A raucous, bombastic atmosphere highlighted a 3-1 win for Team USA over Team Canada in Saturday night's heavyweight showdown in Montreal.
With the win, Team USA (2-0-0-0, six points) clinched a spot in the inaugural 4 Nations Face-Off championship game. Team Canada (0-1-0-1, 2 pts) will need to beat Finland and see how the standings shake out if we're to see a rematch between these two longtime rivals.
Here are our five biggest takeaways from a historic night in the NHL.
The puck dropped... and so did the gloves. Matthew Tkachuk vs. Hagel for a USA/CAN + FLA/TBL battle. pic.twitter.com/FeIHawI9iB
— Shayna (@shaynagoldman_) February 16, 2025
The intensity is jumping off the screen
Three fights in nine seconds will dominate the headlines — especially considering the star power involved in those fights. Think they were making up for lost time?
The first 20 minutes of hockey felt like a decade of hockey combined -- the fights, an off-the-charts level of awesome Connor McDavid goal and monster hitting from Boston defenseman Charlie McAvoy and Ottawa winger Brady Tkachuk. For those in person, the intensity was obvious. You could also feel it emanating off the TV screen.
Brady Tkachuk smashes Drew Doughty into the boards!
— Daily Faceoff (@DailyFaceoff) February 16, 2025
: Sportsnet | NHL#Canada #USA pic.twitter.com/pqQVYYf6v6
NHL rules, rather than IIHF, in an international best-on-best setting lead to the wildest version of the sport
Only two power plays in the entire game, three fights and numerous collisions — with some of the greatest skill players on Earth treating this like a Stanley Cup Final game.
Sometimes the best ideas are organic. Sometimes they are accidental — the NHL's 4 Nations Face-Off might be a little bit of both. This could be the start of something new — and an end to the traditional NHL All-Star Game.
That was the craziest 20 minutes of hockey I've ever seen. Pace is off the charts, 3 tilts, huge hits, electric atmosphere. Incredible stuff.
— Mike Kelly (@MikeKellyNHL) February 16, 2025
Fans have been begging for an improvement on the All-Star Game. The NHL found it
There are myriad reasons why the NHL All-Star game doesn't work. The skill events don't translate well, the games have less intensity than NHL exhibition games, many players don't take it seriously and guys regularly bail on the event.
It's not a best-on-best, either. The NHL requires every team to be represented — often leading to undeserving players at the All-Star Game.
The 4 Nations Face-Off, in its inaugural run, has flipped the script. Players want to be there — so much so that Los Angeles's Drew Doughty pushed himself hard to get back on the ice and prove he could potentially make Team Canada as an injury replacement.
Connor McDavid gives Canada a 1-0 lead
— The Athletic (@TheAthletic) February 16, 2025
@BR_OpenIcepic.twitter.com/lcOG71yNFg
Team USA is deep everywhere, but their goaltending is the difference
Connor Hellebuyck stopped 44 of 46 shots in two regulation wins for Team USA — including some Grade-A chances against Team Canada.
The questions will swirl around everyone else — Sweden's down a goaltender to illness (Filip Gustavsson), Finland already made one goalie change and St. Louis's Jordan Binnington has been on the hook for a couple of clear-sighted goals in the first two games of the round robin for Team Canada.
Cale Makar will not play tonight vs. USA, but remains eligible for the tournament. pic.twitter.com/I4lqREiGLY
— TSN (@TSN_Sports) February 16, 2025
Injury concerns are mounting. Who has the most to lose?
Team Canada was down three defensemen Saturday from its originally announced roster — missing Vegas's Alex Pietrangelo and Shea Theodore with injuries and Colorado's Cale Makar with an illness.
Be prepared for some pushback on this tournament. Typically, superstars don't get injured in low-intensity All-Star Games. If the tournament doesn't drive revenue and also results in injuries that impact NHL teams fighting for the playoffs, general managers will almost certainly voice those frustrations.
Just don't expect those complaints to come from the fans or the players.
There is a reason the guys wanted best on best and it has been on display since Wednesday. Tonight did more than show their longing for it. The game created the passion for a generation who has been missing this type of game for far too long. Well done all who made this happen.
— Kyle Okposo (@bookerT2116) February 16, 2025
The tournament will move to Boston for the final two games of the round robin and the Feb. 20 championship game.
Canada vs. Finland will drop the puck 1:00 p.m. Monday, Feb. 17. Sweden vs. USA will meet later that night at 8:00 p.m.
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