Day 6 games
Sweden 6, United States 3: Lucas Pettersson (Anaheim Ducks) and Eddie Genborg (Detroit Red Wings) each scored twice, and Sweden gained the top seed in Group A at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul.
“Amazing win,” Genborg said. “I think we play really good and play as a team for 60 minutes. So we are really nice win.
“I think we played like a team over 60 minutes and that’s the biggest key. To play like a team, and hold it together the whole 60 minutes.”
Jack Berglund (Philadelphia Flyers) had three assists, Viggo Bjorck (2026 NHL Draft eligible) and Liam Danielsson (2026 draft eligible) each had two assists, and Love Harenstram (St. Louis Blues) made 28 saves for Sweden (4-0-0-0), which seeks its first World Juniors gold medal since 2012.
Brodie Ziemer (Buffalo Sabres) had two assists for the United States (3-0-0-1). Brady Knowling (2026 draft eligible) allowed five goals on 28 shots through two periods in his World Juniors debut, and Nicholas Kempf (Washington Capitals) made 14 saves in the third period.
Sweden is 17-1-2-17 with two ties in 39 meetings in the all-time series against the United States. The Swedes also won their first WJC game against the Americans in five matches.
“We started so hot, and we kind of fell apart at moments, undisciplined again tonight,” Ziemer said. “Maybe a couple soft [calls] but still you can’t really have that excuse. And just wasn’t a full 60 minutes from us. I liked our game at times again, like I did the other day, and then we kind of took our foot off the gas and teams like that are gonna capitalize on it.”
Casper Juustovaara (2026 draft eligible) gave Sweden a 1-0 lead at 9:17 of the first period when his pass attempt in the slot deflected into the net off the skate of U.S. defenseman Logan Hensler (Ottawa Senators).
Genborg made it 2-0 with a power-play goal on a snap shot from the left face-off circle at 3:01 into the second period.
Pettersson extended the lead to 3-0 on a wrist shot from the right face-off circle at 6:01.
‘In these games you want to play well,” Pettersson said. “I’m here to score goals, so I’m happy to do that.”
Chase Reid (2026 draft eligible) pulled the United States to within 3-1 with a power-play goal at 8:55.
Pettersson pushed it to 4-1 with a short-handed goal at 12:44, and Genborg made it 5-1 with a power-play goal at 15:15.
“I don’t think anything’s ever really a killer,” Ziemer said of the short-handed goal. “You never want to think that you’re out of the game. Obviously, it hurt a little bit but what are you what are you gonna do? You kind of flush it, and you get back out there and play.”
Will Zellers (Boston Bruins) scored off a rebound for the United States to make it 5-2 at 16:44.
Teddy Stiga (Nashville Predators) made it 5-3 for the United States with a power-play goal on a redirection in the slot at 2:30 of the third.
Ivar Stenberg then scored to give Sweden a 6-3 lead during a 5-on-3 power play at 6:43.
“The energy we came out with and the mindset we came out to play was right there. It was spot on,” U.S. coach Bob Motzko said. “Unforunately the one bounce off our skate (on Sweden’s first goal) and we make a mistake and we’re chasing the game. We got them back a couple times but Sweden capitalized on our mistakes and you’re chasing the game and you can’t do that. We have to clean that up.”
The U.S. was without defenseman Cole Hutson (Washington Capitals) and forward Max Plante (Detroit Red Wings), who are each day to day. Hutson was removed from the ice on a stretcher during a 2-1 win against Switzerland on Saturday after being hit in the back of the head by a puck and Plante missed the third period of a 6-5 win against Slovakia on Monday.
Motzko said postgame that there was a “really good chance” that Hutson returns to the lineup against Finland on Friday (6 p.m. ET; NHLN, TSN).
Sweden will face off against Latvia in the quarterfinal round on Friday (2 p.m. ET; NHLN, TSN).
Canada 7, Finland 4: Cole Beaudoin (Utah Mammoth) had two goals and an assist, and Brady Martin (Nashville Predators) scored twice for Canada, which finished undefeated in Group B play at 3M Arena at Mariucci, on the campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.
“It means a lot. Our whole team played our game” Beaudoin said. “Obviously kind of a scrambly first period. But we settled down and played our game.”
Zayne Parekh (Calgary Flames) and Sam O’Reilly (Tampa Bay Lightning) each had a goal and two assists for Canada (3-1-0-0), which finished first in the Group, and Tij Iginla had goal and an assist. Carter George had 28 saves.
Roope Vesterinen (2026 draft eligible) had a goal and an assist for Finland (2-0-1-1), which finished third, behind Czechia (2-1-0-1). Petteri Rimpinen (Los Angeles Kings) made 25 saves.
Parekh put Canada ahead 1-0 at 1:13 with a shot from the right face-off circle.
Julius Miettinen (Seattle Kraken) tied the game at 3:54 when he stepped past Parekh, took a pass from Matias Vanhanen (2026 draft eligible), and scored under the crossbar from in front.
“We started great, the first and second were great,” Miettinen said. “And then, go to give credit to Canada, they scored on their chances. I think that’s one thing we’ve got to dial in, not giving up that many chances.”
Martin put Canada ahead 2-1 at 4:26. He flipped a pass into the Finland zone, Michael Hage (Montreal Canadiens) skated onto it, slammed on the brakes at the goal line, and centered back to Martin.
Oliver Suvanto (2026 draft eligible) made it 2-2 at 5:40 when he scored off the rebound of a Vesterinen shot.
Martin scored a power-play goal at the front of the net to put Canada ahead 3-2 at 10:40.
Finland tied it 3-3 at 12:59 on a power-play goal by Lasse Boelius (Anaheim Ducks) from the blue line.
“Just a whirlwind of emotions there,” George said of the first period. “For us to score that early and the crowd to get into it and then to give up the lead three more times after that, it was definitely a crazy period.”
Iginla put Canada ahead 4-3 with a power-play goal at 9:35 of the second period.
Beaudoin poked in a loose puck in the crease to put Canada ahead 5-3 at 17:05.
Vesterinen scored from the left side after a Canada defensive-zone turnover to make it 5-4 at 17:40.
Beaudoin stretched to tip an O’Reilly centering pass off the rush to make it 6-4 at 8:20 of the third period.
“They’ve been awesome for us,” George said of the Beaudoin-O’Reilly-Desnoyers line. “That line has been getting us momentum, changing games for us. Today they showed their offensive skill and put the puck in the net for us, and they sealed the win for us. That line was our best line tonight by far.”
Canada will play Slovakia on Friday in the quarterfinal round (8:30 p.m. ET; NHLN, TSN).
Switzerland 3, Slovakia 2: Elijah Neuenschwander (Anaheim Ducks) made 20 saves to help Switzerland finish third in the Group A bracket at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul.
Switzerland (2-0-0-2), which finished eighth at the 2025 WJC, has reached the quarterfinal round for the 10th straight year. The country has medaled once, winning bronze in 1998.
“We’re proud of the effort,” Switzerland captain Leon Muggli (Washington Capitals) said. “The whole group stage was pretty good. We have an unbelievable group here and we showed that on the ice and really battled it out.
“We’ve got a tight group here. The core is the same since we’re young; we know each other, also from different leagues. Off the ice we have a good spirit, and the coaching staff brings a good mentality in practices and you can see that on the ice in the games.”
Luca Radivojevic (2026 NHL Draft eligible) and Adam Nemec (2026 draft eligible) each had a goal and an assist, and Michal Pradel (Detroit Red Wings) made 15 saves for Slovakia (1-0-0-3).
“It was a hard game,” Nemec said. “We know Switzerland is a very good defensive team, but we can’t start at the [beginning of the] third period. We have to start in the first minute when the puck drops, so this can’t happen to us in the quarterfinals.”
Switzerland took advantage of a double-minor penalty against Tobias Tomik for high-sticking at 16:53 of the first period with two power-play goals in a span of 26 seconds.
Loris Wey (2026 draft eligible) gave Switzerland a 1-0 lead at 18:05 on a redirection from the slot, and Mike Aeschlimann (2026 draft eligible) pushed it to 2-0 on a snap shot at the left post at 18:27.
Kevin Haas (2026 eligible) extended the lead to 3-0 at 16:43 of the second period on a rebound from the slot.
Nemec cut it to 3-1 on a shot from the slot that hit the crossbar, rolled off the back of Neuenschwander and over the line at 7:41 of the third period.
Radivojevic scored at 19:50 with Pradel pulled for an extra attacker for the 3-2 final.
Switzerland will face off against Czechia in the quarterfinal round scheduled on Friday (4:30 p.m. ET; TSN).
Czechia 4, Latvia 2: Adam Jiricek scored for the third straight game, and Czechia finished Group B play with a win at 3M Arena at Mariucci, on the campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.
“We could have handled the game better. We could have ended the game sooner than in the very end,” Jiricek said. “In the second period we try to do too much, and we skate around and don’t skate back. … We could have scored like two, three goals in the second period and ended the game. We didn’t do that, and that’s why we played until the very end minute.”
Vaclav Nestrasil had a goal and an assist for Czechia (2-1-0-1), and Tomas Poletin (New York Islanders) and Max Psenicka (Utah Mammoth) also scored. Matyas Marik (2026 draft eligible) made eight saves.
“I didn’t like the way we played,” Czechia coach Patrik Augusta said. ” … It didn’t start good for us, we (gave up) a power play goal, and I thought after that, we picked it up. Then we score a few goals. I think the first period was the one that I liked. Second period was totally out of our system. We thought we would score eight goals, and everybody just played on their own, individually. There was no system. We didn’t play together, and it cost us in the third. We wanted to pick it up, and we just couldn’t, because we didn’t deserve it for the way we played in the second period.”
Kristers Ansons (2026 draft eligible) and Markus Sieradzkis (2026 draft eligible) scored for Latvia (1-0-1-2). Nils Maurins made 25 saves.
Ansons scored a power-play goal on a backdoor pass by Bruno Osmanis (2026 draft eligible) to put Latvia ahead 1-0 at 6:00 of the first period.
Poletin tied it at 10:04 when he knocked in a loose puck in the crease.
Jiricek put Czechia ahead 2-1 at 11:19 with a power-play goal off a one-timer from the left face-off circle.
“He’s one of the leaders,” Augusta said of Jiricek. “He’s been around, this is his third [World Juniors], and he’s a big part of our defense, and offense also.”
Psenicka made it 3-1 at 5:31 of the second period when his shot from the outside of the right circle went off the skate of Latvia defenseman Harijs Cjunskis (2026 draft eligible).
Sieradzkis scored a power-play goal at 6:39 of the third period on a one-timer from the left circle to make it 3-2.
“It’s a tough game, we played back-to-back (6-3 win vs. Denmark on Tuesday),” Latvia coach Artis Abols said.” … We were a step behind, but at the same time, we competed hard. The goalie (Nils Maurins) gave us a chance, the power play was good. And at the end it’s a one-goal game.”
Nestrasil scored an empty-net goal at 18:43 for the 4-2 final.
NHL.com deputy managing editor Adam Kimelman and senior draft writer Mike G. Morreale contributed to this report

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