Canada faces Russia in Semis on Friday after a 6-0 win over Slovakia

Winter Universiade men’s hockey: Canada blanks Slovakia in quarters, to face Russia in semis

20131214_Hockey_CANvsKAZ_Federico_Modica

Photo credit Federico Modica

TRENTINO, Italy (CIS) – Tyler Carroll scored two goals while Chris Culligan and Éric Faille tallied three points apiece as the Canadian men’s hockey team qualified for the semifinals at the Winter Universiade thanks to a 6-0 quarter-final win over Slovakia, Wednesday night.

The result sets up yet another meeting at the biennial tournament between Canada and archrival Russia, Friday at 10:30 a.m. EST (4:30 p.m. Trentino) in the early Final Four matchup. The second semi will see the United States battle Kazakhstan at 2:30 p.m. EST. Both games are streamed live at www.fisu.tv.

In today’s other quarter-finals, Russia (4-0) beat the Czech Republic 5-1, the USA (3-1) shut out Italy 5-0 and Kazakhstan (4-0) dominated Latvia 6-1.

The Canadians and Russians – the two-time defending champions – have met at each of the last four FISU tourneys. Russia prevailed 4-2 in the 2011 semis, 4-2 in the 2009 gold-medal match and 6-0 in pool play in 2005, while the Canucks triumphed 3-1 in the 2007 final to capture their third Universiade title.

In 13 previous appearances at the competition, Canada has reached the podium 12 times, including three gold medals (2007, 1991, 1981), three silver and six bronze.

“Any time you get Canada and Russia, it’s going to be great for hockey fans,” said Team Canada head coach Gardiner MacDougall from the reigning CIS champion University of New Brunswick. “You have two very good teams and it will be exciting.

“The whole point of this tournament is to get better every game and it’s not always going to be a straight line. Maybe the performance in the last game allowed us to go up two steps today instead of one. We had more urgency, were more business-like. We played the way we have to play, we have to play Canadian hockey but we have to be disciplined and take less penalties. Special teams hurt us the last game, special teams won us the game tonight.”

After dropping a 4-2 decision to Kazakhstan on Monday in their third and last preliminary round contest, the Atlantic University Sport all-stars rebounded with a solid all-around game against Slovakia.

The Red & White outshot its rivals 47-17 overall, including 16-5 in the first period, 16-5 in the second and 15-7 in the third, and was leading 3-0 after 20 minutes and 4-0 heading into the second intermission.

Liam Heelis, an Acadia University forward from Georgetown, Ont., opened the scoring on the power play 7:09 into the duel.

Carroll, who skates for UNB and hails from Strathroy, Ont., and Chris Desousa of UPEI then gave Canada a comfortable 3-0 cushion with two goals in a span of 22 seconds, at 15:00 and 15:22.
Lucas Bloodoff of Saint Mary’s made it 4-0 late in the second, with Culligan and Carroll rounding out the scoring midway through the third.

It was the first of the tournament for UNB’s Culligan, the team captain from Howie Center, N.S., who finished with a goal and two assists. Faille, a Moncton forward from Lachine, Que., racked up three helpers.

While the Canadians were held to one goal in seven man advantages, the penalty killing unit was perfect on nine occasions, including a trio of 5-on-3 situations.

Making his second start of the competition, Saint Mary’s netminder Anthony Peters turned aside 17 shots to earn the shutout. His opponent Igor Cibula was solid in a losing effort with 41 saves.

GAME NOTES: UNB’s Nick MacNeil (6-3-9) picked up an assist against Slovakia and is currently tied with Kazakhstan’s Yevgeniy Rymarev (5-4-9) for the tournament scoring lead with nine points… A trio of Canadians shares third place with eight points, including Faille (4-4-8), Acadia’s Mike Cazzola (2-6-8) and StFX’s Michael Kirkpatrick (2-6-8)… Canada’s three triumphs in Universiade men’s hockey came courtesy of AUS standouts in 2007 (Turin, Italy), the senior national team in 1991 (Sapporo, Japan) and the University of Alberta Golden Bears in 1981 (Jaca, Spain).

Team Canada website: http://english.cis-sic.ca/universiade/winter/2013/index
Trentino 2013 website: http://www.universiadetrentino.org/en

TEAM CANADA SCHEDULE & RESULTS (all times local / 6 hours ahead of EST)

Dec. 10 (20:00): Canada 12, Japan 1
Dec. 13 (20:00): Canada 11, Ukraine 0
Dec. 15 (20:00): Kazakhstan 4, Canada 2
Dec. 18 (20:00): Canada 6, Slovakia 0 (quarter-final)
Dec. 20 (16:30): Canada vs. Russia (semifinal)
Dec. 21 (10:30): Bronze
Dec. 21 (14:30): Final

SCORING SUMMARY

Canada 6, Slovakia 0

FIRST PERIOD

SCORING:
1. CAN Liam Heelis (2) (Nick MacNeil), 7:09 PP
2. CAN Tyler Carroll (2) (Chris Culligan, Éric Faille), 15:00
3. CAN Chris Desousa (1) (Cory Tanaka, Michael Kirkpatrick), 15:22

PENALTIES:
Martin Kalinac (SVK) hooking, 1:33;
Jakub Loydl (SVK) hooking, 7:02;
Miroslav Habsuda (SVK) charging, 11:09;
Martin Baran (SVK) tripping, 15:37;
Chris Desousa (CAN) hooking, 17:49;
Simon Lacroix (CAN) slashing, 18:14.

SECOND PERIOD

SCORING:
4. CAN Lucas Bloodoff (2) (Cory Tanaka, Michael Kirkpatrick), 15:45

PENALTIES:
Tyler Carroll (CAN) tripping, 4:16;
Cory Tanaka (CAN) tripping, 4:55;
Éric Faille (CAN) delay of game, 17:09;
Matthew Maione (CAN) delay of game, 17:15.

THIRD PERIOD

SCORING:
5. CAN Chris Culligan (1) (Alex Wall, Éric Faille), 9:15
6. CAN Tyler Carroll (3) (Éric Faille, Chris Culligan), 12:20

PENALTIES:
Miroslav Habsuda (SVK) slashing, 2:06;
Miroslav Habsuda (SVK) clipping, 7:21;
Simon Lacroix (CAN) slashing, 8:55;
Peter Cizek (SVK) hooking, 13:04;
Éric Faille (CAN) diving, 13:04;
Jakub Loydl (SVK) hooking, 16:55;
Lucas Bloodoff (CAN) slashing, 19:29.

GOALS (by period)
CAN: 3-1-2: 6
SVK: 0-0-0: 0

SHOTS ON GOAL (by period)
CAN: 16-16-15: 47
SVK: 5-5-7: 17

POWER PLAY:
CAN: 1-7
SVK: 0-9

GOALTENDERS
CAN – Anthony Peters (W, 2-0, 17 shots, 17 saves, 0 GA, 60:00)
SVK – Igor Cibula (L, 2-1, 47 shots, 41 saves, 6 GA, 60:00)

REFEREE: Ville Johannes Stigell (FIN)
LINESMEN: Simone Lega (ITA), Lauri Nikulainen (FIN)
ATTENDANCE: –
START: 20:00
END: 22:12
LENGTH: 2:12

POOL STANDINGS (FINAL)

Pool A
GP W OTW OTL L GF GA PTS
1. Italy 3 2 0 0 1 11 7 6
2. USA 3 1 1 0 1 6 7 5
3. Latvia 3 1 0 1 1 9 9 4
4. Sweden 3 1 0 0 2 6 9 3

Pool B
1. Russia 3 3 0 0 0 20 2 9
2. Slovakia 3 1 1 0 1 15 7 5
3. Czech Rep. 3 1 0 1 1 15 10 4
4. Great Britain 3 0 0 0 3 0 31 0

Pool C
1. Kazakhstan 3 3 0 0 0 11 5 9
2. Canada 3 2 0 0 1 25 5 6
4. Ukraine 3 0 1 0 2 6 18 2
3. Japan 3 0 0 1 2 5 19 1

Scoring system:
3 points for a win in regulation
2 points for a win in overtime or shootout
1 point for a loss in overtime or shootout

Legend: W (win), OTW (OT win), OTL (OT loss), L (loss)

About the Winter Universiade

The Winter Universiade is a biennial international multi-sport event open to competitors who are at least 17 and less than 28 years of age as of January 1 in the year of the Games. Participants must be full-time students at a post-secondary institution (university, college, CEGEP) or have graduated from a post-secondary institution in the year preceding the event. The competition program of the Trentino Universiade includes alpine skiing, biathlon, cross-country skiing, curling, figure skating, freestyle skiing, ice hockey (women & men), nordic combined, ski jumping, snowboarding and speed skating (short & long track).

About Canadian Interuniversity Sport

Canadian Interuniversity Sport is the national governing body of university sport in Canada. Every year, 11,000 student-athletes and 700 coaches from 55 universities and four regional associations vie for 21 national championships in 12 different sports. CIS also provides high performance international opportunities for Canadian student-athletes at Winter and Summer Universiades, as well as numerous world university championships. For further information, visit www.cis-sic.ca or follow us on:

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