McDavid Haula

BOSTON -- It's a must-win Monday doubleheader for potentially three teams at the 4 Nations Face-Off.

It certainly is for Canada and Finland in the afternoon game at TD Garden (1 p.m. ET; TNT, MAX, truTV, SN, TVAS). If the game between the Canadians and Finns ends in regulation, the winner will advance to play the United States in the championship game at TD Garden on Thursday.

The United States is already guaranteed to finish first in the round-robin portion. It has six points from regulation wins against Finland and Canada.

"I believe that we are ready to play against Team Canada," Finland coach Antti Pennanen said. "It's going to be a big battle for us and it means a lot because we respect Team Canada a lot and the hockey history. So, it's going to be a big thing for us if we can win against that team."

If Canada-Finland does produce a winner in regulation, Sweden will be playing for only pride against the U.S. in the nightcap (8 p.m. ET; TNT, MAX, truTV, SN, TVAS). It will be eliminated if the first game ends in regulation.

Sweden, Finland and Canada each has two points in the tournament standings, but Canada and Finland both won against Sweden so each owns the tiebreaker against the Swedes.

"If it's a game that doesn't mean anything we're still playing the U.S. in Boston," Sweden coach Sam Hallam said. "We know what they want to do in front of their home crowd so we need to be ready for everything."

However, if Canada-Finland goes to overtime, Sweden would remain alive and would leap both by defeating the United States in regulation, setting up a Sweden-U.S. rematch in the final.

"I don't think it changes that much in our preparations," Hallam said. "We're doing everything we can today and tomorrow to prepare to play a game, give ourselves an opportunity to play the last game. We can't have anything to do with the result in the early game so we're preparing to do the best we can and see it as a game to give us a chance to play the last game."

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      4 Nations Face-Off continues Monday with Canada vs. Finland and Sweden vs. USA

      From Canada's perspective, forward Connor McDavid said they're treating it like a Game 7.

      "The difference probably between Canada and Finland is we have massive expectations in front of us, but expectations don't win hockey games," Canada coach Jon Cooper said. "You have to go out there and perform and I think our team has performed extremely well."

      The Canadians, though, lost to the Americans 3-1 in an emotionally charged, memorable round-robin game at Bell Centre on Saturday. They would like nothing more to get another shot at the U.S., but first they get the Finns, and no, they're not worried about looking past them.

      "You have to marvel at the Finns because you can go to any tournament and they always seem to be the team that probably never gets the respect they deserve until they're in the final, and then you're like, 'Whoa, how did Finland get here?'" Cooper said. "But it's every tournament. It's World Juniors. They could be World Championships. They're always, always, always hanging around and it's because they just play a disciplined style. I think everybody in the country knows exactly how they play. They have an identity to them. Now you look and all of a sudden you're like 'Wow, that's (Mikko) Rantanen and that's (Aleksander) Barkov and that's (Sebastian) Aho and that's (Artturi) Lehkonen.' You just go down the list of guys that have either won Cups or been the guys that have propelled their teams to win at playoff time. And then they've always had sneaky good goaltending, always."

      For Finland, it's been an emotional rollercoaster, losing 6-1 to the U.S. in a game that was 2-1 going into the third period before coming back to defeat rival Sweden 4-3 in overtime on Saturday, setting up the chance to advance to the final with a regulation win against Canada.

      "I think we were just [ticked]," forward Erik Haula said of the Finns' emotions after losing to the U.S.

      Finland defenseman Henri Jokiharju said to defeat the Canadians, the key is to play them much the way the U.S. did; strong defensively, always in structure, smart with the puck, with little risk.

      "We've got to stick together and take their best guys, try to take them out of the game," Jokiharju said. "Stick together, skate hard, make good plays with the puck. It can't be just throwing it around. You've got to be smart for sure against these guys."

      The Swedes could be going through some emotional highs and lows as the Canada-Finland game plays out. They know if it ends in regulation they will be eliminated, but the mindset, as Hallam mentioned, is to prepare as if the game means everything to them.

      In fact, Sweden defenseman Mattias Ekholm said an attack mindset is what the Swedes need now after consecutive 4-3 overtime losses to Canada and Finland in Montreal.

      Ekholm certainly didn't couch his comments with the what-if scenario.

      "Just got to make sure that you come ready for the game and you just play your heart out," Ekholm said. "Whether you lose 6-0 or you win 6-0 doesn't really matter that much. But don't leave anything out there. I think we have the players to do it. I think it's more a mindset than X's and O's and whatnot on a drawing board at this point."

      And for the Americans, they want to improve in every area, as they feel they did from their game against Finland to their game against Canada. They want to prepare the right way for the final regardless of who they play.

      They're certainly not treating it as some throwaway game in Boston even though they've already punched their ticket to the final.

      "There's still a ton to play for," U.S. forward Kyle Connor said. "We've got the Olympics coming up to and we have to make sure we let Sweden know what we're about. Just not let off the gas. That's going to be the big focal point for us. And I don't think we will."

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