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.
Canada’s Tom Wilson Will Not Face Suspension For Olympic Fight
There will be no supplemental discipline for the fight between Team Canada’s Tom Wilson and Team France’s Pierre Crinon at the end of Canada’s 10-2 win on Sunday per Sportnet’s Elliotte Friedman. The Olympic rulebook has long been strict about fighting, even calling it out as “not part of international hockey’s DNA”. Fighting majors result in automatic match penalties and are reviewed for supplemental discipline after the game. In this case, neither player will face a suspension for their actions, keeping two of the top enforcers in the tournament on the ice.
Wilson has been strategically rotated onto Canada’s top line for much of the tournament. His intense physicality has filled a gap next to superstar Connor McDavid and Canada’s youngest player, Macklin Celebrini. Wilson has earned three points in three games in that role, though he’s averaged less than 12 minutes of ice time a game – partially thanks to an ejection in the third period on Sunday.
Crinon has long been known as a bruiser. The 6-foot-5, 225-pound defenseman currently has 66 penalty minutes in 29 games in France’s Ligue Magnus, the country’s top league. He served a seven-game suspension earlier in the league’s season for knocking out an opposing goalie with a punch during a scrum. Cronin racked up 95 penalty minutes in only 36 games of the 2023-24 Ligue Magnus season.
This decision will allow Wilson to stick with Canada as they head into the quarterfinals. At their current pace, Canada seems likely to face one of Germany, Latvia, or Czechia. Crinon will bring his enforcer presence to the qualifying rounds against Italy and Denmark.
Czechia, France, Latvia Announce 2026 Olympic Rosters
Today, the IIHF revealed three additional rosters for next month’s Olympics in Milano-Cortina, Italy. Czechia, France, and Latvia have now locked in their 25-man groups. We’re still waiting on five countries – Denmark, Germany, Italy, Slovakia, and Switzerland – to confirm their rosters.
Czechia
Forwards:
- C Roman Červenka (Dynamo Pardubice/ELH)
- C Radek Faksa (Stars)
- LW Jakub Flek (Kometa Brno/ELH)
- C Tomáš Hertl (Golden Knights)
- C David Kämpf (Canucks)
- RW Ondřej Kaše (Litvínov/ELH)
- LW Dominik Kubalík (Zug/NL)
- RW Martin Nečas (Avalanche)
- LW Ondřej Palát (Devils)
- RW David Pastrňák (Bruins)
- C Lukáš Sedlák (Dynamo Pardubice/ELH)
- RW Matěj Stránský (Davos/NL)
- RW David Tomasek (Färjestad/SHL)
- C Pavel Zacha (Bruins)
Defensemen:
- RD Radko Gudas (Ducks)
- RD Filip Hronek (Canucks)
- LD Michal Kempný (Brynäs/SHL)
- RD Tomáš Kundrátek (Oceláři Třinec/ELH)
- RD Jan Rutta (Genève-Servette/NL)
- LD Radim Šimek (Bílí Tygři Liberec/ELH)
- RD David Špaček (Wild)
- LD Jiří Ticháček (Kärpät/Liiga)
Goaltenders:
- G Lukáš Dostál (Ducks)
- G Karel Vejmelka (Mammoth)
- G Daniel Vladař (Flyers)
Goaltending will be the Czech squad’s anchor as they look to medal for the third time since the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1992. While Vladař would likely have been the third-stringer had this roster been released a year ago, his emergence as a top-tier starter in Philadelphia this season may give him the inside track on the No. 1 job.
Hertl and Zacha will anchor Czechia’s top lines from the middle while Nečas and Pastrňák give them one of the tournament’s most formidable one-two punches on the right side. Even among their non-NHL talent, it’s a comparatively deep forward group that gives them a medal chance. Plenty of names playing overseas have NHL experience, and the only two who don’t (Flek and Stránský) are currently the top goal-scorers in their respective leagues.
Defense – particularly their left-shot rearguards – is where things stand to get hairy for the Czechs as they attempt to unseat the nucleus of Canada, Finland, Sweden, and the U.S. for a medal. They might do well to shift a righty to their off side to give them a more dynamic two-way element than what shutdown NHL veterans Kempný and Šimek have to offer. Ticháček, 22, may be the most talented offensive producer Czechia’s defense has to offer – even ahead of their clear No. 1 in Hronek – but at 5’9″ and 170 lbs, size is a concern as he goes up against the most difficult competition of his life.
France
Forwards:
- C Justin Addamo (Jukurit/Liiga)
- C Pierre-Édouard Bellemare (Ajoie/NL)
- RW Charles Bertrand (Sport/Liiga)
- C Louis Boudon (Jukurit/Liiga)
- LW Kevin Bozon (Ajoie/NL)
- C Stéphane Da Costa (Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg/KHL)
- C Audrélien Dair (Grenoble/Ligue Magnus)
- LW Floran Douay (Lausanne/NL)
- LW Dylan Fabre (Ässät/Liiga)
- RW Jordann Perret (Mountfield/ELH)
- LW Anthony Rech (Rouen/Ligue Magnus)
- C Nicolas Ritz (Angers/Ligue Magnus)
- LW Alexandre Texier (Canadiens)
- LW Sacha Treille (Grenoble/Ligue Magnus)
Defensemen:
- LD Yohann Auvitu (Black Wings Linz/ICEHL)
- LD Jules Boscq (HPK/Liiga)
- RD Enzo Cantagallo (Marseille/Ligue Magnus)
- LD Florian Chakiachvili (Rouen/Ligue Magnus)
- LD Pierre Crinon (Grenoble/Ligue Magnus)
- LD Hugo Gallet (KalPa/Liiga)
- RD Enzo Guebey (Davos/NL)
- RD Thomas Thiry (Ajoie/NL)
Goaltenders:
- G Julian Junca (Dukla Trencin/Slovakia)
- G Antoine Keller (Ajoie/NL)
- G Martin Neckar (Chur/SL)
If not for the host country, Italy, fielding a club, France would be the favorite to finish with the worst record in the tournament – especially as they face arguably the toughest competition out of anyone with Canada, Czechia, and Switzerland in Group A. That’s not to say they’re devoid of NHL-caliber talent, though.
Texier and Bellemare, now 40 years old with 700 games of NHL experience, will anchor their forward group. Whether they share a line remains to be seen as France weighs whether having them each anchor their own unit may be more beneficial as they attempt their only realistic potential upset against the Swiss. Da Costa, still an All-Star caliber player in Russia at age 36, spent parts of four seasons with the Senators in the early 2010s.
Defense is their weakest position. Only Auvitu has any NHL experience, and three-eighths of the group are from France’s own Ligue Magnus, one of the lowest-caliber top divisions in Europe.
The crease will feature the 21-year-old Keller, a Capitals seventh-rounder in 2023 who’s yet to sign his entry-level deal. He played briefly for their ECHL affiliate this season before heading to Switzerland’s top league, where he has a .900 SV% in nine starts.
Latvia
Forwards:
- C Rodrigo Abols (Flyers)
- LW Rūdolfs Balcers (ZSC Lions/NL)
- C Oskars Batņa (Pelicans/Liiga)
- C Teddy Blueger (Canucks)
- LW Roberts Bukarts (Pioneers Vorarlberg/ICEHL)
- RW Kaspars Daugaviņš (Kassel Huskies/DEL2)
- LW Mārtiňš Dzierkals (Sparta Praha/ELH)
- C Haralds Egle (Energie Karlovy Vary/ELH)
- LW Zemgus Girgensons (Lightning)
- C Renārs Krastenbergs (Olomouc/ELH)
- C Dans Ločmelis (Bruins)
- LW Ēriks Mateiko (Capitals)
- LW Eduards Tralmaks (Red Wings)
- LW Sandis Vilmanis (Panthers)
Defensemen:
- LD Uvis Balinskis (Panthers)
- LD Oskars Cibuļskis (Herning Blue Fox/Denmark)
- LD Ralfs Freibergs (Vítkovice/ELH)
- RD Jānis Jaks (Energie Karlovy Vary/ELH)
- LD Roberts Mamčics (Energie Karlovy Vary/ELH)
- LD Kristiāns Rubīns (Plzeň/ELH)
- LD Alberts Šmits (Jukurit/Liiga)
- LD Kristaps Zile (Bílí Tygři Liberec/ELH)
Goaltenders:
- G Kristers Gudlevskis (Fischtown Pinguins/DEL)
- G Elvis Merzļikins (Blue Jackets)
- G Arturs Silovs (Penguins)
Perhaps no hockey country’s stock is rising quicker than Latvia’s, which upset their way to a bronze medal at the World Championship in 2023 and has had its fair share of memorable moments at the junior level in recent years as well. They only have three Olympic group stage wins in history – two in 2002 and one in Sochi in 2014 – but are a clear-cut favorite ahead of Denmark in Group C and should be on relatively equal footing with Germany to finish second behind the United States.
Easily the strongest roster they’ve ever sent, half their forward group are playing in the NHL or AHL while under contract with a parent club. Among the European league talent they’re drawing from, two of those names – Balcers and Daugaviņš – have NHL experience. With a pair of NHLers in net as well and a third-stringer in Gudlevskis with NHL experience, they’re well-positioned to make noise.
Like the other two rosters locked in today, defense is their weak spot, but they have two NHL veterans in Balinskis and Rubīns. The most intriguing talent to watch, perhaps on the entire team, will be Šmits. The 6’3″ lefty is fresh off his 18th birthday and is a slam-dunk top-20 pick in the 2026 draft. He’s coming off a stellar World Juniors showing that saw him record five points in five games.
