The 2021 IIHF World Championship is back for 2021 in Riga, Latvia, and the ROC vs Belarus is set to run at the Olympic Sports Centre, Group A on Tuesday, Jun 1. The match starts at 1:15 p.m ET and will broadcast on NHL Network, TSN.
Here’s what you need to know to tune in:
- What: ROC vs Belarus Hockey
- When: Tuesday, Jun 1, 2021
- Where: Olympic Sports Centre
- Time: 1:15 p.m ET
- TV: NHL Network, TSN
- Live stream: Watch here (Free trial)
How to watch ROC vs Belarus hockey without cable
In the United States, every American game, along with select games of other countries, will be shown on NHL Network. NHL Network can be streamed on fuboTV and Sling TV. In Canada, TSN will air every game of the 2021 tournament with select games also appearing exclusively on TSN.ca or the TSN App.
FuboTV
You can watch a live stream of NHL Network (live in most markets), NHL Network and 100-plus other TV channels on FuboTV, which comes with a free seven-day trial:
Once signed up for FuboTV, you can watch ROC vs Belarus hockey live on the FuboTV app, which is available on your Roku, Roku TV, Amazon Fire TV or Fire Stick, Apple TV, Chromecast, Xbox One, Samsung Smart TV, Android TV, iPhone, Android phone, iPad or Android tablet. Or you can watch on your computer via the link here (Free trial).
If you can’t watch live, FuboTV also comes with 250 hours of cloud DVR space.
AT&T TV
AT&T TV has four different channel packages: “Entertainment”, “Choice”, “Ultimate” and “Premier.” (live in most markets) and NHL Network are included in every package, but you can pick any package and any add-on you want with your free 14-day trial. NHL Network is on channel 638 in Standard Definition and channel 1638 in HD.
Note that the free trial isn’t advertised as such, but your “due today” amount will be $0 when signing up. If you watch on your computer, phone or tablet, you won’t be charged for 14 days. If you watch on a streaming device on your TV (Roku, Fire Stick, Apple TV, etc.), you will be charged for the first month, but you can get still get a full refund if you cancel before 14 days.
Once signed up for AT&T TV, you can watch ROC vs Belarus hockey live on the AT&T TV app, which is available on your Roku, Roku TV, Amazon Fire TV or Fire Stick, Apple TV, Chromecast, Samsung Smart TV, iPhone, Android phone, iPad or Android tablet. Or you can watch on your computer via the link here (Free trial).
If you can’t watch live, AT&T TV also comes with 20 hours of Cloud DVR storage (with the ability to upgrade to unlimited hours).
Sling TV
For the best NHL coverage on Sling, get Sling Blue + Sports Extra. That way, you can watch games broadcast regionally NBC select markets, games shown nationally on NBC, NBCSN or the Golf Channel and extra coverage on NHL Network.
Once signed up for Sling TV, you can watch ROC vs Belarus hockey live on the Sling TV app, which is available on your Roku, Roku TV, Amazon Fire TV or Fire Stick, Apple TV, Chromecast, Xbox One, Samsung Smart TV, LG Smart TV, Android TV, airTV Mini, Oculus, Portal, iPhone, Android phone, iPad or Android tablet. Or you can watch on your computer via the link here (Free trial).
If you can’t watch live, Sling TV comes included with 50 hours of cloud DVR
ROC vs Belarus hockey preview
A shoot-out win for Team ROC sensationally dumped Sweden out of the World Championship after the group stage. Vladimir Tarasenko, on his first appearance in this tournament potted the decisive attempt to give his team the narrowest of verdicts and lift the Red Machine to first place in the group.
It’s unusual for Czech hockey fans to celebrate Russian goals, but Tarasenko’s effort might have raised a cheer among fans from Prague to Ostrava as it confirmed that the Czech Republic secured its top-four finish regardless of tomorrow’s results against Slovakia.
But for Sweden, which misses out on knock-out action for the first time since the format was introduced, it was a desperately disappointing end to an absorbing game.
Captain Henrik Tommernes said after the action that he felt ’empty’ – and blamed a slow start that saw Sweden lose to Denmark and Belarus. Both nations celebrated their first World Championship victories over the Tre Kronor.
“You just feel empty here,” he said. “We played a really good game, I feel like we had the lead a long way into the third. But then they scored to tie and got the 2-1 goal on the shift right after so it was tough.
“We scored the 2-2 goal and we still had a chance, but in the end it was really tough loss.”
Team ROC’s head coach Valeri Bragin had a special present for his 65th birthday in the form of two Stanley Cup winners available for his team against Sweden. Defenseman Dmitri Orlov and forward Vladimir Tarasenko cleared quarantine in time to make their first appearances of the championship, and they played a huge role in that third-period turnaround with assists on the two goals in 12 seconds that turned this game around.
First it was Orlov, stripping the puck from Andreas Wengerli in centre ice, then outwitted Jonathan Pudas before finding Anton Slepyshev for the tying goal on 12:34 of the third. And, straight from the face-off, Tarasenko got onto Nikita Nesterov’s long pass and teed up Alexander Barabanov to put team ROC in front.
“I don’t know what happened on their first goal,” added Tommernes. “It was a breakdown, and then the puck hit their guy in the skate and goes in. And then the next shift, I’m not sure, a miscommunication, and they scored again.”
Those quick goals were testament to Bragin’s reshuffle, putting Barabanov onto Tarasenko’s line after the Russians lacked firepower in the second period. It took a little time to pay off as Sweden continued to press in the third, but when the connection clicked, it changed the game.
And Tarasenko himself reflected on a successful arrival in the tournament. “There was a lot of pressure there,” he said. “It was my first game but an important moment for us to clinch the playoffs today. A lot of credit to the Swedish team, they worked really hard and played really well.
“It was a hard game we played really well together but there is a lot of areas we can improve. We have time to talk and get ready for tomorrow.”
Sweden was down, but not quite out. Two-and-a-half minutes later, Victor Olofsson resurrected his team’s hopes with a tying goal. He sped into the ROC zone and opted for an early shot that snapped over Alexander Samonov and kept the Tre Kronor alive in the competition for a while longer.
Olofsson, too, felt that the seeds of today’s disappointment were sown on the opening weekend. “After those first two losses, we kind of had to win almost every game to get to the quarter-finals,” he said. “Looking back, those two games made a big difference for us.
“I don’t think we played a bad game after that. I think we battled hard every game and had a chance to win every game. We couldn’t find a way to do it.”
Meanwhile, Orlov was concerned that the ROC was unable to see out the victory in regulation. “Letting in that second goal stung a bit, maybe we lost concentration,” he said. “I don’t think we can get away with mistakes like that in the play-offs and I’m sure the coaches will tell us about it. We’ll be better and strong in the next games.”
In overtime, Sweden held the puck for almost three minutes before getting a shot at Samonov as the Tre Kronor looked to tempt the Russians into an error. At the other end, Reideborn twice came up big to deny first Grigorenko then Burdasov and, once again, keep Swedish hopes alive as the game went to a shoot-out.
ROC was always one step ahead in that shoot-out and when Marcus Sorensen missed the fifth attempt for the Tre Kronor, Tarasenko could wrap it up.
All that seemed far away when the ROC made the more composed start to the game, diligently probing in the opening stages without seriously testing Adam Reideborn in the Swedish net. Anton Burdasov, a team-mate of Orlov and Tarasenko on the 2011 gold medal team at the World Juniors, put an early chance over the top after Nikita Zadorov’s long pass sprang the defence and set up a KHL duel between the SKA forward and the Ak Bars goalie.
However, Sweden got ahead on its first power play of the game, collecting its sixth power play goal of the tournament. This was a play we’ve seen more than once from the Tre Kronor in this tournament – traffic in front of the net, a willingness to shoot and a man alert to the rebound. This time it was Adrian Kempe with the feed, Oscar Lindberg firing in a powerful shot from the right-hand circle and Jesper Froden sliding home the rebound with Alexander Samonov unable to reverse the strong push that helped him stop Lindberg’s effort.
After the midway point in the second period, both goalies found themselves taking a battering. First, Sweden’s Reideborn was bundled into his own net after Andreas Wingerli took out Anton Slepyshev as the Russian forward headed for goal. Then Wingerli ended up in the net at the other end, along with Samonov, after Max Friberg’s rush had the SKA St. Petersburg goalie at full strength.
If ROC had the better of the play in the first period, Sweden was the more menacing in the second and the best chance of the frame went begging soon afterwards when a puck bounced of Slepyshev’s skate and caused a turnover in centre ice. Froden pounced on the opportunity and fashioned a shooting chance for Friberg but Samonov got his blocker behind the shot and his defence eventually put out the fire around his net.
The third frame continued with Sweden enjoying more of the action. Two further power plays helped to deprive the Red Machine of momentum until suddenly the offence exploded into life with that quickfire double.
After Olofsson’s leveller, though, Sweden again had the better chances with Adrian Kempe going especially close after good work from Henrik Tommernes in the corner presented the opportunity. However, Samonov again came up with the answer and the game moved to overtime before the Tre Kronor were dumped out of the competition earlier than anyone expected before the action began.