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Czech Republic’s Martin Ruzicka (left) and Canada’s Brandon Kozun fight for the puck during the final period of the men’s preliminary round match on Saturday. Image Credit: AFP

Gangneung, South Korea: Petr Koukal and Jan Kovar scored in the shoot-out to give the Czech Republic a 3-2 win on Saturday and hand two-time defending gold medal winner Canada their first Olympic men’s ice hockey loss since the Vancouver Games in 2010.

The Czechs, who now sit in the pole position to win their group in the tournament’s preliminary round, battled back from a pair of one-goal deficits in the first two periods and then persevered under pressure from the Canadians through the third period and overtime to force the shoot-out.

Canada’s Wojtek Wolski scored first in the shoot-out, but was matched immediately by Koukal. Derek Roy then missed and Kovar slipped one between Canadian goaltender Ben Scrivens’ legs to give the Czechs the 2-1 advantage.

After both of the next shooters missed, Canada had a chance to tie but after beating Czech goalie Pavel Francouz with a nice move, Maxim Noreau’s soft shot bounced off the post, giving the Czechs the win.

“I’ve done that before, I thought it was going in,” Noreau said. “I must have pushed it wide or there was snow, but don’t have to dwell on that, we can move on to the next game now.” “A penalty shot is 50-50,” said Roman Cervenka, who took one of the Czech’s penalties and was stopped by Scrivens. “We were more lucky today.”

Canada last lost in Olympic to the US in the preliminary round of the Vancouver Games. They went on to win gold over the Americans there and then went undefeated four years later in Sochi to reclaim the Olympic hockey title.

Those two teams were stuffed with top NHL talent, but this year’s team is largely a mix of former NHL players and pros from other leagues because the NHL is not sending players to the Games for the first time since 1994.

The win puts the Czechs atop Group A with five points, and Canada moves into second with four, having picked up a point for the shoot-out loss. Group play ends Sunday with the Czechs facing Switzerland and the Canadians up against the South Koreans.

Canada drew first blood on the power play early in the first period. With the Czechs’ Dominik Kubalik off for slashing, Linden Vey drifted in from the point and snapped the puck toward Mason Raymond, who redirected it inside the far post and past Francouz.

Kubalik redeemed himself a few minutes later, capitalising on a broken clear attempt by the Canadians. Defenceman Chris Lee fanned on a bouncing puck to the right of the Canadian net, and Kubalik grabbed it and squeezed it between Scrivens and the post, knotting the game at 1-1.

The Canadians went back on top later in the period, again on the power play. Rene Bourque, who played 12 seasons in the NHL, tapped in a rebound on a shot from the point by Noreau with one second remaining on a holding penalty to Jakub Nakladal.

The Czechs fought back again, levelling inside the first minute of the second period. Scrivens stopped a pair of shots from Roman Horak and Michal Birner, but couldn’t contain the rebounds, and former Carolina Hurricane Michal Jordan snatched the loose puck and went top shelf.

Canada continued to outshoot the Czechs but could not finish, squandering a two-man advantage late in the second period. After a scoreless third period it went to a five-minute, three-on-three overtime.