-man’s skate and came to me out front. I just had to tuck it upstairs.”

Making his second start in as many games, Toronto Maple Leafs backup Curtis McElhinney was perfect until he was beaten on a shot by Jesper Jensen Aabo that deflected off a Canadian player, 8:07 into the third period.

“Just a redirectio­n - that’s how things are going to go at this point I think,” said McElhinney. “Teams are just looking for bounces and stuff. They got one at the end.

“It’s tough; I never want to give up a goal but I thought overall the team played great in front of me tonight.”

The 34-year-old McElhinney, who is suiting up for Canada for the first time in his career at any level, made 14 saves as he continued his strong bid for the No. 1 job.

“Every test that he’s gotten, he’s stepped up to it,” Peters said. “There have been some really good chances that we’ve given up so he’s had to be sharp. That’s exactly what he’s done.”

Monday’s much-anticipate­d matchup between McElhinney and Maple Leafs goaltendin­g partner, Frederik Andersen, didn’t materializ­e. Denmark coach Jan Karlsson elected to rest his top netminder against Canada after Andersen faced 80 shots in his first two games.

The host nation is currently in tough to reach the quarterfin­al - tied for fifth place after three games, with the only top four advancing to the eliminatio­n round. Andersen will be needed for Denmark’s more winnable games through the remainder of the preliminar­y round.

Sebastian Dahm got his first start of the tournament for Denmark, making 22 saves.

In earlier action on Monday, Keith Kinkaid earned his second-straight shutout as the United States defeated Germany 3-0 to stay on top of the Group B standings, while Russia recorded its third-straight shutout with a 6-0 win over Belarus in Group A in Copenhagen. In the late game in Group A, Sweden beat France 4-0.

Canada now sits second in the Group B standings, one point behind the United States.

Canada’s next game is Thursday against Norway.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Canada’s Pierre-Luc Dubois watches Denmark’s Sebastian Dahm make a save during world hockey championsh­ip action Monday in Herning, Denmark.
AP PHOTO Canada’s Pierre-Luc Dubois watches Denmark’s Sebastian Dahm make a save during world hockey championsh­ip action Monday in Herning, Denmark.

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