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Ranking the 4 Nashville Predators’ Olympic Performances Four Nashville Predators participated in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy: Juuse Saros (Finland), Filip Forsberg (Sweden), Roman Josi (Swi...

#Nashville #Predators #Olympics #2026 #Winter […]

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The Most Dangerous Player For Canada and Finland at the Olympics Finland’s Best Player Has Been Juuse Saros With the 2026 Winter Olympics coming to the semifinal round, TSN Director of Scouting C...

#NHL #Opinion #Canada #Connor #McDavid #Finland #Jordan […]

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The Most Dangerous Player For Canada and Finland at the Olympics Finland’s Best Player Has Been Juuse Saros With the 2026 Winter Olympics coming to the semifinal round, TSN Director of Scouting C...

#NHL #Opinion #Canada #Connor #McDavid #Finland #Jordan […]

[Original post on nhlrumors.com]

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Finland’s 2026 Olympic Men’s Hockey Roster Team Finland has announced their Mens 2026 Olympics roster in Milan. This will be the first time NHL players will be participating in the Olympics s...

#NHL #News #Olympics #2026 #Winter #Olympics #Juuse #Saros […]

[Original post on thehockeywriters.com]

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3 Takeaways From Finland’s 4-1 Loss to Slovakia at the 2026 Milan Olympics Finland’s opener against Slovakia stayed level into the middle of the game, then broke quickly in the third period. Slovakia scored first, Finland tied it early in the second, then conceded the go-ahead goal off a lost draw and never recovered. Then, two more Slovakia goals within 13 minutes of one another. Finally, Juuse Saros was pulled for the extra attacker with 4:25 left, and the empty-netter finished it. ## **Finland’s Top Line Needs a Real Identity** The Granlund-Hintz-Rantanen unit has been assumed to be an automatic advantage due to its recent success and line chemistry in the Dallas Stars’ recent playoff run, but the five-on-five profile does not match the reputation. As a line, they have lived off individual heroics, with the recent Stars postseason samples sitting around 42 percent in shot share and 45 percent in expected goal share. (Thank you for the stat, David Castillo from Stars Stack) That showed up here. Finland’s top group had touches, entries, and controlled looks, but not enough possessions that ended at the net front. Their was just no momentum behind their assumed dominate line and the group did not seem to mesh as well as they would on paper. This is also Mikko Rantanen’s paradox. His underlying numbers are not always dominant, yet he can still decide a game with one sequence. Finland did not get that bailout moment, and the line did not win enough shifts to create it. Hockey 2026 Olympics Milano, Finland (The Hockey Writers) Artturi Lehkonen looks like the simplest fix alongside Roope Hintz and Rantanen. He plays through contact and extends zone time, adding the needed pressure. Finland’s best offensive minutes came when shifts stayed alive long enough for layers to arrive, not when the first look was clean. ## **Finland Played Like a Favorite, Not a Team Chasing Points** Finland’s pace was controlled for long stretches, especially after the tying goal early in the second period. The problem was urgency. The group played like it expected the game to open naturally, then did not have a second gear when it tightened. The third period punished small details. Slovakia’s 2-1 goal came right after a faceoff win, and Ilta-Sanomat noted Sebastian Aho’s issues in the circle earlier, including a 33 percent faceoff rate after two periods. Finland did not lose on one play, but the go-ahead goal was a clean example of how thin Olympic margins are. From there, Finland chased. After Slafkovsky’s move on the 3-1 goal, with Nemec and Dvrsky involved, that was the moment the game felt out of reach. ## Juuse **Saros Did Not Stop the Run** Juuse Saros did not have a catastrophic night, but Finland needed a stabilizing save when the game flipped. It did not come. **Related:3 Players on Finland’s Men’s Team to Watch at the 2026 Winter Olympics** Once Slovakia took the lead, Finland’s bench posture changed. With 4:25 left, Saros went to the bench for the extra attacker at 3-1. Ilta-Sanomat logged the timing, then the empty-net goal after a scramble in Finland’s attacking end that turned into a turnover and a finish. Saros entered this tournament carrying pressure, and this opener added to it. Finland’s defensive detail in front of him has to be cleaner, but the short-tournament reality is that Finland also needs its starter to blunt momentum when the game turns. ## Finland Will Return to Face Their Rival Finland’s next game at the 2026 Milan Olympics will be versus their main Hockey Rival, Sweden, on Friday February 13th.

3 Takeaways From Finland’s 4-1 Loss to Slovakia at the 2026 Milan Olympics Finland’s opener against Slovakia stayed level into the middle of the game, then broke quickly in the third period. Sl...

#Olympics #2026 #Winter #Olympics #Juuse #Saros

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Finland Announces 2026 Olympic Men’s Hockey Roster Team Finland has announced their Mens 2026 Olympics roster in Milan. This will be the first time NHL players will be participating in the Olym...

#NHL #News #Olympics #2026 #Winter #Olympics #Juuse […]

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Finland Names First 6 Players to Preliminary Roster for 2026 Winter Olympics Finland has named its first six players who will participate in the 2026 Winter Olympics. The remainder of the rosters w...

#NHL #News #Olympics #2026 #Winter #Olympics […]

[Original post on thehockeywriters.com]

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Predators Rally Back to Beat Maple Leafs 5-2 The Toronto Maple Leafs made their way to Nashville to take on the Nashville Predators. On Thursday night, they held on for a 4-3 win against the New York Rangers, moving into the top spot in the Atlantic Division. As for the Predators, they’re just looking to finish the season on a positive note. After what seemed like a strong offseason, it’s been a rough year. At this point, players are competing to show management they deserve a spot in the organization moving forward. With that, let’s jump into a Saturday night recap between the Maple Leafs and Predators. ## Game Recap ### 1st Period The game started at a great pace, with both teams generating chances, but Juuse Saros and Joseph Woll shut the door heading into the first TV timeout. The deadlock was finally broken after a sloppy high-sticking call on Luke Evangelista, sending Toronto to the power play. John Tavares capitalized, collecting the puck in the slot and firing it past a screened Saros to make it 1-0. Juuse Saros, Nashville Predators (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers) That goal gave Tavares yet another 30-goal season. Shortly after, Mitch Marner extended the lead to 2-0 off a set faceoff play, where Auston Matthews won the draw to him at the hash marks, and he ripped it past Saros. Moments later, Scott Laughton tipped a point shot from Brandon Carlo into the net. The goal was initially called good on the ice, but after review, it was overturned due to a high stick. Nashville took another undisciplined penalty but managed to kill it off, heading into the second period down 2-0. ### 2nd Period The Predators started the second period on the power play after Matthew Knies took a penalty late in the first. Michael Bunting, a former Maple Leaf now playing for Nashville, capitalized on the man advantage, beating Woll to cut the lead to 2-1. The first ten minutes of the period became a typical trap game from Nashville, as they dumped the puck in and played physically against Toronto’s blue line. Eventually, it paid off when Kieffer Bellows scored to tie the game 2-2. **Related** : **Maple Leafs News & Rumours: Laughton, Minten & Rielly** It looked like the period would end deadlocked, but with less than a minute left, Filip Forsberg rushed down the ice and poked the puck past Woll to give Nashville a 3-2 lead heading into the third. ### 3rd Period The Maple Leafs entered the third period playing catch-up. The pace slowed compared to the first 40 minutes, with Toronto generating some early chances, but Nashville tightened up defensively. Six minutes in, Max Domi attempted to flip the puck out of the zone but sent it over the glass, resulting in another Nashville power play. However, the Predators couldn’t capitalize, and the score remained 3-2. Max Domi, Toronto Maple Leafs (Photo by Claus Andersen/Getty Images) Nashville doubled their lead after Morgan Rielly missed a key opportunity to tie the game. Moments later, Nick Blankenburg was called for holding Knies, sending Toronto to another power play. Again, they failed to convert, leaving the score at 4-2. With three minutes left, Toronto pulled Woll for the extra attacker but couldn’t break through Saros. Eventually, Forsberg took advantage of the empty net and sealed the game 5-2, handing Toronto a tough loss. ## Looking Ahead for Both Teams The Maple Leafs head home to face off against the Philadelphia Flyers, before taking a quick trip to California to face off against the San Jose Sharks. As for the Predators, they head out on the road to take on the St. Louis Blues, before continuing their road trip with a game against the Carolina Hurricanes. Both teams are on polar opposite sides of the standings, so for the Maple Leafs they are trying to tighten things up before the playoffs. For Nashville, they are counting the games down until the end of the season.

Predators Rally Back to Beat Maple Leafs 5-2 The Toronto Maple Leafs made their way to Nashville ...

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#Nashville #Predators #Toronto #Maple #Leafs #Joseph #Woll #Juuse #Saros #Michael #Bunting

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4 Takeaways From Canada’s 5-3 Win vs. Finland <p>With both of these teams defeating Sweden, <a href="https://www.nhl.com/events/2025-4-nations-face-off">a regulation win</a> for either of them would mean facing off (pun intended) against the United States in the championship round. The favorites showed up in this one, as Canada knocked off Finland in a 5-3 decision.</p> <div data-stn-player="vq9qr2ja" style="max-width: 600px; margin: auto;"></div><script async="" src="https://embed.sendtonews.com/player3/embedcode.js?fk=vq9qr2ja" type="text/javascript"></script> <p></p> <p>Just 46 seconds apart, <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/the-better-nhl-player-mcdavid-or-mackinnon/">Connor McDavid and Nathan MacKinnon</a> got on the board for Canada in the opening frame. Brayden Point added another, quickly putting this one in blowout territory. The second and third periods were a bit calmer for the most part, as MacKinnon struck at the 5:03 mark in the second and Finland’s Esa Lindell took approximately 28 minutes to respond.</p> <p class="has-text-align-center"><strong>Related: <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/guide-to-the-2025-4-nations-face-off/">Guide to the 2025 4 Nations Face-Off</a></strong></p> <p>Out of nowhere, Mikael Granlund buried back-to-back goals with Finland in empty-net mode to make it 4-3, scoring twice in 23 seconds. The fun stopped there, though, as Sidney Crosby slid one into the yawning cage with 56 seconds to go. A quick recap aside, what were some takeaways for both nations?</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-canada-easy-entries-easy-goals">Canada: Easy Entries, Easy Goals</h2> <p>There was <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/carolina-hurricanes/latest-news/jaccob-slavin-puts-on-defensive-clinic-to-help-usa-clinch-championship-game-berth">no Jaccob Slavin</a> to stop them in this one. In the first period, Canada had no trouble crossing Finland’s blue line, which led to utter domination in time of possession, scoring chances, and of course, goals. The Canadians suffocated their Finnish counterparts early in the game—a Herculean effort would’ve been needed to bounce back.</p> <div class="wp-block-image"> <figure class="aligncenter size-large"><img alt="4 Nations Face-Off" class="wp-image-1440747" decoding="async" fetchpriority="high" height="724" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" src="https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-1200x724.jpg" srcset="https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-1200x724.jpg 1200w, https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-575x347.jpg 575w, https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-100x60.jpg 100w, https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-768x463.jpg 768w, https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations-1536x927.jpg 1536w, https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/4Nations.jpg 2000w" width="1200"/><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">4 Nations Face-Off (The Hockey Writers)</figcaption></figure></div> <p>In their <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/3-takeaways-from-canadas-frustrating-3-1-loss-to-usa-2-15-2025/">sole defeat of the round-robin</a>, Canada actually had an obstacle for not just entering the offensive zone, but creating chances there. Slavin wasn’t their <em>only</em> challenge, mind you, but a presence like his would be greatly appreciated in Finland. Instead, they’ve been playing without superstar <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/docs/miro-heiskanen/">Miro Heiskanen</a>, top-four piece Rasmus Ristolainen, and depth contributor Jani Hakanpaa. Half your defense being out with injuries will pose a slight problem, oftentimes.</p> <p>Still, the Canadians deserve their flowers. The United States defeated Finland 6-1 through aggressive <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/3-takeaways-from-finlands-6-1-loss-to-usa-2-13-2025/">forechecking and power-play excellence</a>. It took until the third period for the floodgates to open, however, as it was a 2-1 score after two frames. Canada instantly recognized their talent advantage over Finland, so there was never much of a doubt in the final result. The empty-net sequence was their only flaw.</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-finland-goaltending-conundrum">Finland: Goaltending Conundrum?</h2> <p>Overdramatic? Possibly, but Finland’s most consistent issue aside from their defensive zone play has been goaltending. <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/docs/juuse-saros/">Juuse Saros</a> had a stinker against the United States, allowing six goals, while Kevin Lankinen sacrificed seven across five periods of play (Sweden and Canada combined). There were a lot of stoppable pucks in the mix, too.</p> <p>In about a calendar year, the Finns are set to travel to Italy to play in the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics. If this is the level of goaltending they get, obtaining a medal next winter will be quite the challenge. They need their men between the pipes to be superb—not outclassed in a majority of games.</p> <p>This is only worth bringing up because Saros is having the worst season of his career back in the NHL, sitting at a .898 save percentage. Is that a product of the Nashville Predators’ struggles? Maybe. But he’s not playing Vezina Trophy hockey anymore, as opposed to his 2021-22 and 2022-23 campaigns.</p> <blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p dir="ltr" lang="en">Did Juuse this save from Saros last season? 😤 <a href="https://t.co/MgszG6rzPu">pic.twitter.com/MgszG6rzPu</a></p>— NHL (@NHL) <a href="https://twitter.com/NHL/status/1552067490347249664?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 26, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async="" charset="utf-8" src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"></script> <p>Lankinen has played decent hockey this season for the Vancouver Canucks, but he’s also a backup who’s seen starter-level usage due to Thatcher Demko’s injuries and on-ice struggles. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen was the third goalie, and he didn’t get an ounce of playing time.</p> <p>So, Finland’s golden dreams in 2026 more or less depend on Saros. Will he bounce back?</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-canada-can-makar-be-the-difference-maker-vs-usa">Canada: Can Makar Be the Difference-Maker vs. USA?</h2> <p>On Thursday, Canada will be taking on the only team that beat them in this tournament, the United States, to decide which hockey nation is supreme. Defenseman <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/docs/cale-makar/">Cale Makar</a> was out from that game but played today. Is he the missing piece?</p> <p>There were a few things that didn’t go Canada’s way against the United States (a 3-1 loss), but their lack of defensive puck-movers stood out. Makar is a weapon for creating offense, as he is a machine for both creating in the offensive zone and entering it in the first place. He’s one of hockey’s finest for his puck skills, no doubt, but he gets the puck up the ice and can form lanes inside opposing blue lines at a rate that few others can.</p> <p>Makar didn’t register a point in this one, nor was he a good play-driver if you’re just looking at his <a href="https://moneypuck.com/g.htm?id=2024190005">5-on-5 expected goal share</a> (34.92%). But is he the difference?</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-finland-a-positive-spin-on-a-disappointing-tournament">Finland: A Positive Spin on a Disappointing Tournament</h2> <p>Finland was decimated by the United States, notched <a href="https://thehockeywriters.com/3-takeaways-from-finlands-4-3-ot-win-vs-sweden-2-15-2025/">a slim win over Sweden</a>, and was outplayed but made it surprisingly tight against Canada. The question for this team is, can they compete for gold medals at the best-on-best stage?</p> <p>Well, we didn’t exactly get to see Finland at their “best.” Heiskanen was a <a href="https://www.thescore.com/nhl/news/2706039">devastating blow from the jump</a>, basically giving this team no chance. For all their faults, the Finns still had a shot at advancing to the championship round today. Only trailing by one as the clock dipped below 60 seconds against Canada is one incredible feat.</p> <p>It’s impossible to tell what a full-strength Finland team might look like, but it’s probably a bit better than they were in the 4 Nations Face-Off. While it’d take a disciplined effort to bring home a gold medal next winter (and future tournaments), it’s absolutely within reach.</p> <p>Next up, Canada will take on the United States, where the winner of the 4 Nations Face-Off will be crowned. The festivities will get underway on Thursday, Feb. 20 at 8 p.m. EST. Boston’s TD Garden will host the event.</p> <div class="wp-block-image"> <figure class="aligncenter size-large"><a href="https://thehockeywriters.substack.com/subscribe"><img alt="Substack Subscribe to the THW Daily and never miss the best of The Hockey Writers Banner" class="wp-image-1229316" decoding="async" src="https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/THW_Substack_Banner4-1200x149.jpg"/></a></figure></div> <!-- Image Map Generated by https://www.fla-shop.com/image-map/ --> <svg style="width:100%" viewbox="0 0 1729 193" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <style> .image-mapper-shape { fill: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); } g:hover .image-mapper-shape { stroke: white; stroke-width: 2px; opacity: 20%; } </style> <image style="width: 1729px;" xlink:href="https://s3951.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Logos_NHL_THW_N.jpg"/> <a rel="noopener" target="---" xlink:href="https://thehockeywriters.com/anaheim-ducks/" xlink:title="Anaheim Ducks"> <g> 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4 Takeaways From Canada’s 5-3 Win vs. Finland With both of these teams defeating Sweden, a regu...

thehockeywriters.com/4-takeaways-from-canadas...

#4 #Nations #Face-off #Cale #Makar #Juuse #Saros #Team #Canada #Team #Finland

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3 Takeaways From Finland’s 6-1 Loss to USA Not a great start. Finland lost their opening game of the 4 Nations Face-Off to the United States 6-1, placing them in sole possession of last place. The Finns hung&#8230;

3 Takeaways From Finland’s 6-1 Loss to USA Not a great start. Finland lost their opening game o...

thehockeywriters.com/3-takeaways-from-finland...

#4 #Nations #Face-off #Juuse #Saros #Miro #Heiskanen #Team #Finland

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