2. Cozens has expanded role for Canada
Forward Dylan Cozens (Buffalo Sabres) has gone from support player for Canada at the 2020 WJC to its leading man through the preliminary round, with 11 points (six goals, five assists), second among all players. And he's done it playing center and right wing, looking equally comfortable in each spot.
"I think just confidence is the biggest thing," Cozens said. "Being a second-year guy, I just think my role is bigger this year. I put a lot of work in this offseason to create more, be more of a threat offensively, create things out of nothing and just use my speed and my explosiveness to create scoring opportunities."
Cozens also is leading off the ice. In the absence of injured forward Kirby Dach (Chicago Blackhawks), Cozens has shared captain duties with defenseman Bowen Byram (Colorado Avalanche).
"He's playing with a lot of confidence right now and that's huge," Byram said. "He's leading the team in a positive direction, he's doing the little things right and it's paying dividends for him and our team. ... It's been awesome and I'm positive he can keep it going."
3. Germany's top line
It only seemed like Tim Stuetzle (Ottawa Senators) and John-Jason Peterka (Buffalo Sabres) never left the ice for Germany during the preliminary round. But the way the forwards produced, it was difficult to keep them on the bench.
Stuetzle scored 10 points (five goals, five assists) and averaged 25:56 of ice time in four games. Peterka also scored 10 points (four goals, six assists) and averaged 25:31 of ice time in four games. Each scored a point on 10 of Germany's 14 goals during the preliminary round.
Their strong play helped Germany reach the quarterfinals for the first time since the current tournament format was adopted in 1996.
Stuetzle, the No. 3 pick in the 2020 NHL Draft, had five assists at the 2020 WJC, but this year as Germany's captain, he's driven his line and been the best player on the ice on a consistent basis. He scored five points (two goals, three assists) in the 5-4 win against Switzerland on Wednesday that clinched Germany's spot in the quarterfinals.
"It's unbelievable what he can do with the puck," Germany coach Tobias Abstreiter said. "Last year he was not as strong in the legs as he is now, and without the puck his game has improved as well. He's working both ways very hard. Defensively he's really improved his game and that's why I think he made a big step forward."