In a stunning turn of events at the Milan Winter Olympics, Slovakia secured advancement to the quarterfinals in men’s hockey despite suffering a 5-3 defeat against Sweden in Saturday’s preliminary round finale. The crucial moment came when Dalibor Dvorsky of the St. Louis Blues scored with just 39 seconds remaining, creating a tiebreaker scenario that ultimately favored Slovakia.
The complex advancement mathematics hinged on Slovakia’s superior goal differential among three tied teams in Group B, contingent upon Finland’s expected victory over host Italy later that day. This unusual circumstance prompted Slovakia’s Juraj Slafkovsky, the reigning Olympic MVP who shares the tournament scoring lead with Canada’s Connor McDavid at six points each, to describe the outcome as “probably the best loss I ever had.”
Dvorsky, who netted the critical power-play goal following a penalty against Sweden’s Lucas Raymond, echoed this sentiment, calling it “the best loss of my life.” The forward revealed their late-game strategy was straightforward: “We all know what we need to do on the ice. There was not too much tactics, right? At this point of the game, just try to get pucks to the net.”
Meanwhile, Sweden faced disappointment despite their on-ice victory, having performed significantly better than in their previous 4-1 loss to archrival Finland. Coach Sam Hallam’s decision to pull goaltender Jacob Markstrom while leading by two goals in the final seconds—aiming for additional tiebreaker advantages—backfired as Sweden failed to score again. Alternate captain Victor Hedman called the outcome a “tough pill to swallow” but vowed the team would “regroup and be ready for our next challenge.”
In other Olympic hockey action, Latvia delivered an upset victory over Germany with a 4-3 win, thanks to goals from Eduards Tralmaks and Renars Krastenbergs just over three minutes apart. Zemgus Girgensons of the Buffalo Sabres, one of ten NHL players on Latvia’s roster, expressed confidence in his team’s capabilities: “We’re a good team. We believed it. We came in today thinking we’re going to win.” Germany now faces a critical match against the United States on Sunday night.
