Russians grab No. 1 seed by edging Czechs 2-1

CBS SportsLine wire reports
Feb. 16, 1998

NAGANO, Japan -- Russia, its hockey dynasty in tatters after the 1994 Olympics, is a medal threat once again.

Valeri Bure
Pavel Bure
Pavel Bure (right) takes a tumble over fellow NHL player and Czech Olympic opponent Petr Svoboda during Russia's 2-1 victory Monday. (AP)
and Alexei Zhamnov scored 10 seconds apart early in the third period as Russia held off the Czech Republic 2-1 Monday in the round-robin finale.

Mikhail Shtalenkov made 22 saves for Russia (3-0), which clinched one of two No. 1 seeds for the medal round by rallying to victory for the second time in two nights.

In Wednesday's single-elimination quarterfinals the Russians will play Belarus, a 5-2 loser to Sweden Monday. The Czechs meet the United States, which finished third in its group Monday after a 4-1 loss to Canada.

FOUR YEARS AGO, THE RUSSIANS finished fourth at the Lillehammer Games. It marked the end of the dominance of the former Soviet Union, which had won gold medals at seven of the previous eight Olympics.

That tournament featured a 5-0 loss to Finland -- the worst defeat in Russian/Soviet history and first time in 70 matches they were shut out.

The same threat loomed against the Czechs, especially since goalie Dominik Hasek had given up just two goals in his first two games, including a shutout of Finland.

After a scoreless first period, Russia fell behind 1-0 on Robert Reichel's power-play goal at 11:53 of the second.

But the Russians quickly got it together in the third.

BURE SCORED ON A SLAP SHOT at 3:27 to tie the game. Ten seconds later, Zhamnov fought his way through Czech defenders Petr Svoboda and Roman Hamrlik and scored the game-winning goal lying on his stomach.

Jaromir Jagr, who left the game midway through the first period with an apparent shoulder injury, had the best chance for the Czech Republic to knot the game. He had a breakaway with four minutes remaining but Shtalenkov came out and deflected the puck with his right pad.

The Czechs were 1-for-3 on the power play while Russia went 0-for-7.