MONTREAL -- Mikael Granlund scored the overtime winner, and Finland beat Sweden 4-3 Saturday in an instant classic, back-and-forth game between the bitter rivals at the 4 Nations Face-Off.
Granlund scored 1:49 into 3-on-3 OT, sending fans in Finland's blue and white at Bell Centre to the exits cheering and chanting, "Suomi!"
"It's always great to beat Sweden," Granlund said in his postgame media availability.
Anton Lundell and Mikko Rantanen also scored for Finland, and Kevin Lankinen made 21 saves in his debut at the NHL-run international tournament, including a pad stop on Mika Zibanejad seconds into overtime. Coach Antti Pennanen switched from Juuse Saros to Lankinen after his team lost 6-1 to the United States on Thursday night.
"I don't think we needed to do much, we knew that there was a lot of good things we did in the game against USA," Finland captain Aleksander Barkov said in his postgame interview on SportsNet. "Obviously, the result, 6-1, was not great, it did not look good. But I thought we did a lot of good things. And same thing today."
Mikael Granlund after putting Finland on his back! 🇫🇮
— ESPN (@espn) February 15, 2025
📸: Vitor Munhoz/4NFO/World Cup of Hockey pic.twitter.com/Vgzu07CLU6
Knocking off Sweden puts the Finns right back in it with one game for them left in round-robin play. The top two teams among the U.S., Canada, Sweden and Finland meet in the championship game next week in Boston.
Despite goals from Zibanejad and Rasmus Dahlin, the Swedes are in trouble and now might need some help to make the final. Filip Gustavsson was pulled after allowing two goals on four shots in the first period, and Linus Ullmark allowed two on 17 the rest of the way.
Finland also has a potential injury situation to monitor after Barkov came up limping from blocking a shot late in the second. The reigning Stanley Cup champion from the Florida Panthers continued playing through it.
"We got a little better, and played for a full 60-something minutes," Barkov said. "We knew, playing against Sweden, even if it's 4 a.m., it doesn't matter. Everyone is going to be fired up. We came out hard, and we played really well."
The U.S. faces Canada on Saturday night in the most anticipated game in Montreal, but Sweden and Finland put on quite the show in the matinee. Facing off 19 years after Sweden defeated Finland in the 2006 Olympic gold medal game in Turin, this time the Finns were on the winning end of an entertaining game featuring a blend of speed, skill and physicality -- and some pushing and shoving after the whistles, which was expected of players from countries that do not like each other.
The tournament shifts to Boston, where Finland faces Canada on Monday afternoon at 1 p.m. ET and Sweden plays the United States at 8 p.m.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.