Times Colonist

‘Sloppy’ Canada still too much for Europe

- JONAS SIEGEL

TORONTO — In between periods and again after the game Team Canada talked about it.

“We didn’t play our best hockey, there’s no question about that,” Canadian forward Brad Marchand said.

Their off-game was enough to get by Europe in the opener of the World Cup of Hockey final, a 3-1 decision at the Air Canada Centre on Tuesday night. Canada didn’t come close to dominating like it had previously, outplayed for long stretches of a game that saw Carey Price shine (32 saves) and Sidney Crosby’s line continue to produce.

Some of that was resistance from Europe, a concept team that’s unlikely to return for future World Cups. They offered what’s become a standard fight in the first game of perhaps their only final appearance, limiting Canada’s chances while generating more than a few of their own.

Shots were 32-31 at evenstreng­th, just favouring the Canadians.

“For whatever reason we weren’t as good as we felt we were capable of being,” head coach Mike Babcock said. “And so we’ll fix that and we’ll be better.”

Much of it was uncharacte­ristic sloppiness with the puck. The Canadians turned pucks over early, often and in inopportun­e places, including one such turnover from Ryan Getzlaf at the offensive blue line.

Getzlaf thought his linemate Steven Stamkos was there to take the pass, an error perhaps from unfamiliar­ity.

“Even if he is there I don’t necessaril­y need to make that play,” Getzlaf said. “The creativity and stuff is always going to be there, but we’ve got to take care of the puck for sure.”

Getzlaf, who set up Stamkos’ eventual game-winner, also thought the Canadians didn’t move the puck effectivel­y out of their own zone, nor skate with the speed that defined earlier wins. A puck-hogging force throughout the tournament, Canada wasn’t prone either to long stretches in the offensive zone, often one-anddone in the offensive end.

“We’ve been a team that I don’t know if we get 50 [shots] a night but it sure feels like it, we’re all over the other team and we weren’t that tonight,” Babcock said.

Canada rolled over its first four opponents by a 19-6 margin, including a surgical 4-1 over the Europeans in the final game of the preliminar­y round. The Canadians trailed on only two occasions and for less than three minutes total.

It was testament to the overwhelmi­ng talent disparity between the two teams that they actually grabbed a 2-0 lead after the first. The Europeans were the better team through 20 minutes. They outshot the Canadians 13-9, sustained long stints in the offensive zone, grabbed a quick power play and even had the best early chance of the game, a Tomas Tatar shot in tight that was denied by Price.

Price’s best was only required minimally in earlier games. “But we needed him early tonight,” Babcock said.

Canada capitalize­d on its chances as a team with this much firepower often does.

Marchand finished off a rush with Patrice Bergeron early into the first, another play started by Crosby, who had a pair of assists in the game. Crosby leads the tournament in scoring, now with nine points.

Stamkos followed with his first goal of the tournament about 11 minutes later, Europe pulling back to within one midway through the second on a goal from Tatar.

Babcock previously described Europe as a “well-organized” group under head coach Ralph Krueger, that responsibl­e style propelling them to an unlikely berth in the final.

 ??  ?? Team Canada centre Sidney Crosby battles for the puck with Team Europe centre Frans Nielsen during the third period of Game 1 in Toronto on Tuesday.
Team Canada centre Sidney Crosby battles for the puck with Team Europe centre Frans Nielsen during the third period of Game 1 in Toronto on Tuesday.

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