ZÜRICH, Switzerland – Canada's National Men's Team finished fourth at the 2026 IIHF World Championship after falling 3-2 to Norway in overtime in the bronze medal game at Swiss Life Arena on Sunday.
Norway opened the scoring 6:44 into the game and increased their lead to 2-0 in the second period before Robert Thomas (Aurora, ON/St. Louis, NHL) fired home a shot to get Canada on the board with just over a minute to play in the third. Thomas netted his second of the game just 1:08 later and with eight seconds remaining to tie the game 2-2 and force overtime, but the Norwegians found the back of the net 3:32 into the extra frame.
“It took too long to get to our game today. We got to it in stretches towards the end of the second and in the third period, but it was not a complete 60-minute effort for our group. I give [Norway] a lot of credit because they played with a lot of pride and commitment,” said head coach Misha Donksov (London, ON). “Our team had a lot of great people, outstanding leadership and world-class hockey players. I was very fortunate to work with three incredible NHL head coaches at this tournament, and our entire group made a lot of great memories, but unfortunately it was not the way we wanted it to end.”
Jet Greaves (Cambridge, ON/Columbus, NHL) made 21 saves, including multiple stops in the third period to keep the game at 2-0, and finished the tournament with a .919 save percentage and 1.88 goals-against average.
A full game summary can be found at HockeyCanada.ca.
Captain Macklin Celebrini (North Vancouver, BC/San Jose, NHL), who assisted on Thomas’ game-tying goal, finished the tournament as Canada’s leading scorer with 14 points (6-8—14), and ranked second in tournament scoring before the gold medal game.
“[Norway] played a great game, and they came out hard just like we thought they were going to. When you look back on the tournament, I feel like we had a little more to give, and it is unfortunate the way that it ended,” Celebrini said. “We were never going to give up, and we were going to try to find a way to get a goal as the game went on. I have to give credit to our group for the way we battled late in the game, but it is tough that we could not get the result we wanted.”
Canada finished the preliminary round in first place in Group B after earning wins over Sweden, Italy, Denmark, Norway, Slovenia, Slovakia and Czechia. It booked a spot in the semifinals with a 4-0 win over the United States before falling to Finland 4-2 on Saturday.
Since 1931, Canada has collected 28 gold medals at the IIHF World Championship, to go along with 16 silver and seven bronze.
For more information on Hockey Canada and Canada’s National Men’s Team, please visit HockeyCanada.ca, or follow along through social media on Facebook, X, Instagram and TikTok.
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