More than 18 months after losing to the U.S. in the finals at the 2021 world junior hockey championship, he once again has the chance to help Canada capture the tournament’s top prize. “It’s exciting to be in this moment now. But the hardest work is ahead,” Garand said on Friday after his side’s 5-2 semi-final win over the Czech Republic. “We have to do the right things here, rest, recover and be ready to go.” WATCH l Canada defeats Czech Republic in semi-finals:

Canada punches the ticket to the world junior gold medal race

Joshua Roy scored the final goal of the game as Canada beat the Czech Republic 5-2 on Friday to advance to the world junior hockey championship game in Edmonton. Canada (6-0-0) will face Finland (5-1-0) in Saturday’s gold medal game after Finland beat Sweden 1-0 in the semifinals later Friday night. Garand stopped 31 of 33 shots Friday, and one longtime teammate believes he has more to give going into the tournament’s ultimate matchup. “He’s been steady and steady the whole way through. He’s just so focused and ready to go every game,” said Logan Stankoven, who has played three seasons with Garand for the Kamloops Blazers in the Western Hockey League. “There are momentum swings throughout the game and we’re going to need him to make some big stops tomorrow no matter who we play.” Stankoven had a goal and an assist in the semifinal and was one of seven players to get on the scoresheet for Canada. Kent Johnson had a goal and two assists while Connor Bedard, Mason McTavish and Joshua Roy also scored and Olen Zellweger added three helpers. Czech captain Jan Mysak got his team on the board midway through the third period and added an assist to David Jiricek’s power-play tally later in the frame. Jiri Kulich assisted on both goals. Goalkeeper Tomas Suchanek made 22 saves for the Czech Republic (2-3-1) before being replaced by Pavel Cajan to start the third period. Kayan stopped eight shots in relief. Canada celebrates after defeating the Czech Republic on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press) The Czechs were coming off a huge 4-2 upset win over the defending champions Americans in Wednesday’s quarter-finals. Canada earned their spot in the semifinals with a 6-3 win over Switzerland on the same day. The undefeated Canadians jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the second period Friday before the Czechs roared back in the third. The Canadians restored their three-goal advantage with 5:34 left on the clock when Roy drilled a low shot through Kayan’s pads. The Czech Republic had cut the deficit to 4-2 with 12:44 on the power-play in the third. Jiricek unleashed a long bomb from inside the blue line, weaving the puck through traffic and beating Garand glove side. The Czechs got on the board midway through the third when Mysak sent a shot past the Canadian netminder for his fifth goal of the tournament. “They’re a good team and they didn’t get off their game at all,” Stankoven said of the Czechs. Trying to gain some ground in the final period, the Czech Republic switched netminders, replacing Suchanek with Cajan who came on at the second intermission. Canada wasn’t happy with its second period, Garand said. “We didn’t play our best for the first 15 minutes there and then we had a good five minutes,” he said. “We knew it wasn’t our best and we wanted to clean it up and have a good third period.” Canada’s second power-play goal of the day came at 16:21 of the second after the Czech Republic’s Stepan Nemec was called for slashing. McTavish capitalized, blocking a one-meter from the faceoff circle that went off the crossbar, extending Canada’s lead to 4-0. McTavish leads the league in scoring with 15 points (eight goals, seven assists). A penalty for too many men cost the Czechs in the second as well. With Czech forward Tomas Urban in the penalty box, Johnson scooped up a loose puck along the boards and cut it down the ice to Stankoven to break free. The Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year took a few steps and then shot past Suchanek from the chip markers to give Canada a 3-0 lead at 11:28. Excellent setup bypic.twitter.com/zzWMAwlBWt —@HockeyCanada Canada was 2-for-3 on the power play Friday, while the Czech Republic went 1-for-2. The Czechs came into the second with renewed fire and outscored the Canadians 8-0 in the first five minutes of the period. Garand had to make a save 3:55 into the frame after a save gave Jakub Kos of the Czech Republic a great opportunity. Canada took a 2-0 lead into the first intermission after Bedar netted the country’s second goal of the day late in the opening period. Nathan Gaucher sliced ​​the puck through the neutral zone, prompting the 17-year-old phenom for a breakaway. Bedard finished the game with a stunning shot past Suchanek’s glove side, giving the host nation a 2-0 cushion 15:20 into the game. The goal was Bedar’s fourth of the tournament. Suchanek made a great diving stop on Tyson Foerster’s backhand shot midway through the first to keep the game scoreless. The Czech netminder couldn’t get a hand on the puck, though, and Johnson wasted no time blasting it from the top of the crease to open the scoring 10:04 into the opening frame. Johnson has two goals in the tournament – both against the Czechs. Canada isn’t worried about who they’ll face in the gold medal game, coach Dave Cameron said. “They’re both really good teams,” he said. “It should be a tight game. It doesn’t matter who we face, it’s going to be a battle tomorrow.” Canada was without forward Ridly Greig, who suffered an apparent shoulder injury early in the quarter-final win over Switzerland. Riley Kidney is back in the lineup after being a healthy scratch for four straight games.


title: “Canada Will Play Finland In The World Junior Gold Medal Game Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-30” author: “Edgar Kakani”


More than 18 months after losing to the U.S. in the finals at the 2021 world junior hockey championship, he once again has the chance to help Canada capture the tournament’s top prize. “It’s exciting to be in this moment now. But the hardest work is ahead,” Garand said on Friday after his side’s 5-2 semi-final win over the Czech Republic. “We have to do the right things here, rest, recover and be ready to go.” WATCH l Canada defeats Czech Republic in semi-finals:

Canada punches the ticket to the world junior gold medal race

Joshua Roy scored the final goal of the game as Canada beat the Czech Republic 5-2 on Friday to advance to the world junior hockey championship game in Edmonton. Canada (6-0-0) will face Finland (5-1-0) in Saturday’s gold medal game after Finland beat Sweden 1-0 in the semifinals later Friday night. Garand stopped 31 of 33 shots Friday, and one longtime teammate believes he has more to give going into the tournament’s ultimate matchup. “He’s been steady and steady the whole way through. He’s just so focused and ready to go every game,” said Logan Stankoven, who has played three seasons with Garand for the Kamloops Blazers in the Western Hockey League. “There are momentum swings throughout the game and we’re going to need him to make some big stops tomorrow no matter who we play.” Stankoven had a goal and an assist in the semifinal and was one of seven players to get on the scoresheet for Canada. Kent Johnson had a goal and two assists while Connor Bedard, Mason McTavish and Joshua Roy also scored and Olen Zellweger added three helpers. Czech captain Jan Mysak got his team on the board midway through the third period and added an assist to David Jiricek’s power-play tally later in the frame. Jiri Kulich assisted on both goals. Goalkeeper Tomas Suchanek made 22 saves for the Czech Republic (2-3-1) before being replaced by Pavel Cajan to start the third period. Kayan stopped eight shots in relief. Canada celebrates after defeating the Czech Republic on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press) The Czechs were coming off a huge 4-2 upset win over the defending champions Americans in Wednesday’s quarter-finals. Canada earned their spot in the semifinals with a 6-3 win over Switzerland on the same day. The undefeated Canadians jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the second period Friday before the Czechs roared back in the third. The Canadians restored their three-goal advantage with 5:34 left on the clock when Roy drilled a low shot through Kayan’s pads. The Czech Republic had cut the deficit to 4-2 with 12:44 on the power-play in the third. Jiricek unleashed a long bomb from inside the blue line, weaving the puck through traffic and beating Garand glove side. The Czechs got on the board midway through the third when Mysak sent a shot past the Canadian netminder for his fifth goal of the tournament. “They’re a good team and they didn’t get off their game at all,” Stankoven said of the Czechs. Trying to gain some ground in the final period, the Czech Republic switched netminders, replacing Suchanek with Cajan who came on at the second intermission. Canada wasn’t happy with its second period, Garand said. “We didn’t play our best for the first 15 minutes there and then we had a good five minutes,” he said. “We knew it wasn’t our best and we wanted to clean it up and have a good third period.” Canada’s second power-play goal of the day came at 16:21 of the second after the Czech Republic’s Stepan Nemec was called for slashing. McTavish capitalized, blocking a one-meter from the faceoff circle that went off the crossbar, extending Canada’s lead to 4-0. McTavish leads the league in scoring with 15 points (eight goals, seven assists). A penalty for too many men cost the Czechs in the second as well. With Czech forward Tomas Urban in the penalty box, Johnson scooped up a loose puck along the boards and cut it down the ice to Stankoven to break free. The Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year took a few steps and then shot past Suchanek from the chip markers to give Canada a 3-0 lead at 11:28. Excellent setup bypic.twitter.com/zzWMAwlBWt —@HockeyCanada Canada was 2-for-3 on the power play Friday, while the Czech Republic went 1-for-2. The Czechs came into the second with renewed fire and outscored the Canadians 8-0 in the first five minutes of the period. Garand had to make a save 3:55 into the frame after a save gave Jakub Kos of the Czech Republic a great opportunity. Canada took a 2-0 lead into the first intermission after Bedar netted the country’s second goal of the day late in the opening period. Nathan Gaucher sliced ​​the puck through the neutral zone, prompting the 17-year-old phenom for a breakaway. Bedard finished the game with a stunning shot past Suchanek’s glove side, giving the host nation a 2-0 cushion 15:20 into the game. The goal was Bedar’s fourth of the tournament. Suchanek made a great diving stop on Tyson Foerster’s backhand shot midway through the first to keep the game scoreless. The Czech netminder couldn’t get a hand on the puck, though, and Johnson wasted no time blasting it from the top of the crease to open the scoring 10:04 into the opening frame. Johnson has two goals in the tournament – both against the Czechs. Canada isn’t worried about who they’ll face in the gold medal game, coach Dave Cameron said. “They’re both really good teams,” he said. “It should be a tight game. It doesn’t matter who we face, it’s going to be a battle tomorrow.” Canada was without forward Ridly Greig, who suffered an apparent shoulder injury early in the quarter-final win over Switzerland. Riley Kidney is back in the lineup after being a healthy scratch for four straight games.


title: “Canada Will Play Finland In The World Junior Gold Medal Game Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-12” author: “Eleanor Foust”


More than 18 months after losing to the U.S. in the finals at the 2021 world junior hockey championship, he once again has the chance to help Canada capture the tournament’s top prize. “It’s exciting to be in this moment now. But the hardest work is ahead,” Garand said on Friday after his side’s 5-2 semi-final win over the Czech Republic. “We have to do the right things here, rest, recover and be ready to go.” WATCH l Canada defeats Czech Republic in semi-finals:

Canada punches the ticket to the world junior gold medal race

Joshua Roy scored the final goal of the game as Canada beat the Czech Republic 5-2 on Friday to advance to the world junior hockey championship game in Edmonton. Canada (6-0-0) will face Finland (5-1-0) in Saturday’s gold medal game after Finland beat Sweden 1-0 in the semifinals later Friday night. Garand stopped 31 of 33 shots Friday, and one longtime teammate believes he has more to give going into the tournament’s ultimate matchup. “He’s been steady and steady the whole way through. He’s just so focused and ready to go every game,” said Logan Stankoven, who has played three seasons with Garand for the Kamloops Blazers in the Western Hockey League. “There are momentum swings throughout the game and we’re going to need him to make some big stops tomorrow no matter who we play.” Stankoven had a goal and an assist in the semifinal and was one of seven players to get on the scoresheet for Canada. Kent Johnson had a goal and two assists while Connor Bedard, Mason McTavish and Joshua Roy also scored and Olen Zellweger added three helpers. Czech captain Jan Mysak got his team on the board midway through the third period and added an assist to David Jiricek’s power-play tally later in the frame. Jiri Kulich assisted on both goals. Goalkeeper Tomas Suchanek made 22 saves for the Czech Republic (2-3-1) before being replaced by Pavel Cajan to start the third period. Kayan stopped eight shots in relief. Canada celebrates after defeating the Czech Republic on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press) The Czechs were coming off a huge 4-2 upset win over the defending champions Americans in Wednesday’s quarter-finals. Canada earned their spot in the semifinals with a 6-3 win over Switzerland on the same day. The undefeated Canadians jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the second period Friday before the Czechs roared back in the third. The Canadians restored their three-goal advantage with 5:34 left on the clock when Roy drilled a low shot through Kayan’s pads. The Czech Republic had cut the deficit to 4-2 with 12:44 on the power-play in the third. Jiricek unleashed a long bomb from inside the blue line, weaving the puck through traffic and beating Garand glove side. The Czechs got on the board midway through the third when Mysak sent a shot past the Canadian netminder for his fifth goal of the tournament. “They’re a good team and they didn’t get off their game at all,” Stankoven said of the Czechs. Trying to gain some ground in the final period, the Czech Republic switched netminders, replacing Suchanek with Cajan who came on at the second intermission. Canada wasn’t happy with its second period, Garand said. “We didn’t play our best for the first 15 minutes there and then we had a good five minutes,” he said. “We knew it wasn’t our best and we wanted to clean it up and have a good third period.” Canada’s second power-play goal of the day came at 16:21 of the second after the Czech Republic’s Stepan Nemec was called for slashing. McTavish capitalized, blocking a one-meter from the faceoff circle that went off the crossbar, extending Canada’s lead to 4-0. McTavish leads the league in scoring with 15 points (eight goals, seven assists). A penalty for too many men cost the Czechs in the second as well. With Czech forward Tomas Urban in the penalty box, Johnson scooped up a loose puck along the boards and cut it down the ice to Stankoven to break free. The Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year took a few steps and then shot past Suchanek from the chip markers to give Canada a 3-0 lead at 11:28. Excellent setup bypic.twitter.com/zzWMAwlBWt —@HockeyCanada Canada was 2-for-3 on the power play Friday, while the Czech Republic went 1-for-2. The Czechs came into the second with renewed fire and outscored the Canadians 8-0 in the first five minutes of the period. Garand had to make a save 3:55 into the frame after a save gave Jakub Kos of the Czech Republic a great opportunity. Canada took a 2-0 lead into the first intermission after Bedar netted the country’s second goal of the day late in the opening period. Nathan Gaucher sliced ​​the puck through the neutral zone, prompting the 17-year-old phenom for a breakaway. Bedard finished the game with a stunning shot past Suchanek’s glove side, giving the host nation a 2-0 cushion 15:20 into the game. The goal was Bedar’s fourth of the tournament. Suchanek made a great diving stop on Tyson Foerster’s backhand shot midway through the first to keep the game scoreless. The Czech netminder couldn’t get a hand on the puck, though, and Johnson wasted no time blasting it from the top of the crease to open the scoring 10:04 into the opening frame. Johnson has two goals in the tournament – both against the Czechs. Canada isn’t worried about who they’ll face in the gold medal game, coach Dave Cameron said. “They’re both really good teams,” he said. “It should be a tight game. It doesn’t matter who we face, it’s going to be a battle tomorrow.” Canada was without forward Ridly Greig, who suffered an apparent shoulder injury early in the quarter-final win over Switzerland. Riley Kidney is back in the lineup after being a healthy scratch for four straight games.


title: “Canada Will Play Finland In The World Junior Gold Medal Game Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-11” author: “Ashley Tomlin”


More than 18 months after losing to the U.S. in the finals at the 2021 world junior hockey championship, he once again has the chance to help Canada capture the tournament’s top prize. “It’s exciting to be in this moment now. But the hardest work is ahead,” Garand said on Friday after his side’s 5-2 semi-final win over the Czech Republic. “We have to do the right things here, rest, recover and be ready to go.” WATCH l Canada defeats Czech Republic in semi-finals:

Canada punches the ticket to the world junior gold medal race

Joshua Roy scored the final goal of the game as Canada beat the Czech Republic 5-2 on Friday to advance to the world junior hockey championship game in Edmonton. Canada (6-0-0) will face Finland (5-1-0) in Saturday’s gold medal game after Finland beat Sweden 1-0 in the semifinals later Friday night. Garand stopped 31 of 33 shots Friday, and one longtime teammate believes he has more to give going into the tournament’s ultimate matchup. “He’s been steady and steady the whole way through. He’s just so focused and ready to go every game,” said Logan Stankoven, who has played three seasons with Garand for the Kamloops Blazers in the Western Hockey League. “There are momentum swings throughout the game and we’re going to need him to make some big stops tomorrow no matter who we play.” Stankoven had a goal and an assist in the semifinal and was one of seven players to get on the scoresheet for Canada. Kent Johnson had a goal and two assists while Connor Bedard, Mason McTavish and Joshua Roy also scored and Olen Zellweger added three helpers. Czech captain Jan Mysak got his team on the board midway through the third period and added an assist to David Jiricek’s power-play tally later in the frame. Jiri Kulich assisted on both goals. Goalkeeper Tomas Suchanek made 22 saves for the Czech Republic (2-3-1) before being replaced by Pavel Cajan to start the third period. Kayan stopped eight shots in relief. Canada celebrates after defeating the Czech Republic on Friday at Rogers Place in Edmonton. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press) The Czechs were coming off a huge 4-2 upset win over the defending champions Americans in Wednesday’s quarter-finals. Canada earned their spot in the semifinals with a 6-3 win over Switzerland on the same day. The undefeated Canadians jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the second period Friday before the Czechs roared back in the third. The Canadians restored their three-goal advantage with 5:34 left on the clock when Roy drilled a low shot through Kayan’s pads. The Czech Republic had cut the deficit to 4-2 with 12:44 on the power-play in the third. Jiricek unleashed a long bomb from inside the blue line, weaving the puck through traffic and beating Garand glove side. The Czechs got on the board midway through the third when Mysak sent a shot past the Canadian netminder for his fifth goal of the tournament. “They’re a good team and they didn’t get off their game at all,” Stankoven said of the Czechs. Trying to gain some ground in the final period, the Czech Republic switched netminders, replacing Suchanek with Cajan who came on at the second intermission. Canada wasn’t happy with its second period, Garand said. “We didn’t play our best for the first 15 minutes there and then we had a good five minutes,” he said. “We knew it wasn’t our best and we wanted to clean it up and have a good third period.” Canada’s second power-play goal of the day came at 16:21 of the second after the Czech Republic’s Stepan Nemec was called for slashing. McTavish capitalized, blocking a one-meter from the faceoff circle that went off the crossbar, extending Canada’s lead to 4-0. McTavish leads the league in scoring with 15 points (eight goals, seven assists). A penalty for too many men cost the Czechs in the second as well. With Czech forward Tomas Urban in the penalty box, Johnson scooped up a loose puck along the boards and cut it down the ice to Stankoven to break free. The Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year took a few steps and then shot past Suchanek from the chip markers to give Canada a 3-0 lead at 11:28. Excellent setup bypic.twitter.com/zzWMAwlBWt —@HockeyCanada Canada was 2-for-3 on the power play Friday, while the Czech Republic went 1-for-2. The Czechs came into the second with renewed fire and outscored the Canadians 8-0 in the first five minutes of the period. Garand had to make a save 3:55 into the frame after a save gave Jakub Kos of the Czech Republic a great opportunity. Canada took a 2-0 lead into the first intermission after Bedar netted the country’s second goal of the day late in the opening period. Nathan Gaucher sliced ​​the puck through the neutral zone, prompting the 17-year-old phenom for a breakaway. Bedard finished the game with a stunning shot past Suchanek’s glove side, giving the host nation a 2-0 cushion 15:20 into the game. The goal was Bedar’s fourth of the tournament. Suchanek made a great diving stop on Tyson Foerster’s backhand shot midway through the first to keep the game scoreless. The Czech netminder couldn’t get a hand on the puck, though, and Johnson wasted no time blasting it from the top of the crease to open the scoring 10:04 into the opening frame. Johnson has two goals in the tournament – both against the Czechs. Canada isn’t worried about who they’ll face in the gold medal game, coach Dave Cameron said. “They’re both really good teams,” he said. “It should be a tight game. It doesn’t matter who we face, it’s going to be a battle tomorrow.” Canada was without forward Ridly Greig, who suffered an apparent shoulder injury early in the quarter-final win over Switzerland. Riley Kidney is back in the lineup after being a healthy scratch for four straight games.