Sports stats

WHL Regina Pats

Howe & Canada Advance to IIHF U18 World Championship Semifinals

April 27, 2023 - Western Hockey League (WHL)
Regina Pats News Release


PORRENTRUY, Switzerland - Pats forward Tanner Howe and top prospect Matthew Wood, and team Canada's Under-18 Club are heading to the semifinals at the 2023 IIHF U18 World Hockey Championships following a 7-3 win over Switzerland on Thursday.

Tanner Howe did not reach the scoresheet, but he did center Canada's top line which featured Prince George Cougars forward Riley Heidt and Hamilton Bulldogs winger Nick Lardis. The Prince Albert, Sask. product played 14:15 of ice time with one shot on net in the win.

Meanwhile, Pats top prospect Matthew Wood added two points (1G-1A) in the victory, bringing up his total to six goals and three assists for nine points in five games for Canada thus far.

Canada will face Sweden in the semifinals on Saturday at 11:00 a.m., MDT.

Macklin Celebrini gave Canada a reason to celebrate. The 16-year-old Chicago Steel phenom scored two goals and two assists as Canada trounced Switzerland 7-3 in the late quarter-final in Basel.

The first line of Celebrini, Calum Ritchie and Matthew Wood has excelled for Canada at the 2023 U18 Worlds. They combined for eight points in this do-or-die matchup. Assistant captain Andrew Cristall added his first two goals of the tournament

Matteo Wagner replied with a pair for the host nation. It was a tough ending for the Swiss, who played a strong first period but were ultimately overmatched again versus North American opponents. Switzerland fell 10-0 to the Group B-leading U.S. in its last group game.

Heading into the semi-finals, the Canadians are hungry for their fifth U18 Worlds title of all time. Canada's last gold medal was in 2021 in Frisco, Texas with a powerhouse squad whose stars ranged from Connor Bedard and Shane Wright to Dylan Guenther and Mason McTavish.

Canada's game has grown by leaps and bounds since getting thumped 8-0 by Sweden in the opener. The Canadians have responded by scoring seven or more goals three times. In the preliminary round, they hammered Germany 8-0 and the Czechs 8-3.

The Canadians outshot Switzerland 33-31.

Canadian coach Jeff Truitt shuffled his lines as assistant captain Colby Barlow (2+1=3) was unavailable to play. Nick Lardis slotted into the top-six forward group in Barlow's place.

Swiss coach Marcel Jenni's boys came out with a gritty effort. Near the midway mark, Simon Meier almost opened the scoring on a partial breakaway, but Canadian goalie Carson Bjarnason stopped his first attempt and the rebound.

The Canadians swarmed Swiss starter Ewan Huet's net on their first power play. Celebrini blasted a one-timer at 16:42 to draw first blood.

The Swiss struck back just 34 seconds later, igniting the St. Jakob Arena crowd. Timo Bunzli climaxed some great Swiss puck movement on the rush, getting in tight and banging his own rebound past Bjarnason.

In the second period, it took 37 seconds for Canada to take the wind out of Switzerland's sails. An onrushing Ritchie corraled Celebrini's long pass, skated to the bottom of the right faceoff circle, and fired a bad-angle shot that squeezed past Huet on the short side.

The third Canadian goal at 4:53 was straight-up beautiful. Zooming into the Swiss zone, Ritchie found Celebrini, who knifed a backhand pass to Wood, who fired home his team-leading sixth tally.

At 6:53, Cristall got in tight on an odd-man rush and looked off Huet before zinging the puck over the goalie's right shoulder.

Near the midway mark, Wagner dangled his way in on a solo jaunt, but couldn't beat Bjarnason on the backhand. About a minute later, Huet made a nice save on a Nick Lardis breakaway.

Celebrini stretched the lead to 5-1 with a snipe high to the blocker side at 15:46, and that ended Huet's night. Swiss backup Christian Kirsch got a rude welcome, as Berkly Catton made it 6-1 at 17:00. Even though Wagner scored a pretty goal off the rush just before the buzzer, there would be no miraculous Swiss comeback.

In the third period, Cristall scored at 2:04, and Wagner got one back with 5:51 remaining to round out the scoring at 7-3.

All-time, the Swiss have lost 12 of 13 U18 Worlds games against Canada by an aggregate of 78-21. In the last quarter-final clash between these two nations, Canada prevailed 9-1 in 2016 (Grand Forks, North Dakota).




Western Hockey League Stories from April 27, 2023


The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.

Other Recent Regina Pats Stories



Sports Statistics from the Stats Crew
OurSports Central