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HOCKEY WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

HOCKEY

Co-hosts Sweden hope to snag ice hockey gold

Sweden's national ice hockey team, Tre Kronor, is hoping to avenge last year's upset loss to Norway – as well as reverse a recent string of defeats – in the quest for gold at 2012 ice hockey world championships.

Co-hosts Sweden hope to snag ice hockey gold

The world’s top 16 ice hockey nations square off in the 76th ice hockey world championships starting in Finland and Sweden on Friday.

Sweden’s national team opens the tournament in Stockholm against neighbouring Norway, a team which handed Tre Kronor a surprise first-round loss last year.

“I think we just need to go out and play our game. Take charge from the start and get the momentum. If we do that, we will have a good chance of getting a win,” Detroit Red Wings star Henrik Zetterberg told the IIHF website.

Reigning champions Finland are trying to overcome the misfortune that has beset hosts of the world championships in recent decades as they seek to become the first team to win gold on home ice since the Soviets in 1986.

They will also try to defend the world title on home ice for the first time since the Soviet’s all-conquering Red Machine in 1979.

However, they face tough challenges from hungry pretenders headed by Vancouver Olympic champions Canada, last year’s runners-up Sweden and the traditionally strong teams of Russia and Czech Republic dreaming to storm all the way to the top.

Sweden, however, is heading into the tournament having lost an unprecedented six matches in a row after losing 2-3 to the United States in an exhibition match earlier in the week.

“A Swedish national team should never lose this many games in a row,” frustrated Tre Kronor head coach Pär Mårts told Sveriges Television (SVT).

Mårts’s squad hasn’t had a victory since beating Belarus on penalty shots on April 11th.

However, analysts hope the addition of a few NHL veterans like Daniel Alfredsson, whose Ottawa Senators were recently knocked out of the Stanley Cup playoffs, will help give Sweden a boost and ensure a repeat of last year’s nightmare opening to the world championships when the team lost to 5-4 to neighbouring Norway, a squad deemed inferior to the perennial Tre Kronor powerhouse.

“Sweden has suffered very few upsets in the history of the world championships against weaker teams,” wrote Aftonbladet sports columnist Mats Wennerholm.

“And never twice in a row.”

Nevertheless, Wennerholm admitted Norway could defeat Tre Kronor, but added that a loss wouldn’t likely prevent Sweden from advancing to the tournament’s final rounds.

This year international ice hockey’s ruling body IIHF has changed the format of the annual tournament, which will be co-hosted by two countries for the first time in modern history.

And it will be the first time since 1997 that the men’s world championship – the biggest annual winter sports event worldwide – will be played with two preliminary round-robin groups with eight teams in each.

Finland’s capital Helsinki will stage the championship’s matches at the 13,350-seat Hartwall arena, while the group which is based in Stockholm, Sweden, will play its matches at 13,850-seat Globen arena.

The new format sees the top four teams in each group advance into the last-eight round. The quarter-finals will be played within the respective groups as opposed to the cross-over system.

Bottom-placed teams in each group will be relegated to Division One and replaced by Austria and Slovenia in next-year’s tournament.

Two quarter-finals will be played in Helsinki and two in Stockholm. Both semi-finals, bronze medal game and the championship’s final will be played in Helsinki.

Defending champions Finland are teamed up with both North-American giants Canada and the United States, Switzerland, Slovakia, France and two former Soviet Republics – Belarus and Kazakhstan in the group based in Helsinki.

Stockholm will stage the matches of the other round-robin group comprising the hosts Sweden, Russia, last year bronze medalists Czech Republic, Germany, Norway, Latvia, Denmark and Italy.

Zetterberg hopes the pressure of hosting the tournament will once again help Sweden make it to the finals in Helsinki.

“If you don’t have pressure, you won’t play well. It’s part of the game. We’re just going to enjoy it and embrace it and go out and have fun in Globen,” he told the IIHF.

This year’s world championship will also determine the seeding for the men’s Olympic ice hockey tournament in Sochi 2014 for all countries participating in the Olympic qualification campaign.

After the end of the championship nine top-ranked teams will earn a direct entry to the 12-team Olympic tournament in Sochi.

The three other participating teams will be determined in three final Olympic qualification tournaments in 2013.

The championship title winner will be decided in the final in Helsinki on May 20th.

TT/AFP/The Local

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HOCKEY

Sweden’s Rasmus Dahlin first overall pick in NHL draft

Rasmus Dahlin became just the second Swedish-born player to be selected first overall in the NHL draft on Friday when the Buffalo Sabres used the top pick on the rangy teenage defenceman.

Sweden's Rasmus Dahlin first overall pick in NHL draft
Rasmus Dahlin is bound for Buffalo. Photo: Ron Jenkins/Getty Images/AFP
Dahlin, who plays for Frolunda HC in the Swedish league and was widely expected to be the first pick, follows Mats Sundin, who was the top choice of the Quebec Nordiques in 1989.
 
“I just want everything to start,” Dahlin said. “I'm going to bring everything I have to that city. I'm super excited. I can't wait.”
 
Russian forward Andrei Svechnikov went second to the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens used the third pick to get Finnish centre Jesperi Kotkaniemi.
 
The draft had a decided Europe flavour as four of the top six players were Europeans. The first American was Brady Tkachuk who went to the Ottawa Senators at No. 4 and the Phoenix Coyotes took the first Canadian Barrett Hayton with the fifth pick. 
 
The 18-year-old Dahlin said he was happy to call Buffalo home despite the fact they haven't had a winning season in the past seven seasons and have missed the playoffs eight years in a row.
 
“It's amazing to finally put on the Buffalo Sabres' jersey,” Dahlin said. “I've been there twice. I love that city.”
 
The six-foot-three, 185-pound Dahlin was honoured as the best defenceman at the 2018 world junior championship in Buffalo, registering six assists in seven games. He also played twice for Sweden as a 17-year-old at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.
 
At number six, the Detroit Red Wings chose the brash Halifax Mooseheads winger Filip Zadina who vowed to make teams that passed on him pay down the road.
 
“I'm telling my agent if they will pass on me, I will fill their net with the puck,” the Czech Zadina said. “Yeah, it's just I want to prove to them that they have done a bad decision.”
 
The lone trade of the day came before the draft when the Colorado Avalanche acquired backup goalie Philipp Grubauer and defenceman Brooks Orpik from the Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals for the 47th pick. The Capitals were willing to get rid of Orpik and Grubauer so they could create salary cap space to sign free agents.