Finland bags historic hockey gold
Nordic nation wins its first Olympic crown in the sport, beating ROC on last day of Beijing 2022
Finland’s men’s ice hockey team finally reached the top of the Olympic podium on Feb 20 by beating the Russian Olympic Committee 2-1 to claim the final gold medal on offer at the Beijing Winter Games.
Ville Pokka and Hannes Bjorninen each had a goal while Harri Sateri was rock solid in net when called upon, facing 17 shots as the inspired Finns capped an unbeaten run to gold by overcoming the Russian defending champions.
“This means a lot, first time we made history today it feels great,” said Finnish forward Markus Granlund. “It was an early game. Fans probably woke up early. It’s a big thing for Finland.”
Finland has made regular appearances on the Olympic podium, returning home with a medal from five of the previous seven Games, but until Feb 20 had never reached the top step.
Twice before the Baltic nation had contested the final, at the 1988 Calgary Games and 2006 Turin Olympics, and came up short, but the third time proved the lucky charm.
As the last medal to be decided in Beijing, the men’s final was supposed to provide a sporting crescendo to the Games with the world’s best battling for gold.
But Beijing was denied that spectacle when the National Hockey League opted out of Olympic participation after a COVID-19 surge through North American locker rooms forced the postponement of more than 100 games.
Instead the players going for gold on Feb 20 were taken mostly from the Russian-based Kontinental Hockey League and Finnish elite league teams.
“What a way to end it and on this day we’re the best hockey country in the world,” said Finnish forward Harri Pesonen. “There are so many good players, even if North American guys were not here.”
The gold, however, lost none of its luster for the Finns who tossed helmets, sticks and gloves into the air and mobbed each other in pure joy as
the final second ticked off the clock.
When Finland defeated Sweden in Stockholm in 1995 to win the ice hockey world championship for the first time, the team received a fighterjet escort home, and no doubt will receive another rousing reception when the players return to Helsinki.
“I can’t even describe it. It was an emotional incredible moment,” said Sateri. “I don’t even realize yet it’s such a huge thing, just a huge thing.
“It’s been a dream since I was a kid. An Olympic gold medal is just unreal.”
In the Feb 20 final, Finland dominated
the early going but the ROC took the lead on a power-play goal from Mikhail Grigorenko on what was just the Russians’ second shot of the game.
Finland continued to carry the play into the second period where its persistence was finally rewarded when Pokka’s shot from just inside the blue line beat Ivan Fedotov.
Deadlocked at 1-1, Bjorninen put the Finns in front just 31 seconds into the third, and then the defense and Sateri shut down the ROC attack to seal the victory.
Teenage sensation Juraj Slafkovsky scored twice to lead Slovakia’s men’s ice hockey team to a historic first Olympic medal as it beat Sweden 4-0 to take bronze at the Beijing Games on Feb 19.
As one half of the former Czechoslovakia, the country made several appearances on the Olympic podium and as an independent nation reached the semifinals at the 2010 Vancouver Games but lost to Finland in the bronze match.
“I don’t know how we’re going to celebrate but for sure it will be long,” said forward Kristian Pospisil after receiving his medal.
Slovakia was determined not to be denied a medal a second time. Seventeen-year-old prodigy Slafkovsky spearheaded the attack with a pair of goals and Samuel Takac and Pavol Regenda got one each while Patrik Rybar was unbeatable in net.
Sweden, an Olympic champion in 2006 and a silver medalist in 2014, had eased past Slovakia 4-1 in group play but this time faced much more inspired opponents playing with a hunger the Scandinavians could not match.
“It’s an amazing feeling after all we went through to beat Sweden after a tough loss in the group stage — we get them back four goals,” said Slafkovsky.
Tipped as a top-five pick in this year’s National Hockey League draft, the teenager finished the Olympic tournament as the leading goal scorer with seven.