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Stuck on silver

he rivalry has returned.
Dwayne Roloson, Oleg Saprykin,
Canada goaltender Dwayne Roloson slumps as Russian Oleg Saprykin celebrates his goal as Russia beat Canada 2-1 to win the 2009 World Championship Sunday.

Russia 2 Canada 1

BERN, Switzerland — The rivalry has returned.

After watching Russia capture another gold medal at the IIHF World Hockey Championship with a 2-1 victory over Canada on Sunday, it was impossible not to note some growing animosity between the sport’s original superpowers.

Consider it a new generation of players acting out international hockey’s traditional storyline.

It’s important to remember that the plot had been lost. The Russians went 15 years without winning a world championship but now have two in a row — delivering heartbreaking losses to Canada in consecutive years.

Is this the start of a new Russian dynasty?

“I think so, yes,” said defenceman Denis Grebeshkov.

Not everyone believes that matter has been resolved.

“I don’t think it’s a dynasty for them by any means,” said Canadian forward Dany Heatley. “I think they’ve got some great young players but so do we. I think we’ve got some of the best players in the world in Canada, especially the young guys that are coming up.

“I think it’s going to be a good rivalry for years to come.”

There might be some bad feelings left over from this one.

Alex Radulov scored the eventual game-winner for Russia on a nice individual effort and followed it with a dramatic celebration that caught the attention of the Canadian team. He twirled his stick and then opened his arms wide.

“That’s Radulov, he does that all the time,” said Canadian captain Shane Doan. “That’s to be expected.”

Oleg Saprykin had the other Russian goal and Ilya Bryzgalov made 37 saves. Jason Spezza replied for Canada while Dwayne Roloson stopped 15 shots.

This could have been a Canadian victory.

Heatley rang a shot off Bryzgalov’s mask, Doan fumbled a potential breakaway pass, Matthew Lombardi failed to get a shot away on a dangerous 2-on-1 and Steven Stamkos made a couple nice moves before having the puck land on top of the net.

“We more than doubled their shots, attack time was more than double probably,” said Stamkos. “I thought we played arguably our two best periods of the tournament in the second and third. It’s one of those games, it’s a disappointing feeling.

“You’re angry at yourself. We had so many opportunities.”

The Russians employed a different style and sat on their one-goal lead for much of the third period. Canada pushed hard for the equalizer and defenceman Shea Weber had a shot go off the outside of the goal in the final minute.

Once time expired, the Russians had another exuberant celebration while the Canadians helplessly looked on. The classy Doan even fired an opponent’s glove into the stands at PostFinance Arena in a rare display of frustration.

Yes, the Canada-Russia rivalry is alive and well heading into the next major international hockey tournament — the Vancouver Olympics. Even Steve Yzerman, Canada’s executive director for that event, took note.

“Absolutely, two finals in a row and great hockey games,” said Yzerman. “Having said that, the Swedes are going to be a powerhouse again and the U.S. is coming, the Finns. Anybody can win the Olympic tournament.

“Definitely, the Russian program’s back on track.”

The point is especially well made after this tournament. Sweden beat the U.S. 3-2 in the bronze medal game earlier Sunday and there wasn’t a wide gap in talent between those top four.

Canada has now established itself as a consistent performer at the world championship with appearances in final in six of the past seven years. The country is 3-3 in those gold medal games.

This one was a prime example of how small the gap is between winning and losing.

“We’re not down by the way we played,” said Rolson. “We’re down by the result of the game.”