Waterloo Region Record

Blues stars recall epic 2011 junior tourney

- Bill Beacon

MONTREAL — Brayden Schenn, Jaden Schwartz and Vladimir Tarasenko have something in common besides being the big three in the St. Louis Blues’ attack.

All three played in the 2011 world junior hockey championsh­ip in Buffalo, where Tarasenko’s Russian team stunned Schenn and Schwartz’s Canadian side by erasing a 3-0 lead with five unanswered thirdperio­d goals for a 5-3 victory.

The world junior tournament is headed back to Buffalo, starting Dec. 26, and that will stir memories of the 2011 event where Canada looked to be coasting to a gold medal only to have it snatched away.

“We got beat by Vladdy in the final,” Schenn recalled Tuesday. “We were up 3-0 going into the third and, in junior hockey, anything can happen. Obviously it was nice to get into the gold medal game.”

Schenn had won silver at the 2010 world juniors, where Blues defenceman Alex Pietrangel­o was a teammate, only to fall short a second year in a row.

Canada opened the 2011 tournament with a 6-3 win over Russia, but finished second in their round robin group after a shootout loss to Sweden.

They beat Switzerlan­d 4-1 in the quarter-finals and the United States 4-1 in the semis, while Russia needed overtime to top the Finns 4-3 and a shootout to beat Sweden 4-3.

Then Canada took a three-goal lead in the final on tal- lies from Schenn, Ryan Ellis and Carter Ashton. All looked set for a big win in front of a full house of mainly Canadian fans who had crossed the border from Ontario. Then it all caved in.

Momentum can be a big factor in junior hockey and when the Russian comeback started, the Canadian teenagers were swamped.

Artemi Panarin scored twice, while Tarasenko, Maxim Kitsyn and Nikita Dvurechens­ki also beat beleaguere­d goalie Mark Visintin in the final period, setting off a wild celebratio­n on the ice that carried over to the dressing room and continued at the team’s hotel.

The Russians partied so hard they were not allowed to board their flight the next morning due to unruly behaviour and had to fly home the next day.

Schenn said Tarasenko doesn’t rub in his victory too hard. “We talk about it actually, but nothing more than that. It was a cool experience.

“Any time you get to represent your country, just over the border in Buffalo, is an awesome experience. Big crowds. A lot of people driving in from the Toronto area. Obviously they all come to support their junior kids. You always look forward to Boxing Day. That tournament is pretty special. You see the up and coming National Hockey League stars and see what they can do on the internatio­nal stage.”

Canada’s world junior team selection camp opens next week in St. Catharines.

 ??  ?? Brayden Schenn
Brayden Schenn
 ??  ?? Vladimir Tarasenko
Vladimir Tarasenko
 ??  ?? Jaden Schwartz
Jaden Schwartz

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