Mittelstadt gives Buffalo fans a glimpse of future
A funny thing happened when the offensively challenged Buffalo Sabres left town for two weeks to make way for the world junior hockey championship.
Buffalo’s win-starved hockey fans got a promising glimpse into the future thanks to Casey Mittelstadt. The 19-year-old forward from Eden Prairie, Minn., earned tournament MVP honours while keying the United States’ run to a bronze medal.
“You have to find hope and positive energy from a performance such as Casey’s,” said Sabres general manager Jason Botterill.
“With it being here in Buffalo, there was that added pressure,” Botterill added. “And I think you saw a player who instead of succumbing to the pressure, actually thriving in that type of environment.”
Mittelstadt, selected by the Sabres with the eighth pick in last year’s National Hockey League draft, finished tied for the tournament lead with 11 points (four goals, seven assists) in seven games. And the University of Minnesota freshman punctuated his visit by scoring a highlight-reel goal in a 3-2 preliminary-round loss to Slovakia.
With Team USA trailing 2-1, Mittelstadt stripped the puck from Marian Studenic at the Slovakia blue line and circled back into the zone. Mittelstadt kicked the puck between his legs to avoid a check by defender Michal Ivan and didn’t break stride in cutting across the top of the crease and avoiding goalie Roman Durny. He swept a shot into the open left side with 3:11 remaining.
Botterill laughed when asked how many times he replayed the goal. “What I was really impressed about that goal was certainly it was a beautiful, beautiful hockey play, but it was the timing of it. Here was a scenario where he was trying to give his team a spark in a crucial situation. I think that’s certainly what we need here in Buffalo.”
Ah, yes, the Sabres, a team mired in last place in the Eastern Conference standings and in jeopardy of extending its franchise-worst playoff drought to seven seasons. Buffalo has a league-worst 92 goals, scoring one or fewer goals 14 times, including five shutouts.
Botterill thinks it will still be some time before Mittelstadt lines up alongside Buffalo’s current U.S star, Jack Eichel. Botterill wants Mittelstadt to continue developing at the college level and will wait until Minnesota’s season ends before meeting the player to discuss his future, including the potential of signing an NHL contract.
EMPTY SEATS The world juniors served as a cautionary tale to the International Ice Hockey Federation for flooding one region with too many major events.
Citing poor attendance figures in Buffalo, IIHF president Rene Fasel acknowledged organizers over-estimated how many times the tournament can be held in the same geographical area.
The 2018 tournament drew 211,210 fans, including a world junior record of 44,592 for an outdoor game between the U.S. and Canada played at the stadium of the National Football League’s Buffalo Bills. The turnout ranks 10th overall, nearly 120,000 fewer than when Buffalo hosted in 2011
One reason was the Canadian loonie being some 20 cents lower than the U.S. dollar this time. Another concern was the tournament being held for the fourth time in seven years in either Buffalo or Toronto. Add to that, Toronto hosted the 2016 World Cup of Hockey and the outdoor Centennial Classic last winter. “It shows us that in the future we should be a little bit more careful,” Fasel said. “Sometimes you can overdo saturation.”
Next year’s tournament will be co-hosted by Vancouver and Victoria, B.C.
WORLD CUP TALK NHL Players’ Association chief Donald Fehr said the union and the NHL have had very preliminary discussions over staging another World Cup. Fehr said the tournament came up when the two sides discussed developing a long-term international calendar. “I think we’re a ways away from that, but I’m hopeful we’ll be able to come to grips with that sometime in the next several months,” Fehr said.