There was late drama, as the Finns scored three goals in the third period to pull within a goal, before Canada’s captain Sidney Crosby scored an empty-net goal to seal the deal.
The win pushes Canada’s round-robin point total to five, putting them out of reach of Sweden:
Here are grades for Canada and Finland, including the biggest takeaways, the key player to watch in the next game for Canada and lingering questions for both countries.
Grading the teams
Canada: A-
This was the Canada we expected to see at 4 Nations. The Canadians were immediately engaged on both sides of the puck and finally got their star-studded offense rolling with three first period goals from Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and Brayden Point.
Having Cale Makar back in the lineup — after he missed Saturday’s matchup against the U.S. with an illness — gave the Canadians’ defense a noted boost, as he and Colorado teammate Devon Toews were excellent anchoring the team’s blue line.
Coach Jon Cooper put Jordan Binnington back in net for this one, and Binnington rewarded his coach’s confidence with a solid showing between the pipes. And Cooper’s changes to his forward groups — particularly creating a top line of McDavid, Point and Mark Stone — paid off with a more balanced attack.
The key, though, was that Canada (mostly) didn’t make the sort of costly mistakes (i.e. turnovers) they did against Sweden and the U.S. Canada was solid in every aspect and appeared to be at their most dangerous heading into a final clash with the Americans.
Finland: C+
The Finns looked deflated when McDavid scored Canada’s opening goal early in the first period, and they could never quite reignite the swagger that carried them past Sweden. At least not until the game’s final minutes, when they scored a pair of 6-on-5 goals to cut the Canadian lead to 4-3.
But the surge — driven by Mikael Granlund, scoring twice in the final three minutes — was too late for Finland. By the time Kevin Lankinen had allowed four goals (and was replaced by Juuse Saros) in the second period, Finland was in an hole against an overwhelming amount of talent on the other side.
The Finns’ smothering forecheck had been their calling card throughout 4 Nations play, but Canada also countered with their best defense showing of the tournament, taking away opportunities for Finland to establish extensive zone time. What pockets of pressure Finland did generate around Binnington produced nothing on the scoresheet. Even Finland’s power play in the second period that might have sparked some momentum came up empty.
In the end, Canada made the most of its opportunities when Finland simply could not.
What we learned
Canada finds chemistry — and balance
Canada managed just one goal against the U.S. despite a star-studded lineup of offensive firepower. So, coach Jon Cooper made adjustments against Finland to start maximizing more of the team’s talent, and it worked — Canada’s new top line of Connor McDavid, Mark Stone and Braydon Point produced two of the the game’s first three goals (courtesy of McDavid and Point), and MacKinnon added two goals from the second line.
That sort of scoring explosion is exactly what Canada needed to create confidence and take control from the get-go. In a short event like this, it’s not always obvious how players will catch on with one another. Even if it took a few games, tapping into the correct combinations now is everything Canada needed to feel confident going into the final.
The Canadian way on display
Cooper spoke about his team’s identity before Monday’s game and emphasized that his team shouldn’t try to manufacture something from nothing — which has come back to hurt them in previous games. Canada showed against Finland how much difference discipline and patience can make.
Throughout much of the game, Canada wasn’t forcing plays and turning pucks over. There was a clear commitment to highlighting their two-way game, back-checking and breaking the puck out well in transition. The details Canada had skimmed over before were their strength against Finland, and it was how the team prevented the furious Finnish forecheck from becoming a problem.
Now, Canada did get away from those intricacies in the final minutes when Finland pushed back with a pair of goals. But there was also an urgency in Canada’s overall performance in this elimination game that bodes well for what’s to come against the U.S. There was no saving it for the third period; Canada was ready to play from the start and injected each shift with that energy.
Player to watch for the final
Canada’s goaltending was under heavy scrutiny well before the tournament started. And Binnington saved his best performance — so far — for Canada’s first elimination game. He was excellent when it counted most against Finland — particularly at the end of the second period — and what Canada needs is for Binnington to hit copy/paste on that come Thursday night.
Cooper has said repeatedly that Binnington has gotten the call because he gives Canada a chance to win. But it’s not just how many saves Binnington makes against the Americans; it’s about making the timely stops when they matter most.
And yes, Binnington did give up two 6-on-5 goals late to Finland, but that was also a product of the players in front of him. Bend, don’t break. Binnington has improved game-over-game at 4 Nations so far. Canada must hope he has saved the best for last — especially if Connor Hellebuyck turns up in Vezina Trophy-worthy form at the other end.
Lingering questions
Can Canada crack Connor Hellebuyck?
Canada put its offensive prowess on display early against Finland to take a 4-0 lead, but then didn’t score again until Sidney Crosby’s empty-net goal in the game’s final seconds. Did Canada start preserving its lead too soon when they should have kept pressing for more? It’s possible. And that’s not the way to beat Team USA.
Hellebuyck looked strong as ever in the first meeting between these teams, and after McDavid registered the game’s first goal Saturday night, there was nothing getting past the USA’s netminder.
It’s imperative that Canada’s big boys make Hellebuyck uncomfortable from the start and capitalize on their opportunities; there don’t project to be many.
Plus, Canada’s role players need to step up like the U.S.’s Dylan Larkin did on Saturday. It’s a whole team effort up front that will put Canada over the top. Can they provide it and take some pressure off Binnington?
What difference will a healthy defense make for Finland at the Olympics?
The Finns’ blue line took several hits as Miro Heiskanen, Rasmus Ristolainen and Jani Hakanpaa were ruled out prior to the tournament with injuries. Heiskanen was an especially tough loss for Finland, but if he’s available for 2026 international play, that’s a massive advantage (in the same way Canada having Makar back on Monday was for them).
Because it’s that side of the puck where Finland shines brightest — they can put on defensive clinics that stifle some of the world’s best skaters (we saw that in full force in their first period against the U.S. last week).
Finland can only wonder “what if” now about their showing at 4 Nations. The results could be quite different for them in a year’s time with better luck on the injury front.
TAMPA, Fla. — Matthew Tkachuk made his long-awaited return to the lineup and was back to his old self quickly on Tuesday night for the Florida Panthers, who opened this postseason the way they ended last postseason: With a win.
Playing for the first time in more than two months after dealing with a lower-body injury, Tkachuk scored two second-period goals in his return game, as the Panthers handled the rival Tampa Bay Lightning6-2 in this Eastern Conference first-round series opener at Amalie Arena.
Those two goals were both of the power-play variety, the first putting Florida up 4-1 — the second goal for the Panthers in a 14-second span — and the next one pushing the lead to 5-1 midway through the second period.
It was just like old times: Tkachuk got twisted up with Tampa Bay’s Brandon Hagel — someone he fought during the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament — after one whistle, took the game’s first penalty on a roughing call (leading to Tampa Bay’s first goal), then made sure his name was all over the score sheet.
Florida coach Paul Maurice, in his in-game, bench interview with ESPN’s Emily Kaplan, said he was comfortable with what he was seeing from Tkachuk in his first game back and expected him to “be the difference-maker” for the Panthers.
“That’s what he is for us,” Maurice said. “He’s got an incredible set of hands, got an incredible gift for the emotional needs of a game, when you need a hit, when you need a big play. He’s been great for us.”
Sam Bennett and Sam Reinhart also scored for the Panthers, and veteran defenseman Nate Schmidt, not known for his offense, added two more goals, as Florida, which won the Stanley Cup last June, hammered an Atlantic Division foe in front of a sellout crowd, setting up an all-important Game 2 on Thursday.
Tampa Bay goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy will need to be sharper in that game, after a Tuesday performance to forget. The two-time Stanley Cup winner allowed all six goals on just 16 shots, closing with a .625 save percentage. Across the ice, Florida’s Sergei Bobrovsky made 20 saves en route to the win.
“The series isn’t won in one game, so there’s a positive. We had a bunch of guys tonight playing their first playoff games, and I thought guys handled it fairly well,” Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said. “But in the end, we gave up six goals. We’re a pretty decent defensive team, and we have a very good [penalty-kill unit], and we gave up three [goals] on that. … In the end, those are areas of strength of ours, so I’m pretty confident we can button those up, and we’ll be OK.”
Jake Guentzel, in his first season with the club, and Brayden Point scored for Tampa Bay. But the Lightning played the final 33:30 without center Anthony Cirelli, and it showed. There was no immediate word why the 27-year-old center was out.
“We gave up 16 shots, and that’s usually a good night, but tonight wasn’t that. They’re a good team, we know they have good players,” Tampa Bay defenseman Victor Hedman said. “So, for us, it’s all about refocusing, make sure we have a good practice tomorrow, and get ready for the next one.”
Whether Tkachuk would even play in Game 1 wasn’t certain until just before game time. Tkachuk went through practices Saturday and Monday, then took part in the team’s day-of-game skate Tuesday before the decision on his return was made. Maurice even indicated that it could come down to the final few minutes before the 8:48 p.m. start time of the game.
“It’s not really a guy you can put a label on,” Schmidt said of Tkachuk. “He’s such a unicorn of a player. But, more than anything, just how he is in the room, getting the guys fired up for the game, you feel his energy, you feel his excitement.”
Tkachuk hadn’t played for the Panthers since Feb. 8 because of a lower-body injury suffered during the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament two months ago. He missed the team’s final 25 games of the regular season, yet still finished with 22 goals and 57 points — third most on the team in all three categories. He was also second on the Panthers this season with 11 power-play goals.
“There’s no better time to be an athlete,” Tkachuk told Kaplan in a postgame interview, in reference to the postseason. “This is the time of our lives. And just getting a win here in Game 1 is the cherry on top.”
Panthers forward Brad Marchand, acquired at the NHL trade deadline from the Boston Bruins, made his postseason debut for his new team in the win and also played with Tkachuk for the first time. Marchand had an assist and two shots on net in his 17:15 of ice time, and seemed to fit right in with Florida’s dominant forward group.
“Both teams will look at the tape and find things that they can do better,” Maurice said after the win. “But there isn’t an established identity to the series yet.”
“It’s definitely a salty feeling in here. We didn’t have a great start to this series like we talked about,” the veteran said. “But we know we can be better. We’ve got another level and we’ll find a way to get to that.”
The Panthers took a 1-0 series lead by scoring six times on 16 shots against Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy. After Sam Bennett and Jake Guentzel traded goals in the first period, the Panthers scored four straight times — including goals by Nate Schmidt and Matthew Tkachuk that were 14 seconds apart in the second period. Schmidt’s goal was unsuccessfully challenged for goalie interference by the Lightning, earning a delay of game penalty. Tkachuk scored on the ensuing power play to make it 4-1.
“Yeah, you’ve got to stop that bleeding,” defenseman Victor Hedman said. “We give up that third one. The challenge that didn’t go our way and we give up one right away. That’s tough, but we got to make sure it stops there and not give up the fifth one as well.”
Tkachuk, returning to the Florida lineup for the first time after being injured in February’s 4 Nations Face-Off, scored his second of the game on the power play at 9:44 of the second period to make it 5-1 for the Panthers, en route to the 6-2 rout.
“You see him being able to step into a game and be impactful,” Schmidt said of Tkachuk. “That’s who he is. He’s a playoff player.”
Lightning coach Jon Cooper, who has won two of the three Battle of Florida playoff series against the Panthers, appreciated his team’s effort despite the result.
“I love this team. They try. They’re always trying, and they did that again tonight. Sometimes the results aren’t there. Most nights they are,” he said. “We can sit here and dissect this game all we want. The bottom line is we lost. Whether you lose 6-2 or you lose 1-0 in overtime, we lost the game. Turn the page and move on. Let’s sit here in 48 hours or whatever it is and dissect that one. This one’s over.”
The Panthers are the reigning Stanley Cup champion. Cooper noted that a number of his players were seeing their first playoff action in Game 1.
“We had a bunch of guys tonight playing their first playoff games, and I thought guys handled it fairly well. But in the end we gave up six goals,” he said. “The series isn’t won in one game, so there’s a positive.”
That said, it took just one game for the Panthers to flex on the Lightning defense and special teams, going 3-for-3 on the power play. One huge factor in that domination was an injury to Lightning center Anthony Cirelli, their best defensive forward and a key to their penalty kill. He left the game after taking two shifts in the second period. There was no update on his status after the game.
Game 2 is Thursday night at Amalie Arena in Tampa.
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
CHICAGO — Catcher Miguel Amaya was confident he’d be jogging around the bases when he blasted a two-out, ninth-inning baseball high into the Wrigley Field sky with his Chicago Cubs trailing 10-9 to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Tuesday night.
He was right — but just barely.
Amaya’s 388-foot shot landed in the center field basket, sending the home crowd into a frenzy as Dodgers closer Tanner Scott blew the save. And one inning later, the Cubs won the game 11-10 on an Ian Happ run-scoring single off Noah Davis, capping yet another wild affair at Wrigley.
According to Statcast, Amaya’s blast would have been a home run in exactly one park in the majors.
“As a baseball player, its something you dream of,” Amaya said. “As soon as I hit, I felt it was out but then I saw the center fielder getting into position to catch it. Then it was, ‘Oh my god, I have to run,’ but it was enough to get out.
“I love those basket balls.”
It was the second time in five days that both teams playing at Wrigley scored 10 or more runs; on Friday, the Cubs beat the Diamondbacks 13-11 thanks to a six-run eighth inning that was preceded by a 10-run frame by Arizona.
On Tuesday, the Cubs led 5-3 after the first inning, but the Dodgers took a 10-7 lead thanks to a five-run seventh aided by an error from third baseman Gage Workman. As has been the case all month, the Cubs kept fighting back. Right fielder Kyle Tucker brought them within one with an eighth-inning home run before Amaya tied it in the ninth.
“They’ve done some amazing things and some resilient things, most importantly,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said of the team’s play on its homestand. “You win games like that early in the season and it’s a great carry forward for the rest of the season.”
The Cubs improved to 15-10 thanks to a high-powered offense that leads the league in scoring at just over six runs per game. They’ve tallied 10 or more runs in seven games already, their most through 25 games of a season since 1895, according to ESPN Research. No other team this season has done it more than 3 times.
Counsell credited his bullpen in shutting down the Dodgers in the final few innings.
The Cubs also did well facing Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani. He went 0 for 4, lowering his batting average against them this year to .167. Against all other teams, he’s hitting .302.
He also went 0-for-3 against Shota Imanaga and is now 0-for-10 against the Cubs starter.
“The next 10 at-bats he might get 10 hits,” Imanaga said. “It’s been a small miracle that it’s happened 10 times in a row.”
The Cubs keep on performing miracles at the plate both in the colder conditions this month and in the few games where the weather has been favorable for hitters. That included Tuesday, when it was 71 degrees with the wind blowing out at first pitch. It led to six home runs, none bigger than Amaya’s.
“Basket hurt us a couple times last year,” Counsell said with a smirk. “It was helpful tonight.”