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Team Russia

World Junior Championship Final Rosters

December 27, 2016 at 8:02 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 1 Comment

Group A

Czech Republic:

G Petr Kvaca, HC Ceske Budejovice

G Jakub Skarek, HC Dukla Jihlava

G Daniel Vladar, Providence Bruins (Boston Bruins)

D Frantisek Hrdinka, Linkopings HC

D Filip Hronek, Saginaw Spirt (Detroit Red Wings)

D Petr Kalina, HC Sparta Praha

D Daniel Krenzelok, HC Vitcovicek Steel

D David Kvasnicka, HC Plzen

D Ondrej Vala, Kamloops Blazers (Dallas Stars)

D Jakub Zboril, Saint John Sea Dogs (Boston Bruins)

F Filip Chlapik, Charlottetown Islanders (Ottawa Senators)

F Lukas Jasek, HC Oceláři Třinec (Vancouver Canucks)

F David Kase, Pirati Chamutov (Philadelphia Flyers)

F Radek Koblizek, Oulun Karpat

F Daniel Kurovsky, Vitkovice Ostrava

F Adam Musil, Red Deer Rebels (St. Louis Blues)

F Martin Necas, HC Kometa Brno

F Kristian Reichel, HC Litvinov

F Tomas Soustal, Kelowna Rockets

F Michael Spacek, Red Deer Rebels (Winnipeg Jets)

F Simon Stransky, Prince Albert Raiders

F Filip Suchy, Omaha Lancers

 

Denmark:

G Emil Gransoe, Topeka Roadrunners

G Kasper Krog, Sønderjysk

G Lasse Petersen, Red Deer Rebels

D Morten Jensen, Rögle BK

D Anders Koch, Esbjerg Energy

D Oliver Larsen, Odense Bulldogs

D Christian Mieritz, Leksands IF

D Oliver Gatz Nielsen, Herning Blue Fox

D Mathias Rondbjerg, Rungsted Seier Capital

D Nicolai Weichel, Rungsted Seier Capital

F Niklas Andersen, Esbjerg Energy

F Rasmus Thykjaer Andersson, HV71

F Joachim Blichfeld, Portland Winterhawks (San Jose Sharks)

F William Boysen, Rungsted Seier Capital

F Nikolaj Krag Christensen, Rogle BK (St. Louis Blues)

F Frederik Hoeg, Odense Bulldogs

F Jeppe Jul Korsgaard, Aalborg Pirates

F Tobias Maximilian Ladehoff, Aalborg Pirates

F David Madsen, Vaxjo Lakers

F Jonas Rondbjerg, Vaxjo Lakers

F Alexander True, Seattle Thunderbirds

F Christian Wejse, Blainville-Boisbriand Armada

Read more

 

Finland:

G Karolus Kaarlehto, TPS

G Markus Ruusu, JYP Jyvaskyla (Dallas Stars)

G Veini Vehvilainen, JYP Jyvaskyla

D Miro Heiskanen, HIFK

D Olli Juolevi, London Knights (Vancouver Canucks)

D Jesper Mattila, Boston College

D Juho Rautanen, Jokerit

D Vili Saarijarvi, Mississauga Steelheads (Detroit Red Wings)

D Urho Vaakanainen, JYP Jyvaskyla

D Juuso Valimaki, Tri-City Americans

F Kasper Bjorkqvist, Providence College (Pittsburgh Penguins)

F Henrik Borgstrom, University of Denver (Florida Panthers)

F Otto Koivula, Ilves (New York Islanders)

F Janne Kuokkanen, London Knights (Carolina Hurricanes)

F Joona Luoto, Tappara

F Julius Mattila, Boston College

F Julius Nattinen, Windsor Spitfires (Anaheim Ducks)

F Petrus Palmu, Owen Sound Attack

F Aapeli Rasanen, Sioux City Musketeers (Edmonton Oilers)

F Arttu Ruotsalainen, Assat

F Eeli Tolvanen, Sioux City Musketeers

F Teemu Vayrynen, TPS

F Kristian Vesalainen, HPK

 

Sweden:

G Felix Sandstrom, Brynas IF (Philadelphia Flyers)

G Filip Gustavsson, Lulea HF (Pittsburgh Penguins)

G Adam Werner, IF Bjorkloven (Colorado Avalanche)

D David Bernhardt, Djurgardens IF (Philadelphia Flyers)

D Gabriel Carlsson, Linkopings HC (Columbus Blue Jackets)

D Lucas Carlsson, Brynas IF (Chicago Blackhawks)

D Rasmus Dahlin, Frolunda HC

D Kristoffer Gunnarsson, IK Oskarshamn

D Oliver Kylington, Stockton Heat (Calgary Flames)

D Jacob Larsson, Frolunda HC (Anaheim Ducks)

F Filip Ahl, Regina Pats (Ottawa Senators)

F Lias Andersson, Sweden HV71

F Rasmus Asplund, Farjestad BK (Buffalo Sabres)

F Jonathan Dahlen, Timra IK (Ottawa Senators)

F Joel Eriksson Ek, Farjestad BK (Minnesota Wild)

F Carl Grundstrom, Frolunda HC (Toronto Maple Leafs)

F Fredrik Karlstrom, Sweden AIK (Dallas Stars)

F Jens Looke, Timra IK (Arizona Coyotes)

F Alexander Nylander, Rochester Americans (Buffalo Sabres)

F Sebastian Ohlsson, Skelleftea AIK

F Elias Pettersson, Timra IK

F Tim Soderlund, Skelleftea AIK

F Andreas Wingerli, Skelleftea AIK

 

Switzerland:

G Matteo Ritz, Lausanne HC

G Joren van Pottelberghe, HC Davos (Detroit Red Wings)

G Philip Wuthrich, SC Bern

D Yanik Burren, SC Bern

D Colin Gerber, SC Langenthal

D Nico Gross, EV Zug

D Roger Karrer, ZSC Lions

D Jonas Siegenthaler, ZSC Lions (Washington Capitals)

D Livio Stadler, Lulea HF

D Serge Weber, EHC Kloten

F Dominik Diem, GCK Lions

F Nando Eggenberger, HC Davos

F Fabian Haberstich, EV Zug

F Timo Haussener, EV Zug

F Nico Hischier, Halifax Mooseheads

F Loic In-Albon, Lausanne HC

F Nathan Marchon, HC Fribourg-Gotteron

F Marco Miranda, GCK Lions

F Jerome Portmann, HC Davos

F Raphael Prassl, GCK Lions

F Damien Riat, Geneve-Servette HC (Washington Capitals)

F Calvin Thurkauf, Kelowna Rockets (Columbus Blue Jackets)

F Yannick Zehnder, EV Zug

 

Group B

Canada:

G Carter Hart, Everett Silvertips (Philadelphia Flyers)

G Connor Ingram, Kamloops Blazers (Tampa Bay Lightning)

D Jake Bean, Calgary Hitmen (Carolina Hurricanes)

D Thomas Chabot, Saint John Sea Dogs (Ottawa Senators)

D Kale Clague, Brandon Wheat Kings (Los Angeles Kings)

D Dante Fabbro, Boston University (Nashville Predators)

D Noah Juulsen, Everett Silvertips (Montreal Canadiens)

D Jeremy Lauzon, Rouyn-Noranda Huskies (Boston Bruins)

D Philippe Myers, Rouyn-Noranda Huskies (Philadelphia Flyers)

F Mathew Barzal, Seattle Thunderbirds (New York Islanders)

F Anthony Cirelli, Oshawa Generals (Tampa Bay Lightning)

F Dillon Dube, Kelowna Rockets (Calgary Flames)

F Pierre-Luc Dubois, Blainville-Boisbriand Armada (Columbus Blue Jackets)

F Julien Gauthier, Val-d’Or Foreurs (Carolina Hurricanes)

F Mathieu Joseph, Saint John Sea Dogs (Tampa Bay Lightning)

F Tyson Jost, University of North Dakota (Colorado Avalanche)

F Michael McLeod, Mississauga Steelheads (New Jersey Devils)

F Taylor Raddysh, Erie Otters (Tampa Bay Lightning)

F Nicolas Roy, Chicoutimi Saguenéens (Carolina Hurricanes)

F Blake Speers, Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds (New Jersey Devils)

F Mitchell Stephens, Saginaw Spirit (Tampa Bay Lightning)

F Dylan Strome, Erie Otters (Arizona Coyotes)

 

Latvia:

G Gustavs Davis Grigals, HK Riga

G Mareks Egils Mitens, Aston Rebels

G Denijs Romanovskis, HS Riga

D Karlis Cukste, Quinnipiac University (San Jose Sharks)

D Eduards Hugo Jansons, Zemgale Jelgava

D Gvido Jansons, Aston Rebels

D Maksims Ponomarenko, Lorenskog IK

D Kristians Rubins, Medicine Hat Tigers

D Tomass Zeile, Shreveport Mudbugs

D Rimants Zeilis, HK Riga

D Kristaps Zile, Dinamo Riga

F Valters Apfelbaums, Prizma Riga

F Rudolfs Balcers, Kamloops Blazers (San Jose Sharks)

F Roberts Baranovskis, HK Riga

F Ricards Bernhards, Springfield Jr. Blues

F Roberts Blugers, Fairbanks Ice Dogs

F Filips Buncis, Johnstown Tomahawks

F Martins Dzierkals, Rouyn-Noranda Huskies (Toronto Maple Leafs)

F Erlends Klavins, Omaha Lancers

F Renars Krastenbergs, Oshawa Generals

F Rihards Puide, GCK Lions

F Deniss Smirnovs, Geneve Futur

F Eduards Tralmaks, Chicago Steel

 

Russia:

G Anton Krasotkin, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl

G Ilya Samsonov, Metallurg Magnitogorsk (Washington Capitals)

G Vladislav Sukhachyov, Chelyabinsk Polar Bears

D Grigori Dronov, Metallurg Magnitogorsk

D Vadim Kudako, Severstal Cherepovets

D Yegor Rykov, SKA Saint Petersburg (New Jersey Devils)

D Mikhail Sergachev, Windsor Spitfires (Montreal Canadiens)

D Mikhail Sidorov, Ak Bars Kazan

D Artyom Volkov, Dynamo Moscow

D Yegor Voronkov, Vityaz Podolsk

D Sergei Zborovskiy, Regina Pats (New York Rangers)

F Denis Alexeyev, MHC Loko

F Kirill Belayev, Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk

F Denis Guryanov, Texas Stars (Dallas Stars)

F Kirill Kaprizov, Salavat Yulaev Ufa (Minnesota Wild)

F Pavel Karnaukhov, CSKA Moscow (Calgary Flames)

F Danila Kvartalnov, CSKA Moscow

F Alexander Polunin, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl

F German Rubtsov, Vityaz Podolsk (Philadelphia Flyers)

F Yakov Trenin, Gatineau Olympiques (Nashville Predators)

F Kirill Urakov, Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod

F Mikhail Vorobyev, Salavat Yulaev Ufa (Philadelphia Flyers)

F Danil Yurtaikin, MHC Loko

 

Slovakia:

G Adam Huska, University of Connecticut (New York Rangers)

G Roman Durny, HK Orange 20

G Matej Tomek, University of North Dakota (Philadelphia Flyers)

D Martin Bodak, Finland Tappara

D Erik Cernak, Erie Otters (Los Angeles Kings)

D Martin Fehervary, Malmo J20

D Mario Grman, HK Orange 20

D Samuel Hain, HK Orange 20

D Andrej Hatala, HC Dukla Trencin

D Oliver Kosecky, HK Orange 20

D Michal Roman, HC Ocelari Trinec

F Martin Andrisik, HK Orange 20

F Radovan Bondra, Vancouver Giants (Chicago Blackhawks)

F Marek Hecl, HK Orange 20

F Filip Lestan, HV71

F Patrik Osko, HK Orange 20

F Oliver Patacky, HK Orange 20

F Milos Roman, Ocelari Trinec

F Adam Ruzicka, Sarnia Sting

F Boris Sadecky, HK Orange 20

F Marek Sloboda, HK Orange 20

F Miroslav Struska, HK Orange 20

F Marian Studenic, Hamilton Bulldogs

 

United States:

G Jake Oettinger, Boston University

G  Tyler Parsons, London Knights (Calgary Flames)

G Joseph Woll, Boston College (Toronto Maple Leafs)

D Jack Ahcan, St. Cloud State University

D Joseph Cecconi, University of Michigan (Dallas Stars)

D Casey Fitzgerald, Boston College (Buffalo Sabres)

D Adam Fox, Harvard University (Calgary Flames)

D Caleb Jones, Portland Winterhawks (Edmonton Oilers)

D Ryan Lindgren, University of Minnesota (Boston Bruins)

D Charlie McAvoy, Boston University (Boston Bruins)

F Joey Anderson, University of Minnesota Duluth (New Jersey Devils)

F Kieffer Bellows, Boston University (New York Islanders)

F Jeremy Bracco, Kitchener Rangers (Toronto Maple Leafs)

F Erik Foley, Providence College (Winnipeg Jets)

F Jordan Greenway, Boston University (Minnesota Wild)

F Patrick Harper, Boston University (Nashville Predators)

F Clayton Keller, Boston University (Arizona Coyotes)

F Luke Kunin, University of Wisconsin (Minnesota Wild)

F Tanner Laczynski, Ohio State University (Philadelphia Flyers)

F Jack Roslovic, Manitoba Moose (Winnipeg Jets)

F Troy Terry, University of Denver (Anaheim Ducks)

F Tage Thompson, University of Connecticut (St. Louis Blues)

F Colin White, Boston College (Ottawa Senators)

 

Team Canada| Team Finland| Team Russia| Team Sweden| Team USA World Juniors

1 comment

World Cup Notes: Forsberg, Datsyuk, Marchand

September 24, 2016 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

When the Washington Capitals traded away Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat in an attempt at the Stanley Cup a few years ago, they gave away one of the games most dynamic young players – one that has developed into a legitimate goal-scoring threat from anywhere on the ice.  They also lost their chance at having Forsberg potentially skate alongside Nicklas Backstrom and Alexander Ovechkin. It would likely have been an unstoppable offensive trio, and Backstrom said as much today when speaking with Dan Rosen of NHL.com:

He reminds me of playing with Alex with his quick release. He loves shooting the puck. He loves to go to the net. He loves creating stuff. In that way he reminds me of Ovi.

Forsberg, who has already scored 60 goals in his brief NHL career, has a long way to go to catch one of the all-time great goal scoring wingers but even without 50-per-season he’ll be an elite player. Swedish defenders like Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Roman Josi and Mattias Ekholm, all excellent players in their own right, agree that Forsberg is one player you can’t give much space. Had he stayed in Washington, playing with Backstrom and Ovechkin would have afforded him that room.

  • Pavel Datsyuk took the ice at team Russia’s morning skate prior to their evening matchup against Canada, but will still be a game-time decision. He didn’t take part in the entire practice, instead doing some skating at center ice by himself. He sat out the Russian’s final round-robin game against Finland with a “lower-body injury”, and hasn’t been the same dynamic force he used to be.
  • Always known for a good soundbite, Drew Doughty told reporters “that’s a bonus, that’s for sure” in regards to missing the first part of Kings camp due to the World Cup. While the players remaining won’t get to practice with their squads for at least a few more days, the work they’ve put in with and against the best players in the world should be more than enough to get them ready for the season.  The only worry is injuries, like the one suffered by Matt Murray which will now keep him out 3-6 weeks.
  • In his latest column, AP’s Stephen Whyno speculates that Brad Marchand may be a top target for the Pittsburgh Penguins if he reaches free agency next summer, due to the growing chemistry between the Boston winger and his Team Canada center Sidney Crosby. The two have scored seven points in three games and look like they are a natural fit together on the ice. Fitting Marchand into their salary structure may prove difficult however, if Marchand can duplicate his outstanding 37-goal campaign from a year ago.

Injury| Los Angeles Kings| NHL| Players| Team Russia| Uncategorized| Washington Capitals Filip Forsberg| Matt Murray (b. 1994)| Nicklas Backstrom| Pavel Datsyuk| World Cup

0 comments

Confirmed: Orlov Signs One-Year Deal With Capitals

September 21, 2016 at 5:34 pm CDT | by Mike Furlano Leave a Comment

The Washington Capitals and Dmitry Orlov agreed to a one-year deal worth $2.57MM. Orlov was a restricted free agent this summer, and while his contract will keep him as an RFA next summer, he is arbitration-eligible. The signing wraps up the Capitals’ obligations right before training camp opens.

Orlov is currently playing on Team Russia’s blueline in the World Cup of Hockey and averaging around 20 minutes a game. Last season he scored 8G and 21A in 82 games for the Capitals, but remains a bottom-pairing defenseman because of a stacked Capitals’ blueline.

The signing leaves Washington with approximately $880K in salary cap space to start the season. The Caps have little wiggle room to add, however, and will have to manipulate the cap creatively in order to make space at the trade deadline. The deal itself seems team friendly, but if Orlov continues to progress he is in line for a healthy raise next year.

Newsstand| Team Russia| Washington Capitals Dmitry Orlov

0 comments

Full World Cup Of Hockey Schedule

September 17, 2016 at 1:39 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The World Cup officially kicks off today with a match-up between Team USA and Team Europe. After some interesting scratches announced earlier today, the American team will look to kick off the tournament with a win over Anze Kopitar and the European collection. Here’s a look at the entire schedule in Toronto (all times Central):

Saturday, Sept. 17

Team USA vs. Team Europe, 2:30 pm.

Team Czech Republic vs. Team Canada, 7 pm.

Sunday, Sept. 18

Team Sweden vs. Team Russia, 2 pm.

Team North America vs. Team Finland, 7 pm.

Monday, Sept. 19

Team Europe vs. Team Czech Republic, 2 pm.

Team Russia vs. Team North America, 7 pm.

Read more

Tuesday, Sept. 20

Team Finland vs. Team Sweden, 2 pm.

Team Canada vs. Team USA, 7 pm.

Wednesday, Sept. 21

Team North America vs. Team Sweden, 2 pm.

Team Europe vs. Team Canada, 7 pm.

Thursday, Sept. 22

Team Finland vs. Team Russia, 2 pm.

Team USA vs. Team Czech Republic, 7 pm.

Semifinals (single elimination)

Saturday, Sept. 24

Semifinal 1, 6 pm.

Sunday, Sept. 25

Semifinal 2, 12 pm.

Final (best-of-three)

Tuesday, Sept. 27

Final Game 1, 7 pm.

Thursday, Sept. 29

Final Game 2, 7 pm.

Saturday, Oct. 1

Final Game 3, 6 pm. (if necessary)

Team Canada| Team Europe| Team North America| Team Russia| Team Sweden| Team USA Anze Kopitar| World Cup

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Snapshots: Ovechkin, Cleary, World Cup Predictions

September 17, 2016 at 11:44 am CDT | by natebrown Leave a Comment

If the NHL won’t send players to the 2018 Olympics, it won’t stop Alex Ovechkin from representing Team Russia. ESPN’s Pierre LeBrun reports that the superstar simply said “I will go there,” and elaborated a bit more on his wording:

“My decision is the same,” Ovechkin said. “So, I don’t know what’s going to happen right now, but we just have to wait what they say and we’ll see. …It’s a situation where you don’t know what’s going to happen. But obviously I said I’m going to play.”

The major hangup over participation is 2018 is insurance costs for players should they play in South Korea. The IOC, according to LeBrun, have expressed hesitancy over covering travel and insurance costs for those playing in the Olympics.

In other hockey news:

  • The Detroit Red Wings have offered Dan Cleary a professional tryout tweets Ansar Khan. Cleary spent the season in Grand Rapids, and was not re-signed by the organization. However, this news will certainly rankle many Detroit fans who point to Cleary as one of the many reasons the Red Wings have continued to slide. Cleary had a hand shake deal with general manager Ken Holland to return following the 2013-14 season, a season where his decline began. Since then, he played sparingly and was relegated to the AHL after the emergence of Dylan Larkin and Andreas Athanasiou.
  • With the World Cup of Hockey beginning its first slate of tournament games today, analysts have started releasing their predictions. NHL.com had a slew of analysts picking their favorites and there were three analysts (Amalie Benjamin, Michael Langr and Dave Stubbs) to reach the championship round. Langr believes that Team USA will win Group A. As for the champions, it was either Team Canada or Team Sweden from the handful of analysts. Puck Daddy’s crew of Greg Wyshynski, Sean Leahy, Josh Cooper and Jen Neale all have Canada being crowned as champions. The runner ups varied from the US (Wyshynski and Neale) to Sweden (Cooper and Leahy). Neale adds that the matchup the NHL desires is USA-Canada, but Sweden–or possibly Team North America, could certainly prevent that.
  • Puck Daddy’s writers also conducted a roundtable where they discussed what must happen for the World Cup to be considered a success. Wyshysnki is conflicted because the success of the World Cup–which he calls a negotiating tool against the IOC–may encourage the lack of NHL participation in the Olympics. This is less about national pride, Wyshynski writes, and more about showing the viability of international hockey outside of the Olympics. WCOH gear is selling well and advertisers are aplenty. Josh Cooper writes that North America, USA, and Canada all need to be successful because it was placed in the North America timezone to cement its support. Neale adds that every game needs to be competitive in order to keep the casual fan interested. Ryan Lambert just hopes for more entertainment than an NHL exhibition game, calling that a moral victory for the NHL.

NHL| Snapshots| Team Canada| Team North America| Team Russia| Team Sweden| Team USA Alex Ovechkin| World Cup

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Snapshots: Steen, Ristolainen, Sobotka, Halak, Bobrovsky

September 15, 2016 at 1:39 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Although he withdrew from the World Cup of Hockey last month, Blues forward Alex Steen is hoping he will be ready to suit up for St. Louis in their season opener on October 12th, reports Jeremy Rutherford of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.  Steen stops short of saying he’ll definitely be ready to play against Chicago on opening night but hopes to be ready by then or shortly thereafter:

“(The opener) seems like a realistic target, but we’ll see how it reacts. I haven’t done much. These (practice) skates, there’s not a lot of contact, so we’ll see once we get a little bit of contact. But I think for sure I see myself playing in October.”

Although he won’t be able to play for his native Sweden in the tournament, Steen noted that the goal of being able to play there actually forced him to accelerate his rehab process from his shoulder surgery back in early June.  Without doing so, the chances of him being available to start the season would have been lower.

Steen also denied the speculation that he has given the team an ultimatum to re-sign him before the end of the preseason:

“I don’t know where that surfaced, that’s not something that’s come from me. I want to be in St. Louis and the organization knows that. I’m sure we’ll get to it when we get to it, so we’re not stressed about it. Right now, the whole focus has been on the shoulder, getting that ready and getting the group back together again.”

Steen is entering the final year of his contract, one that carries a cap hit of $5.8MM and a salary of $6.5MM.  He has been in St. Louis since late 2008 when he was acquired from Toronto along with defenseman Carlo Colaiacovo in exchange for right winger Lee Stempniak.

Elsewhere around the league:

  • Buffalo blueliner Rasmus Ristolainen isn’t yet worried that he doesn’t have a new deal with the Sabres, writes Mike Harrington of the Buffalo News. Ristolainen is coming off his entry-level pact which carried a guaranteed salary of just $925K.  He was one of the bigger bargains on the back end last season, one where he had a career high 41 points in 82 games.  Harrington suggests that Ristolainen, who will suit up for Team Finland at the World Cup of Hockey, is seeking a five or six year deal which would cover his remaining restricted free agent years.
  • There is still no deal in place yet to officially allow Vladimir Sobotka to return to St. Louis for the upcoming season, notes ESPN’s Joe MacDonald. The Blues and his KHL team Avangard Omsk as well as his agent are expected to talk during the World Cup to try to come to a resolution.  Sobotka has one year on his deal remaining in Russia but also owes St. Louis one year with a salary of $2.725MM, an arbitration award from back in July of 2014.
  • New York Islanders goaltender Jaroslav Halak has earned the #1 job for Team Europe at the World Cup, head coach Ralph Krueger announced. He beat out Islanders teammate Thomas Greiss and Washington’s Phillip Grubauer for the job.  Team Europe plays their first game of the tournament on Saturday afternoon against Team USA.
  • Columbus Blue Jackets netminder Sergei Bobrovsky will start Team Russia’s first game on Sunday afternoon, reports NHL.com’s Nick Cotsonika.  He beat out Colorado’s Semyon Varlamov and Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevskiy for the start in the opener.  Head coach Oleg Znarok wouldn’t say who he plans to start beyond that and noted that no decisions have been made on what their lineup against Sweden will be.

Snapshots| St. Louis Blues| Team Europe| Team Russia Alexander Steen| Jaroslav Halak| Rasmus Ristolainen| Vladimir Sobotka| World Cup

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World Cup Injury Scares

September 9, 2016 at 11:08 am CDT | by Glen Miller Leave a Comment

One reason team executives and coaching staffs aren’t too keen on tournaments like the World Cup of Hockey is the fear one of their top players might get hurt playing in a meaningless – to them anyway – exhibition. If, for example, the Capitals lost Alex Ovechkin for any significant duration due to an injury playing in the World Cup, Washington’s chances to compete for a Stanley Cup would take a major hit. So general managers and head coaches nervously watch these games with the hope that no one gets injured and thus consequently derailing a team’s playoff hopes.

We’re just one warm-up game and a handful of practices into the tournament and already have seen a number of injury scares to key players. Here’s a quick rundown.

  • Vladimir Sobotka of the Czech Republic was injured in Thursday’s game with Team Russia and according to early reports, was transported to the hospital with an apparent shoulder/clavicle injury. Tom Gulitti of NHL.com later reported that x-rays were negative and that there was a chance Sobotka would be available for Saturday’s return tilt against Russia. However, Gulitti followed up via Twitter this morning and said that Sobotka is indeed out for tomorrow’s contest. Roman Cervenka would have ultimately replaced Sobotka in the lineup but he won’t be available in time to suit up tomorrow. Instead the Czechs will be forced to ice seven defensemen and 11 forwards. Sobotka has spent the past two seasons in the KHL but was expected to return to North America and the Blues for the 2016-17 campaign. After losing Troy Brouwer and David Backes to free agency, the hope was Sobotka would be able to pick up some of the slack in St. Louis. Even though he may miss some time in the World Cup, the early indications are the injury isn’t too severe, much to the relief of the Blues and their fans.
  • The Chicago Blackhawks experienced a bit of a scare when Marian Hossa left Team Europe’s game against Team North America after a puck struck his right foot causing the veteran Slovak to sit out the third period. But after a quick trip to the hospital revealed just a bruise, Hossa is expected to continue on in the tournament though he might still sit out future World Cup exhibition games as a precaution, according to Scott Powers writing for The Athletic. The 37-year-old Hossa, whose offensive output dropped last season to just 33 points in 64 games, is still a vital cog in the Chicago lineup due to his outstanding two-way play.
  • Earlier it was reported that superstar goaltender Henrik Lundqvist may have injured himself while on a golf outing ahead of the World Cup of Hockey. However it was later revealed he took a shot to the ribs during a practice and that he was indeed good to go for the tournament. According to Dan Rosen of NHL.com (via Twitter), Lundqvist is in fact expected to get the start between the pipes tomorrow and play the whole game for Team Sweden.
  • The news isn’t quite as good for fellow Swede and Chicago Blackhawks forward Marcus Kruger. Again according to Rosen, Kruger suffered an upper body injury which caused the pivot to miss the final 7:39 of regulation and all of OT in the game against Finland (both links via Twitter). With Kruger out for tomorrow’s contest, Team Sweden will insert Mikael Backlund into the lineup in Kruger’s place. Backlund, of course, was added to the Swedish roster as a replacement for Henrik Zetterberg.

Chicago Blackhawks| Coaches| Free Agency| Injury| KHL| NHL| Players| St. Louis Blues| Team North America| Team Russia| Washington Capitals Alex Ovechkin| David Backes| Henrik Zetterberg| Mikael Backlund| World Cup

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Snapshots: World Cup

September 7, 2016 at 10:44 am CDT | by Brett Barrett 1 Comment

When looking at the rosters for the upcoming World Cup of Hockey, it’s hard not to be intrigued by the United States roster.

Initial lines via USA Hockey (changing each day):

Max Pacioretty – Joe Pavelski – Patrick Kane
Zach Parise – Derek Stepan – Blake Wheeler
Justin Abdelkader – Ryan Kesler – T.J. Oshie
James van Riemsdyk – David Backes – Brandon Dubinsky
Kyle Palmieri

Ryan Suter – Dustin Byfuglien
Ryan McDonagh – John Carlson
Jack Johnson – Matt Niskanen
Erik Johnson

Ben Bishop – Cory Schneider – Jonathan Quick

The goaltending is superb, but USA lost out to Canada 1-0 at the 2014 Sochi Olympics despite a lights out performance by Quick. Other than obvious picks like Patrick Kane and Joe Pavelski, there are some surprising choices, like no Phil Kessel and grinders like Justin Abdelkader making the cut.

It’s a different philosophy than the States’ rivals Canada: their bottom six features five number one centers, a very good second line center, and a first line winger. USA GM Dean Lombardi told ESPN’s Craig Custance that “it’s no different than putting together an NHL team … this had to be about team and identity.”

In other World Cup news:

  • USA named their captains Wednesday: as expected, Pavelski will wear the C, with Kane and Ryan Suter wearing As.
  • Russia also named their leadership group: Alex Ovechkin will be captain; Pavel Datsyuk and Evgeni Malkin will be assistants.
  • Back in the U.S., TSN’s Gary Lawless posited that USA coach John Tortorella is wrong to force his views on his players. Yesterday, Tortorella told ESPN that any player who protested the American anthem like NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick would stay on the bench for the whole game. Lawless argued that while it’s admirable that Tortorella wants to honor his son, an Army Ranger, he shouldn’t be able to arbitrarily block someone from doing their job and publicly shame them for exercising free speech.

John Tortorella| Team Russia| Team USA World Cup

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