• Sweden stays perfect

    From IIHF News@1:266/404 to All on Tue May 8 16:02:05 2018
    Sweden maintained its 100% record in Group A, despatching France with a routine
    4-0 victory in Copenhagen.

    Goals from Rickard Rakell, Mikael Backlund, Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Elias Pettersson put the Tre Kronor on top. Swedish goalie Anders Nilsson, making his
    first start of the tournament, made 14 saves as the French endured a second blank game out of three.

    After France's 0-7 loss against Russia, head coach Dave Henderson insisted that
    the only way his team could hope to compete with the game's top teams was to keep the scoreline tight. Against Sweden - many people's pick to top the Russians in Copenhagen - hopes of frustrating the opposing offence evaporated in just 24 seconds.

    That was all the time it took for the Swedes to get in front with Rakell again on the scoresheet. Adam Larsson's cross-ice pass found the forward at the back door and Ronan Quemener was beaten by the first shot he faced.

    Part of the French trouble against Russia was a lack of strong defence. Too often players were given time and space in front of the net. The same thing happened again here in the sixth minute when Backlund got away from Antonin Manavian to divert Pettersson's feed through the five-hole.

    "It was nice to get a goal that quick. It gave us a little confidence," goalscorer Rakell said. "But maybe we relaxed a little too much after the second goal. It's a long tournament. You're going to have ups and downs. Hopefully we can see the positives in this game. We didn't let a goal in, and we didn't give them too many chances. When they had some, our goalie played really well. All we can do right now is just take the win and move forward."

    There wasn't much happening for the French offence at this stage: les Bleus managed just four shots on goal in the first period, although Florian Douay almost snatched a short-handed goal when he got a look at Nilsson's net but shot high and wide.

    The second period was more competitive, with France's Guillaume Leclerc at the heart of many of the key incidents. First he fashioned the best chance of the game for the French, firing in a wrist shot that had Nilsson scrambled to trap
    the puck under pressure from Nicolas Ritz. Next, he found himself on the receiving end of a monster hit from Larsson as he looked to take play into the
    Swedish zone. Adding insult to injury, Larsson collected an assist as the play went to the other end of the ice and Ekman-Larsson smashed home a shot from the
    left-hand face-off spot.

    The French were incensed, convinced there should have been a penalty call on Larsson, and that bad blood boiled over later in the frame. Ritz and Larsson scrapped in centre ice, while Leclerc took the opportunity to have a swing at Magnus Paarjavi out on the boards. All four players sat out minor penalties.

    In the final stanza, Sweden demonstrated its game management. France was held at arm's length as the Tre Kronor moved on to nine points and kept pace with Russia at the top of the table. There was still time for one more goal, with Pettersson showing great composure to pause while Thomas Thiry committed himself. Once the defenceman had moved, Pettersson duly despatched a wrist shot
    beyond Quemener to wrap up the scoring.

    ANDY POTTS

    http://https://www.new-iihf.com/en/events/2018/wm/news/2514/sweden-stays-perfect-with-win-over-france
    --- SBBSecho 3.04-Win32
    * Origin: TequilaMockingbird Online - Toms River, NJ (1:266/404)