Sweden romps against Switzerland, wins world title
STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Sweden became the first home team to win the world hockey championships in 27 years, beating Switzerland 5-1 on Sunday for its ninth title.
Vancouver Canucks star Henrik Sedin had two goals and an assist, and Buffalo Sabres goalie Jhonas Enroth made 26 saves to help Sweden become the first team to win the title on home ice since the Soviet Union in 1986. Switzerland earned its first medal in 60 years.
"It was a tight game,'' Sedin said. "It could have gone either way, I felt. It was lucky we got our first two goals pretty quickly after their first one. After we scored our third, it felt pretty calm on the bench.''
Simon Hjalmarrson, Philadelphia's Erik Gustafsson and Dallas' Loui Eriksson also scored for Sweden. Roman Josi had the lone goal for Switzerland.
"It's an unbelievable feeling. You can't put it into words,'' New Jersey's Henrik Tallinder said. "As soon as we got our legs and got that first goal, I thought we controlled the game pretty well.''
In the third-place game, the United States beat Finland 3-2 in a shootout for its first medal in nine years.
The young Swiss team came out aggressively, opening the scoring in the fifth minute after Josi skated in from the blue line and backhanded the puck past Enroth.
But Sweden took over from there, scoring twice in the first period and using the edge to dominate the game.
"We were slow out of the gates, but after the second goal I felt we had control over the game,'' Tallinder said. "The Swiss haven't had many times they've been down, so we could play their game against them.''
Switzerland dominated throughout the tournament, winning all nine of its games before the final.
"Right up until the end I thought it was a lot closer than it was,'' forward Ryan Gardner said. "The score's not indicative of how hard we've worked.''
In the bronze-medal game, Montreal's Alex Galchenyuk scored consecutive goals in the shootout for the Americans.
"After I scored the first one, I was pretty confident and I wanted to go at it one more time,'' Galchenyuk said. "We (coach Joe Sacco and Galchenyuk) kind of looked at each other, and I was like: `I want to go,' and I'm happy that he let me. When you win a game for your country ... it's unbelievable. It's probably the happiest I've been in my life so far.''
Nashville's Craig Smith and Colorado's Paul Stastny had first-period goals.
"It feels great,'' St. Louis forward T.J. Oshie said. "This is my fourth time playing for Team USA, and I hadn't gotten a medal. Obviously, we wanted it to be gold, but that's not going to take any excitement away from winning this.''
John Gibson, a 19-year-old goalie for the Kitchener Rangers of the Ontario Hockey League, made 36 saves.
"At the end there, Gibson was outstanding,'' Sacco said. "We had only two days of preparation for this tournament and I thought our young group did a really good job. I told them after the game that the most impressive thing was ... how we came together as a group.''
Gibson, from Pittsburgh, was drafted 39th overall by Anaheim in 2011.
"I don't know,'' Gibson said when asked about his future. "We're just going to enjoy this for a bit and see what happens.''
Phoenix's Lauri Korpikoski scored twice in the third period for Finland.