It’s the penultimate game of the preliminary round for Canada’s National Men’s Team when it faces Slovakia on Sunday at the 2026 IIHF World Championship.
Last Game
Canada improved to 5-0 on Friday with a 3-1 victory over Slovenia. Emmitt Finnie recorded his first international goal and assist with Team Canada, earning player of the game honours. Dylan Cozens and Denton Mateychuk rounded out the scoring, and Jet Greaves made 13 saves for his third win in Fribourg.
Slovakia fell to Czechia in a close 3-2 game on Saturday for its first loss of the tournament. Marek Hrivik and Martin Chromiak scored for the Slovaks in the second period, and Samuel Hlavaj made 15 saves.
Last Meeting
Canada had a strong showing against Slovakia last year in the preliminary round, shutting out the Slovaks 7-0. Sidney Crosby recorded two goals and two assists, connecting with linemate Macklin Celebrini (1-2—3) twice during the game. Nathan MacKinnon scored twice, Brandon Montour and Tyson Foerster rounded out the scoring, and Jordan Binnington made 14 saves in his second start.
What to Watch
His last goal was scored against Italy back on May 16, but captain Celebrini continues to rack up assists and strong offensive scoring chances. The 19-year-old leads Canada with seven points (2-5—7)—making him tied for eighth overall for the tournament’s scoring leaders—and has 20 shot attempts alongside Mark Scheifele through five games. Crosby is close behind Celebrini with six assists so far, and continues to seek his first goal of the tournament.
Calgary Flames fans are well aquainted with Martin Pospisil. The 26-year-old is playing with his older brother, Kristian, in Fribourg. Both brothers have been contributing to Slovakia’s offence—Martin has a goal and four points while Kristian has two goals and an assist. Filip Mesar may sound familiar for World Juniors fans—he recorded four goals and 15 points (4-11—15) over three editions of the tournament. The 22-year-old winger recently completed his second season with the AHL’s Laval Rocket, recording nine goals and 27 points. He has a goal and two assists so far at Men’s Worlds.
A Look Back
Canada has won the last seven meetings with Slovakia since 2014, and 15 of the 18 all-time meetings going back to 1996 when Slovakia returned to the Top Division after the dissolution of Czechoslovakia.
Although Canada has an advantage in goal differential, the Slovaks can keep these games close. In 2019, the Canadians edged Slovakia in a thrilling 6-5 win . The game appeared destined for overtime before Mark Stone—celebrating his 27th birthday—recorded the game-winning goal on a power play with 1.8 seconds remaining in regulation.
All-time record: Canada leads 15-2-2 (1-0 in OT/SO) Canada goals: 78 Slovakia goals: 43
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