
World Championship Final Preview: USA Vs. Switzerland Set To Be A Battle Between Youth And Experience
The stage is set for the 2025 IIHF Men's World Championship final as Team USA is set to take on Team Switzerland on Sunday for a chance to take home the gold medal.
These two teams couldn't be more different, which is why this matchup is so intriguing.
On paper, one thing that stands out about the USA squad is their youth.
They are led by a cast of young, upcoming NHL stars, including Clayton Keller, Logan Cooley, Frank Nazar, Will Smith, Shane Pinto, Matty Beniers, and the list goes on and on.
Their youth and inexperience in these big tournaments should be somewhat of a weakness, but it's actually been a strength for an American team that plays with a high tempo, making them explosive and difficult to keep up with.
'When you're young, sometimes you're a little bit naive to situations, and that's helped our group,' USA head coach Ryan Warsofsky said. 'We are going to continue to grow and mature. It was nice to see our youth kind of kick in here.'
There is also a chip on many of these young player's shoulders that wouldn't be there for veterans.
They are hungry to prove themselves at the international level, as many of these American players are just scratching the surface in terms of their potential.
'I think we got a lot of young guys that are looking to prove that they are mature and that they can play on winning teams,' Josh Doan said. 'I think as a young guy, you get put to that side that you don't know how to win yet, but I think we've done a good job of proving that we can defend leads and play in big games.'
Team USA also consists of talented players the likes of Tage Thompson, Zach Werenski, Jeremy Swayman, Brady Skjei and Conor Garland.
In most sports and international tournaments, the USA is dominant, but not in the hockey World Championship.
America hasn't won a gold medal at the World Championship since 1993, and this group has that engraved into their minds.
'It's been (since) 1933, and truly I think that's not good,' Warsofsky said about America's gold-medal drought. 'It's not good at all for us, and we have to start winning this tournament. We addressed it, and we have one more game to go.'
While Switzerland's team may not look as flashy on paper, there's an element about their game that can't be seen on paper.
Many of these Swiss players have been playing with each other for years and that chemistry gives them a big advantage.
It's no coincidence that Switzerland won the silver medal at last year's World Championship. Their long-lasting chemistry sets them apart from other countries.
'I say we have a good consistency now over the past couple of years of the same guys coming in,' J.J. Moser said of why Switzerland is successful. 'We have chemistry in the team and we also can take our experiences from the past years, and that kind of gets us more confidence and more calmness in those situations, if you have experience obviously…
'We're connected, all five guys on the ice and all 20 guys on the team. I think that makes it really hard to play against us.'
Team Switzerland is headlined by Kevin Fiala, Timo Meier and Nino Niederreiter.
This tournament and team mean everything to the Swiss players. They've grown a bond with each other that is unmatched and honestly wholesome.
'I think team spirit is the key,' Switzerland defenseman Andrea Glauser said. 'We have such good team spirit. We are like brothers, we are like a family.'
We'll see on Sunday whether the USA's youth takes them over the top or if Switzerland's experience pays off.
Get thelatest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and bysubscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting belowthe article on THN.com.
Copyright 2025 The Hockey News, Roustan Media Ltd.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
5 minutes ago
- New York Times
Canada coach Jesse Marsch condemns U.S. treatment, ‘lack of respect' for Ukraine
Canada men's national team coach Jesse Marsch offered his support for Ukraine and the Ukrainian national team on Friday while also taking aim once again at United States President Donald Trump. 'As an American, the treatment that we have given the President of the Ukraine and the lack of respect really bothers me. Without having to know what it's like to go through something like what these players, this coach and this federation has been through, I am just really excited to be able to show our support,' Marsch said in his opening remarks at a Friday morning event with the Canada Ukraine Foundation. Advertisement Marsch is likely referencing a tense and fiery exchange between Trump and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Feb. 28 that made global headlines. Marsch has previously taken aim at Trump, saying in February that Trump should 'lay off the ridiculous rhetoric about Canada being the 51st state; as an American, I'm ashamed of the arrogance and disregard we've shown one of our historically oldest, strongest and most loyal allies.' Due to the Russian invasion, the Ukrainian national team is required to play its matches in neutral venues. 'If you think about the challenges that the players from Ukraine have been through, they haven't played a home match in several years, they've had to play World Cup qualifiers on foreign soil, they've had players playing professionally and internationally with the concern of the safety of their country and their family and their friends,' Marsch said. 'In general, the ability for us to have empathy and sympathy for everything that their team, their nation, their team, their players have gone through is really important at a time like this.' Ukraine's upcoming home matches in UEFA Group D of 2026 World Cup qualification do not yet have a location. 'As the Canadian national team coach, to show how much we are behind them, we are with them, that we want to do everything we can,' Marsch said, noting that one of the beauties of international football is that it 'can take on so much more than what the sport is.' Ukraine is in Toronto to play Canada in the Canadian Shield friendly tournament on Saturday. Ukraine will play its second match of the Canadian Shield friendly tournament on Tuesday against New Zealand, while Canada plays Ivory Coast also on Tuesday. 'It's really a pleasure and an honour to show that friendship and respect are at the core of everything we try to do in this sport,' Marsch said.


Forbes
20 minutes ago
- Forbes
New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox Renew Rivalry In Differing Spots In The AL East
The quirks in a schedule often get scenarios like the one about to unfold, the Yankees and Red Sox starting their season series. Ever since the schedule was reduced to 13 divisional games in 2023 to accommodate playing every team, sometimes it has taken a while for a divisional rivalry to get going and this year it is the case for the Yankees and Red Sox, who will start their season series this weekend. It is the third straight season the Yankees-Red Sox are starting in June. Last year, it began June 14 in Fenway Park and the Yankees began their month-long slump they eventually recovered from by winning 94 games and their first AL pennant since 2009. Two years ago, it began June 9 at Yankee Stadium a week after Aaron Judge crashed into the fence in right field at Dodger Stadium to effectively doom the Yankees to a lost summer of 82 wins. At this point, the Yankees and Red Sox are in different places. The Yankees enter the series with a nice lead atop the AL East where they have resided every day since beating the Kansas City Royals on April 14. The Yankees are there because of Judge's flirtation with .400, which has him hitting .392 to go along with an astounding 1.251 OPS while playing all 61 games. They are there because the offseason moves following the loss of Juan Soto to a massive 15-year deal with the Mets, a storyline that figures to get all sorts of play over the weekend when FOX follows its coverage of the Belmont Stakes on Saturday and ESPN puts the game up against Game 2 of the NBA finals between the Pacers and Thunder. The Yankees and Red Sox may be hard-pressed to replicate the end of Game 1 between the Thunder and Pacers when Tyrese Haliburton hit the game-winner with three-tenths of a second. The first installment of the 13-game series is about the Yankees going about their business in the matter-of-fact way they are doing thus far. One thing not happening is Max Fried getting his first start in the rivalry since he pitched Thursday, though he might pitch next weekend in Fenway. Fried has been everything and more the Yankees could have hoped for, getting to 8-1 through his first 11 starts with the mix of dominance and grit. The latter occurred Thursday when Fried put two on with two outs in the first and then won an eight-pitch battle with Carlos Santana. Santana's at-bat started a run of 11 straight retired hitters and 15 of 16 though there were several long counts and 16 foul balls. It was the kind of outing the Red Sox hoped Fried would provide for them but Fried opted for the eight-year, $218 million deals to join a rotation headed by Gerrit Cole. Cole is three months removed from Tommy John surgery on his elbow thus the storyline with him and Rafael Devers is on hold until next season. Cole underwent the surgery about six months after a bizarre intentional walk to Devers, who is 9-for-33 in their matchups. Devers was playing third base back then and has yet to see the field this year. Devers was moved off the position when Alex Bregman was signed and is still only hitting as Bregman recovers from a quad strain sustained May 23. Devers got the game-winning hit in the game after Bregman's injury but the Red Sox went from five to 9 1/2 games out since. They head to the Bronx with eight losses in 11 games, including five by one run, an area where the Red Sox dropped 17 of 23 so far. The rough start through 64 games is part of a team with an MLB-worst 53 errors after struggling defensively last season when Devers made 12 errors and had a .961 fielding percentage in his 130 games at third. Naturally all of Boston's faults are after some raised expectations, leading to questions about Alex Cora's job security and it is secure based on comments chief baseball officer Craig Breslow made this week on WEEI. This weekend will be hyped because the Red Sox-Yankees often are, though nothing will be like 2003 through 2007. It will be about the Yankees continuing to go about things in their business like matter and the Red Sox trying to find their footing to climb closer to .500 and eventually over the break-even mark.


New York Times
30 minutes ago
- New York Times
How Tyrese Haliburton and Pacers stay calm, cool and connected in the clutch
OKLAHOMA CITY — How many more times do Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana Pacers need to show us who they are for us to believe them? On Thursday night, Haliburton and the Pacers looked to be out of it. Again. Like they were in overtime in Game 5 against Milwaukee, down seven with 40 seconds left in overtime. Like they were in Game 2 against the Cavaliers in Cleveland when they were down seven with 48 seconds to go in the fourth quarter. And again, in Game 1 against the New York Knicks, when they were down 17 with a little more than six minutes to go before their epic comeback became 'The Miracle at MSG.' And now, again, in the NBA Finals, they trailed early, got within striking distance multiple times, then surrendered a run to the Oklahoma City Thunder each time. But the cardiac kids from Indiana had another fourth-quarter comeback in the tank. Haliburton hit a pull-up 2-point jumper to win it with less than a second on the clock. It was the fourth time in the playoffs that Haliburton hit a game-winning or game-tying shot. And it was the Pacers' fifth come-from-behind victory from a deficit of 15 or more points in this year's playoffs. Advertisement Before the shot, it was a quiet night for Haliburton, who finished with 14 points, 10 rebounds and six assists. But when it mattered, he made his presence known. The Pacers trailed by nine with 2 minutes, 52 seconds to go before closing the game on a 12-2 run. 'I think we're just a really resilient group,' Haliburton said. 'We do just a great job of sticking in and just settling into the game. Through the course of the game … it felt like it could get ugly. Who knows where this game is heading? I thought we did a great job of just walking them down. 'When it gets to 15, you can panic or you can talk about how do we get it to 10 and how do we get it to five and from there.' But it wasn't just Haliburton. Sure, his Pacers teammates have said they go as he goes, but as usual, it took the team as a whole to get the job done. Haliburton is the one who leads. The goal is to get the ball in his hands for the final possession. 'We got it to eight pretty fast and that gave us confidence. We kept getting stops. Myles (Turner) and Andrew (Nembhard) made play after big play down the stretch,' Haliburton said. 'Myles got a wide-open look on the wing and missed that one, but we stuck with it. Andrew was huge down the stretch. We got a big stop there and had a lot of confidence in me to make that shot. 'I don't know what you say about it. I know that this group is a resilient group, and we don't give up until it's 0.0 on the clock.' Indiana's balanced depth puts teams on their heels in a matter of minutes, and Haliburton finishes them off. 'Ultimate, ultimate confidence in himself,' Turner said about Haliburton. 'Some players will say they have it, but there are other players that show it. He's going to let you know about it, too. That's one of the things I respect about him. He's a baller, a hooper, and really just a gamer. Advertisement 'When it comes to the moments, he wants the ball. He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from the moment and (it is very) important this time of the year to have a go-to guy. He just keeps finding a way, and we keep putting the ball in the right positions. The rest is history.' Eastern Conference finals MVP Pascal Siakam was the first to score in double figures and led all Indiana scorers with 19 points. By the end of the game, the Pacers had six players in double figures, including all five starters. Nembhard, who was critical on defense and was the primary ball handler late, added 14 points. Obi Toppin hit five 3s that helped swing the game and finished with 17 points. 'That's been our thing the whole year, even at the beginning of the playoffs,' Toppin said. 'Everybody got the other team winning every single game. We just go out there and always do what we do,' Indiana had 18 more turnovers than OKC and 16 fewer field-goal attempts and still managed to win. They've shown a level of competitiveness and composure throughout this year's playoffs that should be synonymous with their identity at this point. 'We stay connected,' Nembhard said. 'We're going to play until the whistle blows. It didn't feel like we were down 20. I don't know what the deficit was, but it felt like we were just right there. 'Stuff that's done in the past is behind us at this point. We had 19 (turnovers) in the first half. Couldn't get much worse than that.' FINAL SECONDS? GAME ON THE LINE? That's Tyrese Haliburton's music 🎶 Tyrese has done it in EVERY. SINGLE. ROUND. — NBA (@NBA) June 6, 2025 That Pacers connection starts off the court. In the locker room before games, each player is involved in their pregame ritual, yet it still feels as if their rituals overlap and affect one another. Before Thursday's game, Haliburton sat in front of his locker bobbing his head as a song by Central Cee blared on the Pacers' Bluetooth speaker. With their first NBA Finals appearance looming, everyone appeared exactly the way they always do — calm yet focused. The way they are on the court. This latest historic comeback is just who they are. In their incredible comebacks against the Bucks, Cavs, Knicks and Thunder, the Pacers were all but done, with their opponents having better than a 96 percent chance to win those respective games. But when the clock hit 0:00.0, the Pacers were the ones left standing (sometimes on a scorer's table). Advertisement 'This group never gives up,' Haliburton said. 'We never believe that the game is over until it hits zero, and that's just the God's honest truth. 'That's just the confidence that we have as a group, and I think that's a big reason why this is going on.' (Photo of Aaron Nesmith and Tyrese Haliburton: Alonzo Adams / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)