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Old 01-04-2005, 10:39 PM   #1 (permalink)
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I'm sure that everyone in this forum watched Canada trounce the Russians in Grand Forks,ND tonight to win the World Junior Hockey Championship. This may be the best hockey that fans will see this year.

Anyone miss the NHL? I'm getting used to the situation, and it'll probably go on for a while longer, unless the players finally accept that regardless of how long they wait, they will be returning to play under a salary cap (or a rough equivalent of a cap).


http://www.tsn.ca/world_jrs/news_story.asp?id=110063

GRAND FORKS, N.D. (CP) - The Canadian junior men's hockey team put on a dominating display of hockey to win the gold medal at the world junior championship Tuesday with a 6-1 win over Russia.


After finishing a heartbreaking second the last three years in this tournament, Canada left nothing in doubt by scoring four times in the second period for a five-goal after heading into the final 20 minutes.


The sellout crowd of 11,862 at the Ralph Engelstad Arena - the majority of them Canadian - began singing goodbye to the Russian team midway through the third period.

Russia had no answer for a Canadian defence that gave up only 19 shots on starter Jeff Glass.


It was the first world junior title for Canada since 1997, when the country capped a run of five straight gold medals.


Canada scored three power-play goals and its penalty killers held the vaunted Russian power-play to one lone goal in the first period.


The Canadian team played with controlled emotion and relentless determination.


Ryan Getzlaf, Danny Syvret, Jeff Carter, Patrice Bergeron, Anthony Stewart and Dion Phaneuf scored for Canada, which lost the 2002 and 2003 championship games to Russia.


Getzlaf, who was a standout in the game for Canada, and Andrew Ladd each had two assists.


Bergeron was named tournament MVP while Phaneuf was chosen the top defenceman. Both were named to the all-star team, too, along with Carter.


Russian defenceman Alexei Emelin scored a power-play goal for Russia in the first period.


Star Alexander Ovechkin was used sparingly in the second period and at the start of the third period, he was out of his skates and in his track pants on the Russian bench. He appeared to be favouring his right shoulder.


Canada put the boot on in the second period with four unanswered goals - two of them on the power play - and chased Russian goaltender Anton Khudobin at 3:33 after the Minnesota Wild draft pick gave up three goals on 15 shots. He was replaced by Andrei Kuznetsov.


Phaneuf's shot from the blue-line beat Kuznetsov's outstretched glove at 13:19 to make it 6-1 for Canada. Stewart tipped in a Nigel Dawes pass at 8:54.


Kuznetsov gave up a long rebound on a Sidney Crosby blast and Corey Perry chipped it over to Bergeron who had an open net at 7:53.


Carter whipped a sharp-angled shot from the boards by Khudobin to spark Canada's outburst and send the Russian goaltender to the bench.


Canadian goaltender Jeff Glass didn't face a lot of shots again behind a formidable defence, but he did make a glove same from close range on Enver Lisin after Carter's goal.


Canada had a five-minute man advantage late in the second period after Toronto Maple Leafs draft pick Dimitri Vorobiev put his stick in Dawes' face and was given a major and a game misconduct.


Emelin pulled Russia within a goal before the first period expired. His shot through traffic with 32 seconds remaining gave Russia a power-play goal.


Canada had taken a 2-0 lead on Syvret's power-play goal at eight minutes. Braydon Coburn's shot on net hit the end boards and Syvret collected it and banked it off Anton Khudobin.


Getzlaf scored 51 seconds into the game when he took a Carter drop pass and blasted it by Khudobin.


Canada killed off a 1:12 worth of a two-man Russian advantage early in the first period after Perry took an interference minor and Shea Weber hauled down Evgeni Malkin for a tripping penalty.


This Canadian junior team was the country's best in a long time and arguably the best ever. The NHL lockout combined with spike in talent in Canadian players born in 1985 made the 2005 team a formidable one. Players who might not have otherwise been available to the Canadian team from their NHL clubs were still playing in the junior ranks.


The closest team in depth and talent to this one may have been the team in 1995 - the last time there was an NHL labour disruption - and Canada dominated that tournament in Red Deer, Alta.


Canada outscored the opposition 32-5 during the round-robin portion of this tournament to finish first in Pool B. A 3-1 semifinal win over the Czech Republic, in which Glass faced only 11 shots and fewer quality scoring chances, sent Canada to the final of this tournament for the fourth straight year.


While the team's road to the final looked easy on paper, it wasn't without adversity as defence Cam Barker was sent home after three games with mononucleosis, forward Jeremy Colliton was able to play just over one period with a knee injury and defenceman Brent Seabrook played through a shoulder injury he suffered on the first day of selection camp.


Head coach Brent Sutter, a Stanley Cup winner during his 18-year NHL career and a former international player for Canada, guided the team with a firm, but intelligent hand.


This was Canada's oldest team at the world juniors and with a record number of returning players from last year's tournament in Helsinki, they knew the drill and what was at stake.


A dozen players on this squad played for Canada last year and suffered the disappointment of wasting a two-goal lead in the third period. The U.S. scored three times in the period to win 4-3.


Attendance at the 2005 tournament was 195,771, which fell short of the record set by Halifax in 2003 at 242,173. The hundreds of Canadians who made the trek to Grand Forks, two hours south of the Manitoba border, swelled the number of spectators in the stands.


Tuesday's gold-medal game was as close to a home game for the Canadian team as it could be without actually being in the country.


The 2006 world junior hockey championship will be held in Vancouver, Kamloops and Kelowna, B.C.
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Old 01-05-2005, 10:17 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Woo Hoo...nothing like a good old rout to get you excited about the hockey future of this country. I was at the new arena here watching our AHL team the Moose...yawn...got some comp suite seats...so we sat and watched the Juniors on the TV like everyone else in the suites.

This team was amazing to watch...great speed, skills and hungry...when scoring, playmaker Crosby is laying the body on guys you know this was a total team effort.

It did look like a home game...a few companies here loaded up some buses and a ton of guys car pooled for the scant 2 1/2 hour trip.
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Old 01-05-2005, 12:51 PM   #3 (permalink)
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It was great to see.
We were long overdue for the gold.
Well done boys!

As for missing the NHL, I'm not missing it alot, YET. Ask me in a month or so when football is over and the only highlights on Sportscenter are freakin' basketball I will start losing it which will be even worse when the playoffs are supposed to be on
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