"Wonderful ice," Slafkovsky said. "Ice pack fixes everything and I think I'm going to put an ice pack on my neck next game too and I hope that we score two goals."
Slovakia kept the pressure on and Dvorsky made it 4-0 at 10:21. He created a 2-on-1 by chipping the puck off the boards between the benches to himself. Dvorsky kept it and beat Grubauer to extend the lead.
"When they get 2-on-1s, when they get 3-on-2s, they make those skilled plays and are super good finishing," Germany forward JJ Peterka said. "So, definitely super dangerous."
Reichel scored on a one-timer from Draisaitl to cut Slovakia's lead to 4-1 at 14:59, but the Slovaks regained the four-goal lead 58 seconds into the third period when Regenda scored his second of the game from between the circles to make it 5-1.
Regenda celebrated by tugging on his jersey to show the Slovakian logo on his chest.
"It's what came to me in the moment," Regenda said.
Tiffels cut the deficit to 5-2 on the power play at 9:09 of the third period with a one-timer from the right circle, but Tatar scored an empty-net goal off a 3-on-1 rush to make it 6-2 at 16:33.
"We have so much talent, so many hard-working guys that if everyone gives 100 percent, we can win against every team," Slovakia forward Martin Pospisil said. "We are excited for another game."
NOTES: Dvorsky has six points (three goals, three assists) in the tournament, the most points by an NHL rookie in a single Olympics. He has at least a point in all four of Slovakia's games. … It was the first win for Slovakia against Germany in an Olympic tournament involving NHL players. Germany won in the qualifying round in Salt Lake City in 2002 (3-0), and in the consolation round in Nagano in 1998 (4-2).