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CANADA STRIKES GOLD AGAIN WITH VICTORY OVER RUSSIA
By Lucas Aykroyd |
Box Score
For the second straight year, Canada is on top of the junior hockey world. In a 5-0 victory over Russia at
Vancouver’s GM Place on January 5, the Canadians succeeded in neutralizing super sniper Evgeni Malkin and
fulfilling Head Coach Brent Sutter’s defence-first plan to perfection.
Michael Blunden led the way with a pair of goals, Blake Comeau had a goal and an assist, and Steve Downie
and Kyle Chipchura also scored. Cam Barker and Andrew Cogliano added a pair of helpers apiece.
Although Russia dominated the first period territorially, Canada had the only two goals, and the final two
periods belonged to the host team.
Canadian goalie Justin Pogge made 35 saves for his third shutout of the tournament. At the other end,
Anton Khudobin stopped 29 shots for Russia.
With the victory, Brent Sutter’s all-time record for Canadian World Junior coaching wins now stands at 12.
He has never lost a game behind Canada’s bench.
The five-goal margin of victory was the same as last year in Grand Forks, when Canada won 6-1. It was the
fifth gold game between these two rivals since 1999. Russia won in 1999 (Winnipeg), 2002 (Pardubice), and
2003 (Halifax). It was also Canada’s fifth straight appearance in the gold medal game.
Russia entered this contest with eight returning veterans, while Canada had none, as Cam Barker did not
play in last year’s tilt due to mononucleosis.
Team Canada skated out to its most tumultuous ovation of the tournament, including huge chants of “Go
Canada Go!” and “Pogge!” throughout the pre-game introductions, from a crowd of 18,630 wearing an equal mix
of home and away Canadian jerseys.
Canada’s Steve Downie threw a huge hit deep in the Russian end to set the tone on Denis Bodrov, but he was
assessed a charging penalty at 0:36.
Evgeni Malkin streaked around the defence during the ensuing power play and zinged a wrister on net that
Pogge gloved down. The Russians controlled the puck for much of the man advantage, until Alexei Emelin was
dinged for hauling down Ryan O’Marra in the neutral zone at 2:02. Canada exerted some good pressure on its
own power play but couldn’t get its first shot on goal.
With Ilia Zubov in the box for hooking at 4:40, Canada got its second power play of the game, and nearly
opened the scoring when Boyd brought the puck in unobstructed from the right side, but Khudobin, challenging
wildly, made the save.
In the eighth minute, Russia’s Enver Lisin came oh-so-close to banging home a puck in the air at Pogge’s
right post.
Alexei Emelin was nabbed for slashing at 8:22, but 30 seconds later Downie was sent off for
unsportsmanlike conduct, nullifying the Canadian power play.
Zubov hauled down Marc Staal with five seconds left in the Russian power play, and it was back to the man
advantage for Canada.
But that didn’t work out well for Canada, as first Steve Downie was crushed along the boards by Andrei
Zubarev in the Russian zone, and then Cam Barker was tagged for hooking on Roman Voloshenko as the play
headed up ice at 12:31. Pogge made a nice glove grab off Emelin’s point blast halfway through the penalty
kill.
After the power play, the Russians turned up the heat. Pogge made more incredible saves on Russian point
blasts and deflections. Alexander Radulov hit the crossbar right off a faceoff in the Canadian zone.
Luc Bourdon threw a bone-crushing hit on Sergei Ogorodnikov along the boards that drew a roar from the
crowd with under five minutes left in the first period.
The dying moments of the opening stanza truly swung the advantage in Canada’s favour.
At 17:13, Steve Downie came around the net to Khudobin’s right and slid the puck through a tiny gap in the
Russian goalie’s five-hole to give Canada the lead. Canada had been outshot 15-4 at that stage.
It didn’t take long for the red-and-white team to muster more offense. At 18:56, Canada went up 2-0 when
Staal came over the blueline and fed Comeau a neat pass from left wing. Comeau banged home his own rebound
underneath Khudobin.
Pogge continued his fine play early in the second period, giving Nikolai Kulemin nothing to shoot at when
the Russian forward cut in around the Canadian defence and zinged a wrister high on goal. Later, he stood
tall when Nikolai Lemtyugov powered a slapper on goal from the faceoff circle.
Also early in the second period, a possible Russian goal was reviewed, but the referee informed both
benches that it would not count.
Khudobin came up big for Russia halfway through the period when Downie centered a pass down low to
O’Marra, who backhanded it right into the perfectly positioned goalie.
After a frantic burst of action around the net, Tom Pyatt backhanded the puck right through the Russian
goal crease behind Khudobin, and shortly after that play, Canada went to the man advantage when Alexander
Aksenenko was nabbed for tripping at 11:34.
Canada quickly capitalized. After Cam Barker fired a hard left point shot through traffic, Blunden found
the rebound and knifed it home at 12:02. When the red light came on, Khudobin collapsed dramatically
backwards in his crease as if he had been shot.
At 12:25, Sergei Shirokov was left lying on the ice injured next to the penalty box area after colliding
with David Bolland, but he got up and had an ice pack applied at the bench.
At 14:44, Blunden made it 4-0 on another power play, popping in a rebound over Khudobin’s glove from a
scrum at the edge of the crease just before Canada’s man advantage came to an end.
Lisin got in tight on Pogge, jumping around Ryan Parent, and Cogliano was called for cross-checking after
the Canadian goalie made a nice save at 15:21.
But during the Russian man advantage, it was Canada that got the best chance. Kyle Chipchura found Boyd
alone in front of the net on a 2-on-1 rush, and Khudobin was forced to make a fine save.
Downie got another good chance when he got around Andrei Zubarev in the neutral zone and raced down right
wing to pound a solid shot on the Russian goal.
With under two minutes left in the period, Toews thought he’d made it 5-0 when he poked in a rebound with
Michael Blunden causing havoc in the crease, but the whistle had already blown.
Just 27 seconds into the final stanza, Malkin was nabbed for hooking. Russian frustration mounted. Downie
nearly scored after working his way in on goal on a 2-on-1, and then showed Khudobin four fingers (for four
goals) after the goalie came out to have words with him after a whistle.
After getting out of the penalty box, Malkin nearly had a breakaway, but Ryan Parent managed to knock him
off the puck with good body position.
Then came some great end-to-end action. Bolland and Cogliano had a 2-on-1 but Bolland’s pass across was
blocked by the Russian defender. Next, Bolland burst in alone on top of Khudobin, but only bumped the
goalie.
Ilia Zubov fired high and wide with a clear path to the Canadian net, and shortly afterwards Malkin came
down right wing and fired the puck into the belly of Pogge, square to the shooter.
The Russians started coming on a little toward the midway mark of the period, buzzing around Pogge’s net,
and Bolland took a holding penalty at 9:43. Russia’s best chance came off a nice Alexander Radulov rush, as
he fired hard from the faceoff circle to Pogge’s left, but Roman Voloshenko had no rebound to whack home.
Canada clamped down defensively in the last five minutes, allowing the Russians only long, easy-to-handle
shots on Pogge, and frequently dumping the puck deep into the opposition’s zone.
Kyle Chipchura sealed the deal with 2:45 to go when he picked up a loose puck after a Cogliano rush and
rifled it home with the goalie down and out.
The Vancouver crowd gave Canada another gigantic standing ovation as the final two minutes ticked
down.
When the buzzer sounded, Canada mobbed Pogge and celebrated wildly in the corner with sticks and gloves
flying. Led by the big netminder, the Canadian players took their commemorative victory baseball caps and
raised them in salute to the crowd, grinning from ear to ear.
Denis Bodrov was named Russia’s Player of the Game, and for Canada, much to the crowd’s delight, it was
big number 33, Justin Pogge.
The top three players of the tournament for Russia were announced: Evgeni Malkin, Alexei Emelin, and Anton
Khudobin.
Canada’s top three players were Justin Pogge, Steve Downie, and Marc Staal.
The Best Goalie of the tournament was Finland’s Tuukka Rask, who cheerfully gave the thumbs up to the
crowd.
Canada’s Marc Staal was named the Best Defenceman.
Evgeni Malkin was named the Best Forward, and also accepted the commemorative silver plate to represent
Russia’s second-place finish.
Then the Russians lined up to get their silver medals, presented by dignitaries including IIHF President
René Fasel and tournament chairman Frank Gonzalez. The Russians applauded the Canadian crowd, and the fans
responded in kind.
The Canadians clustered around captain Kyle Chipchura as he hoisted the IIHF World Junior Championship
trophy, before receiving their gold medals to the strains of Vancouver-based rock band Prism’s
“Armageddon.”
This was Canada’s 12th IIHF World Junior gold medal, marking its first back-to-back championship since
1997.
Starting in December 2006, Canada will go for a golden three-peat at the 2007 IIHF World Junior
Championship in Sweden.
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