GAME NOTES: CANADA VS. FINLAND (DEC. 31)
Canada’s National Junior Team closes out the preliminary round—and 2025—on Wednesday night when it faces off with Finland in a first-place showdown in Group B at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship.
Last Game
Canada made it three wins from as many prelim games Monday, flexing its offensive muscle in a 9-1 win over Denmark. Gavin McKenna led the way with a hat trick—the first by a Canadian at the World Juniors since Connor Bedard and Dylan Guenther had three each in a victory over Germany in 2023—while Porter Martone chipped in with a pair of goals and Brady Martin had three assists. In total, 14 skaters recorded at least a point.
The Finns dropped an overtime heartbreaker to Czechia in their last outing, falling 2-1 on Monday afternoon. Emil Hemming provided the lone goal with 19.3 seconds left in the third period to force OT, and Petteri Rimpinen was terrific in goal in a 24-save effort.
Last Meeting
Finland provided the opposition for Canada in the tournament opener a year ago in Ottawa, with the Canadians earning a 4-0 win on Boxing Day. McKenna opened the scoring late in the first period, future No. 1 overall pick Matthew Schaefer finished it in the dying seconds of the third and Carter George was perfect between the pipes to post a 31-save shutout.
What to Watch
McKenna continues to impress with the Maple Leaf on his chest. The pride of Whitehorse is the only player in the tournament with multiple points in every contest, and sits atop the scoring race with seven points (3-4—7) through three games, one ahead of a quintet of players that includes linemate Michael Hage (2-4—6). He showcased his release on his first two goals before tucking home a highlight-reel hat trick marker early in the third period. The reigning CHL Player of the Year after a 129-point season in the Western Hockey League last year, McKenna has simply dominated international competition at every level of the Program of Excellence. Across the World U17 Hockey Challenge, Hlinka Gretzky Cup, IIHF U18 World Championship and two World Juniors, he has now racked up 42 points (22-20—42) in just 27 games.
As they typically are at the World Juniors, the Finns are flush with talent. Fourteen players are property of NHL teams, although only one was a first-round selection—Hemming went 29th overall to the Dallas Stars in 2024. They’ve also got experience, with 11 players returning from the team that lost the gold medal game in overtime to the United States a year ago in Ottawa. But through three games, it’s not an NHL prospect or a returnee helping lead the charge offensively. Jasper Kuhta, who has averaged almost a point per game with the OHL’s Ottawa 67’s this season (17-13—30 in 32 GP), sits tied for ninth in tournament scoring with a goal and four assists through three games. He’s right alongside Philadelphia Flyers draft pick (107th overall in 2024) Heikki Ruohonen, a 2025 silver medallist and Harvard University forward who has an identical stat line.
Be There Next Year!
The holiday hockey tradition returns to Canadian ice a year from now when Edmonton and Red Deer host the 2027 IIHF World Junior Championship. Fans interested in ticket packages can register until Jan. 6 for the Priority Ticket Draw at HockeyCanada.ca/PriorityDraw.
A Look Back
Going all the way back to the first World Juniors in 1977, only the United States (50 games played) has been a more frequent foe for Canada than the Finns (43).
After alternating wins and losses through the mid-to-late-2010s, Canada has taken control of the head-to-head history, winning each of the last six meetings. That includes four prelim victories, a shutout win for the Canadians in the 2020 semifinals and the memorable 2022 gold medal game in Edmonton, when Kent Johnson netted the golden goal in overtime for the Canadians.
All-time record: Canada leads 28-9-6 (1-1 in OT/SO) Canada goals: 172 Finland goals: 107
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