Truro News

O’reilly scores in OT as Canada beats Russia, advances to world semifinals

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Canada will compete for a medal at the world hockey championsh­ip for the fourth straight year.

Ryan O’reilly scored the game winner on a four-on-three power play 4:57 into overtime Thursday as Canada beat Russia 5-4 and punched its ticket to the semifinals in Copenhagen.

Colton Parayko and Ryan Nugent-hopkins also scored powerplay goals while Kyle Turris and Pierre-luc Dubois added thirdperio­d markers.

Canada came into the quarterfin­al as the lower seed after a somewhat lacklustre preliminar­y-round performanc­e in smalltown Herning. The change of scenery seemed to agree with the Canadians in their first period of action at Royal Arena in Copenhagen.

Canada controlled the play, outshootin­g Russia 12-4 in the opening frame and taking a 1-0 lead when Parayko fired a massive slapshot to the glove side of Igor Shestyorki­n at 4:45.

The power-play goal snapped a 0- for- 16 drought that had stretched over four preliminar­yround games for Canada. It was the first of the tournament al- lowed by Shestyorki­n, who had been perfect in seven periods of action against Slovakia, Belarus and Austria during preliminar­yround play.

The 22-year-old was a surprise starter in place of the more experience­d Vasili Koshechkin, who held down the No. 1 job for the gold medal-winning Olympic Athletes from Russia team at the Pyeongchan­g Games in February.

Darcy Kuemper made his fifth start of the tournament for Canada.

The Russians started skating in the second period, building an 8-3 shot advantage before Nugent-Hopkins put Canada up 2-0 while Sergei Andronov was serving his second penalty of the game at 11:51 of the second period.

The Russians stormed back with a goal just 1:02 later when Ilya Mikheyev scored after an Artem Anisimov shot pulled Kuemper out of position. Alexander Barabanov evened the score with an extra attacker on the ice for a delayed penalty call with 2:28 left to play in a second period where Russia outshot Canada 15-9.

After a cautious start to the third, Turris put Canada up 3-2 at 7:11, beating a sprawling Shestyorki­n between the pads from the slot after a pinpoint pass from Jaden Schwartz.

Andronov answered back for Russia just 1:33 later, deflecting a Nikita Zaitsev shot over Kuemper’s shoulder. Then, Dubois scored his third of the tournament off a rebound off a Tyson Jost shot with 7:24 left to play in the third before Anisimov forced overtime when beat Kuemper high from a bad angle.

The teams traded chances in overtime before Canada went to the power play after Kirill Kaprizov was whistled for slashing with 3:35 elapsed. Canadian coach Bill Peters called a time out, then sent out captain Connor Mcdavid with O’reilly, Aaron Ekblad and Parayko, with O’reilly’s goal ending the game.

Canada has now won its last three meetings with Russia at the worlds, storming back for a 4-2 come-from-behind win in the semifinal in Cologne, Germany in 2017 and earning gold with a 6-1 win over Russia in 2015.

The win also ends a four-year medal streak for the Russians at worlds, where they won gold in 2014, silver in 2015 and bronze in 2016 and 2017.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Canada’s Ryan O’reilly (90) celebrates after scoring the overtime winner against Russia yesterday.
AP PHOTO Canada’s Ryan O’reilly (90) celebrates after scoring the overtime winner against Russia yesterday.

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