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Reply #30 posted 01/05/09 7:22pm

JustErin

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Sweden = fail
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Reply #31 posted 01/05/09 7:23pm

hokie

OK...Ariel being on a thread about sports is WRONG.

falloff
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Reply #32 posted 01/06/09 3:26pm

Teacher

emm said:

so did we win? boxed


Yes, by running over our goalie 4 times. Three of those of completely open ice, twice when he wasn't anywhere near the puck and one of those during a power break when he was on his way to the bench. Nice way of winning.
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Reply #33 posted 01/06/09 3:37pm

luv4u

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Canadian juniors still riding high after championship win over Sweden

woot! canada woot!


at 17:42 on January 6, 2009, EDT.
By Tamsyn Burgmann, THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO - Fresh off their championship victory, members of Canada's junior hockey team arrived at Toronto's Pearson International Airport on Tuesday with gold medals around their necks and fans cheering their appearance.

A small throng of supporters was on hand to greet several members of the team, which won its fifth straight world junior title with a 5-1 win Monday night over Sweden at Scotiabank Place in Ottawa.

Tournament MVP John Tavares, who plays for the Oshawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey League, said winning the championship on home ice before a crowd of 20,380 - a single-game record for the competition - made the victory that much sweeter.

"You couldn't hear the whistles sometimes, it was so loud - it was rockin'," said Tavares, who has been touted as the possible No. 1 pick in this June's NHL entry draft.

"When you hear the final buzzer go off and we'd won gold, it felt like the roof was going to come off. It was an amazing experience - something I'll never forget."

Canada's streak of five straight titles matches the tournament record set by the Canadians from 1993 to 1997.

Cody Hodgson, who scored twice against the Swedes and led the tournament with 16 points, said the team is confident it can make it six championships in a row.

"It doesn't matter who's here, I'm sure the guys will pull together," said Hodgson, a member of the OHL's Brampton Battalion. "Canada is such a great hockey nation that we should be able to get it done again."

Eleven-year-old fan Blake Carey wore a Team Canada jersey that flowed down to his knees as he eagerly awaited the players' arrival.

"I just thought it was amazing that they won five in a row," he said.

With their championship caps worn backwards, the players shook hands with fans and signed autographs.

"The only way to top (this year) is to get to six in a row, and keep going from there," said defenceman Alex Pietrangelo of the OHL's Niagara IceDogs.

"I think every kid on our team this year has watched (the tournament) every single year, and I watched it last year knowing maybe this year I'll get a chance.

"It was better than anything I'd imagined. And having a gold around your neck makes it that much better."

Pietrangelo's aunt Caroline was waiting with him with a sign in hand as he strolled through the arrivals gate with his medal on display.

"I think they just pulled together," she said of the team. "You could see there was a real camaraderie between them, and I think that's the difference between winning and losing, is how you interchange with each other."

Head coach Pat Quinn said he hadn't slept since the previous night except for a little shut-eye on his flight to Vancouver on Tuesday.

"But you don't mind that after such a thrilling ride with those young men," he said after arriving at the city's airport. "They did a wonderful job under immense pressure.

"There's nothing you can imagine that matches standing there watching your flag go up after winning a gold."

Tavares said the team celebrated the victory with family members before gathering in their Ottawa hotel until the wee hours to hang out for the last time.

He reflected on hard-fought victories against the U.S. and Russia, but called the championship match the team's best performance.

"We got better as the tournament went along - our confidence grew," he said. "We believed in ourselves and that was key. Our confidence was high and we had the support of the country."

Team Canada will be gunning for a record-breaking sixth consecutive gold medal at next year's tournament in Saskatoon and Regina.


©The Canadian Press, 2009

Canada risked and was rewarded in country's fifth straight world junior gold

at 1:24 on January 6, 2009, EDT.
By Donna Spencer, THE CANADIAN PRESS


John Tavares holds the cup up to the crowd. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tom Hanson

OTTAWA - Canada's fifth straight gold medal at the world junior hockey championship was won much differently than the previous four.

This was an offensively explosive squad with a little riverboat gambler in it. The team didn't have big power forwards or a defence-first philosophy like the last four championship squads.

While coach Pat Quinn did stress defence, he also held the reins a little looser when it came to giving this group of players some offensive freedom.

"It's the kids you've got," he said after Monday's 5-1 win over Sweden. "That's the kids we have and they're terrific kids."

This was Canada's second-highest scoring team in the 35-year history of the tournament, averaging 7.5 goals per game.

John Tavares of the Oshawa Generals, Cody Hodson of the Brampton Battalion and Jordan Eberle of the Regina Pats led the 45-goal charge.

Hodgson, a Vancouver Canucks prospect, led the tournament in points with 16. Tavares, the possible No. 1 pick in the 2009 NHL draft in June, was Canada's top goal-scorer with eight. The 18-year-old of Oakville, Ont., was named MVP of the tournament.

Canada's power-play ran at a stellar 50 per cent through the event thanks to the strategy of assistant coach Guy Boucher. Two of the five goals in the final came when Canada was a man up.

Hodgson scored a twice against the Swedes, including an empty-netter. Belleville Bulls defenceman P.K. Subban, Angelo Esposito of the Montreal Junior and Eberle also scored for Canada.

Joakim Andersson replied for the Swedes and goaltender Jacob Markstrom stopped 26 shots. The Swedes were a tournament co-favourite because of their speed and skill, but the Canadians kept that in check Monday.

A question mark hung over Canada's defence after giving up nine goals in two games prior to the final.

While Quinn said he was confident in goaltender Dustin Tokarski, the cautious way he said it indicated the Canadian coach had concerns about the state of his team's goaltending.

But the Spokane Chiefs netminder rose to the occasion with his best game of the tournament. Tokarski, signed by the Tampa Bay Lightning last week, covered off the gaps between his pads and his posts, squared up to the shooters and made 39 saves.

"Tokarski was very good tonight and I was happy to see that because there was some question in the other games," Quinn said. "But tonight he was one of the keys ... because he made some key saves when he had to have them."

The Canadians stopped making high-risk passes and cheating into the offensive zone against the Swedes.

They controlled the game from the opening minute, when Sweden's Mikael Backlund shoved his glove in Tavares's face and Canada's power play did what it had done the whole tournament.

"Only one goal against, against a great Swedish team," Tavares said. "We needed a game like this."

The victory tied the country's record of five consecutive titles in this tournament set between 1993 and 1997. Canada's 15th gold at the world juniors also tied Russia/Soviet Union for the all-time lead.

There was immense pressure on this team to win a fifth gold medal and do it on home ice. But the majority of Canadian players were making their first and only appearance in the world juniors and they just wanted their gold medal.

"Coach always stressed this was our story," said Tavares. "It's obviously special to be a part of the fifth, but it was never about tying the record. It was just getting a gold for everyone and winning on home ice for all these Canadians."

Each of the last three years, it looked like the run of gold could be over. There was a semifinal shootout win versus the U.S. in 2007, an overtime win against the Sweden last year and another narrow 6-5 shootout victory against Russia in this year's semifinal.

Canada was five seconds away from playing for bronze versus Russia when Eberle tied the game.

"It's the heart and our passion for the game of hockey," said Tavares. "No matter is what is thrown at us, or what people say, or the adversity we face we learn how to deal with it and we become so close as a team.

"We really learn how to be strong as 22 guys playing as one."

Quinn, 65, insists Canada's resurgence in this tournament isn't because of the hockey summit after the debacle of the 1998 Olympics. He credits Hockey Canada's training centres across the country, established in the early 1980s, for building this new dynasty.

"It's great programs and the medals are just a way to count that we're doing good jobs," he said.

The 20,380 at Scotiabank Place set a new single-game attendance record at the world junior tournament. It was the fourth time a new mark was established in Ottawa and erased the previous high of 20,223 that was set during Canada's preliminary-round game against the U.S.

The audience included Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff.

"Throughout the tournament, Canadian players not only produced world-class hockey on the ice, they also represented our country with tremendous dignity and pride off the ice," Harper said in a statement. "I want to commend all of the players, coaches, volunteers, families and staff who contributed to this successful tournament.

"This is a well-deserved victory."

Canada will have home-ice advantage in playing for a sixth straight gold in Saskatoon and Regina in 2010.

Germany and Kazakhstan were relegated to the world 'B' championship for finishing ninth and 10th. Switzerland and Austria will join Canada, Sweden, Russia, Slovakia, the U.S., Czech Republic, Finland and Latvia in Saskatchewan.

According to organizers, 453,282 tickets were sold, which is a tournament attendance record that wiped out the previous high of 325,138 set in Vancouver three years ago.

Because of the sheer size of Scotiabank Place it wasn't a difficult ticket to get and there were still some available for Canada's semifinal and the final late last week. Scalpers were asking $350 for upper-level seats prior to the final.

The attendance record was attainable because of Scotiabank's capacity and the Civic Centre, the site of Pool B games, also holds 10,000. Most European arenas hold 16,000 to 18,000.

Notes: Rumours surfaced Monday that the Oshawa Generals had traded Tavares's his rights to the London Knights, but the Generals issued a statement saying the 18-year-old Oakville, Ont., had not been dealt ... Subban, a Montreal Canadiens draft pick, hugged Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk twice in the post-game ceremony ... Prince George Cougars forward Dana Tyrell was on the ice to sing the anthem following the game. A knee injury forced him off the team prior to the tournament and he was replaced by Evander Kane ... Hickey, Subban, Tavares and Lethbridge Hurricanes forward Zach Boychuk, who played with a sprained ankle, have won back-to-back world junior titles ... According to the International Ice Hockey Federation, Ottawa posted the fourth largest attendance of any of its world championships, including the world men's tournament which is so popular in Europe. The 2004 world championship in the Czech Republic holds the record of 552,097.


©The Canadian Press, 2009
canada

Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture!
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Reply #34 posted 01/06/09 3:44pm

Teacher

Funny how they didn't mention any of the roughing by Canada. rolleyes I would easily admit if they'd outplayed us throughout the game as I did with the 1st period, but they didn't even have to do what they did. These aren't hockey players, they're thugs with a helmet and a stick. Well done, see ya when the Swede Hedman gets picked 1st in next year's draft wave
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Reply #35 posted 01/06/09 7:19pm

JustErin

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Let me say it again.

Sweden = fail
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Reply #36 posted 01/06/09 7:21pm

roodboi

go team!
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Reply #37 posted 01/06/09 7:30pm

luv4u

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JustErin said:

Let me say it again.

Sweden = fail


spit
canada

Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture!
REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince
"I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben
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Reply #38 posted 01/06/09 8:00pm

meow85

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Teacher said:

meow85 said:

I will never understand people that take sports this seriously.


Seriously how? You mean to root for a team?

I mean seriously enough to badmouth the opponent, even in jest. It just seems weird to me. shrug
"A Watcher scoffs at gravity!"
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Reply #39 posted 01/06/09 8:02pm

JustErin

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meow85 said:

Teacher said:



Seriously how? You mean to root for a team?

I mean seriously enough to badmouth the opponent, even in jest. It just seems weird to me. shrug


And then be a sore loser when their team loses?
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Reply #40 posted 01/06/09 8:02pm

meow85

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Teacher said:

Canada outplayed us in the first period and did not need to resort to ugly shit, but they did. They have run into our goalie not one, two but THREE times. They are worth less for doing it, and when they were PLAYING so well too. Sad to see, the home of hockey indeed. disbelief

Not technically. Contrary to popular myth, our official sport is lacrosse. razz
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Reply #41 posted 01/06/09 8:08pm

IAintTheOne

fuck em both I say biggrin
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Reply #42 posted 01/06/09 8:10pm

meow85

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JustErin said:

meow85 said:


I mean seriously enough to badmouth the opponent, even in jest. It just seems weird to me. shrug


And then be a sore loser when their team loses?


Yup. nod

Granted, I'm not exactly what you'd call a big sports fan and so didn't watch the game, but a fair win is a fair win. Rough play within reason is just part of the deal. If our team didn't cheat for their win, it's all good.
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