Sweden and Finland renew their
long-running, tense hockey rivalry at the 4 Nations Face-Off
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[February 15, 2025]
By STEPHEN WHYNO
MONTREAL (AP) — If Sam Hallam wants to rile up a Finn of a certain
age about Swedish hockey, he'll just bring up Anders “Masken”
Carlsson. For a younger generation, it's Mats Sundin.
It works the other way around to Swedes if someone mentions
Finland's Saku Koivu. And people will keep doing it, too, because
the intense rivalry between the two Nordic nations separated by one
sea has been passed down by generations at the Olympics, the world
championships and now at the 4 Nations Face-Off.
“It’s a brotherly kind of love-and-hate relationship going back for
a long time,” said Hallam, who's coaching Sweden at the NHL-run
tournament. “You want to beat your brother. That’s the way it is. We
have tons of respect for the way they play the game, the character
they have. That goes for hockey and that goes for life, too. Look at
where they are on the map, and they never back down.”
Still, they can't even agree on which brothers.
“I think you if ask them, they say they’re the big brother, and if
you ask us, we’re the big brother,” Sweden captain Victor Hedman
said.
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Finland's Erik Haula said this week, “I think I heard Hedman say
that they’re the big brother, but I guess we’ll find out.”
Gustav Nyquist pointed out that the hatred dates to when his country
of Sweden and Finland were formed. Their long, shared histories are
more complex than those of the United States and Canada — longtime
allies away from the sports world. It's peacetime now, except for on
the ice when the puck drops for a game pitting Tre Kronor against
Suomi.
“It’s more personal, I feel, maybe because with the games through
the years in the past, as well, against them, there’s been multiple
tight games,” Finland defenseman Esa Lindell said. "And obviously I
would say because they’re the country next to us. That adds up (to)
extra tension against them.”
There have been plenty of big, tense moments over the years, and
never were the stakes higher than at the gold-medal game at the 2006
Olympics. Sweden beat Finland 3-2 in a thriller after Nicklas
Lidstrom scored the go-ahead goal early in the third period and
Henrik Lundqvist made the most important save of his career on Olli
Jokinen with 25 seconds left.
“I remember that game,” Sweden goaltender Samuel Ersson said. “And
it feels like when we play each other, the whole country, they stop
and you want to watch those games.”
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Sweden fans cheer on a goal during third period of 4 Nations
Face-Off hockey action against Canada in Montreal, Wednesday, Feb.
12, 2025. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP)
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And the players want to take part in them. Hallam
thinks the rivalry builds because by age 20, Swedes and Finns have
already faced off in some form or fashion 20 to 25 times.
Sweden's Elias Lindholm still thinks about losing to Finland in the
the 2014 world junior championship final on home ice in Malmo. But
he also agrees with rivals from Finland about how the dislike is
contained on a sheet of ice between the boards and glass.
“You cross paths with a lot of Finns: Huge respect for them, but
there’s always something there when we played against each other
that had a little extra,” Lindholm said Friday. “You’re going to be
competitive out there, and when the game is over, you can all enjoy
and you can have a beer or whatever and be friends. But when it’s
game time, it’s no friends.”
The 4 Nations Face-Off is a unique event that does not have the
history or tradition of the Olympics and is more a celebration of
the return of elite competition with the NHL's best players. But
with those players' return to the Games on the horizon in Milan, the
tournament has value as a show of superiority a year away from that
major test.
Finland is the defending Olympic champion, and Hedman acknowledged
that the Finns' success from 2022 in Beijing and at recent world
championships have evened things out against Sweden.
“I don’t feel like they’ve bullied us or anything like that,”
Lindell said. “I feel like lately I think we’ve played very well
against them.”
Saturday afternoon is the next chance for Sweden and Finland to add
another chapter to their storied rivalry.
“It’s history,” Sweden defenseman Rasmus Dahlin said. “It’s
something that means a lot to the Swedish nation. It’s a must-win.”
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