Golden glory for Russia

HELSINKI
– It’s just like old times: Russia is back on top of the hockey world.
Unbeaten from wire to wire, Russia got a dominating performance from its
NHL superstars to defeat underdog Slovakia 6-2 in Sunday’s gold medal
game at Hartwall Arena.
It was the Russians' first gold since
Switzerland 2009. Reflecting their renewed hockey superpower status,
they became the first champions to win all their games in regulation
since the 1989 Soviets, who also won 10 straight.
This is
arguably the strongest outing by any senior-level Russian national team
since the fall of the Soviet Union. Russia now boasts 26 gold medals
all-time, four in the post-USSR era.
Alexander Syomin shone with a
pair of goals and an assist. Linemate Pavel Datsyuk added a goal and
two assists, while Alexander Ovechkin, the other member of this all-NHL
troika, had two helpers. Tournament scoring leader Yevgeni Malkin, who
was also named Best Forward and MVP, also tallied for Russia, along with
Alexander Perezhogin and Alexei Tereshenko.
Zdeno Chara, the
Norris Trophy-winning defenceman who was deservedly named a 2012
tournament all-star, scored twice for Slovakia.
The Russians won
their third world title in the last five years. The last team to do that
was Canada (2003, 2004, 2007). Russia and the Soviet Union now combine
for 23 World Championships.
The golden Russians have sealed their
spot atop the 2012 IIHF World Rankings, and also wrapped up the top
seeding for the 2014 Olympics on home ice in Sochi. The triumph puts
head coach Zinetula Bilyaletdinov on the fast track to take the reins at
what will be the most prestigious event in Russian winter sports
history.
The Slovaks, who saw their Cinderella run come to an
abrupt end, put in a valiant effort. But they simply couldn’t keep up
with a Russian squad that worked just as hard, but had superior skill
and the ability to capitalize ruthlessly on mistakes.
Malkin
finished with 19 points, becoming the first Art Ross Trophy winner to
top the Worlds points derby in the same season since Wayne Gretzky
(1982). (Malkin tallied 109 points with the Pittsburgh Penguins this
season.) This was his first gold medal in seven senior-level IIHF
tournaments (five Worlds, two Olympics).
Russian starting goalie Semyon Varlamov was solid as Russia outshot Slovakia 42-31.
The
Slovaks fell short in their bid for their first World Championship
title since Sweden 2002, the only time they've won this tournament.
(That final victory, 4-3, came at Russia's expense.)
Nonetheless,
silver is a tremendous accomplishment for a nation that entered the
tournament seeded tenth in the IIHF World Ranking and finished tenth on
home ice last year. Slovakia hadn’t captured a medal since 2003’s
bronze.
Miroslav Satan now becomes the first Slovak player to own
four IIHF World Championship medals (silver 2000, gold 2002, bronze
2003, silver 2012).
Slovakia couldn’t have asked for a better start to this game.
Seconds
after Ovechkin took a run at Chara (reminiscent of their battles in the
recent Washington-Boston series), the huge Slovak blueliner opened the
scoring on a blast from the right point at 1:06. Chara’s slapshot was
clocked at a record-setting 175 kilometres an hour (108.8 miles) at the
2012 NHL All-Star game, and he got plenty on this one, which sailed past
Ovechkin and beat Varlamov high on the blocker side.
Near the
halfway mark of the period, Russian captain Ilya Nikulin spotted Malkin
open to the left of Slovak netminder Jan Laco, and defenceman Ivan
Baranka made a tremendous play, blocking Malkin’s shot with his stick.
The
Russians tied it at 9:57 on the rush, with Ovechkin making amends for
his earlier miscue. Taking a pass from Datsyuk, Ovechkin exploded into
the Slovak zone on left wing and threw a beautiful backhand pass through
the legs of Rene Vydareny on to the stick of Syomin, who zipped it in
through Laco’s five-hole.
The Russians went up 2-1 at 6:10 of the
second period, when Alexander Popov cut to the net from behind the goal
line and Laco sprawled to poke the puck away from him, leaving
Perezhogin to backhand it into the gaping cage. The combined bulk of
Chara and Tomas Surovy on the goal line couldn’t keep it out.
At
13:31, Russia made it 3-1 with a vintage, old Soviet-style passing play.
Capitalizing on a turnover inside the Slovak blueline, Nikita Zherdev
sent the puck cross-ice to Tereshenko, who then worked a give-and-go
perfectly with Sergei Shirokov before sliding it inside Laco’s right
post.
The Russian fans among the 13,242 in attendance exulted,
chanting “Rossiya!” to the beat of the goal-celebration song, KISS’s
1980’s hit “Heaven’s On Fire”.
Turnovers continued to plague
Slovakia. Datsyuk, the NHL’s king of takeaways, stripped Baranka inside
the blueline and found Syomin all alone in front of Laco. Syomin made no
mistake, feinting before whipping the puck into the top corner on his
forehand at 15:22.
The NHL line struck again to make it 5-1 at
3:55 of the third, with Datsyuk beating Laco five-hole on a Gretzky-like
set-up from behind the net by Syomin. There was no hope of a Slovak
comeback anymore, even though they tried to shake things up by pulling
Laco in favour of backup Peter Hamerlik.
Even when Chara pinched
in to beat Varlamov from close range at 9:37, with Ovechkin serving
Russia’s first penalty for a slash, it was just a chance for the Slovak
fans to cheer a bit more for their team, whose urgency commendably
didn’t slacken despite their dire situation.
Malkin put an
exclamation point on Russia's victory when he barged in over the
blueline and hammered a slapshot past Hamerlik to make it 6-2 with 1:57
left.
When the final buzzer sounded, the Russians leaped over the
boards, shedding their sticks and gloves and bounced up and down in a
joyful embrace that dislodged Varlamov's net. Moments later, the team
grabbed Bilyaletdinov next to their bench and exultantly tossed him up
in the air and caught him several times.
During the silver medal
presentation, Chara donned a special jersey that bore the name and
number 38 of Pavol Demitra. The great Slovak forward, who captained the
national team in 2011 in Bratislava, passed away last year in the tragic
Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash.
The Russians accepted their
gold medals from Russian Ice Hockey Federation president Vladislav
Tretiak, who beamingly hugged each of his players. They posed for a
jubilant team photo before belting out their national anthem and doing a
victory lap with the World Championship trophy, led by Ovechkin and
Syomin, who flourished a huge Russian flag. The Slovaks took time to
circle the ice too, clapping for their fans.
With the result,
Russia’s all-time record against Slovakia at this tournament dating back
to 1996 improved to six wins, three ties and three losses.
The
Russians will kick off their defence of their title at the 2013 IIHF Ice
Hockey World Championship in May 2013. With the tournament co-hosted
again by Finland and Sweden, Slovakia and Russia will play their
round-robin games in Helsinki and aim to make the finals in Stockholm.
-- by Lucas Aykroyd for IIHF.com --
HELSINKI – Yevgeni Malkin is the man of the tournament. After winning
gold with Russia, he was also named MVP and Best Forward of the 2012
IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship.
Malkin also made it to the
World Championship All-Star Team for the third time after 2007 and 2010.
The Russian had 19 points (11 goals, 8 assists) throughout the
tournament to win the scoring title before surprising Norwegian forward
Patrick Thoresen, who had seven goals and 11 assists for 18 points.
Thoresen and Sweden’s Henrik Zetterberg also made it to the All-Star
Team.
Slovakia’s Jan Laco was named to the All-Star Team and won
the award as Best Goalkeeper of the event. The 30-year-old was in the
goal for most of the time in his first IIHF Ice Hockey World
Championship and helped his team advance to the gold medal game. He was
close behind Russia’s Semyon Varlamov (93.99%) in save percentage with
93.55% prior to the gold medal game.
Slovak giant Zdeno Chara was voted Best Defenceman and named to the All-Star Team along with Russian back Ilya Nikulin.
Individual Awards selected by the Tournament Directorate:
Best Goalkeeper: Jan Laco, Slovakia
Best Defenceman: Zdeno Chara, Slovakia
Best Forward: Yevgeni Malkin, Russia
All-Star Team selected by media vote:
Goal: Jan Laco (SVK)
Defence: Zdeno Chara (SVK) – Ilya Nikulin (RUS)
Forwards: Yevgeni Malkin (RUS) – Patrick Thoresen (NOR) – Henrik Zetterberg (SWE)
MVP: Yevgeni Malkin (RUS)
Source: IIHF.com
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20/05/2012 - 22:14