Tag Archives: IIHF

BLH’s 2022 Team Canada Olympic Roster

I see it’s that time again where hockey media types are posting their 2022 Olympic roster prognostications for Team Canada. I thought I’d jump in as well since the Oilers don’t play until Saturday.

First, let’s look at a few rosters that have already been posted at the Athletic and TSN.

Pierre LeBrun’s Team Canada

Forwards: Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon, Sidney Crosby, Mark Scheifele, Brayden Point, Brad Marchand, Mitch Marner, Steven Stamkos, Mark Stone, Mathew Barzal, Patrice Bergeron, Bo Horvat, John Tavares.

Defense: Alex Pietrangelo, Cale Makar, Morgan Rielly, Dougie Hamilton, Shea Theodore, Josh Morrissey, Drew Doughty

Goalies: Carey Price, Jordan Binnington, Carter Hart

Eric Duhatschek’s Team Canada

Left Wing Center Right Wing Left Defense Right Defense Goalie
Brad Marchand Connor McDavid Mitch Marner Shea Theodore Cale Makar Carey Price
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins Nathan MacKinnon Mark Stone Morgan Rielly Colton Parayko Carter Hart
Sidney Crosby Brayden Point Mark Scheifele Josh Morrissey Alex Pietrangelo Jordan Binnington
Jonathan Huberdeau Bo Horvat Mathew Barzal Thomas Chabot Drew Doughty
Sean Couturier Ryan O’Reilly

Thomas Drance’s Team Canada

Left Wing Center Right Wing Left Defense Right Defense Goalie
Connor McDavid Nathan MacKinnon Mathew Barzal Shea Theodore Alex Pietrangelo Jordan Binnington
Brad Marchand Sidney Crosby Patrice Bergeron Samuel Girard Cale Makar Carter Hart
John Tavares Brayden Point Mitch  Marner Morgan Rielly Drew Doughty Carey Price
Taylor Hall Ryan O’Reilly Mark Stone Mark Giordano Ryan Ellis
Sean Couturier Steven Stamkos

Craig Button’s Team Canada

Left Wing Center Right Wing Left Defense Right Defense Goalie
Jonathan Huberdeau Connor McDavid Nathan MacKinnon Shea Theodore Cale Makar Carey Price
Brad Marchand Sidney Crosby Patrice Bergeron Morgan Rielly Alex Pietrangelo Carter Hart
Bo Horvat Brayden Point Mitch Marner Thomas Chabot Shea Weber MacKenzie Blackwood
Ryan O’Reilly Mark Scheifele Mark Stone Bowen Byram Colton Parayko
Nick Suzuki Mathew Barzal

BLH’s Team Canada

Left Wing Center Right Wing Left Defense Right Defense Goalie
Steven Stamkos Connor McDavid Mark Stone Thomas Chabot Cale Makar Carey Price
Brad Marchand Sidney Crosby Nathan MacKinnon Shea Theodore Alex Pietrangelo Marc-Andre Fleury
John Tavares Mark Scheifele Mitch Marner Darnell Nurse Drew Doughty Carter Hart
Ryan O’Reilly Sean Couturier Brayden Point Morgan Rielly Jared Spurgeon
Tyler Seguin Jamie Benn

What do you think of my roster? Let me know in the comments below!

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Our tribute to the Team Canada of ’87! Click the pic to get yours!

(12/12/2020) – BLH’s NHL Rumor Roundup AM Edition: “Do They Want to Burn a Substantial Amount on a 30-Something Forward”

BLH provides you with the latest NHL news, rumors, and speculation featuring Carter Savoie, Team Canada, a new Might Ducks TV Series, Mikael Backlund, Rasmus Sandin, and more!

Would you make this blockbuster trade? Read This!

Watch the “Punch-up in Piestany” in its entirety right here!

Woodguy on the 2020-21 Edmonton Oilers.
Watch 16yr Old Wayne Gretzky Destroy the Czechs at the ’78 World Juniors!

Watch Connor McDavid help Team Canada end a five year JHC gold medal drought right here!

Click the pic and find the NHL94 player from your team!

NHL Rumors and Speculation

BLH’s Thoughts: I watched the first couple games of Savoie’s season with Denver and I was really underwhelmed. Since then he’s simply continued scoring goals. I’m probably just nitpicking, but I believe most of those ginos were scored with the man advantage. I could be wrong, but what’s his plan when he makes it to the next level and he’s not getting that cherry PP TOI? He can’t choose to bring the intangibles every five or six games like he is now. His shooting % is otherworldly right now too, right? I think I heard Bob Stauffer say he has only 16 shots but 6 goals?…

That said, he’s doing a fine impression of Brett Hull at the moment and I’m very happy to watch him continue that.

  • Mark Spector (Sportsnet): Darnell Nurse on shutdown defensemen in today’s NHL,
    • “Shutdown guys are different now. Everyone thinks of the stereotypical shutdown guy from the ‘90s, early 20000’s. They didn’t cross the red-line. I’ve watched every game — the games I am most effective is when I am moving my feet. It’s not just sitting back. It’s closing on things quick and taking away time and space.”

BLH’s Thoughts: In that article Nurse also says that the Oilers’ M.O. has been to work on getting the goals-against down for a while now, my question is, how’s that been working out for you?

The way I see it, we’re at the “Jeff Petry before getting traded to Montreal” stage of this team’s defence. It’s decent, but not great, yet… If the club gives up on it, we could be in for more bumpy roads. As it is though, Nurse will have his work cut out for him and I’m rooting for him for at least another year until I have to get back on his case because he’ll be looking for more money than he’s worth.

  • Sportsnet: Twenty years on and The Mighty Ducks ARE BACK! Disney is bringing back Gordon Bombay’s boys in a new series entitled “The Mighty Ducks: Game Changers”.

  • Eric Duhatschek (The Athletic): Reckons the Flames are set to lose core forward Mikael Backlund to Seattle in the upcoming expansion draft. He says that Backlund’s age and salary are the main reasons that the long-time Flame will be left exposed for the Kraken.
    • “His contract and the number on his birth certificate (he’ll be 32 by the expansion draft). Seattle will have a lot of cap flexibility. But do they want to burn a substantial amount on a 30-something forward, earning over $5 million per season for three more years? Maybe not.”

BLH’s Thoughts: Man. Backlund would be a fantastic pick-up for Seattle. He’s got that same competitive edge that Peter Forsberg had in his prime. Too bad for Calgary he doesn’t have Foppa’s skill either. Even at $5M/yr, that’s a cheap top-6 center in today’s game and as I’ve always said, you have to build from the middle out with a franchise. Your top-two centers, top-three defenders, and your starting goalie need to be the priority from the get-go if you’re planning to succeed.

  • Hailey Salvian (The Athletic): Says that the Senators might look to dump defenceman Mike Reilly at the NHL trade deadline this year.
    • If I was putting money on it, I’d say Reilly is the first to be moved, which would potentially allow the Senators to give Erik Brannstrom a run in the latter half of the season after some time in the AHL.

BLH’s Thoughts: Sure. Every year there’s a bottom-pairing puck mover who gets traded to a contender for a pick. You can’t have enough good NHL blueliners in the post-season.

  • Adam Gretz (NBC): On how the teams stack up in the Canadian Division,
    • “Toronto is the best team on paper, but that has not meant much in recent seasons. Ottawa is the one team clearly rebuilding and at the bottom of the pack, but there is not much separating the rest of these teams.”

BLH’s Thoughts: I don’t agree that Toronto is the best on paper. They simply have the most popular players. I think Edmonton and Montreal are right up there and it wouldn’t shock me if Vancouver, Winnipeg, and Ottawa battled it out for the lottery spots this season.

BLH’s Thoughts: Sandin is soooo good. The Leafs are lucky to have this guy. Dermott could go, Holl could go too. But how much will Toronto really do before the expansion draft?

Lastly, Team Canada’s roster for the 2021 World Juniors is set! Check it out below and let me know what you think? It’s pretty stacked (as it should be)… I can’t wait to watch Edmonton Oilers 2020 first rounder Dylan Holloway crush it!

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Watch BLH’s Hockey Game of the Night: “16yr Old Gretzky Destroys Czechs at ’78 WJHC” (Dec.31, 1977)

For this evening’s hockey viewing pleasure, in its entirety (old school commercials and all), we bring you a New Year’s Eve World Junior Hockey classic from 1977 between Team Canada and Team CSSR (Czechoslovakia) featuring two future Edmonton Oilers, a 16yr old by the name of Wayne Gretzky and another teenager called Miroslav Frycer.

Gretzky only played in one of these tournaments, but he ended it by leading the competition in scoring with 17 points (8g 9a) and being awarded forward of the tournament. He was also named to the Media All-Star team alongside Alexander Tyzhnykh (G), Risto Siltanen (D), Slava Fetisov, Anton Stastny (F), and Mats Naslund (F).

There’s a rumor out there that Gretzky might not have even been invited to the Team Canada selection camp if Bill Derlago, who scored 96 goals the previous season with the Brandon Wheat Kings, didn’t break his leg a month before the start of the tournament.

I bet Hockey Canada is glad they did invite him though…

Other names you’ll notice in this particular game that you’re about to watch are Wayne Babych, Rick Vaive, Mike Gartner, Bobby Smith, as well as Anton Stastny for the Czechs.

If you can, please check out our Youtube channel, BEER LEAGUE HEROES.

I hope you enjoy the game!

Click the pic and find the NHL94 player from your team!

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Watch BLH’s Hockey Game of the Night: “The Punch Up in Piestany” (Jan.4, 1987)

Have you ever taken the time to sit down and watch one of THE most famous hockey games that never happened according to the record books in its entirety? Well, since the World Juniors taking place in Edmonton, AB are literally around the corner and there haven’t been many full-length games on the tele as of recent, I thought I’d provide a game for you.

The Punch-up in Piestany

Now, if you’re interested in reading some more about the incident that featured two future Edmonton Oilers (Chris Joseph and Greg Hawgood), below the video is a write-up I ripped straight from Wikipedia. It includes what sparked the brawl, the fallout, and its legacy to date. The boxscore from the game is included as well as the rosters. Some names might surprise you, like Sergei Federov and Alexander Mogilny, I had no idea those two were involved.

Please, remember that this is a broadcast from the Czech Republic in 1987 and therefore the quality is a bit vintage… Enjoy!

Click the pic and find the NHL94 player from your team!

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The Punch-up in Piestany was a bench-clearing brawl between Canada and the Soviet Union, during the final game of the 1987 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in PiešťanyCzechoslovakia (now Slovakia), on January 4, 1987. The incident resulted in the ejection of both nations, and while the Soviets had already been eliminated from medal contention, the disqualification cost Canada a medal – potentially the gold. The brawl is famous for officials having turned off the arena lights in a desperate attempt at ending the 20-minute melee. Much of the blame was placed on Norwegian referee Hans Rønning, who had been selected for the game based on his perceived neutrality rather than experience.

Following the brawl, the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) suspended the players involved for 18 months and the coaches for three years. The players’ suspensions were later reduced to six months on appeal, allowing several players from both teams to return for the 1988 tournament in Moscow. Both nations won medals in 1988; Canada won the gold medal while the Soviets won silver.

The brawl dramatically raised the profile of the World Junior Hockey Championships in Canada, where it is now one of the top events on the annual sports calendar. The fervent patriotism displayed by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation analyst Don Cherry in the aftermath led to a sharp rise in his own popularity with Canadian fans. Several players in that game went on to play in the National Hockey League, including Brendan ShanahanTheoren FleuryMike KeaneSergei FedorovAlexander Mogilny, and Vladimir Konstantinov.

Hockey’s “Cold War”

Canada and the Soviet Union had engaged in an increasingly intense rivalry since the Soviets first emerged on the international scene by winning the 1954 World Ice Hockey Championships. From 1963 until 1983, the Soviets captured 17 World Championship titles amidst repeated accusations from Canada that their teams were made up of professionals masquerading as amateurs. The accusations eventually led to Canada boycotting all World Championships and Olympic hockey tournaments between 1970 and 1976. Finally, the 1972 Summit Series was organized, pitting the Soviet all-stars against Canada’s NHL all-stars. The eight-game series was won by Canada 4–3–1 as Paul Henderson scored the winning goal late in the deciding contest. The Soviets handily won a second Summit Series against the World Hockey Association all-stars in 1974. The series led to the creation of the Canada Cup, a tournament held five times between 1976 and 1991. Canada won four titles, losing to the Soviet Union in 1981. Also from 1976 until 1991, top Soviet club teams toured the NHL in what became known as the Super Series.

The World Junior Championships were formally created in 1977, and to that point had been dominated by the Soviet Union with seven championships. Until 1982, Canada sent either their Memorial Cup champion or an all-star team. 1982 was the first time Canada sent a national junior team, under the auspices of Hockey Canada‘s Program of Excellence. The Canadians won that tournament, and again in 1985.

The “Cold War” culminated in 1987 with Rendez-vous ’87, as the Soviet national team played a two-game series against the NHL all-stars in place of the NHL All-Star Game. The series was split, with the NHL winning the first game 4–3, and the Soviets the second, 5–3. The 1987 Canada Cup followed, and was won by Canada two games to one, with the third game being described as the greatest in hockey history. The winning goal was scored by Mario Lemieux on a pass from Wayne Gretzky.

Game summary

In 1987, the World Junior Hockey Championship was a round robin tournament. The teams with the top three records won the gold, silver and bronze medals. Finland had finished their schedule with a 5–1–1 record to lead the tournament. Canada entered the game with a 4–1–1 record, and had already been assured the bronze medal. A victory against the Soviets would have guaranteed Canada the silver, and a victory by 5 goals or more would have won the gold medal. The Soviet Union, entering the game with a 2–3–1 record, had already been eliminated from medal contention. The match-up between the two squads was deliberately scheduled to be the final game of the tournament as organizers expected at least one of the teams would be playing for the gold medal.

The IIHF assigned Norway’s Hans Rønning as the referee for this game. The assignment was made based on his neutrality despite his inexperience officiating at the international level. Upon hearing of Rønning’s assignment, Canadian representative Dennis McDonald sought out IIHF supervisor of officials, René Fasel, hoping to convince him to select a different referee. Aside from the question of his competence to call a game of this magnitude, the Canadians were concerned about Rønning following an earlier game in the tournament he officiated between Canada and the United States. A wild brawl had broken out during the pre-game warm-ups against the Americans three days earlier. The officials were not on the ice when the melee occurred; however, Rønning ejected one player from each team at random for starting the brawl. Canadian captain Steve Chiasson was thus barred from the game against the Americans, as well as the following game after being assessed a match penalty. Unable to convince IIHF officials to change the assignment, McDonald was concerned about how the game would be played. Rønning’s inexperience at that level was later identified as a significant cause of the brawl, as several stick infractions by both sides had gone uncalled, causing anger to rise between both teams.

Off the opening faceoff, Sergei Shesterikov elbowed Canadian Dave McLlwain, who responded by cross-checking the Soviet player. Neither player was assessed a penalty. Five minutes in, Theoren Fleury scored the opening goal for Canada. In celebrating the goal, Fleury slid across centre ice on his knees acting as if his stick was a machine gun and pretended to “open fire” on the Soviet bench. Canadian Amateur Hockey Association president Murray Costello later called it an “inflammatory act, completely unnecessary, lacking any sort of respect.” The first period continued in similar fashion with both teams repeatedly slashing their opponents and Canada emerging with a 3–1 lead. Interviewed by the CBC during the intermission, Fleury described the atmosphere on the ice: “The boys are up for the gold medal. Everybody is so tense. Tempers are flying. It’s really tough out there … I can’t believe it. It’s so tense. It’s so tense.”

Early in the second period, the game was paused for a moment of silence in memory of four Swift Current Broncos players who were killed when their team bus crashed in Saskatchewan five days previous. There was a drop in intensity in the five minutes of play that followed. However, just after the six-minute mark, following a minor scuffle that sent two players from each team to the penalty box, the teams resumed shoving and slashing at each other. Each team also scored a goal, giving Canada a 4–2 lead halfway through the game.

The brawl

The scoreboard in the darkened arena showing Canada leading 4–2

The brawl began after a face-off as Shesterikov collided with Everett Sanipass with 6:07 left in the second period, resulting in a fight between the two. Soviet player Pavel Kostichkin also leveled a two-handed slash at Fleury, leading to another fight. The battle quickly escalated into a line brawl involving all skaters on the ice for both teams. Returning from a commercial break, Canadian commentator Don Wittman understated the severity of the fighting by saying “well, we had a real skirmish just moments ago following a face-off.” Evgeny Davydov was the first player from either team to leave his bench to join the melee, prompting all players from both teams to leave their benches.

Mike Keane paired off against Valeri Zelepukin, with the Canadian “fighting like it was for the world title” according to Fleury. In another fight, Vladimir Konstantinov leveled a head-butt that broke Greg Hawgood‘s nose; Brendan Shanahan later described it as “the greatest head-butt I’ve ever seen”. Stéphane Roy was pummeled by two Soviet players. The remaining players paired off as the officials attempted to break up the fighting. There were at least a dozen separate fights over the entire ice surface. Unable to control the situation, Rønning and his linesmen eventually left the ice under the orders of Czechoslovakian officials. In a desperate attempt at ending the brawl, tournament officials had the arena lights turned off, leaving the players to fight in the dark as the fans whistled loudly in disapproval of the entire situation. The whole stadium shouted “My chceme hokej, my chceme hokej”, which translates to “We want hockey, we want hockey”. By the time the fights had finally broken up, the IIHF declared the game null and void.

Boxscore

January 4, 1987
20:00 (Eastern European Time – UTC+2)
Canada  Game declared null and void
(3–1, 1–1, Not Played)
 Soviet Union Zimný Štadión PiešťanyPiestany

Aftermath

The IIHF held an emergency meeting in an arena office to decide how to handle the incident. Each team was represented by a delegate, and the meeting was chaired by IIHF President Günther Sabetzki. The delegates voted 7–1 in favour of ejecting both teams from the tournament, the lone dissenting vote being that of Canada’s Dennis McDonald. McDonald was incensed by the voting: FinlandCzechoslovakia and Sweden all stood to gain medal position by voting the two teams out, the Americans only promised support if other nations supported Canada, and Sabetzki could barely control his disdain for the Canadians.

After voting to eject the two teams, IIHF officials banned the Soviets from the tournament banquet and medal ceremony but still invited Canada. McDonald stated the Canadians were not interested, Sabetzki and Czechoslovak officials ordered the Canadian team out of the arena within half an hour. They were met by armed soldiers who escorted them across the border and out of Czechoslovakia. The IIHF voided the individual standings of both teams. In the words of McDonald, “it was like we were never here.” However, the other teams kept the points they gained in the matches against both teams.

Both teams attempted to blame the other for allowing the violence to get out of hand. Soviet official Anatoly Kastriukov blamed a Canadian trainer for igniting hostilities by running over to the Soviet bench and punching one of their assistant coaches in the stomach. The Canadians, meanwhile, pointed to Davydov being the first off the bench as being the spark that led to the brawl. CBC commentator Don Cherry was one of the first to float a conspiracy theory that the Soviets had done so as a deliberate attempt to have Canada ejected, and therefore lose a medal. Alan Eagleson suggested that the IIHF’s decision would have been different had it been the Soviets in contention for a medal, and not the Canadians. Soviet administrator Yuri Korolev expressed regret that the incident occurred but did not admit any guilt. He felt that the game should have been finished instead of both teams being disqualified from the tournament.

The IIHF voted to suspend all players involved from competing in international events for 18 months, and all coaches for three years. The player suspensions were later cut to six months, which allowed eligible players to participate in the 1988 tournament, and Alexander Mogilny to play in the 1988 Winter Olympics. The IIHF also considered either demoting both teams to the B pool or banning them from the 1988 tournament as further punishment, but backed off as the next year’s tournament was set to be held in the Soviet Union, while Canada represented the only media revenue the tournament generated at the time.

Among the Canadians, only two players were not suspended: goalie Jimmy Waite and forward Pierre Turgeon. One other Canadian Steve Nemeth was on the ice along with Waite, but neither threw a punch. Waite felt he could not risk being ejected for fighting under the belief that the game would resume, and that the Canadian backup goaltender, Shawn Simpson, was injured. Nemeth would later apply for early reinstatement arguing that he was not fighting, but trying to help break the players apart. Turgeon was the only Canadian who did not initially leave the bench until Canadian head coach Bert Templeton convinced him to go on the ice. Regarding not leaving the bench, Turgeon stated in 2017: “that wasn’t my job. I didn’t have to fight.” Many of their teammates never forgave Turgeon for failing to defend his teammates. In the words of Everett Sanipass: “I’m looking for someone to help (Stéphane) Roy out and I look over at the bench. There’s this dog Turgeon, just sitting there, with his head down. He wouldn’t get his ass off the bench … just sitting there when everyone’s off the Soviet bench and at least one of our guys is in real trouble getting double-teamed.”

Legacy

At the 1988 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Moscow, Canada and the Soviet Union won the gold and silver medals, respectively, as both teams’ rosters featured several players from the 1987 tournament. Since the 1987 tournament, the two nations have maintained their dominance of the tournament. Canada has won 15 gold medals between 1988 and 2020, while the Soviet Union, and its successor, Russia, has won six.

Hans Rønning’s assignment to officiate the game was viewed by other on-ice officials as a nod to organizers from LillehammerNorway, who had just won the right to host the 1994 Winter Olympics and were observing the game. At age 38, Rønning expected the 1987 tournament to be among his last international assignments. Rønning never officiated another international game, though he did referee two more seasons in Norway before retiring.

In Canada, public sentiment widely supported the players. Opinion polls taken in the aftermath of the brawl saw 87–92% of respondents supporting their actions. Don Cherry‘s passionate defence of the Canadian team led to a sharp increase in his popularity. Toronto Maple Leafs owner Harold Ballard had special gold medals made up for the Canadian team. Ballard stated that “I believe the Canadian boys deserve the gold medal and I’m going to see to it that they get them. Imagine how these Russians [sic] engineered this whole thing over there just because they’ve got a lousy team and were scared to go home finishing in sixth place.”

Canadian hockey officials criticized the players for the brawl. In 2005, the suggestion of a reunion for the 1987 team was met with uncomfortable silence and “I don’t think so” from Hockey Canada officials. Immediately following the tournament, Canadian officials were seen as trying to distance themselves from the team: “The CAHA (Canadian Amateur Hockey Association) didn’t do anything for these kids”, reporter Jim Cressman said. “These kids were good enough to make this team. They gave up their holidays, did their best, risked getting hurt and ended up on the wrong end of a bad decision – and the CAHA basically handed them their tickets.” Winnipeg Jets assistant general manager Mike Smith was in the Vienna airport while the Canadian juniors were waiting for their flight, and took the opportunity to criticize them for their play at the tournament as well as the brawl.

Before Piešťany, the junior tournament had a small following in Canada. Only one Canadian reporter flew overseas to cover the 1987 tournament. That changed in 1988, as the major Canadian media outlets all sent reporters to Moscow. The tournament’s prestige in Canada continued to grow. By the 2005 tournament, over 100 Canadian reporters covered the tournament in Grand Forks, North Dakota.

The brawl was seen as an embarrassment by Soviet officials who prided themselves on the discipline of their teams. A senior official, Anatoly Kostryukov, said that the “ice hockey department and the Ice Hockey Federation of the USSR will soon analyze the Soviet team’s performance at the championship, and those guilty of the incident will be strictly punished”. The Soviet media agency, Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union, was highly critical of the coaching staff’s inability to control the players. Head coach Vladimir Vasiliev was fired as the coach of the Soviet national junior team as a result of Piešťany.

Players

Of the 20 players who dressed for Canada in that game, 19 went on to play in the National Hockey League. (Shawn Simpson was drafted by the Capitals, and dressed for two games for them, but ultimately only played for their associate team.) In 1987, only one Soviet had ever played in the NHL, Victor Nechayev. The players for this Soviet team would be among the first wave of Eastern Bloc players to arrive in the NHL with the fall of the Iron Curtain. Five of them would ultimately win the Stanley Cup.

Canada

1 – Shawn Simpson, G
2 – Greg Hawgood, D
3 – Glen Wesley, D
4 – Steve Chiasson, D
5 – Chris Joseph, D
6 – Kerry Huffman, D
8 – Luke Richardson, D
9 – Yvon Corriveau, F
10 – Theoren Fleury, F
11 – Mike Keane, F
12 – Everett Sanipass, F
14 – Dave McLlwain, F
15 – Pat Elynuik, F
16 – Scott Metcalfe, F
18 – Brendan Shanahan, F
19 – Steve Nemeth, F
20 – Pierre Turgeon, F
21 – Stéphane Roy, F
22 – David Latta, F
30 – Jimmy Waite, G

Soviet Union

1 – Vadim Privalov, G
3 – Dmitri Tsygurov, D
4 – Andrei Smirnov, D
7 – Igor Monayenkov, D
8 – Alexander Mogilny, F
9 – Sergei Fedorov, F
10 – Valeri Zelepukin, F
11 – Aleksandrs Kerčs, F
12 – Dmitri Medvedev, F
15 – Alexander Galchenyuk, F
16 – Sergei Shesterikov, F
17 – Anton Zagorodny, F
19 – Valeri Popov, F
20 – Valeri Ivannikov, G
21 – Sergei Osipov, F
22 – Evgeny Davydov, F
24 – Vladimir Konstantinov, D
26 – Vladimir Malakhov, D
27 – Pavel Kostichkin, F
28 – Vadim Musatov, D

(source)

Edmonton Oilers Talk: What Dylan Holloway Will Bring to Team Canada According to Craig Button

The World Juniors are just around the corner and TSN’s NHL draft guru Craig Button is doing a series of short profiles on the players who are candidates to be on Team Canada for this year’s tournament.

Here’s what Button had to say about Edmonton Oilers 2020 first-rounder Dylan Holloway,

Dylan Holloway will bring a skill and power element regardless of where he plays. His versatility has been demonstrated time and time again. He can play center ice, he can play wing. He can play up your lineup and he can play down your lineup. He can play in all different types of situations. His skating is excellent. He’s got speed, quickness, power, and once he uses that to create advantages for himself, it becomes very difficult for opponents to regain an advantage on him because that size and power is utilized very very well.  He attacks defenders, he attacks the net, and he’s invested from a competitive standpoint everywhere on the ice.

My one big takeaway, Dylan Holloway can switch from skill to power and power to skill in a fleeting moment.”

I liked him early last season as he reminded me of Anders Lee a bit. However, I think a lot of fans were down on the selection of Holloway because he didn’t quite have the jaw-dropping numbers some were expecting him to have after being named the MVP of the AJHL as a 17yr old. His NCAA club featured former NHL first-round picks players like Alex Turcotte (LA) and Cole Caufield (MTL), and K’Andre Miller (NYR), and was coached by former NHLer Tony Granato. Yet, success wasn’t to be had and it was a mess from the get-go.

That said, Turcotte (whose dad, Alfie, had a cup of coffee with the Oilers’ AHL club in Nova Scotia back in the day) signed with LA and that opened up a door for Holloway to become the top centre on the club. The Bragg Creek native grabbed that opportunity and has run with it. In his first two games with Wisconsin this year, Holloway has already amassed 25% of his goal production from the season prior. That’s just a fancy way of saying he only scored eight goals last season and he has two so far.

The Athletic’s prospect expert Corey Pronman has Holloway in the category of “Strong Consideration” for this year’s edition of Team Canada that will compete for the gold in Edmonton. Alongside him, Pronman listed other players like Alex Newhook (COL), Cole Perfetti (WPG), Connor Zary (CGY), Peyton Krebs (VGK), and Phil Tomasino (NSH).

I think Holloway should be a lock. Unless he’s found unfit to play, cutting him after all he’s had to go through to get to the camp, would be a massive mistake and would surely piss off a lot of powerful people. He’s exactly the kind of player you want on this team. He’ll be a momentum shifter during the tournament, mark my words.

This is what Mr. Pronman had this to say about Holloway’s chances of making Team Canada for this year’s World Juniors,

Holloway and Newhook are in tough positions given they didn’t play in either scrimmage because they were isolated from the group after entering Canada from the United States. But they have strong histories with Hockey Canada, and have the toolkits and performances with their club teams to merit a spot.

As an Oilers fan, I’m feeling jacked about the future of the club. The pipeline is finally starting to fire out some legit NHL prospects.

I mean, think about it. Edmonton has Rafa Lavoie causing absolute terror for goaltenders in the Allsvenskan. They’ve got defenceman Evan Bouchard in the same division producing offense like he’s back in junior. Ryan McLeod and Philip Broberg are getting regular shifts for their clubs in the Swiss league and the SHL respectively. Look, Phil Kemp, a defensive defenceman, signs a contract with Edmonton and a week later he’s already putting up points in Vasby. Tyler Benson is a point-per-game player in the Swiss second division, and Dmitri Samorukov is the KHL’s +/- leader whilst playing a huge role for his club there. Then we’ve got goalie Olivier Rodrigue stonewalling the Austrians to boot!

In two seasons, there’s a good chance that we could see as many as five of the players I talked about above on the Oilers main squad. The benefit of having all of those ELCs on the club will be through the roof and right about the time the club is challenging for Western Conference titles no less.

The future is bright in Northern Alberta.

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