Brett Hull obviously counts, Team USA was the national team he played on, stop being weird about it. This isn't some cheeky "oh Wayne Gretzky is the best American hockey player ever" because he became a U.S. Citizen later on type of deal
it’s weird to me how as time has passed everyone has come to just accept this, because through the 90s, like during the 1991 canada cup and 96 world cup, everybody (on this side of the border, at least) called shenanigans.
but as i said, everyone is free to treat this how they wish. i just see a kid who was born and primarily trained in canada. he turned eight the summer they moved to winnipeg and after the divorce lived in north vancouver before moving to penticton, BC for two years after graduating high school to play in the BCHL. he didn’t live in the US again until he started college at age twenty. personally, i’m taking these rosters as “create the best roster of guys that US has produced,” and i don’t think the US produced hull so it defeats the point of what we’re trying to show or analyze here.
adam deadmarsh and darren turcotte are two other examples of players who grew up and were trained in canada but played for the US due to their dual citizenship. i don’t consider these guys american anymore than i consider william nylander or alex steen canadian.
remember, there was a time when team USA had to scrape these guys to field a competitive roster. and the interesting thing about this thread, to me, is looking how the proliferation of youth hockey since the 90s generation has generated way more high level players (as per your post upthread), but not necessarily anymore creme de la creme players than the one that came of age after the miracle on ice.
Depend a bit if we are talking about the best american players of all time and going a bit by their positions or trying to build the best team ever using American players, not that it is a vast distinction but, with large roster, specialist that are not top 30 players can find a spot.
The Joel Otto get a look type, because the coach could want him to take a faceoff in his zone late in the third/ expect a Lindros to be on the other side of things.
i was thinking the same thing. i loved (actually hated) otto, but it was hard to find a place for him because that meant having to subtract one of modano, matthews, lafontaine, and roenick. also would have loved to have found a place for a glue guy like langenbrunner, or a two-way role for say drury or even todd marchant.
but for that reason, i included blake wheeler, who on an absolute level is not necessarily one of the four best RWs (but i also cheated and moved m. tkachuk to LW) but as a dedicated playmaking winger is probably a better fit with matthews than a mullen or kessel, or to name guys who didn’t make my team but would be competitive with wheeler, guerin or amonte.