Evening Notes: Team France, Sharangovich, Lund

Hockey France announced earlier today that defenseman Pierre Crinon will meet with Pierre-Yves Gerbeau, president of the FFHG and deputy head of the delegation. Crinon will be summoned “to shed full light on this incident”. In other words, he will need to answer for his actions and may face discipline. 

Crinon, a 30-year-old 6’4” defenseman who made stops in the USHL and NAHL over a decade ago, has since played professionally in France. He has been a controversial player, punching an opposing goaltender earlier this season in Ligue Magnus. In the midst of a resounding 10-2 defeat to Team Canada today, Crinon delivered a high hit on Nathan MacKinnon, and more notably, fought Tom Wilson late in the contest. 

It was already revealed that Wilson will not face suspension for his role in the incident, but Crinon may have a different fate as he’s brought unwanted negative attention to the French team. While making his way off the ice after the fight, the defenseman was seen egging on the crowd. The Olympics allow for a one-of-a-kind event in which players such as Crinon have the opportunity to compete against the best NHL players in the world. Doing so in honor of their countries, naturally such lesser heralded players want to make a mark, but incidents such as today’s are never a good look.

Elsewhere across the league:

  • The Calgary Flames may have trouble finding a new home for forward Yegor Sharangovich, as reported by David Pagnotta on February 13’s episode of The Sheet with Jeff Marek. As the team works through what could be a heavy sell-off, Pagnotta says Sharangovich’s name is the least mentioned. On paper, the 27-year-old should have interest in a change of scenery deal, as a former 30-goal-scorer. The Flames were right to lock him up after such a great first campaign in Calgary, but unfortunately things have soured since. The forward has just 20 points on the season, in the first year of a five year contract worth $5.75MM per season. Sharangovich still has strong metrics; a 53.5% corsi for in all situations, and a 87.5% corsi for on the man advantage. His struggles are indicative of a weaker Calgary team, but regardless, it appears he’ll be a Flame for the near future as he works to get back on track. 
  • San Jose Sharks prospect Cameron Lund will miss multiple weeks due to an upper-body injury, reported by Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. The 2022 second rounder has 25 points in 37 games with the San Jose Barracuda, in his first full professional season after three years at Northeastern University. Lund jumped right into the NHL last year after college, making 11 appearances for San Jose and recording three points. In such a deep prospect pool, Lund is a bit overshadowed, but he has size (6’2”) with enough scoring touch and speed to be a future complementary scorer. The tenth-ranked Barracuda will move forward without Lund having won seven of their last 10 games.

Slovakia, Denmark, And Latvia Qualify For 2026 Winter Olympics

The 12-team tournament in men’s ice hockey for the 2026 Winter Olympics has been set as Team Slovakia, Team Denmark, and Team Latvia all came away with wins earlier today. Slovakia and Latvia will join the United States and Russia in Group C of the round-robin action while Denmark will slot into Group B with Finland, Germany, and Czechia. France could still qualify for the 2026 Winter Olympics if the Olympic Committee decides to bar Russia from the tournament since they finished as the next highest seed in the standings. This would allow France to play in back-to-back Winter Olympics as they will be the host country in 2030.

The Slovakian team is headlined by notable NHL talents such as Simon Nemec, Tomas Tatar, and Martin Pospisil. They have a legitimate shot to make it to the playoff round if Russia is barred from the tournament. Team Slovakia will be looking for their second medal in team history after earning the bronze medal in the 2022 Winter Olympics after defeating Team Sweden.

The Danes brought one of the more experienced rosters to the qualifier tournament with Winnipeg Jets’ Nikolaj Ehlers and Carolina Hurricanes’ Frederik Andersen striking as the most noteworthy NHL talents. Denmark does not have a lengthy history in men’s ice hockey in the Olympics as the team debuted two years ago in Beijing. The team surprised many by knocking off Latvia in their opening game of the knockout round before losing to the ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’ in a tightly fought battle.

Latvia has skated in five Olympic tournaments since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 but has failed to make much headway against larger nations. The only notable NHL player on the roster is Uvis Balinskis for the Florida Panthers who recorded one goal and four points in three qualifying events. Latvia is not expected to finish much higher than in previous attempts even though they are in one of the tournament’s weaker divisions.