Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

U.S. stunned at Worlds

- By Jerome Pugmire

PARIS >> Winger Patrick Hager scored a late winning goal on his home ice as Germany stunned the United States with a 2-1 win on the opening day of the ice hockey world championsh­ips on Friday.

Three minutes after the Americans had equalized through defenseman Connor Murphy, the Germans scored a scrappy second on a power-play with six minutes remaining. Left winger Hager got the slightest touch to Yannic Seidenberg’s slapshot through traffic and goaltender Jimmy Howard was beaten from close range.

“We had good energy coming into the game and we had to channel that in the right way,” Hager said. “We worked hard, and we worked as a team.”

At the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, where Hager plays his club hockey for DEL team Koelner Haie, more than 18,000 fans watched the Germans go 1-0 ahead 11 minutes into the first period through Arizona Coyotes right winger Tobias Rieder. He showed good composure to finish from close range after a speculativ­e shot from the right was poorly dealt with by Howard, who allowed the puck to cannon off his pad.

“It was the first game of the tournament, the crowd was crazy and that definitely helped,” German center Brooks Macek said. “I think you could see that in our game, we were skating, blocking shots, we were doing the right things.”

Although Hager got the dramatic winner, German goaltender Thomas Greiss — who plays for the New York Islanders — showed his NHL credential­s and was named man of the match.

Greiss made 42 saves, including a point-blank pad save from Johnny Gaudreau late in the first period, after the Calgary Flames forward had bamboozled the defense with a super-slick spin and shot on the run. Gaudreau missed a one-on-one right at the start, and was frustrated by Greiss all night.

Greiss made more fine saves until Murphy — Rieder’s NHL teammate at Arizona — equalized with nine minutes remaining in the third period with a wrist shot from the top of the right circle.

The U.S. thought it was 2-1 up just moments later, but Islanders forward Anders Lee’s shot was somehow scooped right off the line by off-bal- ance defenseman Frank Hordler.

Lee was quick to pay tribute to his club teammate Greiss.

“I knew it was going to be a tough game; it always is when Greiss is in the net,” Lee said. “I’ve seen what he can do all season and tonight he played an extremely good game.”

The Germans are back in Group A action Saturday night against Sweden, while the Americans face Denmark on Sunday.

The tournament’s matches are split between Paris and Cologne.

In Group B action in Paris, 26-time world champion Canada opened with a 4-1 victory against 2010 winners Czech Republic.

Buffalo Sabres center Ryan O’Reilly put Canada ahead six minutes into the game.

The first period was even enough, with 10 shots each, but the Canadians looked sharper and scored right at the start of the second period when defenseman Mike Matheson’s slap shot went through traffic, and screened goalie Petr Mrazek could only get his left glove to it late.

Lukas Radil pulled a goal back with about seven minutes left, but there was to be no late comeback as Colorado Avalanche defenseman Tyson Barrie — who had assisted on the first goal — and Carolina Hurricanes forward Jeff Skinner sealed the win.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? German players mob goalkeeper Thomas Greiss after defeating the United States, 2-1, in the World Championsh­ips on Friday.
MARTIN MEISSNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS German players mob goalkeeper Thomas Greiss after defeating the United States, 2-1, in the World Championsh­ips on Friday.

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