Connor Hellebuyck will start in
goal for the US in its 4 Nations Face-Off opener against Finland
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[February 13, 2025]
By STEPHEN WHYNO
BROSSARD, Quebec (AP) — Connor Hellebuyck is set to start in net for
the United States in its opening game of the 4 Nations Face-Off
against Finland on Thursday night.
USA Hockey said Wednesday that the Winnipeg Jets goaltender would
get the nod a few minutes after coach Mike Sullivan foreshadowed an
announcement. The decision is not surprising given that Hellebuyck
has been the best player at the position in the NHL this season and
is on track to win the Vezina Trophy as the league’s top goalie for
the third time.
“He’s very focused, he’s very driven and obviously the results speak
for themselves,” U.S. forward Chris Kreider said. “He’s just so
fundamentally sound in net. There’s not a lot to shoot at. When you
think you have something, it gets taken away really quickly. All
three of our goalies are incredible.”
Top center Jack Eichel in the leadup to the tournament called the
U.S. talent in net with Hellebuyck, Dallas' Jake Oettinger and
Boston's Jeremy Swayman making the decision tough on coaches “a good
problem to have.” It really didn't seem like a difficult choice
given how dominant Hellebuyck has been for the past few months.
Ottawa captain Brady Tkachuk faced Hellebuyck and the Jets a lot
when the pandemic spurred the creation of an all-Canadian division
for the shortened 2021 season. He's happier to be playing with him
for the U.S. than against him.
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“They were never fun games when we had to play them,” Tkachuk said.
"He’s just a rock star back there. He’s an unbelievable player, and
you can just tell how comfortable and confident he is.”
Finland coach Antti Pennanen said Juuse Saros of the Nashville
Predators is his starter, citing the 29-year-old's experience and
grit.
“He’s a really good goalie, and of course we have three good goalies
and it wasn’t an easy call,” Pennanen said. “But tomorrow we go with
Juuse.”
Finland's 5 forward power play
One of hockey's shifts in recent years has been more teams using
four forwards and one defenseman on the ice for the power play,
rather than three and two. Finland after losing top defenseman Miro
Heiskanen to injury is going with five forwards on its top unit,
counting on captain Aleksander Barkov — unquestionably the best
defensive center in the league — to play the point position that
would have been Heiskanen's spot.
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United States' Austin Matthews skates past goaltender Connor
Hellebuyck during 4 Nations Face-Off hockey practice in Brossard,
Quebec, on Monday, Feb. 10, 2025. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian
Press via AP)
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“We needed to rethink our power-play plans, and now
Aleksander Barkov, he is at the blue line and he has played that
role before, so it’s not a new situation for him,” Pennanen said.
“He is one of the best players on this planet at the moment, and he
is playing with good guys around him — lots of good players, so I
think it’s going to be a good power play.”
Sebastian Aho said he thinks Barkov is good enough to play defense
in the NHL, and that has he and his teammates confident in this
approach.
“That’s not a common thing, but obviously we have Barkov on the blue
line there who’s a couple time Selke winner,” forward Roope Hintz
said. “It’s going to be interesting to see in the game.”
Crosby good to go
Sidney Crosby missed Pittsburgh's past two games because of injury,
but the Penguins and Canada left it up to their captain to decide
whether he wanted to play in the 4 Nations. Even if he's not fully
healthy, Crosby declared Wednesday morning he was good to go.
“I think it’s probably going to be something that I’ll get a better
idea of once I get out there in the game as far as what I can do,”
Crosby said before Canada opened against Sweden. “But I feel really
good, really confident going into it. That’s the biggest part. I
don’t really have a lot of apprehensions or anything like that, so
mentally I feel really good about it.”
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