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CANADA EARNS BYE TO SEMI-FINALS WITH BIG WIN OVER USA
By Lucas Aykroyd | Box Score
Canada claimed first place in Group A and a bye to the January 3 semi-finals with a 3-2 New Year’s Eve win
over the USA in front of a sold-out, ecstatic Pacific Coliseum. Kyle Chipchura scored the winner into an
empty net as the Americans pulled goalie Corey Schneider in a late bid for the two points, since a tie would
not have sufficed.
The Americans will play in the quarter-finals on January 2.
Cam Barker and Dustin Boyd, with his fourth goal of the tournament, also scored for Canada, and Steve
Downie had two assists. Chris Bourque, with his sixth tally, and Peter Mueller replied for the Americans. The
USA’s Phil Kessel, goalless through four games, added his eighth assist.
“We played well,” said Boyd. “Both teams battled to the end, and it was a hard-fought game. Fortunately
for us, we got the empty net and put it in for the win.”
“It’s not fun when it’s a tie game and they end up winning the game because we pulled the goalie,” said
Bourque. “But we needed that win and that was the thing we needed to do. It was obviously the right decision,
but we couldn’t capitalize on it.”
Canada outshot the USA 26-24, with goalie Justin Pogge earning his fourth straight win.
“I felt really confident out there,” said Pogge. “The team played really well in front of me. I think we
just played an amazing game, and we deserved the win.”
The final Round Robin game for both teams was played at a high tempo, with solid hits aplenty, although it
rarely descended into the kind of trench warfare that sometimes ensues between these North American
rivals.
With five club team captains and nine alternate captains on Canada’s roster, you’d expect plenty of
leadership to be shown, and Team Canada’s C-wearer, Chipchura, showed the way for his mates with a strong
forechecking effort.
It was Canada’s best all-around performance of the tournament to date, and the USA’s effort also couldn’t
be faulted.
“We were a little anxious and nervous and made some mistakes early on that Canada was able to capitalize
on,” said USA Head Coach Walt Kyle. “But to our leadership’s credit, we were able to settle things down in
the room and played the rest of the game at a pretty good pace.”
Taylor Chorney took the first penalty for the USA at 2:09 after mauling Boyd deep in the American end, and
the Canadian power play went to work. Just 26 seconds later, Barker’s wrister from the left point sailed
through traffic and beat Schneider high to the glove side, and the crowd erupted.
With Andrew Cogliano off for hooking at 3:20, the USA exerted good pressure around Pogge’s net, but thanks
to solid, positional team play and some thunderous physicality from crowd favourite Luc Bourdon, a
first-round Vancouver Canucks pick, the Canadians weathered the storm.
Cogliano came out of the box and nearly teamed up with Chipchura for Canada’s second goal on a give-and-go
rush, but Schneider tumbled back in an awkward snow angel position and barely kept the puck out. Moments
later, he was forced to stone Michael Blunden right on the doorstep.
At 6:42, a beautifully executed 2-on-1 rush with Boyd and Steve Downie gave Canada a 2-0 lead. Boyd,
rushing down left wing, fed the puck over to Downie in the middle, and with Schneider committed, Downie gave
it back to Boyd, who coolly fired it into the gaping net.
The Canadians faced another big test when Blake Comeau was assessed a double-minor for high-sticking at
7:27, and this time the Americans made them pay. Three minutes later, it was 2-1 after Chris Bourque’s point
shot tipped en route to the net and sailed in high to the stick side.
In the last minute of the first period, Cogliano found himself all alone right in front of the USA net,
zinged a shot off Schneider’s left post, and raised his arms as if he’d scored, but it wasn’t to be.
Canada wound up facing a two-man disadvantage in the final minute of the opening frame, where the host
side was assessed 12 total PIM to the USA’s two.
During the successful Canadian penalty kill early in the second period, Pogge made a stellar glove grab
off Jack Johnson 37 seconds in and then got some help from his left post moments later as Johnson fired
another bullet.
But the USA would tie the score at 2-2 on another power play. Peter Mueller walked in all alone on a Tom
Fritsche feed, with Canadian D-man Ryan Parent caught out of position seeking a hit, and fired home a
five-hole wrister at 8:10.
The USA’s Brian Lee hauled down Boyd 37 seconds into the third period, and Canada went to the man
advantage. On Canada’s best chance, Boyd took a perfect cross-crease pass from Bolland but Schneider flung
himself to the left and made a great save. A few minutes later, Ryan O’Marra got the puck in the slot but
fired it off the side of the net.
After some wild end-to-end action that saw both Schneider and Pogge making close-in saves, the USA went to
the power play with Blunden dinged for cross-checking at 6:55, and Canada’s goaltending remained solid. Just
as the penalty ended, Pogge made a brilliant glove save on Kevin Porter, with the puck flipping up in the air
and landing atop the net.
In the last five minutes the Canadians focused on protecting the lead, frequently dumping the puck in deep
from the neutral zone.
With 1:03 remaining, Schneider was pulled for the extra attacker after a USA timeout. Chipchura salted it
away with his empty-netter with 33 seconds left as five Americans were caught deep in the corner to Pogge’s
left.
Downie was elbowed viciously by Jack Johnson right after the 3-2 goal, and had to be helped off by the
team trainer. Johnson got a five-minute major and a game misconduct. Downie’s medical status will be
re-evaluated on New Year’s Day.
The Player of the Game for Canada was Justin Pogge, whose name was chanted continuously by the crowd, and
for the USA it was Jack Johnson. Team USA captain Kevin Porter accepted the award on Johnson’s behalf.
Canada improved its all-time WJC record versus the USA to 24 wins, five losses, and three ties.
With the victory, Brent Sutter joins Dave King and Terry Simpson as one of the only Canadian coaches to
win 10 games at the IIHF World Junior Championships.
“It was a heck of a hockey game,” said Sutter. “I thought both teams played hard. Every kid on both
lineups played hard and put it on the line tonight.”
“It’s nice to have a couple days off to recharge the batteries and get our mindset ready for whatever team
we play,” added Boyd.
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