GB ice hockey suffered a 4-1 defeat to hosts Switzerland in Zurich at the 2026 IIHF World Championship, but not before producing yet another determined, gutsy display against one of the tournament’s standout sides.
GB Ice Hockey Milestone as Lachowicz Reaches 100 Caps
Before a ball was dropped — or rather a puck — the night already carried real weight. Robert Lachowicz became just the eighth GB player in history to earn 100 international appearances, receiving his milestone cap in a brilliant locker room moment where Robert Dowd handed him the jersey bearing the captain’s C. Leading his nation on such a landmark evening, Lachowicz deserved far more than the result delivered.
Between the pipes, Mat Robson was outstanding, making 37 saves against a Swiss side brimming with top-tier NHL talent. He stopped efforts from Timo Meier, Theo Rochette, Damien Riat and Sven Andrighetto, keeping GB in the contest far longer than many would have anticipated. BBC Sport’s ice hockey coverage has tracked this GB squad’s resilience throughout the tournament, and tonight was no different.
Switzerland Punish GB Errors But Kirk Fires Back
Switzerland, however, were ruthless when it mattered. Nino Niederreiter broke clear of the GB defence to open the scoring early in the first period. Then, just over a minute into the second, Nico Hischier capitalised on a turnover in the GB zone to double the advantage. Simon Knak extended the lead further midway through the period with a crisp one-timer after the puck fell kindly at his feet.
Nevertheless, GB refused to fold. Liam Kirk drove a two-on-one rush late in the middle frame and, after his initial effort was stopped, slid a perfectly weighted pass to Josh Waller, who finished on the backhand into an open net. The crowd barely had time to process it. Brilliant.
Defensively, GB continued to scrap throughout the third period. Mark Richardson and Ollie Betteridge both made crucial blocks on the penalty kill — the kind of work that doesn’t make headlines but keeps dressing rooms together. Unfortunately, Niederreiter had the final say, converting from a rebound for his second of the game to restore Switzerland’s three-goal cushion. A late Liam Kirk effort — when a dump-in from the boards crept into the net — was ruled out for offside, denying GB any consolation.
The result means Switzerland secured a fifth consecutive victory to remain top of Group A. For GB, the focus shifts quickly. EIHL fans backing their players on the international stage will be hoping Great Britain can carry this fight into Friday evening’s clash with Finland.

























