
๐บ๐ธ United States 3-1 Canada ๐จ๐ฆ
Four Nations Face-Off Group Round
Centre Bell, Montrรฉal ๐จ๐ฆ
Saturday, 15 February 2025
As the enemy in a hostile environment, in front of a pro-Canada sellout crowd, the United States showed the hockey world who is boss.
For now.
Jake Guentzel scored two goals, and the United States clinched a berth in the Four Nations Face-Off championship game by defeating Canada 3-1 in front of 21,105 at Bell Centre on Saturday.
“That was one of the best experiences of my life,” U.S. forward Dylan Larkin said. “Just an unbelievable hockey game.”
It was the United Statesโ first win against Canada in a best-on-best international tournament since the preliminary round of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics on 21 February 2010.
Larkin had a goal and an assist, and Connor Hellebuyck made 25 saves for the U.S., which leads the tournament standings with six points (2-0-0-0) because of two regulation wins, including 6-1 against Finland on Thursday.
Canada (0-1-0-1), Sweden and Finland each has two points. A regulation win is worth three points, so the United States can’t be caught for first place when the remaining two games of the round-robin portion are played at TD Garden in Boston on Monday.
The championship game is at TD Garden on Thursday.
“It’s exciting to guarantee to be in Thursday, but we still have a big one Monday (against Sweden),” U.S. forward Brady Tkachuk said. “I guess it can be easy to get complacent, but this group I don’t even think it’s going to get in our mind that we’re happy with where we’re at. I think we know what’s at stake here. We know what our goal has been right from the start, and I don’t think we’re going to stop until we get it.”
Connor McDavid scored, and Jordan Binnington made 20 saves for Canada.
Canada will clinch a berth in the final with a regulation win against Finland on Monday. Finland will do the same if it defeats Canada in regulation.
“It was fast, tight-checking, competitive, emotional,” McDavid said. “It had everything you would want in a hockey game. It (stinks) it didn’t go our way, but this thing’s far from over.”
The intensity and emotion of the rivalry were evident from the opening face-off as there were three fights in the first nine seconds.
“Mayhem,” Canada coach Jon Cooper said. “That was the first minute.”
U.S. forward Matthew Tkachuk fought Canada forward Brandon Hagel right after the puck drop, with two seconds having come off the clock. On the ensuing face-off, U.S. forward Brady Tkachuk did the same with Canada forward Sam Bennett after one more second ticked off.
After another face-off and six seconds of play, J.T. Miller of the United States and Colton Parayko of Canada fought after a scrum by the U.S. net.
Miller was also called for cross-checking, but the U.S. killed the penalty.
“I think the message we wanted to send is ‘It’s our time,'” Matthew Tkachuk said. “We’re in a hostile environment, and we wanted to show that we’re not backing down. They’ve had so much success over so many years over there. They’re some of the best players in the world. We felt in this environment it was a good time to do it. It was a lot of fun.
โYou’ve got to give credit to those guys, as well. They did the exact same thing that we did. I thought it was great energy from both sides, and the building was shaking after the third one. I’m excited to watch them.”
Things settled down after that, the pace picked up and McDavid gave Canada a 1-0 lead at 5:31 of the first period.
He gained speed through the neutral zone, got the puck from Drew Doughty in stride and with space, and protected it from Charlie McAvoy on his backhand before lifting a backhand over Hellebuyck’s glove from the right side.
The U.S. tied it 1-1 on Guentzel’s goal at 10:15, 26 seconds after McAvoy lined up McDavid and put a big hit on the Canada forward along the left-wing wall in the U.S. defensive zone. Guentzel scored with a low shot from the left face-off circle that went under Binnington’s pad.
“That also is a message-sending moment; probably one of the plays of the game,” Matthew Tkachuk said of McAvoy’s hit on McDavid. “They just scored a goal, the building was rocking and Charlie comes there and pops McDavid, like one of the hardest hits I’ve seen.”
McAvoy had another big hit on McDavid in about the same spot at 11:55. He finished the period with four hits: two on McDavid and two on Sidney Crosby.
Brady Tkachuk also had a big hit on Doughty behind Canada’s net at 15:28.
There were 31 hits in the first period: 17 for the U.S., and 14 for Canada.
“I thought we did a great job of handling our emotions and hitting when possible, but I thought Charlie was incredible tonight and really led that back end — the whole 200 feet, the physicality, the offence, everything,” Matthew Tkachuk said. “He was one of our best players for sure, and I think the rest of us, we followed him.”
The U.S. took a 2-1 lead at 13:33 of the second period, when Larkin got loose on a 2-on-1 with Miller, kept the puck and scored with a blocker-side shot from the right circle.
Larkin said he could see his father celebrating in the stands after he scored. His family was sitting up from the corner where he was celebrating on the ice.
“I got to see my dad jump up,” Larkin said. “Honestly, just probably one of the more special goals of my career.”
Canada had the puck a lot in the third period but couldnโt get through offensively with the U.S. playing well in its structure, getting sticks on pucks, disrupting passing lanes and blocking eight shots.
“We had the puck for about 180 feet, we couldn’t get it past that extra 20 feet and that’s stuff we’ve got to look at,” Cooper said. “We’ve got to learn from this.”
Hellebuyck said it “felt playoff hockey” in the third period.
“Got a lead and you try to kill the clock,” he said. “Try to garner a little bit of something, but you know the team is going to be pressing so you’ve got to play perfect hockey, perfect details.”
Guentzel scored into an empty net at 18:41 for the 3-1 final.
Hellebuyck made three more saves after that to finish with eight in the third.
“What an incredible hockey game,” U.S. coach Mike Sullivan said.
NOTES: Matthew Tkachuk didn’t play the final 12:36 of the game because of a lower-body injury. He stayed on the bench. Sullivan said Tkachuk was being evaluated, and the coach was not sure of his status for the game against Sweden on Monday…Canada defenceman Cale Makar (illness) did not play. Defenceman Thomas Harley was added to the roster and played 18:17. Canada was already without defenceman Shea Theodore, who is out for the rest of the tournament because of an upper-body injury. Cooper said Makar was close to playing and that he’s hopeful the defenceman can return Monday.
BOXSCORE
1st Period
00:02 – ๐จ๐ฆ PEN – Hagel, fighting major
00:02 – ๐บ๐ธ PEN – M. Tkachuk, fighting major
00:03 – ๐จ๐ฆ PEN – Bennett, fighting major
00:03 – ๐บ๐ธ PEN – B. Tkachuk, fighting major
00:09 – ๐จ๐ฆ PEN – Parayko, fighting major
00:09 – ๐บ๐ธ PEN – Miller, cross checking + fighting major
05:31 – ๐จ๐ฆ GOAL – McDavid (Doughty, Binnington)
10:15 – ๐บ๐ธ GOAL – Guentzel (Eichel, Werenski)
12:54 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Crosby, hooking
16:47 – ๐บ๐ธ PEN – Guentzel, tripping
2nd Period
33:33 – ๐บ๐ธ GOAL – Larkin (Boldy)
3rd Period
58:41 – ๐บ๐ธ EN GOAL – Guentzel (Larkin, Faber)
GOALTENDERS
W: ๐บ๐ธ Hellebuyck (25-26)
L: ๐จ๐ฆ Binnington (20-22)
SHOTS ON GOAL
๐บ๐ธ 8+10+5 = 23
๐จ๐ฆ 8+10+8 = 26
ROSTERS
๐บ๐ธย Goaltenders: Connor Hellebuyck, Jake Oettinger. Defence: Brock Faber, Adam Fox, Noah Hanifin, Charlie McAvoy (A), Jaccob Slavin, Zach Werenski. Forwards: Matt Boldy, Kyle Connor, Jack Eichel, Jake Guentzel, Jack Hughes, Dylan Larkin, Auston Matthews (C), J.T. Miller, Brock Nelson, Brady Tkachuk, Matthew Tkachuk (A), Vincent Trocheck.
๐จ๐ฆย Goaltenders: Jordan Binnington, Adin Hill. Defence: Drew Doughty, Thomas Harley, Josh Morrissey, Colton Parayko, Travis Sanheim, Devon Toews. Forwards: Sam Bennett, Anthony Cirelli, Sidney Crosby (C), Brandon Hagel, Seth Jarvis, Nathan MacKinnon, Brad Marchand (A), Mitch Marner, Connor McDavid (A), Brayden Point, Sam Reinhart, Mark Stone.
| ๐บ๐ธ UNITED STATES (C) |
vs. | CANADA ๐จ๐ฆ |
| current champion (since 13 Feb 2025) |
Last Title | 25 May 2024 |
| 59 | All-Time Wins |
338 |
| 11 wins | Head-To-Head (+ 3 ties) |
40 wins |
| First IHLC Meeting (USA vs. CAN) ๐จ๐ฆย CAN 2-0 USA ๐บ๐ธ โ 25 Apr 1920 โ OG โ Antwerp ๐ง๐ช |
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| Previous IHLC Meeting (USA vs. CAN) ๐จ๐ฆย CAN 4-2 USA ๐บ๐ธ โ 20 Sep 2016 โ WCH โ Toronto ๐จ๐ฆ |
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| Last IHLC Game ๐บ๐ธ USA 6-1 FIN ๐ซ๐ฎ โ 13 Feb 2025 โ FNF โ Montrรฉal ๐จ๐ฆ |
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| Next IHLC Game ๐ธ๐ช SWE 2-1 USA ๐บ๐ธ โ 17 Feb 2025 โ FNF โ Boston ๐บ๐ธ |
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Article Credit: NHL
Photo Credit: The Press Democrat – IIHF – HHOF – IOC