Sweden defeated Czechia 4-2 to claim the gold medal at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship, ending a 14-year drought since their last title in 2012. Canada secured bronze with a 6-3 victory over Finland, while standout performances from prospects like Ivar Stenberg and Gavin McKenna highlighted the tournament's focus on future NHL talent.
The 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship concluded in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, after 11 days and 29 games, showcasing over 100 NHL prospects. Sweden captured its third gold medal in history, improving to 2-7 in championship finals since the playoff system's adoption in 1996. In the gold-medal game at Grand Casino Arena, Love Harenstam of the St. Louis Blues made 27 saves to secure the 4-2 win over Czechia. Casper Juustovaara scored a short-handed goal in the first period, followed by Victor Eklund's power-play tally in the second. Sascha Boumedienne extended the lead to 3-0 in the third before Czechia's late rally with goals from Adam Jiricek and Matej Kubiesa. Ivar Stenberg sealed it with an empty-net goal.
"It was time for gold, and we did it. It's amazing," said Sweden forward Anton Frondell of the Chicago Blackhawks. Captain Jack Berglund added, "This is such a special group... I'm proud of everyone."
Czechia, seeking its first gold since 2001, earned silver and has now medaled in four straight tournaments. Vojtech Cihar of the Los Angeles Kings was named tournament MVP with 11 points (four goals, seven assists). Czechia coach Patrik Augusta noted, "Before this tournament, if somebody told us that we will win a silver medal, we will take it."
In the bronze-medal game, Canada ended a two-year medal drought with a 6-3 win over Finland. Gavin McKenna, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, recorded a goal and three assists, finishing the tournament with 14 points—the most among draft-eligible players. Sam O'Reilly scored twice, and Zayne Parekh set a Canadian defenseman record with 13 points (five goals, eight assists). Michael Hage led all skaters with 15 points.
"That group... showed a lot of resilience," said Canada captain Porter Martone. The tournament's Media All-Star Team included Harenstam, Parekh, Czechia's Tomas Galvas, Hage, Frondell, and Cihar. Prospects like Sweden's Stenberg (10 points) and Viggo Bjorck impressed scouts, boosting their draft stock.