The Province

Canada maintains its grip on Spengler Cup

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Special teams were Canada’s backbone at the 2016 Spengler Cup, so it was only fitting that the championsh­ip-winning goal came while killing a penalty.

Cory Emmerton’s short-handed goal in the second period stood up as the winner as Canada downed HC Lugano 5-2 Saturday, beating the Swiss side in the tournament final for the second straight year.

Canada came into the final with nine power play goals over four games but was shut out on four chances Saturday. The other half of the special teams came through, however, as Canada allowed just one goal on six penalty kills while Emmerton scored the Canadians’ second short-handed goal of the tournament.

“Our penalty killing was excellent,” Canada head coach Luke Richardson said. “We may not have scored on the power play, but we generated some good chances and got a short-handed goal again. In short tournament­s like this that really is the key, and that’s what came through for us all the way through.”

Canada won its 14th Spengler Cup title and only host club HC Davos (15 championsh­ips) has been more successful at the tournament However, Davos has been involved since the tournament’s inception in 1923, while Canada didn’t start competing until 1984.

Nick Spaling, who spent six full seasons in the NHL before joining Swiss side Geneve Servette for the 2016-17 campaign, had an empty-net goal and two assists

“Nick had a great game today. He came in with a bit of an injury and we weren’t sure if he was ready to go, but he said ‘I’m here and I’m playing,’” Richardson said.

Chay Genoway, Marc-Antoine Pouliot and Andrew Ebbett also scored for Canada, while Dario Burgler had both goals for Lugano.

Zach Fucale ended his impressive tournament with a 40-save performanc­e, picking up his fourth straight win after taking the starting job from Drew MacIntyre.

A star in junior hockey, Fucale has struggled in his transition to the profession­al game and is currently playing for the Brampton Beast, the Montreal Canadiens’ ECHL affiliate. But he showed poise in Davos, particular­ly in the final. Canada gave up a goal 31 seconds into the game, but the 21-year-old overcame that early hurdle and was solid the rest of the way.

“He came up with two huge saves in the second period, and he just settled in and played with a lot of confidence,” Richardson said of Fucale, who added a Spengler Cup championsh­ip to his world junior, Memorial Cup and Ivan Hlinka under-18 titles. “I think this has been a great week for him and I hope it really propels him in his career.”

 ??  ?? Canada’s Marc-Antoine Pouliot celebrates after beating Switzerlan­d’s HC Lugano in the Spengler Cup final.
Canada’s Marc-Antoine Pouliot celebrates after beating Switzerlan­d’s HC Lugano in the Spengler Cup final.

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