Arab Times

Russia, Sweden record 2nd wins

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PRAGUE, May 3, (AP): Defending champion Russia beat newcomer Slovenia 5-3 for its second straight victory at the ice hockey world championsh­ip on Sunday and 2014 bronze medalist Sweden also made it two wins from two after routing another newcomer Austria 6-1.

Evgeni Dadonov contribute­d two goals and two assists to Russia’s win in Group B in Ostrava.

“It’s good that I managed to score a couple of goals but in general we made too many mistakes,” Dadonov said.

In a first-period attacking display, captain Ilya Kovalchuk and Islanders left winger Nikolay Kulemin scored 36 seconds apart early and Dadonov added his first with 1:04 left for a comfortabl­e 3-0 lead.

Los Angeles Kings star Anze Kopitar and Ziga Pance scored for Slovenia in the second and Robert Sabolic added one in the third.

Vadim Schipachyo­v also scored for Russia and added a couple of assists, while Pittsburgh forward Evgeni Malkin played his first game at the worlds.

In Group A in Prague, the fast skating Swedes looked far too good for Austria. Nashville center forward Filip Forsberg led Sweden with a hat trick and an assist.

Forsberg opened the scoring in the first and complete his hat trick for a 6-0 lead in the second, forcing Austria to pull goalie Rene Swette.

Oscar Klefbom, Anton Lander and Elias Lindholm also had a goal each.

“We did a pretty good job,” said Edmonton defenseman Klefbom. “They came out hard but we played pretty solid, we got a couple of goals and we kept working hard.”

Earlier, the United States made it two wins in two games by edging Norway 2-1 at the ice hockey world championsh­ip, and host the Czech Republic rebounded from a loss to Sweden with a 4-2 victory over Latvia on Saturday.

A first period goal by Trevor Lewis and Brock Nelson’s score in the second rallied the US after Morten Ask gave Norway a 10 lead on a rebound in a Group B match in Ostrava.

“The first period Norway carried the play,” US coach Todd Richards said. “They were faster, battled better than us. We were fortunate to get out.”

In Group A in Prague, veteran Jaromir Jagr broke a 2-2 tie with a second period goal on a power play for his second goal in two games.

“I haven’t noticed that,” Jagr quipped, after a message on the giant video screen at O2 Arena noted he was the oldest scorer at the worlds at 43.

The Czechs pulled goalie Alexander Salak after he allowed Mikelis Redlihs’goal for Latvia’s 2-1 lead at 3:18 in the second. Ondrej Pavelec took his position.

Captain Jakub Voracek made it 4-2 on a 5-3 advantage in the third.

“It’s the first win of the tournament, it’s always huge,” Voracek said.

Of Jagr’s goal, he added, “That power play helped us. We know what to do on the power play. We didn’t panic. We put a lot of shots on the net.”

Earlier, Austria and Slovakia needed penalty shootouts to win their opening games.

Germany struck late to edge France 2-1, and 2014 quarterfin­alist Belarus beat Slovenia 4-2 to open their campaigns.

In Prague, Patrick Reimer scored the winner for Germany on a power play with one minute left in the final period.

“It was a tough piece of work today,” forward Tobias Rieder said. “We got the lead early but then kind of sit back. We’re happy we got the win at the end.”

Captain Michael Wolf put Germany ahead with a first period goal, and that lead stood until Damien Fleury tied it at 1 midway through the third on a rebound.

In Ostrava, Andrei Stas, Andrei Kostitsyn and Alexei Kalyuzhny scored and Alexander Kitarov added one into an empty net for Belarus. Ziga Jeglic and and Ziga Pance scored for newcomer Slovenia.

Also, forward Marko Dano scored the decisive goal for Slovakia in the shootout to beat Denmark 4-3.

Denmark led 1-0 after two periods, then the teams traded five goals in the third. Slovakia took a 3-2 lead on goals from Michal Sersen, Marek Viedensky and Dominik Granak, but Daniel Nielsen forced overtime with a goal for Denmark with 2:14 to go in regulation.

“After their goal in the second period we started to play better,” Slovakia coach Vladimir Vujtek said. “We played some very good hockey from then until the end of the game. We had a lot of chances.”

 ??  ?? Latvia’s defender Guntis Galvins (left), and Czech Republic’s forward Jakub Voracek vie for the puck during the group A preliminar­y round match Latvia vs Czech Republic at the 2015 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championsh­ips on May 2,
at the O2 Arena in...
Latvia’s defender Guntis Galvins (left), and Czech Republic’s forward Jakub Voracek vie for the puck during the group A preliminar­y round match Latvia vs Czech Republic at the 2015 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championsh­ips on May 2, at the O2 Arena in...
 ??  ?? Anders Lee of USA (left), fights with Norway’s Alexander Bonsaksen (right), during the Hockey World Championsh­ips Group B match in Ostrava, Czech Republic on
May 2. (AP)
Anders Lee of USA (left), fights with Norway’s Alexander Bonsaksen (right), during the Hockey World Championsh­ips Group B match in Ostrava, Czech Republic on May 2. (AP)

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