Hockey

Canada suffers upset loss to Denmark, drops 2nd straight at men's hockey worlds

Denmark beat Canada for the first time in a 3-2 upset win at the world ice hockey championship on Monday, while the United States slumped in a loss to the Czech Republic in Tampere, Finland.

Canada will need to defeat France on Tuesday to reach quarter-finals

Denmark players celebrate beside Canada's Damon Severson, right, after winning 3-2 in Group A action at the men's hockey world championship in Tampere, Finland on Monday. (Martin Meissner/The Associated Press)

Denmark beat Canada in the men's world hockey championship for the first time with a 3-2 victory Monday.

Mathias Bau's power-play goal at 12:11 of the third period gave Denmark a 3-1 lead and stood up as the game-winner at Helsinki Ice Hall.

Ryan Graves scored at 16:09 to pull Canada to within a goal, but the Canadians couldn't muster an equalizer with goaltender Chris Driedger pulled for an extra attacker.

Canada and Denmark, both 4-2, were tied for third in Group A behind Switzerland (6-0) and Germany (5-1).

WATCH | Canada drops 2nd in a row as Denmark takes upset win:

Denmark hands Canada 2nd-straight loss at hockey worlds

3 years ago
Duration 1:18
The 3-2 victory gave the Danes their first-ever win over Canada at the world hockey championships.

The top four teams in each pool advance to the quarter-finals.

The Canadians close out the preliminary round against France (1-1-0-4), while the Danes finish against Slovakia (3-3) on Tuesday.

"They played a good game and were really good defensively, but we need to find ways to score goals, and battle in front of the net to give ourselves scoring chances," said Canadian centre Nicholas Roy from Amos, Que.

"We need to regroup now. We have another game tomorrow, so we will look at the video and look at what we can do better. We need to come ready to play tomorrow because the tournament is not over."

The closest Denmark had come to beating Canada previously was a 2-2 tie in 2003.

'We need a little more desperation'

"It is important for us to realize that every team is going to play their best against us," Canadian head coach Claude Julien said. "We may not have been as prepared as we should have been in the first period, and we fell behind 2-0 and had to play catch-up.

"In the third period, the Danes were playing desperate and were blocking shots and getting in shooting lanes because they wanted to win so badly. It is important for us to start taking that approach as well if we intend on being champions at the end of this tournament.

"We need a little more desperation from our group, which I know we have, and we will be fine."

Sebastian Dahm made 29 saves in Denmark's net, while Driedger stopped 21 shot in the loss.

Markus Lauridsen and Peter Regin also scored for the Danes. Max Comtois scored Canada's other goal.

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