The bronze medal game was an absolute shitshow for both teams. I know those games are hard to play, especially on such a quick turnaround, but I've seen more structured efforts in pickup games. One of those games where someone was going to win a medal but it's hard to say either team deserved a medal based on their performances today. I'm happy Team USA pulled it off but all of their worst traits throughout the tournament reared their ugly heads in this one.
On the positive side, it was nice to see Lucius show up. Of course, the hat trick and GWG were huge, but it was the first game all tournament where he consistently looked engaged. He was skating hard, hustling, battling, and making skillful attempts, things he rarely did before today. In a tournament where we needed some 19-year-olds to step up and it largely didn't happen, it was nice to see a 19-year-old finally step up to help the team at least end it with the bronze.
It wasn't Cooley's best performance today - he looked exhausted - but he still found a way to make an impact. That said, he was the team's best player throughout the tournament by a sizable margin and he could be dominant if he's back next tournament.
Brindley didn't provide any offense all tournament and I don't see the 1st round upside or skill level some others see, but I respect the hell out of the way he plays the game. Production wise he didn't deserve a bigger role but he sure deserved one based on his effort.
I'm no fan of Mbereko's game and while it's hard to say he had any real impact on the team winning the bronze after he came in the game, it was nice to see him end his USAH career on a high note. He seems like a pretty good kid.
It's a small sample size but Augustine is showing a worrisome habit of shrinking in pressure games. He did it at the U18s and he did it here, too. It's far too early to make any declarations, especially as an underager and double-underager in those respective tournaments, but it's something I'll be closely watching at this year's U18 tournament. While Mbereko didn't inspire any increased confidence, especially when he immediately let in a soft goal, pulling Augustine was the right decision, and one of the only times the coaching staff made any decisions all tournament in an effort to reel in the team and the disappearing momentum/lead.
It's clear the staff didn't choose wisely when building the defense. It was something we were all worried about and those fears ended up being justified. One on hand, the options for a different makeup weren't abundant - the '03 defensive pool is shallow and the most advanced '04 defensemen were all guys similar to the '03s who were going to make the team. That said, it was a mistake to take 7 very similar defensemen, compounded by not playing the one defenseman they took (Chesley) who could be the best defender while playing with the most chippiness. That's not to say Chesley would have played any better, or drastically changed anything, but to not even give him an extended look when a few guys playing regularly struggled so much was a bit shocking. In the end, it would have been prudent to evaluate and/or select more defenders with length, varied skill sets, or a willingness/ability to bring a different element than the others. Again, the options weren't endless but guys with length like Buium and Schmidt (who I don't even really like) or a meat-and-potatoes guy like Gallagher who would take a puck in the face to win would have positively changed the makeup, or at least the ability to mix things up.
The Peart - Ufko pairing might be one of the worst pairings I've seen for Team USA when it came to playing defense. Ufko put up a lot of points, which isn't too surprising as he's a very talented offensive defenseman (and he racked up 5 of those points against Germany). But he had a poor tournament, even if the team makeup did him no favors. I defended Peart after his debacles in last year's tournament as he's been a good NCAA player. But he was even worse this tournament - one of the worst performances by one of our defensemen in the WJC in a long time - and he was a drag on Ufko much like he was when he was with Hughes. Ufko turned the puck over a lot (sometimes it was just bad luck like the fan on Carlsson's goal today) but Peart was continually lost defensively, wandering out of position in the defensive zone, often to cover the wrong man who's already being closed in on, while leaving his position and player open to score. Peart should have been benched midway through the tournament; instead, he kept getting regular shifts and/or prime assignments and it kept leading to the puck going in against Team USA.
Beyond the performances of individual players or the defensive roster construction, the two things I think most plagued the team throughout the tournament were:
1. They were really poor on face-offs. Both winning them but also maintaining any structure, positioning, or assignments on defensive zone face-offs. So many of the best scoring chances (and goals) they gave up were right off of defensive zone face-offs. And today wasn't any different.
2. It was the worst Team USA I've seen in my 18+ years watching this tournament at maintaining any momentum, or not completely falling apart when the momentum shifted. There is always going to be a high likelihood for wild momentum swings and lead changes when dealing with junior players, but it was shocking how predictable this team was at it. Even when things were going well (i.e., dominating run of play or multiple goal leads), it felt inevitable that they'd give it right back, and quickly. How many leads did they blow today? And was anyone surprised that Sweden tied it up late? I think there were a lot of underlying reasons for this: we didn't have a quality 19-year-old core to help anchor the team, the defense was poorly constructed and shaky at best (if you're being generous), the bottom six forwards never brought consistent forechecking nightmares for the opposition as we've seen with previous rosters, and the staff never coached as if they had any influence over the momentum - they never shortened the bench, never changed the lines, never sat guys consistently hurting the team, never used their timeouts. It was as if they were resigned to helplessness as they watch stretches of games - and leads - rapidly get away from them.
Before the tournament I said:
"If they can get into the medal games that'd be a win and from there, anything can happen, but I don't think this is a gold medal game or bust team like has been the norm in recent tournaments."
Generally, I think that proved fairly accurate. On one hand, they'll stew over the semifinal result against Canada and what could have been, but on the other hand, the team was very uneven throughout the tournament with some glaring, recurring, and monumental issues they could never even slightly remedy, so even coming home with a medal still feels like a win.