Canada and Sweden Open Up 4 Nations Face-Off Tournament Tonight

Source: nhl.com

By NHL Public Relations

February 12, 2025

A whirlwind 4 Nations Face-Off, the NHL’s first best-on-best competition since 2016 that will pit Canada, Finland, Sweden and USA against each other in a round-robin tournament with the top two teams advancing to the final next week in Boston, opens tonight at Bell Centre in Montreal when Canada faces Sweden.

Canada and Sweden 411

  • Canada and Sweden have met in an NHL International Tournament nine times, starting with the 1976 Canada Cup – the NHL’s first-ever international tournament – when Bob Gainey scored twice to help Canada earn a 4-0 victory in a game that included two legendary Hall of Fame defensemen in Bobby Orr and Borje Salming.
  • The two countries last met in an NHL International Tournament in the semifinals of the 1996 World Cup of Hockey, with Theo Fleury scoring 19:47 into the second overtime to help Canada advance to the final. Canada has an 8-1-0 record in their nine meetings to date.
  • Canada captain Sidney Crosby (609-1,045—1,654) has more points than any active player and is the only skater in the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament who ranks among the top 10 on the NHL’s all-time points list.
  • Sweden’s Erik Karlsson (196-660—855) and captain Victor Hedman (164-608—772) rank second and third, respectively, in career points among active defensemen.
  • Three of the NHL’s top-five goal scorers this season will be in this contest: William Nylander (2nd; 33), Brayden Point (t-4th; 31) and Sam Reinhart (t-4th; 31), as well as three of the top-five point producers in 2024-25: Nathan MacKinnon (1st; 87); Connor McDavid (4th; 71) and Mitch Marner (5th; 71).
  • Canada head coach Jon Cooper confirmed goaltender Jordan Binnington would be the starter in the opening game (Sweden did not confirm its starter). Binnington is one of two Stanley Cup-winning goaltenders on a 4 Nations Face-Off roster, with the other his Canadian teammate Adin Hill. Binnington, who was an OHL champion (2011), Stanley Cup champion (2019) and is the winningest goaltender in Blues history, will look to claim an international championship for the first time.
  • A pair of second-generation NHL players will follow in their fathers’ footsteps once again Wednesday when Canada’s Sam Reinhart and Sweden’s William Nylander hit the ice in the 4 Nations Face-Off opener.
  • Each player’s dad played at a past NHL International Tournament: Reinhart’s father, Paul, skated for Canada at the 1981 Canada Cup, and Nylander’s father, Michael, scored the last Sweden goal vs. Canada at an NHL International Tournament during the 1996 World Cup of Hockey semifinals. The same feat will happen Thursday when brothers Brady and Matthew Tkachuk team up for USA and follow in the footsteps of their father, Keith (1996 & 2004 WCH).
  • Guy Gaudreau, father of the late Matthew and Johnny Gaudreau, was invited to Montreal by USA and is taking part in the event. Guy has been included in team activities including a dinner Monday alongside American hockey legends Mike EruzioneRob McClanahan and Mike Modano, and on the ice for practice Tuesday at Bell Centre – where Johnny scored twice while wearing a Team North America jersey during preliminary action at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. Much like the Blue Jackets are this season, USA will have a stall set aside in remembrance – hear from Guy and members of the USA team in Dan Rosen’s article on NHL.com.

Source: nhl.com

2025 World Juniors Championship – Day 1

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

December 26th, 2024

Source: iihf.com

2025 World Junior Championship Day 1 – 411 by Andrew Podnieks @ iihf.com

  • The World Junior Championship is coming to Canada for the 16th time, and the second time to Ottawa
  • The last time the Juniors came to Ottawa was 2009, when fans set a record by passing through the turnstiles 453,282 times in 31 games, an average of 14,622 a game (also a record).
  • This year begins a string of three World Juniors in a row in North America:
    • Next year will be hosted by USA Hockey, at St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota
    • The year after will be back under the auspices of Hockey Canada, in Alberta (location(s) TBD).
  • Kazakhstan earned promotion last year and will be playing at the World Juniors for the ninth time, and the first since 2020.
    • Only five countries have played in every U20—Canada, Czechia/Czechoslovakia, Finland, Sweden, United States. 
  • Canada is tops in several all-time categories.
    • They lead the medal haul, having won 35 in the previous 48 events (20G, 10S, 5B)
    • No country has scored more goals than Canada’s total of 1,637 in 314 games.
    • Their 231 victories is also tops, followed by Sweden (198), Finland (176), and the United States (175). 
  • Two Slovaks will also break—or, tie—a record.
    • Both Dalibor Dvorsky and Maxim Strbak will be playing in their FIFTH World Juniors! But there’s a catch.
      • Their first U20 was the ill-fated event of December 2021 that was cancelled because of a covid-19 outbreak.
      • They both played two games of that tournament, then played in 2022, 2023, and 2024, and should tie the official record of four tournaments in their first game in Ottawa.
      • However, because the team never advanced past the quarter-finals in this span, they won’t approach the record for most games played (26, Bjorn Christen, SUI). They both sit at 16 games played.
  • Czechia’s Eduard Sale will also try to make his way into the record books.
    • He will be playing in his third straight U20, and he has already won a silver medal in 2023 and bronze last year. Another medal in Ottawa would tie him for most in a career.
    • Indeed, some 28 players have won three medals at the World Juniors, but at the top of the heap stands Canada’s Jason Botterill, the only player to have won three gold.
  • Two Americans also have a pretty special resume that they hope to add to in the next two weeks.
    • Gabe Perreault and Zeev Buium won gold at the U18 in 2023 and gold at last year’s World Juniors. Only seven times has a team won U18 one year and U20 the next, so the list of back-to-back gold medallists is small.
    • To win three combined gold medals at the junior level (U20 + U18) is also a small and exclusive list (last achieved by Canadian Connor Bedard and achieved by only five Americans—goalie Jack Campbell, and skaters Seth Jones, Jacob Trouba, Jason Zucker, and Rocco Grimaldi).
  • In the crease, the goalie to watch is another American Trey Augustine, who could add his name to the record book on several counts.
    • Still only 19, he will be playing in his sixth tournament and record-tying third World Juniors for the Americans.
    • He has a gold medal from last year and a bronze from 2023, so a medal in Ottawa would tie the record of three medals for a goalie at the U20.
    • And if that third medal were to be gold, he would join an exclusive group of five other goalies with two career golds.