MILAN â Matthew Tkachuk insists he and his U.S. teammates were only focused on beating Germany in their preliminary round finale and never worried about scoring enough goals to pass Canada for the top seed at the Olympics.
âWe never talked once about the top seed at all,â Tkachuk said. âNone of that seeding stuff. All that handles itself.â
Itâs handled now, after the U.S. defeated Germany 5-1 on Sunday night behind two goals and an assist from captain Auston Matthews and 23 saves from Connor Hellebuyck. The Americans finished group play unbeaten to clinch the second seed in the knockout round.
âThe confidence just continues to grow within our group,â Matthews said. âEach game I think weâve taken steps in the right direction of where we want to grow our game going into the quarterfinals and itâs good to see.â
Canada put such a beatdown on France, winning 10-2, that the U.S. would have had to run up the score and beat Germany by 10 goals to pass the tournament favorite. The North American rivals cannot meet until the gold medal game.
They have to get there first. The U.S. is set to face the winner of the qualification round game Tuesday between Sweden and Latvia, while Canada plays Czechia or Denmark in the quarterfinals on Wednesday.
Sweden is the only European team at the Olympics with a full roster of NHL players, won two of its three preliminary round games and only dropped to seventh because of a goal differential tiebreaker.
âA super-skilled team, a lot of guys we see throughout the NHL season,â said defenseman Zach Werenski, whose goal was set up by Matthews. âThey have a lot of talent on that team, and we know last year at the 4 Nations it was a hard game. I expect the same thing in the quarters if thatâs who weâre playing against.â
It could be quite the test for the U.S., which has only faced Latvia, Denmark and Germany so far.
The Germany game was a chance for the Americans to fine-tune their play before the tournament goes to single-elimination playoffs. Matthew Tkachuk had a pair of assists, and Matthews, the captain just as he was at the 4 Nations Face-Off a year ago, had his best showing of the tournament.
Hellebuyck also looked good in his second start, allowing only a goal to Tim Stßtzle. The U.S. got the goaltending it expected from him after a shaky outing from Jeremy Swayman 24 hours earlier.
âI thought it was his best game,â coach Mike Sullivan said. âI just think he was tracking pucks extremely well.â
Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid each had a goal and two assists in a clinical, businesslike 10-2 dismantling of France. Canada finished round robin play undefeated, outscoring opponents by 17 goals over three games.
âWe did what we came to do,â said McDavid, who leads all scorers in Milan. âWe came to win a hockey game and continue to get better.â
The blowout also included Tom Wilson fighting the player who delivered a forearm to Nathan MacKinnonâs face a couple of minutes earlier. MacKinnon returned and Wilson was ejected, since fighting is a game misconduct under international rules, but the already popular teammate earned even more respect inside Canadaâs locker room.
âHeâs going to stick up for his guys,â forward Sam Bennett said. âHeâs a leader on this team and heâs a guy thatâs going to protect our guys and do whatever it takes for our team.â
Macklin Celebrini, Canadaâs youngest player at 19, scored on a penalty shot and on the power play against France to give him four goals in three games. Wilson, picked by coach Jon Cooper to ride shotgun on the top line on McDavidâs right wing, also had a goal, an assist and some big hits.
Mark Stone scored short-handed with 3.4 seconds left in the first period and had two assists. Brandon Hagel had Canadaâs ninth goal in the third before Celebrini scored the 10th.
Rallying around the absence of injured winger Kevin Fiala, Switzerland beat Czechia 4-3 in overtime to give itself an easy path to the quarterfinals.
Winning the preliminary round finale means captain Roman Josiâs team next faces winless host Italy in the qualification playoffs Tuesday.
âWe knew it was a big game,â said Josi, the Nashville Predators defenseman who scored Switzerlandâs first goal by banking the puck off Radko Gudasâ left skate and in. âObviously a lot of up and downs in that third period but found a way. It was a huge win against a really good team.â
Former Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Dean Kukan scored the overtime winner. In 172 NHL regular-season and playoff games, he had just six goals and ranked this one top three in his career.
Timo Meier of the New Jersey Devils and Pius Suter of the St. Louis Blues also scored for Switzerland, and 38-year-old national team goaltender Leonardo Genoni stopped 29 of the 32 shots he faced.
Fiala, the Los Angeles Kingsâ second-leading scorer, had surgery to repair what the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation only called a lower left leg injury. He sent his teammates a video message from his hospital bed, and coach Patrick Fischer hopes Fiala is back at the athletesâ village Monday.
âHeâs still with us,â said Nico Hischer, who captains the Devils in the NHL. âWeâll play for him. And obviously you hate to see injury like that. Heâs one of our best players, so itâs obviously a tough loss for us. But we know heâs still engaged with us, and heâll cheer us on.â
Longtime NHL goaltender Frederik Andersen made 33 saves on 35 shots to give Denmark its first victory in Milan, 4-2 over Latvia.
Winning by two on an empty-netter also put Denmark ahead in the seeding, leaving Latvia to be 10th and face No. 7 Sweden in the qualification round Tuesday.
âThereâs no easy teams, but we wanted to give our best shot at whatever comes next,â Andersen said.