Mikita is complicated, but he was on the Summit Series roster, and learned hockey in Canada. If people want to count him as Canadian for this discussion, I wouldn't dismiss it, since the spirit of the discussion is about players from non-traditional hockey countries who've succeded. When I think of this discussion I think more along the lines of Kopitar, Vanek, Josi and Draisaitl, than I do of Stan Mikita who while Slovakian grew up in St. Catherines and went through the Blackhawks player development system.Mikita was not a canadian. None of his family were born in canada. He moved to canada at 8 living with his aunt n uncle who had moved from slovakia to canada. Just because you learn a sport in a different country doesnt make you from said country.
What he can be called is a naturalized canadian but no he is slovakian first n foremost which he himself said.
It's sort of like comparing Auston Matthews and Matthew Tkachuk when talking of players from non-traditional Hockey markets. One had no previous connection to the sport, was born in California and raised in Arizona. The other is the son of an NHLer, born in Arizona, and raised in St. Louis. Matthew Tkachuk is someone you expect to see growing up playing hockey, Auston Matthews isn't.