Montreal Gazette

McDavid ‘really upset’ about missing an Olympic opportunit­y

But Canada’s best young player will not ask to leave Oilers to play in PyeongChan­g

- mzeisberge­r@postmedia.com MIKE ZEISBERGER

While Connor McDavid wishes Canada’s Olympic men’s hockey team all the best in 2018, he knows those players proudly sporting the Maple Leaf on their chests won’t be the best this country has to offer.

And that eats away at him. Just 24 hours after Hockey Canada announced its management team, coaching staff and developmen­t blueprint for the PyeongChan­g Games, the NHL’s reigning MVP said he’s still frustrated by the league’s decision not to participat­e.

“I’m really upset about it,” McDavid said Wednesday. “You want to be able to represent your country on the highest stage, and the Olympics is obviously the highest stage possible. To know that you might not be able to represent your country at the Olympics for another four years, for sure, well ... even if you’re able to in four years, it’s disappoint­ing.”

McDavid isn’t slagging the players Team Canada general manager Sean Burke, adviser Martin Brodeur and the rest of the Hockey Canada hierarchy will select to represent the country. Far from it. There is no one who appreciate­s the privilege of wearing that red-and-white jersey more than the Edmonton Oilers captain. And there’s the rub.

During the 2015 world junior championsh­ip in Toronto and Montreal, McDavid fought through the pain of a fractured hand that had kept him out of the Erie Otters lineup the previous six weeks. While his play improved throughout the tournament as his injury healed, he wasn’t the dominant force he’d been in the Ontario Hockey League before getting hurt.

Sixteen months later, coming off an injury-plagued rookie season with the Oilers, McDavid gladly accepted Hockey Canada’s invite to play for Team Canada at the 2016 world championsh­ip in Russia, a memorable tournament that ended with a gold medal dangling from his neck.

Last September, McDavid again stepped onto the internatio­nal stage, playing for the electrifyi­ng Team North America at the World Cup of Hockey.

The group of 23-and-under players were easily the highlight of the tournament.

But those events are not the Olympics.

Since the door opened for NHLers in 1998, the Olympics have provided the best competitio­n between countries the modern game has ever seen.

And McDavid knows that. But his dream of playing for Canada in South Korea — alongside the likes of Sidney Crosby, Carey Price, John Tavares and Drew Doughty — will remain just that: a dream.

Instead, after two consecutiv­e Olympic gold medals under the guidance of coach Mike Babcock, Canada will attempt to threepeat with a collection of retired NHLers, internatio­nal pros and AHL players who are not signed to two-way contracts.

Team Canada coach Willie Desjardins certainly will have his hands full, a fact not lost on McDavid.

“I don’t think Team Canada will be able to put together a team like they’d be able to put together this year,” McDavid said, referring to the potential all-star team Canada would ice if NHLers were participat­ing.

“It would’ve been a special group, and you’re just hoping to be a part of it.”

Even so, don’t expect McDavid to ask Oilers management for permission to play in PyeongChan­g, like Alex Ovechkin did with Washington Capitals owner Ted Leonsis.

“No, I’m not too involved in all that stuff,” he said. “There’s a lot of guys who’ve been in the league a lot longer than I have and have a lot more pull than I do. You don’t want to leave your team for a month. It’s disappoint­ing, but that’s the way it is.”

While the NHL has said it will skip PyeongChan­g, it does seem more interested in the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

Viewing China as an untapped marketing frontier for the sport, the league has scheduled exhibition games there between the Los Angeles Kings and Vancouver Canucks in September, and is helping the Chinese government develop a national team for the 2022 Games.

In the meantime, Connor McDavid will have to wait

— even if he doesn’t like it.

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Connor McDavid
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