logo
U.S. beats Sweden 6-2 to reach the final at ice hockey worlds

U.S. beats Sweden 6-2 to reach the final at ice hockey worlds

CBC24-05-2025

Social Sharing
The United States beat Sweden 6-2 to advance to the final of the ice hockey world championship on Saturday in Stockholm, Sweden.
In Sunday's final, the U.S. will play Switzerland or Denmark, who meet in the late semifinal.
Jeremy Swayman stopped 27 shots and the U.S. remained on course to win the worlds for the first time since 1933.
The Americans were also formally awarded the title in 1960 and 1980 when they won the Olympic tournaments and the worlds did not take place.
By reaching the final, the U.S. achieved its best result since the silver medal in 1950.
"It's a good feeling," captain Clayton Keller said. "There's one more game to win. We're going to focus on tomorrow."
The U.S. jumped to 2-0 in the opening period, outshooting the Swedes 13-3.
Brady Skjei scored 6:52 in with a shot from the blue line that went through heavy traffic in front of goaltender Jacob Markstrom. Cutter Gauthier doubled the advantage with 2:47 remaining, picking up the puck after a shot by Shane Pinto was blocked and directed it into the net between Makstrom's pads.
Gauthier was born in Skelleftea, Sweden, in 2004 when his father, a goaltender, played for a local team.
Conor Garland added the third with 8:53 to go in the second, knocking in a rebound. Mikey Eyssimont made it 4-0 on a 4-on-2 rush from the right circle.
Samuel Ersson replaced Markstrom in the Swedish net at the start of the final period.
Nylander scores for Sweden
William Nylander scored the first for Sweden 6:32 into the the third period, and Elias Lindholm scored another 41 seconds later to give Sweden some hope at 4-2.
But defenseman Jackson LaCombe beat Ersson for the fifth with 8:51 to go. Shane Pinto finished it off into an empty net to complete a three-point game after assisting on the opening two goals.
"Every single guy contributed and I couldn't be more proud of our group," U.S. coach Ryan Warsofsky said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spencer Carbery, who elevated the Caps, is the NHL's coach of the year
Spencer Carbery, who elevated the Caps, is the NHL's coach of the year

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

Spencer Carbery, who elevated the Caps, is the NHL's coach of the year

Spencer Carbery thought he was sitting down for an interview with Monumental Sports Network to discuss the Washington Capitals' season, reflecting on the accomplishments of his second year behind the bench and talking about what he learned. Instead, he was shown a video that featured many of his mentors, including Colorado Avalanche Coach Jared Bednar, offering their congratulations. They just didn't say for what. Article content Article content When Carbery turned around from the video, there was a man walking into the room with the Jack Adams Award, given annually to the coach who has 'contributed the most to his team's success' and voted on by the NHL Broadcasters' Association. He is the first Capitals coach to win the award since Barry Trotz in 2016. Article content Article content 'As a head coach, as a coach at any level in any league in the world, it's the highest individual honor that you can receive,' Carbery told The Washington Post. 'I know the No. 1 goal is always and always will be the Stanley Cup. That's just the way that we're wired. It is a team-first sport and you would trade this award for the Stanley Cup any day of the week. Article content 'But when it comes to recognition of a coaching staff and a coach, it's the highest honour. When you look at some of the names on that trophy, it's pretty humbling. Just really, really grateful.' Article content Carbery, 43, is the first person to win the coach of the year award in the NHL, the American Hockey League and the ECHL. Both previous awards came when he was working for Capitals affiliates: He won in the AHL in 2021 while coaching the Hershey Bears and won in the ECHL in 2014 while coaching the South Carolina Stingrays. Article content 'That brings it all sort of full-circle,' Carbery said. 'I was saying this the other day, because someone asked me, 'Did you ever dream of winning the Jack Adams Award?' I said, 'I didn't even dream of coaching in the NHL.'' Article content Back when he was named Stingrays coach, Carbery said, his main focus was simple: 'Jeez, I just hope I can do a really good job,' both for Robbie Concannon, the team president who hired him, and the team's owners. He hoped to stay in South Carolina, he said, 'for the next 20 years,' sticking with his team and raising a family. Article content 'I never even thought, 'NHL, what if I could move up to be this?'' Carbery said. 'It was just like, 'Can I please, please, please do an okay job in South Carolina to stay an ECHL head coach?'' Article content Carbery quickly fell in love with coaching when he became an assistant for the Stingrays in 2010. A year later, he was the head coach. In 2018, he became the coach of the Hershey Bears, then jumped up to the NHL as an assistant with the Toronto Maple Leafs before he was hired in Washington in 2023.

Capitals' Spencer Carbery wins Jack Adams Award as NHL coach of the year
Capitals' Spencer Carbery wins Jack Adams Award as NHL coach of the year

CBC

time2 hours ago

  • CBC

Capitals' Spencer Carbery wins Jack Adams Award as NHL coach of the year

Spencer Carbery of the Washington Capitals has won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL's coach of the year. The league announced the honour Saturday after members of Carbery's family surprised him with the trophy earlier in the week. Carbery is the first person to be named coach of the year in the NHL, American Hockey League and ECHL. Carbery was a runaway winner of the Jack Adams as voted on by the league's broadcasters, receiving 81 of 103 first-place votes. Winnipeg's Scott Arniel was second and Montreal's Martin St. Louis a distant third. In his second season running an NHL bench, the Victoria native guided Washington to first place in the Eastern Conference. He helped several players set career highs as the Capitals reached the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. "The best thing indication is a lot of our guys had career years, and I think he's a big part of it: the way he communicates, the way he holds guys accountable, the way he can fit guys into certain roles and use their strengths," Capitals general manager Chris Patrick said at his end-of-season news conference. "I think the relationship between the players and the coach throughout our lineup was excellent this year." When he was named a finalist last month, Carbery said it was an organizational award. "I look at our entire staff and everything that they put in, our players, management to provide the players everything," Carbery said. "It's for my name to be there as the figurehead of the organization, but I look at that to me that's a team-nominated award of what we've done as a coaching staff, management team, our players, what they've accomplished in the regular season." Carbery drew praise from counterparts around the league for how he got an aging roster into the postseason in his first season in Washington and took it to another level by transforming the Capitals into one of the league's top teams. "He's turned them into a deep, four-line juggernaut that just wins hockey games," said Tampa Bay's Jon Cooper, the longest-tenured coach in the league who won the Stanley Cup in 2020 and '21 and has made two other trips to the final. "They do everything right. There's no egos on the team and he's found a way to coach a Hall of Fame superstar and coach players that are just surviving to be in the lineup every night and he's found a way to make it all work."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store