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IIHF World Men's Ice Hockey Championship (GROUP B)
18. May 2026. 16:20h
Canada vs Denmark
BCF Arena, Fribourg, CH
2026
18
May
Tickets for Canada - Denmark Ice Hockey World Championship 2026 at BCF Arena Fribourg
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Canada - Denmark Ice Hockey World Championship 2026 at BCF Arena Fribourg

Looking for tickets for Canada - Denmark at the 2026 Ice Hockey World Championship? Here you can buy tickets for the game at BCF Arena in Fribourg and check the key match details, venue information and useful fan notes before travelling to the arena

Canada against Denmark in Fribourg: an early Group B test

Canada and Denmark meet at BCF Arena in Fribourg in a Group B match of the 2026 Men's Ice Hockey World Championship. The game is scheduled for May 18 at 16:20 local time, and it is a duel that has a clear favorite on paper, but also enough competitive edge that fans should not view it only through the reputation of the teams. Canada enters the tournament with a roster full of NHL experience, while Denmark in matches like this mainly looks for discipline, solid defense and patient play without unnecessary penalties.

For Canadian fans, this is one of the matches in which control of the rhythm, pressure in the attacking third and constant creation of traffic in front of the goal are expected. For Danish fans, however, this is an opportunity for their national team to show how much it can withstand against a team that traditionally has depth in every line. Tickets for this match are in demand among fans because Canada regularly attracts great interest at world championships, while Denmark in the outsider role can make the match more uncomfortable than it looks on the schedule.

What is at stake in Group B

Group B is played in competition with Denmark, Italy, Slovakia, Sweden, Canada, Czechia, Norway and Slovenia. That means Canada does not have much room for a slow warm-up: already in the first part of the tournament it must collect points against teams that will fight for the quarterfinals, but also against those that will look for surprises from a compact block. Denmark, on the other hand, has matches in the group in which it will more realistically look for points, but the duel with Canada is valuable as a test of speed, defensive organization and goaltending under pressure.

According to the schedule, before this meeting Canada plays against Sweden and Italy, while Denmark opens the tournament against Czechia and then plays against Norway. Because of that, the clash in Fribourg will already have the context of the first results in the group: for Canada it can be confirmation of a good start or a correction after a more difficult entry, and for Denmark an opportunity after the opening matches to show whether it is ready to stay in the fight for the middle of the standings.


  • Match: Canada vs Denmark

  • Competition: 2026 Men's Ice Hockey World Championship

  • Group: B

  • Venue: BCF Arena, Fribourg

  • Time: May 18, 16:20

Canada: attacking depth and experience in the locker room

Canada's roster for the tournament has 23 players: three goaltenders, eight defensemen and twelve forwards. Head coach Misha Donskov has at his disposal a group in which experienced game carriers and younger players who already have serious international value are mixed. Among the most prominent names are John Tavares, Ryan O'Reilly, Mark Scheifele, Mathew Barzal, Robert Thomas, Dylan Cozens and Macklin Celebrini. Such an attacking profile usually means that Canada can maintain a high tempo and not lose intensity through line changes.

The balance between experience and youth will be especially interesting. Tavares and O'Reilly bring routine, play in important moments and calmness on faceoffs, while Celebrini represents the type of player who can change the speed of an attack in one shift. Canada against Denmark does not necessarily have to rush from the first minute, but it will want to impose the rhythm early, force the opponent to play along the boards and wear down the Danish defensive pairs.

In defense, Canada has names that can help in both directions. Evan Bouchard, Morgan Rielly and Darnell Nurse bring different profiles: puck play, joining the attack from the second wave and physical presence. If Canada quickly establishes possession in the attacking third, the Danish goaltender could have an evening with many shots from the second wave, especially after return passes toward the blue line.

Canadian names that draw attention


  • John Tavares - experience, finishing around the goal and faceoff play.

  • Macklin Celebrini - youth, speed and the ability to create an extra man in attack.

  • Ryan O'Reilly - defensive responsibility and play in key shifts.

  • Evan Bouchard - zone exits and a shot from the blue line.

  • Cam Talbot - the most experienced goaltending option in Canada's selection.



Denmark: discipline as the first condition for a surprise

Denmark against Canada does not have the luxury of an open exchange of chances. If the match moves toward fast transition and a large number of Canadian entries with controlled puck possession, Denmark will find it very difficult to hold the result. Its more realistic path is simpler: a firm neutral zone, short shifts, clearing the puck when there is no safe exit and as few penalties as possible. Against Canada, every penalty is an additional risk because Canadian forwards know how to quickly change sides and open space for a shot from the circle.The Danish national team in recent years has had players who are used to a serious European rhythm, and in the broader context the best-known Danish hockey names such as Nikolaj Ehlers, Oliver Bjorkstrand, Lars Eller and Frederik Andersen show that Danish hockey has quality at the highest level. For this specific match, the most important thing is who will be in the lineup on game day and how head coach Mikael Gath will set up the defense against Canada's depth.

Denmark will have to pay attention to details that against weaker opponents sometimes go unpunished: a lost puck on the blue line, a late change, poor coverage of a player in the slot or unnecessary pushing of an opponent along the boards after the play has ended. Canada turns such mistakes into pressure, and pressure very quickly into a series of shots. That is why Denmark's goal will probably be to reduce the match to as many short, controlled stretches as possible.

Tactical rhythm: Canadian pressure against Danish patience

Canada will most likely look for a quick zone entry and constant rotation of forwards behind the goal. When Canadian centers win faceoffs in the attacking third, defensemen can immediately look for a shot through traffic or a pass to the side for a quick finish. Denmark must be precise there in blocking passing lanes, but also brave enough not to remain too deep. If all five Danish players retreat in front of their own goal, Canada will have too much time to prepare a shot.

The most interesting part of the match could be the first ten minutes. If Denmark survives the initial surge and does not concede an early goal, the meeting can take on a more nervous rhythm. Canada must then remain patient and not force individual entries through three players, while Denmark can look for the occasional transition attack. If Canada takes an early lead, the pressure on Denmark becomes greater because it has to come out of its defensive block and leave more space between the lines.

Seats in the stands disappear quickly when Canada plays, especially at neutral European tournaments where fans from several countries gather. Fribourg, because of the compactness of the city and the arena, can offer a very good fan day: arrival by train, a short move toward the venue and an atmosphere in which Canadian colors, Danish jerseys and local Swiss hockey fans easily mix.

BCF Arena: a compact hockey venue for 7,500 spectators

BCF Arena is the home of HC Fribourg-Gottéron and for this world championship its capacity is listed as 7,500 spectators. It is not a huge hall in which a fan gets lost in the space, but a modern hockey arena where the ice is felt well from the stands. For the meeting between Canada and Denmark, that is an important detail: Canadian pressure and every Danish penalty kill will be acoustically stronger than in larger, colder arenas.

The address of the arena is Chem. Saint-Léonard 5 in Fribourg. The hall is part of the local sporting identity, and for visiting fans it is most practical to plan arrival by public transport. The organizers and the arena itself point out the limited number of parking spaces, so bus or train is recommended. This is especially important for matches with greater international interest, when surrounding streets may be congested earlier than a fan expects.


  • Tournament capacity: 7,500 spectators.

  • Address: Chem. Saint-LĂ©onard 5, Fribourg.

  • Public transport: bus line 1 toward "Portes-de-Fribourg".

  • Arrival stops: Fribourg - Poya or Fribourg - Stade-Patinoire.

  • Train: S1 line, Fribourg / Freiburg, Poya station.



How to arrive and what to plan before the match

For fans coming from outside Fribourg, the simplest option is first to reach a rail connection toward the city and then continue by local transport toward Poya. The match ticket includes second-class travel by train and bus within the Fribourg Transport Network Frimobil system, through all zones, with the integrated ride valid from the first station within the local network at which the train or bus stops. This is a useful detail for travelers arriving from the direction of Bern or other Swiss cities.

Parking should be treated as a backup option, not the main one. Around hockey arenas, crowds often form in a short window before the start, and a match at 16:20 means that arrival can overlap with daytime traffic and a fan wave. It is worth arriving earlier, checking the entrance, finding the sector and leaving enough time for security checks. Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and a practical arrival plan is often just as important as buying the seat itself.

  • Arrive earlier if you are collecting tickets or coming with a larger group.

  • Count on limited parking near the hall.

  • For local arrival, use Poya or Stade-Patinoire as a landmark.

  • Check return connections before entering the hall.

  • Take into account that after the match a larger number of fans returns on the same lines.



Fribourg as a host city

Fribourg is a city in which Swiss bilingualism and a local rhythm between the German and French cultural spaces can be felt. For a fan coming to hockey, that means a simple, compact trip: the old part of the city, bridges, narrow streets and a hall that is not far from urban life. The match in the afternoon slot allows arrival earlier in the day, a shorter walk and then heading toward the arena without rushing.

For Canadian fans, Fribourg will probably be one of the stops on a tournament trip through Switzerland, while Danish fans in meetings like this will often have a different goal: to support the team in a match in which every defended attack and every good shift can lift the stand. Neutral spectators can expect a contrast of styles, strong Canadian individual quality and a Danish battle for every zone exit.

Atmosphere and fan expectations

Canadian matches at world championships are rarely quiet. A few good shifts, a strong forecheck or a goal from a scramble in front of the net are enough for the stands to heat up quickly. In a smaller arena like BCF Arena, that sound stays close to the ice. Danish fans, even when fewer in number, can give the match additional color because they support a team that against the favorite has to live from the energy of the bench and the stands.

It is worth securing tickets on time because this is a match in which a large Canadian hockey base, Danish fan interest and a local audience that knows the rhythm of the game on ice well come together. For families and neutral spectators, the advantage is the 16:20 slot, an early enough start for arrival without a late-night return, but attractive enough for a full fan program.

What to watch especially on the ice

The first thing to watch will be Canada's zone entry. If Denmark allows a controlled entry with speed, Canadian forwards can very quickly create an advantage. The second thing is Denmark's breakout under pressure. Every lost puck behind its own goal or along the boards opens space for Canadian second attacks, and that is the segment in which favorites most often break matches before the score becomes high.

The third thing is the power play. Canada has enough technically strong players to punish every unnecessary penalty, while Denmark must be dangerous in the rare moments when it gets space. The fourth detail is the goaltenders. If the Danish goaltender finds rhythm in the first period, Denmark can keep the match in the zone of uncertainty longer. If Canada finds an early rebound or a goal through traffic, the Danish plan becomes much more difficult.


  • Canadian forecheck and pressure on Denmark's first puck pass.

  • Danish discipline and number of penalties.

  • The effect of Canadian defensemen in the attacking third.

  • Denmark's goaltending response to early pressure.

  • Faceoffs in Denmark's defensive zone.



Practical picture of the meeting

Canada arrives with the expectation of victory, but it must not underestimate a match in which patience and work without the puck are just as important as individual quality. Denmark must withstand surges, stay out of the penalty box and look for its chances after Canadian mistakes in rotation. For fans, it is a good combination: a favorite that wants to show strength and an outsider that must play almost perfectly to make the match dramatic.

The most realistic scenario is Canadian dominance in possession and a higher number of shots, but hockey at world championships often brings at least one stretch in which the favorite must show patience. If Denmark stays close after the first period, BCF Arena can get a more nervous, louder rhythm. If Canada opens the match early, spectators could see a wide rotation of lines and pressure that does not let up until the final siren.Sources:
- IIHF - schedule of matches of the 2026 World Championship, Group B, Canada vs Denmark time and BCF Arena location.
- Hockey Canada - Canada's roster, staff, schedule and list of teams by groups.
- Sportsnet - announcement of the Canadian roster and team context for the 2026 tournament.
- IIHF - data on BCF Arena, capacity and the role of the venue at the tournament.
- BCF Arena / HC Fribourg-Gottéron - instructions for public transport, bus line, railway station and limited parking.
- IIHF Mobility - information on included local transport within the Frimobil network for match tickets.

Everything you need to know about tickets for Canada vs Denmark

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1 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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