wings5
Registered User
- Jan 6, 2008
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- 933
Canada was the better team by far last night. Out-shot them 50-36.
Who cares about shots? The game was completely even.
Canada was the better team by far last night. Out-shot them 50-36.
Canada was the better team by far last night. Out-shot them 50-36.
People are being overly harsh with regards to Dylan Strome. He had 10 points in 7 games in the tournament. He is a fine player with a promising NHL future. It's not fair to take one kid and make him a scapegoat.
I'm sure they went through a scouting report on Parsons, but it is up to the players to execute those shots not the coaching staff. This coaching staff made a not-so-talented Canadian roster come together in a very short tournament, and got them thisclose to the gold medal.
Looking at this roster there were a lot of doubts, but the coaching staff made something out of meh, IMO.
Was at the Bell Center yesterday for the gold medal game, here are a few thing I saw
- Chabot was incredible, best player on the ice for both team
- Barzal and Strome were terrible, they always look to shoot and make no passes, it's hard to play with a center that dosen't pass the puck
Good job by yhe both team, most stressful game ive seen live
Maybe I'm old or maybe it's how the game has evolved but I can't believe how many times a TC player had a chance to just flatten someone in open ice and didn't. For years the opposite was true and oposing teams would really think twice about cutting across east west looking. I love the fast, skilled game but I think the physicality of past teams is what really set them apart.
This is the 2nd time I have seen someone say Barzal does not pass and I have to question if they watched all the games. Did he shoot a fair amount? Yes (Selfisly I'm okay with that) but the dude was making slick passes left and right and was Canada's only reliable player to distribute the puck. His line mates were not too great either so that doesn't help.
Does anyone really think Chabot puts up the number he did without Barzal feeding him the puck? I don't.
Really confused as to why Lauzon didn`t get more time earlier in the game, same with McLeod. I think at some point you had to realize that Strome simply isn`t a game breaker.
There isn't much need for a postmortem this year. This tournament was obviously a failure, which is becoming all too common, but there are not massive issues like in 2013 or 2016. This team was quite a mixed bag, with some elements that were positive, some that were negative, and some that were perplexing.
Credit obviously goes to Chabot. Canada has rarely ever leaned on one defenceman so much. He played huge minutes and really did pull it off. As good as he was offensively, by far his most valuable trait was his ability to consistently get the puck out of the defensive zone. Credit also to Canada's Roy and Cirelli lines, which were nominally Canada's bottom two lines but were certainly the most effective lines on the team. I thought that Roy, Stephens and Cirelli were Canada's best forwards along with arguably Barzal (even with his uneven play). Those guys played a more traditional Canadian style that is very effective at the junior level, and Canada would be wise to cultivate players who can execute in such a way. Finally credit to Hart as well. He was bad in the preliminary round, but his play in two high pressure situations in the last two games was quite good. Goaltending was not the reason Canada lost this year.
The biggest problem on this team was its inability (or refusal) to make simple, clean plays out of the defensive zone. Too many times Canadian players would make the difficult long pass instead of the simple one to clear the zone, skate back into Canada's zone and lose the puck or stop short of the blueline and try to make a play there. This was the cause of multiple goals last night (the fourth American goal in particular) and in several other games. I thought that Ducharme did a good job overall, but he really should have forced the team to take care of its zone first. A big part of this problem of course was probably the worst player on the team - Bean. He turned in the worst performance by a Canadian defenceman that I can recall. Terrible (predictable) turnovers in the Canadian zone, weak on the puck and in battles and slow to make decisions offensively. Replace him with Girard (a player skilled enough to pull off what Bean thought he could) and Canada would have been significantly better. Just horrible. To be fair to him though, the guy barely played this year and Hockey Canada should not have penciled him into the top four for no apparent reason. The other big problem among the skaters was Strome. I liked Strome's play in 2016 and was optimistic this year, but other than his empty points in the preliminary round he was simply terrible. Even a player like Dubois, who didn't score or perform up to the level he should have, contributed in other ways with some physicality an board play. Strome was lazy and far too slow. He just seemed to want to float in the slot and hope that his linemates would find him. It's telling that he had four linemates and each of them was better away from him. He was effectively a black hole when it mattered.
There isn't much else that Canada could have done differently. Girard (or anyone) should have made the team over Bean and Steel arguably should have made it, but they picked a good team and Ducharme generally utilized the players properly. There are still lessons to be learned though. Canada only played an aggressive and physical game once all tournament, and that was against Sweden. It's no coincidence that the Sweden game was Canada's best performance. The effectiveness of the Roy and Cirelli lines demonstrated how that style is extremely effective at the junior level. It was a staple of Canadian hockey and should still be utilized. Many of the top Canadian prospects coming up don't seem to have that style in them, and Hockey Canada should look into why that is. Hockey Canada itself is an issue at this point. Canada has become a loser at this tournament this decade, going 1/7. There is really no acceptable excuse. Changes need to be made - not huge changes, but changes. Canada has gone away from the methods that were very effective in the last decade and the results aren't there. The people who decide these things should be answering for that, and Olympic results (the result of Hockey Canada's work last decade along with Canada's NHL braintrust) are not a sufficient excuse. That Canada just produced a weak crop of players at the 2016 draft and has another weak one coming up in 2017 only exacerbates this issue short term.
Anyway, this team came closer to winning gold than any other failed Canadian junior team has before. Losing, even in the randomness of a shootout, isn't something that should be accepted, but this team's overall performance was not terrible considering what they were working with. There are positives and negatives that we can take forward. On to 2018.
As a CAR fan I was happy with Gauthier's play. Tied for 4th in goals with Nylander, Dahlen and Raddysh in the tourney, and 4th on Canada roster in points... and all without much mention from most posters. Very underrated performance. Roy had a good showing, too. Bean?, not so much this time around.