Tony Ferrari·Jan 2, 2024·Partner

Canada Eliminated in World Juniors Quarterfinal to Czechia

Team Canada's heading home after the quarterfinals of the 2024 world juniors, losing to Czechia just as the matchup was about to head to overtime. Tony Ferrari reacts.

New York Islanders center Mat Barzal had a game to remember in the team's first game against former captain John Tavares.

Eleven seconds. That’s how much time was left in a tied game between Czechia and Canada in the 2024 world juniors quarterfinal.

A shot that would have been going wide, a bad bounce off of a defender, and the puck went into the cage – the goaltender watching it as he slid the opposite way.

The Canadians started this game playing uninspired and sloppy hockey, going down 2-0 after the first period, but their response was exactly what you’d want to see. They stormed back in the second frame, scoring two of their own goals to tie the game and carried that momentum into the third period.

Every time Canada pushed the Czech squad, the players did everything in their power to dive in front of shots and disrupt passes with their sticks. Canada forced Czechia to bend, but Czechia refused to break.

Jakub Stancl was the game's opening goal-scorer, and he called game with the tally with 11 seconds remaining in the third period. The St. Louis Blues prospect isn’t the star for this Czech squad, but he exemplifies what the program has done over the last few years –dDevelop good, strong, puck-possession players who can play at both ends of the ice and outwork their opponents.

Czechia’s victory over Canada was a result of so many things, but the country's development of well-rounded, smart, heavy players is a major one. With Czechia heading to the semifinal, they get a chance to capture a medal for the second straight year.

It will be their third straight year advancing to the semifinal and playing for a medal after a bronze two years ago and a silver last year. Adding a gold medal would be a storybook ending.

As for Canada, the team exits in the quarterfinals for the first time since 2019 and only its third since 2000. The team never seemed to find its footing at this tournament. The offensive stars of the team never really figured it out. Its defense group was inconsistent at best. Despite being the biggest question coming in, their goaltender, Mathis Rousseau, did his part even if he never stole a game.

Macklin Celebrini was their best player from start to finish. The 2024 draft-eligible was fantastic on every shift. Relying on a draft-eligible player isn’t a formula for winning when that player isn’t Connor Bedard, even if Celebrini exceeded all of the expectations they had coming in. The support wasn’t there.

The issue was the 19-year-old offensive weapons that never quite found a way to break through. The issue was the hulking defenders who struggled as much when defending transition as they did when attempting to make a breakout pass. The issue was questionable coaching and lineup decisions.

It wasn’t a shock that Czechia beat Canada; it was a great matchup. It was a shock that it happened the way it did. After Czechia set the tone, Canada responded with vigor.

But with just 11 seconds, Czechia found a way to win. 

Stay tuned to THN.com for a post-game report from Ryan Kennedy in Gothenburg and a world juniors semifinal preview from Tony Ferrari.