Shannon Coulter
Canada’s National Men’s Team faces a familiar foe in Finland on Monday as it looks to remain undefeated in the preliminary round at the 2025 IIHF World Championship.
Last Game
Canada had a strong showing against Slovakia on Saturday, shutting out the Slovaks 7-0 to improve to 5-0 at Avicii Arena. 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.
Finland was also in action on Saturday, earning a 2-1 win over Latvia. Juuso Parssinen opened the scoring in the second period and Mikko Lehtonen doubled the Finnish lead on the power play midway through the final frame. Juuse Saros made 34 saves for the win.
Last Meeting
Canada and Finland were preliminary-round opponents one year ago, with the Canadians recording a 5-3 win. The Finns took an early 2-0 lead, but Dylan Cozens and Brandon Tanev tied it up before the first intermission. Jesse Puljujärvi gave Finland another lead before Canada responded with unanswered goals from Owen Power, Brandon Hagel and Dawson Mercer. Jordan Binnington made 29 saves.
What to Watch
Having so many talented and experienced leaders on Canada’s National Men’s Team means a fantastic opportunity for young players to learn from the best. Although there may be almost 20 years between them, Celebrini and Crosby have connected as linemates and teammates. After Celebrini sent a no-look pass to set up Crosby for a goal, the captain returned the favour to set up the 18-year-old for his second goal of the tournament. Together, the duo has six goals and 14 points and are a combined plus-14 in five games.
Finland has six active NHL players on its roster. Up front, the Finns have Eeli Tolvanen, who had 23 goals and 25 points with the Seattle Kraken this season, and Chicago Blackhawks centre Teuvo Teravainen (15-43—58). In between the pipes, Canada will likely face Saros; the 30-year-old started 58 games for the Nashville Predators this season, registering a 2.98 goals-against average and .896 save percentage.
A Look Back
The Canadians and Finns have certainly been familiar foes at Men’s Worlds. In fact, only Sweden (69 GP) has been a more frequent opponent for Canada than Finland, with the teams set to meet for a 56th time in Stockholm.
The last time they faced off in Sweden was back in 1989, with the Canadians opening their tournament with a 6-4 win over the Finns. Canada and Finland have also met six times in the gold medal game (1994, 2007, 2016, 2019, 2021, 2022), with the Canadians holding a 4-2 record in those medal matchups.
All-time record: Canada leads 39-14-2 (3-3 in OT/SO) Canada goals: 285 Finland goals: 125