Jason MacIsaac
Registered User
Outside a long shift where he got bullied in the corner, this was a very strong all around game by Casey. It’s a shame he got the flu mid tourney, clearly affected him.
Danny Nelson, Zeev Buium, Oliver Moore, Will Smith, Ryan Leonard, Trey Augustine, Gabe Perreault, Fortescue I think are the guys that won it. Might have missed one.
yeah its pretty barebones, the same replays all day long. The commercials are like C level commercials you would never see on ESPN, TNT, CBS etc etcEverything about NHL Network is a disgrace. They should fold the Network. Not only that but unless you have cable or Fubo, you aren't even able to get it for the everyday person. Stop putting shit on it.
But coming back from adversity can go a long way. Good coaching in between periods.That was not pretty but oh well...we playing for gold boys!!! Woooooooo!!!
I'd much rather hear Gord Miller call the game. NHL Network is so lame except for "on the fly" when there allot of games going on.yeah its pretty barebones, the same replays all day long. The commercials are like C level commercials you would never see on ESPN, TNT, CBS etc etc
NHL owns it though so they should get the blame
USA is a bunch of inviduals. Carle got his shot and he failed. Once again our coaching staff is losing 100-0.
Ton of guys on this roster that experienced losing gold to Sweden at the u18s a couple of years ago. They’ll be hungry
Reminds me a bit of the 2021 team having 5 or 6 guys that lost in the Hlinka to the same Canadian age group on that goal after the buzzer
He’s a phenomenal coach. His Denver teams have been a treat to watch. The adjustments he made in the second intermission of the 2022 national championship game was one of the more impressive coaching performances I’ve ever seenI actually have been thoroughly** impressed by Carle. Pushed the buttons when he has needed to.
We should just roll with 5D for the most part.When the US wasn't committing unforced turnovers (Rinzel and Snuggerud in the 1st, Perreault in the 3rd, etc.), they easily carried the play and did so for a lot of the game. Finland had trouble generating any sustained offense outside of those few key turnovers.
Augustine had a shaky start. The first goal against was 100% on Rinzel but he didn't look great on it and the second goal was beyond soft. After the first, he maybe faced a couple of dangerous chances at most but I was impressed with his composure. He didn't let the poor start rattle him and then he made the key saves down the stretch (like at the end of the late PP), which is no easy feat when you've barely touched the puck for 40 minutes.
Gauthier was due. With his lethal shot, his putrid shooting % wasn't going to persist forever. I bet he pots another in the gold medal game.
Casey with his best game of the tournament. He was sensational. Calm, cool, and collected breakouts, held the line on the Snuggerud goal, active in the offensive zone, solid defense. He doesn't get the most ice time because he's not on the first pairing but he's the team's best defenseman.
Chesley was excellent as well. He's been getting better each game and has been excellent overall. If a defenseman on the team was going to be named a top 3 player for the tournament, it should have been Chesley. Hutson getting it was a joke, he's not even been a top 3 defenseman on the team.
Another rock-solid game from Fortescue as well. He was a wildcard on the team, especially in a top 4 role, but he's passed with flying colors. Another composed performance.
Rinzel was rough, not just the turnover on the opening goal. He was skating like he was an amalgamation of McGroarty and Perreault. It won't happen but he should be the #7 and Pohlkamp should take a regular shift. He's better with the puck, and while he's not as tall, he's more physical as well.
Perreault struggled mightily again. Needs to make quicker decisions.
It's great to have a coaching staff that doesn't appear to be painfully stubborn. I'm so used to USAH coaches waiting until the last minutes of a game they're losing to make any changes in an attempt to get back in a game that's mostly over. Carle and co. started the adjustments early in the 2nd and it got the team back in the game and turned the tide.
Officiating was putrid. How many high sticks to the face (mostly to the US players) did they let go? But then started calling ticky-tack stick infractions that you could call on every other shift if you wanted to.
HWhen the US wasn't committing unforced turnovers (Rinzel and Snuggerud in the 1st, Perreault in the 3rd, etc.), they easily carried the play and did so for a lot of the game. Finland had trouble generating any sustained offense outside of those few key turnovers.
Augustine had a shaky start. The first goal against was 100% on Rinzel but he didn't look great on it and the second goal was beyond soft. After the first, he maybe faced a couple of dangerous chances at most but I was impressed with his composure. He didn't let the poor start rattle him and then he made the key saves down the stretch (like at the end of the late PP), which is no easy feat when you've barely touched the puck for 40 minutes.
Gauthier was due. With his lethal shot, his putrid shooting % wasn't going to persist forever. I bet he pots another in the gold medal game.
Casey with his best game of the tournament. He was sensational. Calm, cool, and collected breakouts, held the line on the Snuggerud goal, active in the offensive zone, solid defense. He doesn't get the most ice time because he's not on the first pairing but he's the team's best defenseman.
Chesley was excellent as well. He's been getting better each game and has been excellent overall. If a defenseman on the team was going to be named a top 3 player for the tournament, it should have been Chesley. Hutson getting it was a joke, he's not even been a top 3 defenseman on the team.
Another rock-solid game from Fortescue as well. He was a wildcard on the team, especially in a top 4 role, but he's passed with flying colors. Another composed performance.
Rinzel was rough, not just the turnover on the opening goal. He was skating like he was an amalgamation of McGroarty and Perreault. It won't happen but he should be the #7 and Pohlkamp should take a regular shift. He's better with the puck, and while he's not as tall, he's more physical as well.
Perreault struggled mightily again. Needs to make quicker decisions.
It's great to have a coaching staff that doesn't appear to be painfully stubborn. I'm so used to USAH coaches waiting until the last minutes of a game they're losing to make any changes in an attempt to get back in a game that's mostly over. Carle and co. started the adjustments early in the 2nd and it got the team back in the game and turned the tide.
Officiating was putrid. How many high sticks to the face (mostly to the US players) did they let go? But then started calling ticky-tack stick infractions that you could call on every other shift if you wanted to.
Hutson was all over the ice, dominant, you were probably having problem with the numbers.When the US wasn't committing unforced turnovers (Rinzel and Snuggerud in the 1st, Perreault in the 3rd, etc.), they easily carried the play and did so for a lot of the game. Finland had trouble generating any sustained offense outside of those few key turnovers.
Augustine had a shaky start. The first goal against was 100% on Rinzel but he didn't look great on it and the second goal was beyond soft. After the first, he maybe faced a couple of dangerous chances at most but I was impressed with his composure. He didn't let the poor start rattle him and then he made the key saves down the stretch (like at the end of the late PP), which is no easy feat when you've barely touched the puck for 40 minutes.
Gauthier was due. With his lethal shot, his putrid shooting % wasn't going to persist forever. I bet he pots another in the gold medal game.
Casey with his best game of the tournament. He was sensational. Calm, cool, and collected breakouts, held the line on the Snuggerud goal, active in the offensive zone, solid defense. He doesn't get the most ice time because he's not on the first pairing but he's the team's best defenseman.
Chesley was excellent as well. He's been getting better each game and has been excellent overall. If a defenseman on the team was going to be named a top 3 player for the tournament, it should have been Chesley. Hutson getting it was a joke, he's not even been a top 3 defenseman on the team.
Another rock-solid game from Fortescue as well. He was a wildcard on the team, especially in a top 4 role, but he's passed with flying colors. Another composed performance.
Rinzel was rough, not just the turnover on the opening goal. He was skating like he was an amalgamation of McGroarty and Perreault. It won't happen but he should be the #7 and Pohlkamp should take a regular shift. He's better with the puck, and while he's not as tall, he's more physical as well.
Perreault struggled mightily again. Needs to make quicker decisions.
It's great to have a coaching staff that doesn't appear to be painfully stubborn. I'm so used to USAH coaches waiting until the last minutes of a game they're losing to make any changes in an attempt to get back in a game that's mostly over. Carle and co. started the adjustments early in the 2nd and it got the team back in the game and turned the tide.
Officiating was putrid. How many high sticks to the face (mostly to the US players) did they let go? But then started calling ticky-tack stick infractions that you could call on every other shift if you wanted to.
H
Hutson was all over the ice, dominant, you were probably having problem with the numbers.
He was on the ice also for the last 2 min 30 even with play stoppages, coaches were more confident with him on the ice then Fortescue or Casey.
He's by far the best defenceman on this team.
We should just roll with 5D for the most part.
Hutson - Chesley
Buium/Forts - Casey
This is effectively what we did in the 3rd period.
If one of the core 3 get gassed, let Buium take a shift with Pohlkamp or Rinzel.
Here's an example of Carle's astute coaching -- after the officials missed a couple of obvious Finnish stick-to-the-face calls on American players in the third period that might have been majors had they been reviewed, US coach David Carle didn't scream and blow a gasket (as many other coaches might).
Instead, the 34-year-old went into hyper-calm mode, and he called the refs over and a quiet, composed reminder conversation with the refs about the missed calls. A few minutes later, the US drew a soft make-up call penalty, and Gautier stepped up and scored the game-winner. Sometimes, the quiet route is most effective...
He's been a breath of fresh air.While I agree with the sentiment that coaching is often an achilles heel of USAH teams at various levels, I haven't seen any issues with this team so far. While I (and we) don't agree with every decision Carle and his staff have made, it also shouldn't be the expectation that we would. Minor disagreements or poor stretches of play don't inherently constitute a coaching issue.
I've been calling for Carle to get a shot here for multiple tournaments, so I'm stoked to see him here and doing well and for USAH to hopefully be ushering in a new era of coaches.
Great points. I’ll point out that Steve Miller was at Ohio State until the fall of 2022 so he only spent one year coaching at Minnesota on the big ice. He’s also on the staff every year anywaysI've talked with a number of coaches who have coached in this tourney about the concept of rolling 5 D-men to take advantage of talent disparity and matchups, but they reminded me that it's very hard to do for extended periods when a tourney is being played on big international size ice, as it is in Sweden this year. The reason? The extra 15 feet of width in Gothenberg puts a premium on any d-corp's lateral skating ability and that lateral skating factor gets more taxing on d-men as the game rolls along and the fatigue increases risk later in games. So the coaches need to constantly weigh the fatigue factor inherent in extended ice time vs. the risk factor of turnovers. Gap control is vital if you want to win medals.
The big ice is also a huge factor in power play/pk success. That's why Brett Larson is on the US coaching staff and running the US power-play- he coaches at St. Cloud State, which uses an international sheet. Steve Miller, the other US assistant, normally runs the PK at Minnesota, which until this year, had a full international sheet at Mariucci. These are the kind of details that Carle thinks about when constructing his coaching staff with John Vanbiebrouck and other USA Hockey officials.
Great points. I’ll point out that Steve Miller was at Ohio State until the fall of 2022 so he only spent one year coaching at Minnesota on the big ice. He’s also on the staff every year anyways
Cool interview with McGroarty talking about him and Cutter spending time after practice on the ice practicing the exact same shot Cutter scored the game winner on with McGroaty in front
Rutger McGroarty And Team USA Are Looking Forward To Playing Sweden For World Juniors Gold
Winnipeg Jets prospect Rutger McGroarty and Team USA beat Finland 3-2 in the World Juniors 2024 semifinals and now will face Sweden for gold.www.flohockey.tv
What happened with rinzelI actually thought Hutson was really good today. Controlled a lot of the play in their zone.
Rinzel…yikes
Cutter…boom. What a snipe. Maybe leads to something special tomorrow.