Let the tournament begin! Canada’s National Men’s Team takes on Sweden to open the preliminary round Friday at the 2026 IIHF World Championship in Switzerland, beginning its quest for a 29th gold medal.
Last Game
Canada wrapped up a perfect pre-tournament schedule with a 3-1 win over Hungary on Wednesday. Mark Scheifele and Dylan Cozens found the back of the net on the power play early in the first period, and John Tavares rounded out the scoring with 4:40 left in the opening frame.
Sweden fell 5-1 to Finland in pre-tournament action Sunday. Erik Brännström tied the game midway through the first period, with an assist from Liam Öhgren. Arvid Söderblom made 14 saves for Sweden, including a save on a penalty shot from Patrik Puistola.
Last Meeting
Canada wrapped up the preliminary round a year ago with a 5-3 win over Sweden to earn top spot in Group A. Travis Sanheim got Canada on the board only 18 seconds into the game, with Tyson Foerster and Ryan O’Reilly making it a 3-1 lead after 20 minutes. Macklin Celebrini buried a pass from Sidney Crosby for the game-winning goal and Nathan MacKinnon scored early in the third period.
What to Watch
From new faces to seasoned veterans, this Canadian team has something for everyone. The team’s latest addition was Sidney Crosby, back wearing the Maple Leaf after representing Canada at the Olympics in February and at last year’s Men’s Worlds in Sweden. Young superstar Macklin Celebrini returns for his second Men’s Worlds appearance and sported the ‘C’ for both of Canada’s pre-tournament games after putting up 45 goals and 115 points with the San Jose Sharks this season. Ryan O’Reilly is the all-time leader for games played by a Canadian at the IIHF World Championship (63), passing Ryan Smyth last year. And in addition to the experience on the roster, three Canadians will make their international debuts in Switzerland: Dylan DeMelo, Emmitt Finnie and Jet Greaves.
The Swedish roster boasts 12 NHLers, down from the 21 who won bronze on home ice last year. Leading the way offensively is Lucas Raymond—the winger had 25 goals and 76 points with the Detroit Red Wings this season—and veterans Mattias Ekholm (Edmonton) and Oliver Ekman Larsson (Toronto) lead the group on the blue line. The Swedes also have an injection of youth, with four players on the roster who helped win World Juniors gold in January—goaltender Love Härenstam and forwards Viggo Björck, Anton Frondell and Ivar Stenberg. There will be extra eyes on Stenberg and Björck, who ranked first and fourth, respectively, among international skater in the final NHL Central Scouting ranking and project to go very early in the 2026 NHL Draft.
A Look Back
No opponent has been a more frequent foe for Canada at the IIHF World Championship than Sweden; Friday’s game will mark the 71th meeting between the longtime rivals, dating back to a scoreless tie in 1931.
Despite the long history, this will be the first time the Canadians and Swedes meet in a tournament opener since the Trail Smoke Eaters downed Sweden 6-1 all the way back in 1961.
All-time record: Canada leads 37-28-5 (3-3 in OT/SO) Canada goals: 249 Sweden goals: 198
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