Tkachuk brothers each score twice
as the US beats Finland 6-1 in the 4 Nations Face-Off
Send a link to a friend
[February 14, 2025]
By STEPHEN WHYNO
MONTREAL (AP) — Brady and Matthew Tkachuk came out hitting, started
scoring and put together a display of brotherly dominance playing
together for the first time on a big stage.
The Tkachuks each scored twice, flourishing after being put on the
ice at the same time, and the United States beat Finland 6-1 on
Thursday night night in each team’s opening game at the 4 Nations
Face-Off, a physical showdown played with edge throughout.
“That’s the way we play, one of the reasons why we’re on the team,”
said Matthew Tkachuk, a reigning Stanley Cup champion who finished
with three points. “You don’t change you game. You play your
identity. It’s up to us and the rest of the guys to play to your
strengths. That’s one of them.”
Everyone was finishing checks, including Jack Eichel dumping Finnish
captain Aleksander Barkov into the U.S. bench. Brady Tkachuk bowled
over 6-foot-6 Niko Mikkola with one of his game-high eight hits, and
Matthew Tkachuk gave Patrik Laine an earful before a faceoff as the
Americans began to take over.
Matthew called Brady “a beast," and coach Mike Sullivan said the
brothers “just have a funny way of dragging us into the fight.”

“I mean we kind of knew what to expect after watching (the
Canada-Sweden) game that it was going to be fast and physical,” said
defenseman Zach Werenski, who had three assists. "We have some guys
on this team that can do that, right? You have the Tkachuks. We got
(J.T.) Miller. We got a lot of big bodies. Eichel was throwing his
body around tonight. I thought the pace was really good. I thought
the physicality was good and I thought we responded well to all of
it.”
The scoreboard made it look like more of a rout than it was for the
first two periods, when quality chances were at a premium and space
on the ice was hard to find. Matt Boldy scored the go-ahead goal on
a textbook deflection of Minnesota Wild teammate Brock Faber's shot
late in the second, then the floodgates opened early in the third.
Many fans hadn't even returned to their seats from intermission when
Matthew Tkachuk sailed a long shot in past Juuse Saros 15 seconds
into the period. Saros then gave up another softie to Jake Guentzel,
and Brady Tkachuk beat the struggling Nashville goaltender again to
make it three U.S. goals in less than three minutes.
“The start of the third, it was — I don’t know how to say that, but
we weren’t ready for that,” said Finland coach Antti Pennanen, who
acknowledged he and his staff considered pulling Saros.
That onslaught quieted the very pro-Finland crowd full of Canadians
eager to root against their country's biggest hockey rival. Some
even booed the U.S. anthem before the game, and there was plenty
more where that came from for Toronto Maple Leafs captain Auston
Matthews several times he touched the puck.
[to top of second column] |

United States' Brady Tkachuk (7) celebrates his goal over Finland
during third period 4 Nations Face-Off hockey action in Montreal on
Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press via
AP)

Matthew Tkachuk added another for good measure on
the power play with 8:47 left, and that was enough for the “U-S-A!
U-S-A!” chants to fill the bowl at Bell Centre. In the waning
minutes, a few U.S. fans proclaimed, “We want Canada!”
They face off Saturday night.
"I think it’s going to be the biggest game that I’ve ever played in
my career," Brady Tkachuk said. “We’ve been talking about that game
especially. Really excited to experience it.”
Finland only gave fans one real opportunity to cheer, when
late-added defenseman Henri Jokiharju beat Connor Hellebuyck clean
on a shot 7:31 in to make it 1-0. Hellebuyck stopped the next 18
shots he faced to finish with 20 saves.
The same could not be said for Saros, who allowed six goals on 32
shots and could be replaced in net by Kevin Lankinen for Finland's
game against Sweden on Saturday.
“Of course we need to think about that,” Pennanen said. "It was a
tough day for Juuse. “He was really good the first 40 minutes, but i
think we need to analyze this game and make those decisions tomorrow
or Saturday.”
The U.S. does not need to worry about making a switch there, but
Sullivan made some keen midgame adjustments that contributed to his
team moving to the top of the 4 Nations standings one turn through
round-robin play.
During the second period Sullivan moved Brady Tkachuk to left wing
with Eichel and Matthew Tkachuk, and Kyle Connor to the second line
alongside Matthews and Jack Hughes, and he flip-flopped his second
and third defense pairs to put Noah Hanifin with Adam Fox, and
Jaccob Slavin with Brock Faber.

“We’ve been together for four days," Eichel said. "He’s coached for
quite a while. I think we’re all trying to find chemistry and get
comfortable with each other. That could mean some changes in lines
and pairings and whatnot. I think everyone was prepared when their
number was called and helped contribute to the win.”
Up next
Rivalry day at the 4 Nations starts Saturday with Sweden against
Finland at 1 p.m. EST, followed by the U.S. and Canada at 8 p.m.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |