Canucks 4-Nations Face-Off: How Elias Pettersson’s great escape got a big boost

Pettersson is heading to the 4-Nations Face-Off tournament with much needed confidence. Plus, a look at this week’s 4-Nations games, including Canada vs. the U.S.

It would be the magical and medicinal potion to cure everything that has been ailing him.

Pettersson will be reunited with national-team coach Sam Hallam, his Swedish elite league bench boss at Vaxjo HC. And projected to play between Filip Forsberg and Lucas Raymond on an intriguing second line, he could have a proven veteran and an emerging star on his flanks.

Pettersson could apply his 2018 and 2019 world championship efforts — a combined 13 points (4-9) in 13 games — to soak up camaraderie and enjoy the experience. And, most importantly, forget a miserable and disconnected recent run of just five points (1-4) in 14 games after missing four with an upper-body injury.

“He had some fun (Saturday) and he’s got to understand pressure is fun sometimes.”

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Elias Pettersson throws stick over Plexiglas to a fan after the Canucks beat the Leafs 2-1 on Saturday to head into NHL break on a high.Photo by Derek Cain /Getty Images

“I could just tell early on that he was into it,” added Tocchet. “He needs a bit of a push and that was a big thing. Hopefully, he can build off it.”

Here’s a look at 4-Nations games this week in Montreal before the event shifts to Boston:

Canada vs. Sweden

When and where: Wednesday, 5 p.m. | Bell Centre
TV: Sportsnet. Radio: Sportsnet 650

There’s something to be said for playing freely and remembering good vibes from capturing world title gold in 2018. Pettersson and Forsberg played on that team, and the potential to play prime-time playmaker with the veteran and intriguing Raymond should light a fire within Pettersson to play a key role.

Who to watch: Oldies but real goodies

Sidney Crosby had upper-body injury, but will gut it out at age 37. His 47 points (20-27) in 37 elite-level international games are the excellence benchmark. Drew Doughty, 35, missed 47 games with ankle fracture and replaces injured Alex Pietrangelo. He has 17 points (2-15) in 28 senior international tests.

U.S. vs. Finland

When and where: Thursday, 5 p.m. | Bell Centre
TV: Sportsnet. Radio: Sportsnet 650

Why watch: Don’t sleep on the Finns

At the world championship, they upset Canada to claim gold in overtime in 2019 and then prevailed again in 2022. They were an unknown entity in 2019 with a team built more on positional play rather than big point producers. They didn’t have a player in top 10 scoring, but had a very hot goalie (see below).

Who to watch: Goaltender Kevin Lankinen

The Canucks stopper will vie for net with former Nashville Predators teammate Juuse Saros, but his numbers are superior this season. He should get the start. Saros was lit up for six goals Thursday by the lowly Chicago Blackhawks. Lankinen also had stellar numbers in backstopping that 2019 world win.

Finland vs. Sweden

When and where: Saturday, 10 a.m. | Bell Centre
TV: Sportsnet. Radio: Sportsnet 650

Why watch: They don’t like each other

The Finns are without three injured defencemen, including top pairing Dallas Stars D-man Miro Heiskanen, who had knee surgery Feb. 3. They will likely adjust for the grudge match by moving Niko Mikkola to align with Esa Lindell as top shutdown pair. Tough task awaits.

Who to watch: Winger Mikko Rantanen

The former Colorado Avalanche sniper was traded to the Carolina Hurricanes on Jan. 24, then suffered a lower-body injury and didn’t play Saturday. He was deemed fit to play in the 4 Nations and has history of delivering: In four world events, he has 31 points (9-22) in 31 games.

U.S. vs. Canada

When and where: Saturday, 5 p.m. | Montreal, Bell Centre
TV: Sportsnet. Radio: Sportsnet 650

Why watch: Another rivalry ramps up

Who to watch: Goaltender Connor Hellebuyck

Reigning Vezina Trophy winner leads NHL stoppers, who have played at least 30 games, with stunning numbers. He’s tops in wins (34), goals-against average (2.06), saves percentage (.925) and shutouts (6). Has 9-1-0 record for U.S. in two worlds tourneys with 1.59 GAA, .930 percentage, two shutouts.

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