

On Saturday, for the second straight day in Minnesota, a United States Hockey League goalie was announced as the player of the game for his respective country. Latvian goaltender Nils Roberts Maurins was presented with the award after stopping 36 shots in the 2-1 overtime loss against Canada.
Maurins and Latvia came close to upsetting Canada for the second straight year, scoring late to force overtime before giving up a power play goal on a one-timer by Canadian Michael Hage. Many fans remember the 2025 tournament in Ottawa, where current Sioux Falls Stampede goalie Linards Feldbergs played hero in a 3-2 shootout win, stopping 55 shots.
Maurins is currently in his first season in the USHL, having played 16 games with the Omaha Lancers. Through those 16 starts, Maurins has a 3-10-2 record, 3.37 goals-against average and 0.896 save percentage. The Lancers are currently 8-20-1-2 and find themselves last place in the Western Conference.
Maurins wasn’t the only USHL player to play a key role for Latvia on Saturday. Rūdolfs Bērzkalns of the Muskegon Lumberjacks scored with under two minutes to play to tie the game at one apiece and force overtime. Bērzkalns has seven goals and nine assists through 27 games with the Lumberjacks in the 2025 campaign. Bērzkalns is looking to help secure himself a spot in the upper rounds of the 2026 National Hockey League draft.
On the opening day of the tournament, it was Slovakian and Fargo Force net-minder Alan Lendak who took home the honours after stopping 29 shots in the 3-2 loss against Sweden. Lendak is in his second season with the Force and boasts a 5-6-0 record, 2.45 goals-against average and 0.915 save percentage.
Michal Pradel of Slovakia also had a strong showing in his 2026 World Junior debut, picking up the win in a 4-1 victory over Germany. Pradel stopped 32 shots in the win and currently plays for the Tri-City Storm. Pradel was selected in the third round by the Detroit Red Wings at the 2025 NHL draft and this season has a 9-9-3 record, 2.46 goals-against average and 0.916 save percentage.