GANGNEUNG, Korea, Republic Of -- As Team Canada prepares for a do-or-die Olympic quarterfinal Wednesday, it knows opportunity is knocking.

Devoid of current NHL talent, the Canadian team is filled with players who have had to take the less-travelled hockey road. Like his entire roster, head coach Willie Desjardins was deemed surplus to requirements in the NHL when he was fired by the Vancouver Canucks last April.

It has made for a blue-collar squad looking to take advantage of an unexpected appearance on the Olympic stage.

"Every game you play, it's an opportunity for somebody to do something great," said captain Chris Kelly. "That's the whole Olympic feeling. It's a great atmosphere, it's a great environment."

It's like the Canadians handed in their ticket at valet parking and were given the keys to a Porsche instead of their mini-van. They want to make the most of their change in fortunes.

Canada will face the winner of Tuesday's qualification-round match between Finland and South Korea. And while the Canadian squad looked to show respect for the host country -- which they beat 4-0 on Sunday -- it was clear they were preparing for the Finns.

Asked what his message to his players was ahead of the quarterfinal, Desjardins was upbeat.

"My message is I'm proud of the way they've played," he said. "I think they've played hard ... I'm happy with the way the group's played. But now it doesn't matter. Now it's only the one game that counts."

The Hockey Canada party line at the tournament has been nothing but positive, albeit it with the caveat that the team has to raise its game in the playoff rounds. Other observers have been less enamoured by the on-ice product.

But while Canada looked unconvincing at times against underdog Korea and showed both good and bad in a 5-1 win over Switzerland and a 3-2 shootout loss to the Czechs, it still collected seven points out of a possible nine.

The Canadians ranked first in power-play efficiency in the preliminary round, with a 45.5 per cent success rate (five of 11), and fourth on the penalty kill (87.50 per cent). Only Switzerland and Slovenia gave up fewer penalties than the Canadians.

Canada tied with Sweden with a plus-seven goal difference, second only to the Russian entry (plus nine). And the Canadians, who finished runner-up to the Czechs in Group A, have yet to trail in regulation time.

"The longer we play together, the better chance we have of being good," said Desjardins in a zen-like moment.

The Canadian men are 42-14-2 against the Finns in Olympic and world championship play. Canada is 1-0-0 against Korea in the same competitions.

The Finns, ranked fifth among the 12 teams after the preliminary round, were second to Sweden in Group C after beating Germany 5-2 and Norway 5-1 before losing 3-1 to the Swedes. The Koreans ranked 12th after losing their first three Olympic games.

In the other quarterfinals, it will be the Czech Republic versus the U.S., the Russian entry versus Slovenia, and Sweden versus Switzerland or Germany.

Should Canada advance to the semifinals, it will play the winner of Sweden's quarterfinal.

On Tuesday after an off day -- and some critical columns back home about his demeanour -- Desjardins appeared looser when he met reporters.

"When your team's playing well, you get to enjoy it a little bit more," he said. "They've been good so far."

The stakes will be high Wednesday, he allowed when asked to rate the Olympic quarterfinal in his career.

"Well right now it's got to be the biggest (game)," said Desjardins. "Like it just has to be. There's nothing else when you come down to this.

"But I've had lots of Game 7s and you've just got to treat it like a Game 7. It's business as usual. You've got to be ready and we play hard."