We previewed the camp invites for Team Canada last week (I may have referred to it as the final roster, whoops, sue me). Now let's take a look at Good Old Team America.
To summarize in one sentence: this is not as good as team Canada.
Goalies
Alex Nedeljkovic, Hurricanes' #37 pick in 2014
Brandon Halverson, Rangers' #59 pick in 2014
Luke Opilka, Blues' #146 in 2015
One would think Ned figures to be the starter, though Halverson could get the nod just based on the fact that he's in the Rangers organization and is therefore an elite goalie.
Defensemen
First Round Talent
Zachary Werenski, Blue Jackets' #8 pick in 2015
Other Guys That Have Been Drafted
Brandon Carlo, Bruins' #37 pick in 2015
Ryan Collins, Blue Jackets' #47 in 2014
Louis Belpedio, Wild #80 in 2014
William Borgen, Sabres' #92 in 2015
2016 Prospects
Charlie McAvoy, ranked #15 by Hockeyprospect.com and #6 by McKeen's
Chad Krys, ranked #21 by ISS and #25 by Future Considerations
Casey Fitzgerald, not ranked but related to the Hayes and Tkachuk families (including Matthew, who you will see in about five-six minutes depending on how fast you read)
Brandon Fortunado, not ranked but plays for BU where the camp is being held
Forwards
First Round Talent
Sonny Milano, Blue Jackets' #16 pick in 2014
Nick Schmaltz, Blackhawks' #20 in 2014 (not to be confused with the Flyers' Nick Schultz, who is waaaay too old and bad to play in the World Juniors)
Colin White, Senators' #21 in 2015 (not the shithead who used to play for the Devils)
Brock Boeser, Canucks' #23 in 2015
Other Guys That Have Been Drafted
Paul Bittner, Blue Jackets' #38 pick in 2015
Ryan MacInnis, Coyotes #43 in 2014
Ryan Donato, Bruins' #56 in 2014
Christian Dvorak, Coyotes #58 in 2014
Anders Bjork, Bruins #146 in 2014
2016 Prospects
Auston Matthews, ranked #1 by Every Scout On The Face Of The Planet
Matthew Tkachuk, ranked #2 by ISS and #4 by Hockeyprospect.com
Kiefer Bellows, ranked #12 by ISS and #14 by McKeen's
Clayton Keller, ranked #12 by Hockeyprospect.com and #17 by ISS
Alex "The Cat" DeBrincat, ranked #16 by Hockeyprospect.com and #19 by McKeen's
Scott Eansor, not ranked but described as "scrappy" in the first news article I found about him
Ryan Hitchcock, not ranked but went to Yale and has an "impressive" hockey sense
Like Team Canada, the team loses the cream of the crop because their three most talented qualifiers (Jack Eichel, Noah Hanifin, and Dylan Larkin) are all contributing at the NHL level and will thus not be playing in the World Juniors.
Canada will draw the eye of Islanders, Coyotes, Panthers, Flyers, Devils, and Leafs fans because the team has multiple prospects from each organization. Team USA will draw eyes from Coyotes fans as well (what a time to be a hockey fan in Arizona), along with Bruins and Blue Jackets fans and anybody who roots for a team bad enough to have a chance at Matthews.
Showing posts with label world juniors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world juniors. Show all posts
Monday, December 7, 2015
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Let's Take A Look At The Canadian WJC Team
The 2016 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship starts December 26th. If you aren't familiar, it pits (most of) the best hockey players under age 20 against each other on their national teams. It'll run for about two weeks, and we'll whittle the field down from 10 to 1. The contenders:
The past five years, the tourney was won by Russia, Sweden, the United States, Finland, and Canada. As good as Canada's teams always seem to be, the field is generally wide open. I don't see any odds yet, but that's partially because the squads were just announced. We'll get to Team USA eventually (maybe?), but let's start with America's Hat.
But there is a bunch of young talent on this team (obviously, because it's the Canadian WJC team), and it's going to be especially interesting for Islanders, Coyotes, Panthers, Flyers, Devils, and Leafs fans. Here's the complete roster:
2014 Draft
Forwards (7)
Michael Dal Colle, Winger (Islanders #5 pick)
Brendan Perlini, Wingers (Coyotes #12 pick)
John Quenneville, Center (Devils #30 pick)
Jayce Hawryluk, Winger (Panthers #32 pick)
Brayden Point, Center (Lightning #79 pick)
Rourke Chartier, Center (Sharks #149 pick)
Spencer Watson, Winger (Kings #209 pick)
Defensemen
Haydn Fluery, lefty (Hurricanes #7 pick)
Travis Sanheim, lefty (Flyers #17 pick/Future Stanley Cup Finals MVP)
Roland McKeown, righty (Kings #50 pick)
Brandon Hickey, lefty (Flames #64 pick)
Jake Walman, lefty (Blues #82 pick)
Joe Hicketts, lefty (Undrafted, signed by the Red Wings)
Goalies
Mason McDonald (Flames #34 pick)
2015 Draft
Forwards (8)
Dylan Strome, Center (Coyotes #3 pick)
Mitch Marner, Center/Winger (Maple Leafs #4 pick)
Lawson Crouse, Winger (Panthers #11 pick)
Mathew Barzal, Center (Islanders #16 pick)
Travis Konecny. Center/Winger (Flyers #24 pick/future Alternate Captain to Sean Couturier)
Anthony Beauvillier, Winger (Islanders #28 pick)
Nick Merkley, Winger (Coyotes #30 pick)
Mitchell Stephens, Center (Lightning #33 pick)
Defensemen
Thomas Chabot, lefty (Senators #17 pick)
Noah Juulsen, righty (Canadiens #26 pick)
Travis Dermott, lefty (Maple Leafs #34 pick)
Vince Dunn, lefty (Blues #56 pick)
Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood (Devils #42 pick)
2016 Prospects
Forwards (2)
Pierre-Luc Dubois, Center/Winger
Julien Gauthier, Winger
Defensemen
Jakob Chychrun
And some bullets for the road:
- Group A: Canada, Sweden, United States, Denmark, Switzerland
- Group B: Russia, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Finland, Belarus
The past five years, the tourney was won by Russia, Sweden, the United States, Finland, and Canada. As good as Canada's teams always seem to be, the field is generally wide open. I don't see any odds yet, but that's partially because the squads were just announced. We'll get to Team USA eventually (maybe?), but let's start with America's Hat.
Canada's world Jr. Selection camp roster pic.twitter.com/F83aGmo4rV
— Michael Traikos (@Michael_Traikos) December 1, 2015
The biggest names from the 2015 draft will all be in attendance, with one major exclusion: Connor McDavid will not suit up for Team Canada, because (1) Brandon Manning killed him and (2) he's probably too good for this tournament. Also too good for this tournament are 2014 picks Aaron Ekblad, Sam Reinhart, Sam Bennett, Jake Virtanen, and Robby Fabbri.But there is a bunch of young talent on this team (obviously, because it's the Canadian WJC team), and it's going to be especially interesting for Islanders, Coyotes, Panthers, Flyers, Devils, and Leafs fans. Here's the complete roster:
2014 Draft
Forwards (7)
Michael Dal Colle, Winger (Islanders #5 pick)
Brendan Perlini, Wingers (Coyotes #12 pick)
John Quenneville, Center (Devils #30 pick)
Jayce Hawryluk, Winger (Panthers #32 pick)
Brayden Point, Center (Lightning #79 pick)
Rourke Chartier, Center (Sharks #149 pick)
Spencer Watson, Winger (Kings #209 pick)
Defensemen
Haydn Fluery, lefty (Hurricanes #7 pick)
Travis Sanheim, lefty (Flyers #17 pick/Future Stanley Cup Finals MVP)
Roland McKeown, righty (Kings #50 pick)
Brandon Hickey, lefty (Flames #64 pick)
Jake Walman, lefty (Blues #82 pick)
Joe Hicketts, lefty (Undrafted, signed by the Red Wings)
Goalies
Mason McDonald (Flames #34 pick)
2015 Draft
Forwards (8)
Dylan Strome, Center (Coyotes #3 pick)
Mitch Marner, Center/Winger (Maple Leafs #4 pick)
Lawson Crouse, Winger (Panthers #11 pick)
Mathew Barzal, Center (Islanders #16 pick)
Travis Konecny. Center/Winger (Flyers #24 pick/future Alternate Captain to Sean Couturier)
Anthony Beauvillier, Winger (Islanders #28 pick)
Nick Merkley, Winger (Coyotes #30 pick)
Mitchell Stephens, Center (Lightning #33 pick)
Defensemen
Thomas Chabot, lefty (Senators #17 pick)
Noah Juulsen, righty (Canadiens #26 pick)
Travis Dermott, lefty (Maple Leafs #34 pick)
Vince Dunn, lefty (Blues #56 pick)
Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood (Devils #42 pick)
2016 Prospects
Forwards (2)
Pierre-Luc Dubois, Center/Winger
Julien Gauthier, Winger
Defensemen
Jakob Chychrun
And some bullets for the road:
- I'd be really interested to see a line of Islanders prospects, with Barzal centering Beauvillier and Dal Colle.
- Konecny and Crouse have been best friends since they were six years old. Do you think they might have a little bit of chemistry?
- The team only have two right-handed defensemen, so clearly that's why Ryan Suter won't be lacing up his skates in Helsinki.
- I think there's a consensus that Canada produces the top hockey talent in the world. But in the context of the World Juniors, that can sometimes be a bad thing - and that's why the last five tournaments have been won by five different countries. The Canadiens are effectively missing a whole starting lineup worth of NHL talent with McDavid, Reinhart, Bennett, Virtanen, Fabbri, and NHL All-Star Aaron Ekblad (born in 1996... puts gun in mouth). That leaves the door wide open for the rest of the world to complete, and it should be an interesting couple weeks of hockey.
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