Texarkana Gazette

Canada, Sweden advance to junior world final

- By Jonah Bronstein

BUFFALO, N.Y.—Canada and Sweden will face off for gold medal at the world junior hockey championsh­ip Friday night.

"I think it's the two best teams that are going to meet," Swedish goaltender Filip Gustavsson said.

Gustavsson made 29 saves and Sweden had a three-goal third period to beat the defending champion United States on Thursday in the first semifinal.

Drake Batherson had a hat trick to lead Canada over the Czech Republic 7-2 and into the title game for the third time in four years.

Canada and Sweden have played for the gold medal game three times before, in 1996, 2008 and 2009. The Canadians won all three contests.

With the expected No. 1 pick in this year's NHL draft, defenseman Rasmus Dahlin, and several other top prospects on the roster, the Swedes believe they have the talent to claim their first gold medal since 2012. Sweden finished fourth each of the last three years after finishing second in 2013 and 2014.

"Everyone is here to win," Swedish coach Tomas Moten said. "So if we're not going to win tomorrow, I don't think the feeling will be any different than last year when we lost the bronze medal game."

The U.S. was trying to become the first country to win back-to-back gold medals since Canada claimed five straight from 2005-09. The Americans have never won a gold medal on home ice.

"This one blindsided us because we felt so strong with how we were going," U.S. coach Bob Motzko said. "We had a vampire suck it out of us today. It just tells you how tough it is."

Elias Pettersson, Lias Andersson, Oskar Steen and Axel Jonsson Fjallby scored for Sweden, which has not trailed in any game during the tournament. Linus Lindstrom had two assists.

"We have gold," Dahlin said. "We're so excited about tomorrow."

Sam Steel, Maxime Comtois, Jordan Kyrou and Boris Katchouk also had goals for Canada, which has won every game in dominating fashion aside from its 4-3 shootout loss to the U.S. in the preliminar­y round.

Canada came alive late in the first period after spotting the Czechs a 1-0 lead in the first six minutes. Steel and Batherson scored power-play goals to make it 2-1 by the end of the first.

"The first goal was more of a wakeup call for us," Batherson said. "After that, we played our game and showed our true colors."

The Canadians scored four times in a 10-minute span of the second period. Batherson, a fourth-round draft choice of the Ottawa Senators, scored his third goal to make it 6-1 with 3:02 remaining in the third and tie U.S. forward Kieffer Bellows and the Czech Republic's Filip Zadina for the tournament lead with seven goals.

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