IIHF World Championship roundup: Shooutout victory for Czech Republic, Germany open with win

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IIHF World Championship roundup: Shooutout victory for Czech Republic, Germany open with win

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Slovakia's Milos Kelemen, left, and Moritz Muller of Germany battle for the puck
Slovakia's Milos Kelemen, left, and Moritz Muller of Germany battle for the puckProfimedia
The IIHF World Championship got underway in the Czech Republic on Friday with Slovakia opening the tournament against Germany in Ostrava, whilst the hosts kicked off their campaign against Norway in Prague. Flashscore will bring you all the action from the tournament throughout the 12 days and here is what happened on day one.

Czech Republic 0 Finland 0 (Czech Republic win shootout 2-0)

The Czech hockey players entered the World Championship with a 1-0 win over Finland after a shootout. The shootout was decided by forward Ondrej Kase in front of 17,413 spectators in Prague's O2 Arena, whilst goaltender Lukas Dostal kept a clean sheet in his fourth game for the national team.

The Czechs beat the Finns for the first time at a major international event since winning 4-3 after a shootout at the 2017 World Championships in Paris. Since then, they lost to them in the quarter-finals of the 2021 World Championships in Riga 0-1 and the year before in Tampere 3-0.

Watch the highlights with Flashscore.

Sweden 5 USA 2

Sweden entered the World Championship in Ostrava with a 5-2 victory over the USA. Forward Joel Eriksson Ek contributed to the win with two goals and an assist in the clash of the main favourites in Group B.

The Americans were more active in the game, but the Swedes, however, created more chances. Rasmus Dahlin could have opened the scoring in the fourth minute. It wasn't until the eighth minute when Eriksson Ek scored on a signaled powerplay.

Seth Jones could have equalised at the start of the second period, but only hit the bar as the Americans pushed forward, but their opponents showed more efficiency as Lucas Raymond added a second goal in the 24th minute.

Carl Grundstrom could have scored another soon after, but from a promising position he was not accurate.

Team USA then missed a good opportunity on the first powerplay of the game, but in the 33rd minute Zach Werenski reduced the deficit after Matthew Boldy's shot hit the top corner of Gustavsson's net.

Then Joel Farabee or Brock Nelson could have equalised, but they failed to do so as the Swedes came through again, with Marcus Johansson scoring the third goal.

The Americans got back in touch early in the third when Nelson gave Gustavsson no chance after a pass from behind the net. Cole Caufield or Brady Tkachuk could have tied the game on the ensuing powerplay, but neither of them shot accurately.

The Americans had a perfect chance to tie the game when Eriksson Ek was sent off in the 58th minute, but they didn't add a third goal. They called off the goalie after one minute of play allowing Sweden to score for the fourth time. The powerplay continued after that and the Swedes added a fifth goal.

Watch the highlights from the game with Flashscore.

Slovakia 4 Germany 6

The Slovak hockey team entered the World Championship in Ostrava with a 6-4 defeat against Germany.

Coach Craig Ramsay's charges erased a two-goal deficit against the current silver medalists, but lost to them for the fifth time in a row. Leonhard Pfoderl contributed a goal and two assists to Germany's win in Group B, while Yasin Ehliz had three assists.

The Slovaks were the more active scorers in the first period, but the Germans came close to scoring right from the start. The netminder Stanislav Skorvanek, who will defend the colours of Hradec Kralove next season, was able to keep a clean slate. In the sixth minute, he was helped by the bar. The Slovaks also had a promising chance, but Matus Sukel's shot was blocked by Philipp Grubauer.

After several missed opportunities on both sides, the score changed only in the powerplay. Sukel and Peter Ceresnak were in the penalty box and the Germans took advantage of a long five-on-three powerplay. Dominik Kahun scored after a quick break.

The Slovak team tried to overturn the goal of Czech-born Kahun with a coach's challenge, citing illegal obstruction of the goalie, but they were unsuccessful with the referees and continued to play with three players. This time they defended for two full minutes, but Jonas Muller scored on a shot from the blue line on a classic powerplay.

Coach Ramsay's charges recovered from the referee's call with Marek Hrivik reduced the deficit with a shot from an angle and Martin Fehervary equalised in the 39th minute.

The Germans took the lead back at the end of the second period, with 29 seconds to go, Kalble surprising Skorvanek from the blue line.

In the 45th minute, Marc Michaelis, who was left free by the Slovak defence, brought Germany closer to victory with a goal. After Frederik Tiffels' sending off, Grubauer was outmuscled for the second time by the incisive Hrivik, but his goal was disallowed after a video review. Ceresnak lost the puck at the blue line and the puck went into the middle zone, seeing the goal chalked off for an offside.

Five minutes before the end of regulation time, Slovakia managed to reduce the score to 4-3 when Libor Hudacek scored after Juraj Slafkovsky's assist. But the Germans responded in a flash and Pfoderl gave them back the two-goal lead. Tobias Eder scored shorthanded on a Slovak powerplay before Sukel had the last word with 15 seconds left for what would only be a consolation goal.

Watch the video highlights from the game here.

Switzerland 5 Norway 2

The Swiss hockey team opened the World Championship in Prague with a 5-2 win over Norway - in front of 16,617 spectators at the O2 Arena, they decided the game with three goals in the second period.

Defenseman Romain Loeffel and forward Nino Niederreiter helped Patrick Fischer's team to success with a goal and an assist.

The Swiss, with five NHL reinforcements in the line-up, outshot their opponents 15-5 in the first period, but the score was tied 1-1. Sven Andrighetto opened the scoring at 11:05 with a pass from Niederreiter who shot from the right  into the top opposite corner of Jonas Arntzen's net.

The Norwegians made the most of the deficit and answered in the 15th minute. Forty-year-old Patrick Thoresen found Markus Vikingstad from the back of the left circle, who beat Leonardo Genoni. Late in the opening period, New York Rangers forward Mats Zuccarello, the only Norwegian representative in the NHL, scored from between the circles, as did Thoresen.

In the 25th minute, Loeffel restored Switzerland's lead with a shot from the blue line against the right post. Four minutes later, the Swiss were up by two goals. Nashville's captain and star Roman Josi found Sven Senteler between the circles after a goalmouth scramble and sent the puck between Arntzen's legs. At 33:30, it was 4-1.

Gaetan Haas intercepted an errant pass from Isak Hansen and found Tristan Scherwey, who redirected the puck past the Norwegian goalie.

In the 52nd minute, Niederreiter added the fifth Swiss goal with a backhand finish on a power play when Noah Steen was sent off. The puck deflected to him from record holder Andres Ambuhl, who improved to 62 points on 28 goals and 34 assists in his 19th appearance at the 132nd World Championship.

The score was evened up 64 seconds before the end on a penalty by Phillip Kurashev by 18-year-old talent Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, who finished off a combination of Zuccarello and Thoresen in his first game at the World Championship.

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