Game one Game summary The Russians got off to a flying start, as the Canadians seemed sluggish to begin the series, turning the puck over in the neutral zone many times early in the first period.
Viacheslav Solodukhin of Russia scored the first goal of the tournament, giving the home team a 1–0 lead at 6:46.
Alexander Ryabev made the game 2–0 with a power play goal three minutes and 13 seconds later, on a shot that could have been easily stopped by Canadian goalie
Steve Mason. Canada's
Stefan Legein replied at 15:47 to make it 2–1 Russia with a slap shot right through the wickets of Russian goaltender
Semyon Varlamov.
Kyle Turris scored on a
penalty shot 41 seconds after that, after being tripped on a two-on-one. Canada opened the scoring in the second period, when
Brad Marchand bulged the twine 58 seconds in on a nice play set up by Sam Gagner. They made it 4–2 with 1:10 left in the period when Gagner scored after making a great play behind the net to bring it out front and slide it through the Russian goalie. In the third period, Canada was able to hold on to the lead despite taking another five penalties to add to their high penalty count. The penalty kill was led by the strong play of coach
Brent Sutter's son,
Brandon. Also contributing to the win was the solid play of Mason, who bounced back from giving up two early goals and finished the game with a total of 40 saves. Canada's penalty kill played extremely well, holding the Russians to only one power play goal on a shocking 13 power-play opportunities and leaving them scoreless on two 5-on-3s.
Karl Alzner was named player of the game for Canada.
Scoring summary Game two Game summary Both sides switched their goaltenders for the second game. Canada opted for
Jonathan Bernier, while Russia went with
Sergei Bobrovsky. Canada was the home team in game two, allowing coach Brent Sutter to make the last change and get the line match-ups he wanted. About ten minutes into the game, Brandon Sutter delivered a devastating hit to Russian star Alexei Cherepanov, as the Russian tried to cut into the middle of the Canadian zone. Cherepanov suffered a concussion and would not return in the series. Sutter's hit set the tone for the Canadians and started what would become a chippy affair. On a Canadian power play later in the first period, Kyle Turris finished off a give-and-go with David Perron with a nifty backhand upstairs into the Russian goal. As the second period began, fog began to become a factor in the game. The newly opened Ufa Arena did not have air conditioning, and because of the heat, a thick cloud of fog formed on the ice. Both teams were sent to skate around to try to clear the fog. The Canadians dominated the second period physically, very much due to Canada's checking line of Sutter, Legein, and Lucic. They smothered Cherepanov all game long, and also chipped in with a goal by Legein in the final minute of the second, one-timing a pass from Sutter. Canada dominated the third as well, despite having to delay the game again to try to clear the fog. The game continued to be a heated affair, as there were scrums after many whistles, resulting in penalties for both teams. With 2:01 left, David Perron scored a terrific goal, as he dangled the Russian defender, then using a spin move and backhanding the puck through his legs into the net. Jonathan Bernier earned the shutout in the 3–0 win.
Scoring summary Game three Game summary Leland Irving got the start for Team Canada as the Super Series moved to
Omsk for games three and four. Canada's powerplay was very effective, scoring four goals on nine chances. Semyon Varlamov started the game for the Russian squad, but was replaced after the first intermission by
Vadim Zhelobnyuk. The game was closer than the final score indicated, as the Canadians only led by a goal heading into the third.
Scoring summary Game four Game summary Brad Marchand opened the scoring in the final stages of the first period to give Canada a 1–0 lead. In the second period,
Sam Gagner scored a goal and an assist on
John Tavares' first goal of the series. Facing a 3–0 deficit in the third period, Russia scored two quick goals in 36 seconds to open the final frame, cutting the lead down to one.
Brent Sutter called a timeout after the two Russian goals and Marchand scored his second goal of the game on the next shift to halt the comeback. The final score was 4–2 as Canada swept the first leg of the series in Russia.
Scoring summary Game five Scoring summary Game six Scoring summary Game seven Scoring summary Game eight in Vancouver
Scoring summary == Leading scorers ==