website statistics
Jump to content

Men's Ice Hockey World Cup of Hockey 2016


hckošice
 Share

Recommended Posts

Kapow! Bang! Zap! Kids win 4-1!

North Americans dominate as Rinne peppered

Air Canada Centre Toronto ON Canada

Connor McDavid and his Under-24 teammates dominated Finland in impressive fashion.

 

These kids are more than alright; they’re downright spectacular. And anyone who thought their pre-tournament success was a fluke, well, think again. Team North America dominated Finland from start to finish, winning by a 4-1 score that could have been double that.

The young guns outshot Finland, 43-25, and Matt Murray in the North American goal was rock solid, stopping all but one shot.

"All four lines did their job," Auston Matthews said. "We put them on their heels and had a great game."

Despite never being a team until ten days ago, the North Americans showed incredible chemistry, notably the top line of Connor McDavid-Matthews-Mark Scheifele.

"I think it's a case of everyone thinks the game really well," McDavid suggested. "We've been juggling the lines quite a bit, so everyone has been playing with everyone else. We did some good stuff. We created quite a bit and didn't give anything up."

Coach Todd McLellan couldn't agree more. "We're starting to form a team now. It was their play away from the puck that impressed me. They used their speed to catch their men and that was great to see."

The first period was a combination of domination by the young guns and nerves in goal by Rinne. Had things gone more favourably for the North Americans, they might have had a three- or four-goal lead by the first intermission.

"They skated hard. They won every battle. They're a great team. It's that simple," said a humbled Finnish coach Lauri Marjamaki.

North America opened the scoring at 5:03 on a power play. Matthews took a shot from close range that Rinne couldn’t handle cleanly, and Jack Eichel was Johnny-on-the-spot to poke it in for a 1-0 lead.

Soon after, the first of several pucks slid through Rinne’s pads only to stop on the goal line (confirmed by video review), and later Johnny Gaudreau bolted down the right wing and ripped a shot off the near post.

Late in the period McDavid thought he had scored the second goal for the kids, but another review indicated goalie interference. Before the end of the period Rinne bobbled another harmless shot but managed to keep the puck out.

The NAers came out in the second with even greater purpose and controlled the puck on a string. They made it 2-0 at 5:27 when Colton Parayko’s point shot was deftly tipped by height-challenged, skill-laden Johnny Gaudreau.

Two minutes later, after a shift in which the Finns could not so much as get a stick on the puck, Jonathan Drouin took a shot which Rinne couldn’t control and popped his own rebound home.

Parayko later recovered a bad pass by Valtteri Filppula inside the Finnish blueline and took a quick shot. Nathan MacKinnon was there with another rebound goal at 14:37.

"We could have been up 3-0 after the first," Jack Eichel noted, "but we used that to gain momentum in the second, and shut them down in the third. We were able to open the game in the second with some big goals. We did a lot of things that we talked about before the game, which was good."

The Finns broke Murray's shutout with four minutes left in the game when a loose puck came free in front and Filppula whacked it in. It was much too little, too late, though.

The Finns now need to regroup before playing Sweden on Tuesday. The North Americans are right back tomorrow night against Russia in a game that should be a thrilling ride. Don’t miss it! Zing! Wham! Zap! The kids will give CCCP all it can handle.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 156
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

:CZE

 

Palát - Plekanec - Voráček
M. Michálek - Hanzal - Pastrnák
Červenka - Sobotka - Hemský
Birner - Jaškin - Frolík

Kempný - Polák
Nakládal - Šustr
Z. Michálek - Jordán

 

Mrázek (Neuvirth)

 

Scratched: Kundrátek, Pavelec, Faksa (Injury)

 

 

 

:WHT Team Europe

 

Tatar :SVK - Kopitar :SLO - Hossa :SVK 
Gáborík :SVK - Nielsen :DEN - Zuccarello :NOR
Rieder :GER - Draisaitl :GER - Niederreiter :SUI 
Vanek :AUT - Bellemare :FRA - Hansen :DEN 

 

 

Sekera :SVK  - Chára :SVK  

Josi :SUI  - Seidenberg :GER

Streit :SUI - Ehrhoff :GER


 

Halák :SVK  (Greiss :GER


 

Scratched: Boedker :DEN , Sbisa  :SUI , Grubauer  :GER
 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

what a game so far ! :bounce: such huge hockey...Europe - CZE  1-1 after 2nd period...The Europeans opened the score by slovak tower Zdeno Chára but the czechs equalized the match by Jakub Voráček.

 

Absolutely astonishing match of the czech goalie Mrázek..oh lord he is just awesome :bowdown::bowdown::bowdown:

 

pitty for Europe..the missed penalty shot of Kopitar...also the czech goal was a kinda weird for Halák..but he was exceptional so far so you can´t blame him I guess :d

 

looking forward for the 3rd period..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Draisaitl scores OT winner

Team Europe wins again, puts Czechs in a deep hole

Air Canada Centre Toronto ON Canada

Team Europe and the Czech Republic played a hard-fought game this afternoon at the ACC.

 

Leon Draisaitl beat Petr Mrazek on a breakaway at 2:06 of overtime off a perfect pass from Mats Zuccarello to give Team Europe a dramatic 3-2 win over the Czech Republic.

The Europeans are now 2-0 and in great position to qualify for the semi-finals. The Czechs fall to 0-2 and must beat the United States on Thursday to have any chance of playing in the final four.

"It feels great to score in such a big game," Draisaitl said. "A breakaway or shootout is really 50-50, so I decided to shoot. Fortunately, it went in."

"We're very excited with what we've done in these two games," captain Anze Koitar said of his team's two wins to start the World Cup. "But I think the score was closer than we wanted it to be. Still, we got the two points, and that's what we wanted. We know we've done something special so far, but we want to keep it going."

The Europeans finish their round robin on Wednesday night against Canada, and even one point from that game would ensure a semi-finals spot for them.

"We're enjoying ourselves and playing good hockey," Zuccarello enthused. "We're having fun at the rink and outside the rink. There are a lot of good guys and experienced guys here."

"I've never seen a team come together as quickly in my 25 years of coaching," Ralph Krueger said. "And we're not done yet."

The importance of this game could be seen in the tentative first period, 20 minutes dominated by a lack of action and a fear by all concerned of making a mistake. The best chance of the opening period came off the stick of large defenceman Zdeno Chara. The Team Europe blueliner had a clear shot that ricocheted off Mrazek’s stick and out of play.

The Europeans, though, came out with greater purpose in the second. They had two quick power plays, the second of which drew a penalty shot when Czech defenceman Michal Kempny closed his hand on the puck in the crease at 2:31. But on the ensuing freebie Kopitar tried a cute deke that didn’t work.

Nonetheless, the Europeans dominated, Mrazek the only Czech player involved in the game at all. The conglomerate was rewarded with a goal at 10:05 when Chara wired a quick shot from the side boards with Mrazek fighting to get back into position.

To the Czechs’ credit, the goal fired them up. On the next shift they nearly tied the score, but Dennis Seidenberg made a nice swat at the puck off the goal line. Soon after, though, Jakub Voracek beat Halak to the far side at 13:28 to tie the game.

The Europeans had a great chance to go ahead early in the third when they had a two-man advantage for 64 seconds, but all that came of the power play was a sensational glove save from Mrazek, who robbed Roman Josi point blank with a great glove save.

Moments later, though, Mrazek flubbed an easy save with that same glove. Zuccarello skated down the left wing and drifted a routine shot on goal, but the puck squirted through Mrazek's glove and in at 2:17.

Once again, though, the Czechs responded, this time on a power play at 8:31. Vladimir Sobotka's point shot went wide, but it bounced off the end boards and back out in front where Martin Hanzal swatted the puck in before Halak could react.

That set the stage for overtime and Draisaitl's heroics.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:RUS

 

Ovechkin - Datsyuk - Kucherov

Kulemin - Malkin - Tarasenko
Panarin - Shypachyov - Dadonov
Telegin - Anisimov - Kuznetsov

Orlov - Zaitsev

Markov - Emelin
Kulikov - Marchenko

 

Bobrovsky (Varlamov)

 

Scratched: Nesterov, Namestnikov, Vasilevskiy

 

 

 

:WHT Team North America

 

Drouin :CAN - Nugent-Hopkins :CAN - MacKinnon  :CAN
Mathews :USA - McDavid :CAN - Scheifele :CAN
Gaudreau :USA - Eichel  :USA - Larkin :USA
Trocheck :USA - Couturier :CAN - Saad :USA     

 

 

Ekblad :CAN - Rielly :CAN   

R. Murray :CAN - Jones :USA

Gostisbehere :USA - Parayko :CAN 


 

M. Murray :CAN (Gibson :USA )  


 

Scratched: Miller :USA , Trouba  :USA , Hellebuyck  :USA

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • I think the biggest problem for Australian football is how big the roster size is.   Rugby League Nines might be a more realistic "out there" selection.
    • If lacrosse can be selected then I don't see why Australian rules football can't be selected if they get Olympic sport recognition. Australia will obviously dominate, but there's enough other nations to make a tournament.   As for netball, a women's only event is still much more likely to be accepted than a men's only event. Australia and the netball federation can spin it as bringing equality to the number of men's and women's events (while obviously ignoring that there will be more women at the Olympics).
    • The NFL are pushing had to develop flag football in Australia in hopes of getting it included in 2032. I hope they fail tbh.   Single gender sports fail the gender equality requirement so netball is out unless they can rapidly fix their gender problem. World Netball not so long ago was refusing utterly to sanction men's international netball or even support the growth of men's netball so they kind of sabotaged themselves and are only changing courses out of self interest because Brisbane was awarded the Olympics.   It doesn't even make sense to propose Aussie rules given how poor the participation is outside of Australia.
    • - Great Britain Team Size Prediction for Winter Olympic Games 2026 Milano Cortina   Ski Sports   Alpine Skiing  (4) - The qualification system is a bit confusing, but from what I gather the team is Guaranteed 2 quotas (one for each gender), and then more are given for rankings. I can only see 1 female qualifying, but the men's team is a bit stronger, and could improve with some juniors coming through. I would say a baseline of 3, with a max of 5, 6 if things really improve.  Cross Country Skiing  (3) - The men's team came 11th in the world cup last year, and with some good results could move up to top 10 which would give 3 quotas, The women's team is non existant.  Ski Jumping  (0) - Nope Nordic Combined  (0) - Nope Freestyle Skiing  (6) - Based on last year rankings, the athletes are ranked: M Moguls (26/30), M Ski Cross (26/32), M Halfpipe (33/25), M Slopestyle (39+40/30) W Moguls (23+42/30), W Halfpipe (3/25), W Big Air (5/30), W Slopestyle (19+22/30)  Barring Injury , thats 2 quotas on the women's side, and I would predict 4 more, with a max team of 7 or 8. Snowboarding  (2) - W Halfpipe (34/25) is the only unknown quota, as both Charlotte Bankes and Mia Brookes should qualify easily. Huw Nightlingale may get a spot for the Mixed Team snowboard cross but I don't know how it works. Biathlon  (0) - Nope Ski Mountaineering  (0) - Nope     Skating Sports   Speed Skating  (2) - Cornelius Kersten and Elia Smelding should qualify, although they both haven't competed this year. Short Track Speed Skating  (2) - A team of 5 went to the world but only a couple could really qualify Figure Skating  (4) - Fear and Gibson should qualify, and the pair team is ranked 16th in the world with 19 qualifiers.      Sleigh Sports   Luge  (0) - Nope Skeleton  (6) - A full team is certainly on the cards, but with only ranking points from the next season counting a lot could change Bobsleigh  (6) - Brad Hall and Co should qualify for both 2 and 4 man. I doubt any more will qualify from the mens side. Adele Nicholl on the womens should also qualify in both events     Team Sports   Curling  (12) - Anything but a full team would be a dissapointment Ice Hockey  (0) - The men were the only chance       Total Optimistic Prediction  -  (60) Total Pessimistic Prediction  - (32)   Total Realistic Prediction  -  (47)
    • Medal Table [16/78]    04 00 03 [07]  04 00 01 [05]    03 04 02 [09]  01 02 01 [04]   01 02 00 [03]  01 01 02 [04]   01 00 04 [05] 01 00 00 [01]  00 02 02 [04] 00 02 00 [02]  00 01 01 [02] 00 01 00 [01]  00 01 00 [01] 00 00 02 [02] 00 00 02 [02]   00 00 01 [01] 00 00 01 [01]   00 00 01 [01]   00 00 01 [01]  
    • Men's Team Foil  ( Tunis) Gold: Italy Silver: United States Bronze:  France   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/9F61644FE8314F2FB276EDB05BE2EDD4   Women's Team Foil  ( Tunis) Gold:  Japan  Silver:  Ukraine Bronze:  South Korea   Full results https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/717527B161BD4D5F886E902B95185B92   Men's Team Epee ( Vancouver) Gold:  Hungary Silver:  Japan Bronze:  Kazakistan   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/72BA0CEEBF9A4D599176E4F3A6AE671A     Women's Team Epee ( Vancouver) Gold:  South Korea Silver: Ukraine Bronze: France   Full results: https://www.fencingtimelive.com/events/results/F0AB7989D0044A7DACEE29D1A7114152
    • Team Size Prediction for Winter Olympic Games 2026 Milano Cortina   Let's do this for a country that is not actually that good in winter sports as well as our Olympic Committee Declining lots of places. In Beijing we had 7 quotas and used 2      (also I am a very optimistic person in relation to sport in general and always hope for the best. )    Ski Sports   Alpine Skiing  (2) - Emilija Djurović and Aleksa Tomović Cross Country Skiing  (2) - Anja Ilić (the olympic committee cancelled her participation just before Bejing) and Andrija Tošić Ski Jumping  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Nordic Combined  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Freestyle Skiing  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Snowboarding  (1) - Matija Milenković  Biathlon  (2) - We had two juniors at the YOG 2024, maybe they can get better, I will be optimistic  (Lamija Salihagić and/or Hanna Jelena Braun) Ski Mountaineering  (0) - I don't think it will be existing      Skating Sports   Speed Skating  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Short Track Speed Skating  (1) - Out first EYOF winter medal in a long time came from Luka Jašić Figure Skating  (0) - Maybe we will have a good junior come      Sleigh Sports   Luge  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Skeleton  (1) - We had two juniors at the YOG 2024, maybe they can get better, I will be optimistic Bobsleigh  (0) - Not existent anymore      Team Sports   Curling  (0) - Basically not existent in Serbia Ice Hockey  (0) - Qualifier for women's team cancelled, and mens team eliminated       Total  VERY Optimistic Prediction  -  (9) Total Pessimistic Prediction  - (3)   Total Realistic Prediction  -  (3)
    • North American rugby quotas ( and qualified automatically)    M: and W: and  
×
×
  • Create New...