IHLC Results – 🇨🇭 Switzerland 6-0 Norway 🇳🇴 – 30 May 2026


🇨🇭 Switzerland 6-0 Norway 🇳🇴
World Championship Semifinal
Swiss Life Arena, Zürich 🇨🇭
Saturday, 30 May 2026

Saturday’s first semi-final brought more joy for Switzerland. Six different players scored as the host nation trounced Norway 6-0 to advance to the Gold medal game at the 2026 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship.

The fired-up Swiss, who lost the 2024 and 2025 finals, will battle the CanadaFinland semi-final winner on Sunday. Coach Jan Cadieux’s team owns the tournament’s only perfect 9-0 record. The Swiss have never won Men’s Worlds Gold and are on the brink of history.

Christoph Bertschy, Denis Malgin, Ken Jäger, Damien Riat, Nico Hischier, and Théo Rochette scored for Switzerland.

Reflecting on the past final losses, Swiss veteran Nino Niederreiter said: “Almost every single one of them was extremely tight, either in a shootout or like last year in overtime (1-0 versus the United States). We know how to play a tight-checking game, but we can’t sit back. We gotta go get it.”

Switzerland outshot Norway 30-20. Legendary goalie Leonardo Genoni won his duel with Norway’s Henrik Haukeland. Genoni and Haukeland now share the tournament lead with three shutouts apiece, but Genoni is the all-time tournament leader with 15 career shutouts.

Norway can still win its first medal in IIHF history in Sunday’s Bronze medal game.

“”We have a higher level than we showed today,” said Norway’s Patrick Elvsveen, “I don’t think it can be that hard to get up for tomorrow’s game, it’s a huge game for us.”

Switzerland built this magical home-ice run on a legacy of heartbreak. In addition to 2024 and 2025, it settled for the Silver medal in 2013 and 2018. A Gold-medal triumph in front of the exuberant red-and-white Swiss crowd would be a game-changer for hockey here.

Sparked by 18-year-old forward Tinus Luc Koblar’s six goals, underdog Norway has had a next-level tournament on Swiss ice. The Polar Bears won their first-ever World Championship quarter-final on Thursday, downing Latvia 2-0. Relying on their speed and work ethic, coach Petter Thoresen’s troops yearn to surpass Norway’s previous best finish (fourth place in 1951).

The first period started off penalty-filled, including an uncharacteristic tripping minor to Swiss captain Roman Josi in the first minute. The Swiss battled through the PK, including a gutsy shot-block by Sven Andrighetto off his skate blade.

Bertschy drew first blood with his third goal at 17:36. The speedy Fribourg-Gottéron attacker won a puck battle behind the net and looped out front to beat Haukeland high on the short side.

Early in the second period, Norway got burned on a Swiss 2-on-1 break. Calvin Thürkauf poked the puck out of the Swiss zone and raced off to feed Malgin, who fooled the sliding Haukeland for a 2-0 lead at 4:23.

Thürkauf and Malgin got buzzing again for shorthanded chances during a mid-game Norwegian power play.

Haukeland kept on battling, but he couldn’t prevent Jäger from tipping in Sven Jung’s centre-point shot at 12:51. The 28-year-old ace from Davos is clicking at the right time. Jäger also tallied twice in the 4-2 win over Finland to clinch top spot in Group A.

Praising the ecstatic sellout crowd of 10,000, Nicolas Baechler said: “You can’t describe it. It’s so amazing to get to play in the rink with this atmosphere. It’s insane, and it’s just so much fun.”

On a 5-on-4 power play, Josi set up Riat in the slot to make it 4-0 at 16:36. The party vibe at Swiss Life Arena was unstoppable now, with ceaseless singing and drum-pounding.

In the third period, Hischier added the fifth Swiss goal from the slot at 4:27. Rochette rounded out the scoring with 2:26 on a set-up by Pius Suter.

Suter replaced power forward Timo Meier, who served a one-game suspension for an illegal hit in the 3-1 quarter-final win over Sweden. Suter slotted back into the lineup alongside Hischier and Attilio Biasca. The versatile 30-year-old St. Louis Blues forward played in three group-stage games and was sidelined after sustaining a minor injury versus Germany. Suter is seeking his first IIHF medal.

The Swiss have only trailed once in Zürich, conceding the first goal against Sweden. Josi, Malgin, Andrighetto, Hischier, and Genoni are among the Swiss mainstays who have inserted themselves into the all-star team conversation.

Looking ahead to the Bronze battle, Norway’s Stian Solberg noted: ““We’re stoked. We’ve never played in a Bronze medal game, so we’ll be more excited about it than the other team.”

This was Switzerland’s sixth straight win over Norway at the Worlds. The last time Norway defeated Switzerland was in 2016, as Andreas Martinsen scored at 3:23 of overtime in a 4-3 win.


BOXSCORE
1st Period
00:14 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Koblar, unsportsmanlike conduct
00:14 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Jäger, unsportsmanlike conduct
00:39 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Josi, tripping
05:41 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Martinsen, holding
13:48 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Salsten, interference
17:36 – 🇨🇭 GOAL – Bertschy (Baechler, Egli)

2nd Period
24:23 – 🇨🇭 GOAL – Malgin (Thürkauf)
29:05 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Riat, slashing
32:51 – 🇨🇭 GOAL – Jäger (Jung, Knak)
33:13 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Suter, tripping
34:17 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Koblar, high sticking
35:19 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Krogdahl, slashing
36:24 – 🇨🇭 PP GOAL – Riat (Josi, Andrighetto)

3rd Period
43:57 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Solberg, cross checking
44:27 –
🇨🇭 PP GOAL – Hischier (Riat, Andrighetto)
47:03 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Biasca, slashing
57:34 – 🇨🇭 GOAL – Rochette (Suter, Biasca)
59:14 – 🇳🇴 PEN – Brandsegg-Nygård, unsportsmanlike conduct
59:14 – 🇨🇭 PEN – Suter, unsportsmanlike conduct

GOALTENDERS
W: 🇨🇭 Genoni (20-20)
L: 🇳🇴 Haukeland (24-30)

SHOTS ON GOAL
🇨🇭 12+13+5 = 30
🇳🇴 6+7+7 = 20

ROSTERS
🇨🇭 Goaltenders: Reto Berra, Leonardo Genoni. Defence: Tim Berni, Dominik Egli, Roman Josi (C), Sven Jung, Dean Kukan, Christian Marti, Janis Moser. Forwards: Sven Andrighetto (A), Nicolas Baechler, Christoph Bertschy, Attilio Biasca, Nico Hischier (A), Ken Jäger, Simon Knak, Denis Malgin, Nino Niederreiter, Damien Riat, Théo Rochette, Pius Suter, Calvin Thürkauf.
🇳🇴 Goaltenders: Henrik Haukeland, Tobias Normann. Defence: Sander Hurrød, Johannes Johannesen, Max Krogdahl (A), Christian Kåsastul (A), Adrian Saxrud Danielsen, Stian Solberg, Kristian Østby. Forwards: Eskild Bakke Olsen, Jacob Berglund, Michael Brandsegg-Nygård, Patrick Elvsveen, Tinus Luc Koblar, Andreas Martinsen (C), Emilio Pettersen, Martin Rønnild, Eirik Salsten, Noah Steen, Petter Vesterheim, Mikkel Øby Olsen, Håvard Østrem Salsten.

🇨🇭 SWITZERLAND (C)
vs. NORWAY 🇳🇴
current champion
(since 15 May 2026)
Last Title 13 Apr 2013
84 All-Time Wins
8
7 wins Head-To-Head
1 win
First IHLC Meeting (SUI vs. NOR)
🇨🇭 SUI 5-3 NOR 🇳🇴 – 23 Apr 1999 – EX – Geneva 🇨🇭
Previous IHLC Meeting (SUI vs. NOR)
🇨🇭 SUI 3-0 NOR 🇳🇴 – 14 May 2023 – WC – Rīga 🇱🇻
Last IHLC Game
🇨🇭 SUI 3-1 SWE 🇸🇪 – 28 May 2026 – WC – Zürich 🇨🇭
Next IHLC Game
🇫🇮 FIN 1-0 SUI 🇨🇭 (OT) – 31 May 2026 – WC – Zürich 🇨🇭 🏅

Article Credit: IIHF Worlds 2026
Photo Credit: IIHF Worlds 2026
IIHFHHOFIOC

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