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    Derek O'Brien
    Apr 17, 2025, 18:57

    They’ve been described this week as the most physically imposing European team to ever play in the Women’s World Championship and that was on full display in Czechia’s convincing 7-0 victory over Switzerland in the quarterfinals of the 2025 IIHF Women’s Worlds.

    After an evenly played first half of the opening period, the Czechs killed off Switzerland’s first power play and then went to work, scoring five goals in a span of 8:01 to effectively put the game away. The Czechs, in fact, only recorded 10 shots on goal in the first period but won all the puck battles in the Swiss zone, with the Swiss defenders seemingly unable to hold them back.

    “We said we were gonna go hard to the net, have players in front and try to get those rebounds, which worked for us,” said Tereza Vanišová, who scored a goal and had two assists in the opening period.

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    For fans of any team that she’s played for know – be that the University of Maine, the Boston Pride, Leksands IF in Sweden, the Toronto Six or the PWHL teams in Ottawa and Montreal – Vanišová thrives when the game gets physical.

    “I think hockey should be a physical game,” she said. “It’s too bad the refs are calling (so many) penalties because some of them are just not penalties, it’s just hockey. I think the bodychecks should be allowed, for sure. I think that’s hockey.”

    Vanišová is one of several 1996-born players that have played on the Czech national team for a long time. That group won bronze at the 2014 U-18 Women’s Worlds and later that year, played for the senior women’s national team as 17-year-olds in the Division I Group A tournament on home ice in Přerov.

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    In addition to Vanišová, the other ‘96ers are Vendula Přibylová, defenders Aneta Tejralová and Dominika Lásková and goaltender Klára Peslarová. Denisa Křižová and Kateřina Mrázová, who are a bit older, were also on the national team back in ‘94.

    “We’ve been through a lot, actually, as a team,” she said reminiscently when reminded of how far the group has come. “We have a core of players who’ve been on the national team for so many years. We’ve been through it together and … I think we’re getting better each year.”

    Looking ahead to the semifinals, she said, “Well, the USA has a really good team and we obviously lost the game against them in the group. I don’t know, we’ll try are hardest and see.”

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