website statistics
Jump to content

hckošice

Totallympics Grand Master
  • Posts

    42,033
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    384

 Content Type 

Forums

Events

Totallympics International Song Contest

Totallympics News

Qualification Tracker

Test

Published Articles

Everything posted by hckošice

  1. ROAD TO BEIJING 2022 3rd QUALIFYING ROUND Group H --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Poland snatches dramatic victory Poland pulled off a shock in Nur-Sultan, downing Kazakhstan in Sunday’s Olympic Qualification Group H finale. Moreover, Tomek Valtonen’s team did it the hard way, blowing a 2-0 lead before responding in the third period to win the game and advance to the final qualifying round in August. Polish goalie John Murray was the star of the show, making 51 saves to deny Kazakhstan a place in the next stage - but he was quick to pay tribute to the hard work of his team-mates. "The guys played really well in front of me and kept it simple for me," he said. "I was able to do my job and didn’t have to worry about them doing theirs." Even when Kazakhstan rallied to tie the game? "I was happily impressed with the character in the locker room. We went up 2-0 and I don’t think the guys quite knew what to do and then they crashed back. But at the start of the third we came out, put one in early and played like a solid team defensively in the third." In the two previous games, Kazakhstan began at a blistering pace and took the game away from the opposition almost before it had a chance to compete. Here, once again, Andrei Skabelka sent out his team to storm the Polish net – only to hit a roadblock in the form of Murray and that dogged rearguard action. The Polish goalie, now 32, has one of the more colourful CVs at this championship: born in the USA, his club career took him to Belgrade and Kazakhstan’s Kulager Petropavlovsk before he settled in Poland with Orik Opole then GKS Tychy. Along the way, he acquired Polish citizenship and made his international debut in 2016/17. This was to be one his busier first periods: the home offence roared into action, moving the puck around at pace and penning the Poles into their zone. But, unlike the previous games, not scoring. Whether it was a Curtis Valk rush all the way to the paint or a shot from Yegor Petukhov that bounced off a Polish skate and off the post to safety, Kazakhstan was close, but not close enough. "Coming into the game we weren’t quite sure what to expect," Murray added. "I think we kinda knew what we should do and how we should play, but not exactly what was going to come from the other end. I think we handled ourselves. We kept it simple, kept it to the basics. We let everyone do their job and you do yours." Then, against the run of play, Poland opened the scoring. Not many teams have held the puck in the Kazakh zone for any length of time in this tournament, but after a scrambling save from Henrik Karlsson, the Poles recycled the play and went back to the blue line. Bartosz Cuira’s shot was speculative, but a big deflection off the luckless Alexei Maklyukov took it away from Karlsson and into the net. The first Kazakh power play intensified the pressure, but Poland held on as Dustin Boyd, Talgat Zhailauov and Arkadi Shestakov all went close. Back at equal strength, Nigel Dawes robbed a defenceman behind the net and fed Boyd in front of the net; once again the piping denied the home team. However, there were signs that Poland was weathering the storm. Another power play saw an uncharacteristic fan on a Dawes shot, while the defence defended in a tight square, forcing Kazakhstan to rely on long-range efforts from Darren Dietz rather than allowing the host to carve into the danger zone to ask some bigger questions of Murray. The second period began with Murray excelling once again, his outstretched glove robbing Shestakov early in the frame. Then he held on when Petukhov got a shooting chance all alone in front of the net. There were signs of nerves creeping into Kazakhstan’s play – what was once quick was now becoming hurried – and midway through the frame Poland capitalized with a second goal. Oskar Jaskiewicz fired in a point shot and after a big rebound the defence froze to allow Martin Przygodki to put away the chance. It demanded an instant reaction – and Kazakhstan delivered just 17 seconds later. Valk went behind the net, picked out Boyd and, at last, Murray was beaten at the back door. The same pair combined again five minutes later to tie the scores. It wasn’t the prettiest of goals: Boyd saw one shot saved, another kicked off the line by Jaskiewicz and only the third was stuffed into the net. However, the roar from the home crowd told its own story – this was vital. Boyd's two goals would not be enough, though. The one time Flames forward was bitterly disappointed after a game that promised so much but ended in painful defeat. "We had a lot of pressure, a lot of good chances, a lot of good looks but we have to put more than two goals in the net," he said. "We needed to find a way to get more and we didn’t, and that’s the result we have. "But you gotta give them credit, they blocked a lot of shots, the goalie made some big saves. We’re not happy right now, that’s for sure." After losing its hard-won lead, Poland refused to wobble. Instead, it produced the best chance of the closing minutes of the second period when a breakdown on the blue line allowed captain Krystian Dziubinski to race down the ice on his own. Karlsson blocked that, then came sprawling out of his crease stick first to deny Filip Komorski a chance on the follow-up. And Komorski played a key role in the first minute of the third period as Poland stunned the Kazakhs by retaking the lead. His shot crashed against the inside of Karlsson’s post and the goalie was left helpless as it dropped straight onto Maciej Urbanowicz’s stick in front of a gaping net. Once again, it was a question of whether Polish endurance could outlast Kazakh flair. The game followed the same pattern as before, with the home side enjoying the bulk of the play and Poland limited to counter-attacks. A Kazakh power play midway through the third saw Dustin Boyd twice fail to connect with straightforward chances, but with both teams tiring, the Polish PK was unable to maintain its shape as effectively as before. Kazakhstan kept knocking at the door, but as the clock ran down it was finding it harder to generate the kind of opportunities spurned earlier in the game. Even the departure of Karlsson, replaced by a sixth forward with almost two full minutes on the clock, could not change the script; Poland, and Murray, held on for a famous victory. And as the Polish players danced with delight on the ice, one of the team's newcomers, Noureddine Bettahar was reveling in his first experience of an international tournament. "In that last time out [the coach] was telling us to stay cool, do our jobs and be proud of it. Hockey is a fun game. It’s my first time here. I think I could play better but it’s a team game, it’s not about individuals and we are really proud of what we’ve done together. "Hockey is fun, hockey isn’t about pressure, you just go and have fun. It doesn’t matter who scores, who made the assists, it’s just hockey and it should be fun." IIHF.COM
  2. Stage 19 in Hinzenbach (AUT) Women´s Individual Normal Hill: 1. Chiara Hoelzl 251.0 2. Eva Pinkelnig 247.8 3. Lara Malsiner 241.5 Full Final Result HERE
  3. Stage 9 in Falun (SWE) Women´s 10km Freestyle Mass Start: 1. Therese Johaug 25:04.1 2. Ebba Andersson 25:10.6 3. Heidi Weng 25:27.9 Full Final Result HERE
  4. Right, hard to say that the Poles exactly deserved the win here, but also it would not fair to say the opposite, the guys fought really hard and blocked like million of shots, jumping on the shots to block the pucks with their own bodies, huge team effort and team spirit but the main reason of the win was certainly the Best player of the match and best GK of the tournament the GKS Tychy goalie John Murray
  5. Stage 28 in Chamonix (FRA) Men´s Parallel Giant Slalom: 1. Loic Meillard 2. Thomas Tumler 3. Alexander Schmid Full Final Result HERE
  6. Stage 27 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen (GER) Women´s Super-G: 1. Corinne Suter 1:19.46 2. Nicole Schmidhofer 1:19.89 3. Wendy Holdener 1:20.16 Full Final Result HERE
  7. ROAD TO BEIJING 2022 3rd QUALIFYING ROUND DAY 3 RESULTS #1 Round-Robin February 6th - February 9th, 2020 12 Nations, 3 Groups, the 1st Nation from each Group will qualify for the Final Qualifying Round Group H Alma-Ata Time (GMT +6) Netherlands 0 - 3 Ukraine Period-by-Period: 0-1, 0-2, 0-0 February 9th 2020, h. 13:00, Barys Arena, Nur-Sultan Kazakhstan 2 - 3 Poland Period-by-Period: 0-1, 2-1, 0-1 February 9th 2020, h. 17:00, Barys Arena, Nur-Sultan Group H Final Standing Nation P W(OTW) L(OTW) GF GA +/- PTS Poland 3 3(0) 0(0) 17 3 +14 9 Kazakhstan 3 2(0) 1(0) 17 5 +12 6 Ukraine 3 1(0) 2(0) 5 14 -9 3 Netherlands 3 0(0) 3(0) 1 18 -17 0 The following Nations have qualified for the Final Qualifying Round Poland TBD TBD
  8. Congrats Poland ! so now If SLO beat JPN tonight we´ll see you in Košice
  9. Stage 9 in Falun (SWE) Men´s 15km Freestyle Mass Start: 1. Alexander Bolshunov 33:10.3 2. Sjur Roethe 33:11.1 3. Ivan Yakimushkin 33:20.0 Full Final Result HERE
  10. Vlhová flash interview for our TV : "The speed events are actually pretty cool, it's so easy here, there's no need to hurry between the different rounds like in the GS & SL , but the race itself is quite harder, especially today I had big problems with visibility, I saw almost nothing + for the first time I experienced a start-stop situation after Sofia Goggia crashed, It seems that I have to learn how to handle more mentally such situations, because the primary plan before her crash was to ski faster than I did "
  11. vs Livestream, the winner of the match will qualify for the final OQT
  12. Quite spectacular, since this is the first time ever in her career she skied here
  13. Stage 23 in Deer Valley (USA) Men´s Dual Moguls: 1. Mikael Kingsbury 2. Benjamin Cavet 3. Walter Wallberg Full Final Result HERE
  14. Stage 23 in Deer Valley (USA) Women´s Dual Moguls: 1. Justine Dufour-Lapointe 2. Hannah Soar 3. Jaelin Kauf Full Final Result HERE
  15. - 124 - 49 - 89 - 72 - 80 - 50 and already officially qualified
  16. February 2020 International Break EURO HOCKEY TOUR 2019/20 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- STAGE 3/4 BEIJER HOCKEY GAMES in Stockholm 4 Nations Round-Robin Tournament Sunday 09.02.2020 - SCHEDULE (GMT +1) Last Day 12:15 Czech Republic - Russia 15:45 Sweden - Finland EURO-HOCKEY TOUR 2019/20 Cumulative Standing After Daymatch 8/12 : 1. CZE 14, 2. FIN 14, 3. SWE 13, 4. RUS 7
  17. February 2020 International Break ICE HOCKEY CHALLENGERS 2019/20 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- TOURNAMENT 6 in Klagenfurt 4 Nations, Knock-Out Tournament, Semifinals, the losing teams will qualify for the Bronze Medal Match, the winning teams will qualify for the Gold Medal Match Saturday 08.02.2020 - RESULTS (GMT +1) GOLD MEDAL MATCH 20:00 Denmark 2 - 3(OT) Austria BRONZE MEDAL MATCH 16:15 France (PSO)2 - 1 Norway
  18. February 2020 International Break SLOVAKIA (KAUFLAND) CUP 2020 in Poprad 3 Nations Round-Robin Tournament Saturday 08.02.2020 - RESULTS (GMT +1) Last Day 14:00 Russia "B" 1 - 2 Slovakia Final Standing : 1. SVK 6, 2. RUS "B" 3, 3. BLR 0
  19. February 2020 International Break EURO HOCKEY TOUR 2019/20 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- STAGE 3/4 BEIJER HOCKEY GAMES in Stockholm 4 Nations Round-Robin Tournament Saturday 08.02.2020 - RESULTS (GMT +1) Day 2 12:30 Finland 1 - 3 Czech Republic 16:15 Sweden 5 - 2 Russia Provisional Standing After Day 2 : 1. SWE 6, 2. CZE 3, 3. FIN 3, 4. RUS 0 EURO-HOCKEY TOUR 2019/20 Cumulative Standing After Daymatch 8/12 : 1. CZE 14, 2. FIN 14, 3. SWE 13, 4. RUS 7
  20. Stage 20 in Willingen (GER) Men´s Individual Large Hill: 1. Stefan Leyhe 266.4 2. Marius Lindvik 262.4 3. Kamil Stoch 254.6 Full Final Result HERE
  21. ROAD TO BEIJING 2022 3rd QUALIFYING ROUND DAY 4 SCHEDULE Round-Robin February 6th - February 9th, 2020 12 Nations, 3 Groups, the 1st Nation from each Group will qualify for the Final Qualifying Round Group G Central European Time (GMT +1) LIVESTREAM Croatia vs Lithuania Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 15:30, Arena Podmezakla, Jesenice Slovenia vs Japan Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 19:00, Arena Podmezakla, Jesenice Group H Alma-Ata Time (GMT +6) LIVESTREAM Netherlands vs Ukraine Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 13:00, Barys Arena, Nur-Sultan LIVESTREAM Kazakhstan vs Poland Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 17:00, Barys Arena, Nur-Sultan Group J Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) LIVESTREAM Romania vs Estonia Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 14:00, Nottingham Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham Great Britain vs Hungary Period-by-Period: February 9th 2020, h. 18:00, Nottingham Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham
  22. ROAD TO BEIJING 2022 3rd QUALIFYING ROUND DAY 3 RESULTS Round-Robin February 6th - February 9th, 2020 12 Nations, 3 Groups, the 1st Nation from each Group will qualify for the Final Qualifying Round Group J Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) Hungary (OT)3 - 2 Romania Period-by-Period: 1-1, 0-0, 1-1, Overtime: 1-0 February 8th 2020, h. 14:00, Nottingham Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham Estonia 1 - 7 Great Britain Period-by-Period: 0-0, 1-4, 0-3 February 8th 2020, h. 18:00, Nottingham Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham Group J Provisional Standing After Day 3 Nation P W(OTW) L(OTW) GF GA +/- PTS Great Britain 2 2(0) 0(0) 11 4 +7 6 Hungary 2 2(1) 0(0) 7 3 +4 5 Romania 2 0(0) 2(1) 5 7 -2 1 Estonia 2 0(0) 2(0) 2 11 -9 0
  23. qualified for the Fed Cup Final tournament
×
×
  • Create New...