Chicago Sun-Times

Not enough talent to compete

NHL’s absence put undermanne­d USA behind the 8- ball

- DAN WOLKEN USA TODAY

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — The Russian wound up for a one- timer, watched it whizz past the American goaltender with 0.2 seconds left in the period, turned around and crossed his arms. Then Ilya Kovalchuk — yes, the same Ilya Kovalchuk who scored 417 NHL goals — released them downward in a gesture that needs no translatio­n. It’s over. The game, sure. That was probably over well before Kovalchuk’s blast to make it 3- 0 on the way to a 4- 0 victory. More to the point, it ended any illusion that this U. S. team, is a threat to do anything significan­t at these Olympics.

And you know what? For the first time in years, there’s no reason to get angry about that and nobody to blame. Under normal circumstan­ces, that would and should be our natural impulse if USA Hockey showed up at a major tournament with a team this poorly equipped to compete on the internatio­nal stage.

But these aren’t normal circumstan­ces. And with the NHL sitting this one out, the Americans are who we thought they were.

“I thought it was a great game,” said coach Tony Granato, who spent much of his postgame news conference bemoaning the post his team hit in the first period and a botched breakaway in the second. “I didn’t think it was a 4- 0 game.”

If you’re an American hockey fan who woke up Saturday morning and got steaming mad watching the Olympic Athletes from Russia toy with this team, don’t bother. If you’re inclined to criticize Granato or the late Jim Johannson, who built this roster before he passed away suddenly last month, save your breath.

As discouragi­ng as it might be, this Team USA debacle isn’t reflective of the state of American hockey. It’s merely the bad byproduct of a bad decision by NHL commission­er Gary Bettman that robbed ascendant American stars such as Auston Matthews, Jack Eichel and Johnny Gaudreau a legitimate chance to win the first hockey gold medal for the U. S. since the Miracle on Ice.

Hopefully, for the sake of American hockey, their day will come in Beijing four years from now. But it would be foolish to funnel much emotional energy into this team.

While Granato grasped hard for positives, it doesn’t change the fundamenta­l calculus: There’s a massive talent gap between the U. S. and Russia, where the Kontinenta­l Hockey League has dozens of players who are good enough to make it in the NHL but choose to stay home for big paydays.

It’s really not that complicate­d. A Russian team headlined by Kovalchuk and a slightly- past- hisprime Pavel Datsyuk is going to be better than the collection of col- lege kids and Americans who are a step below the NHL level pretty much every time.

But to characteri­ze Team USA’s issues as exclusivel­y a Russia problem would be underselli­ng the magnitude of upset it would be for this team to win a medal. During the three games in pool play, the U. S. went 1- 1- 1 and scored four total goals. When your best goal- scorers are nearly 40 years old ( Brian Gionta), longtime minor- league players ( Chris Bourque) and a kid who’s been playing for Harvard ( Ryan Donato), you’re going to have trouble scoring goals. When your goaltender, Ryan Zapolski, was pulled out of Finland via the ECHL, well, it’s not really fair to expect Mike Richter.

“We have another game [ Tuesday],” Zapolski said. “It’s win or go home, and I hope we’re going to show our best. We did a lot of good things the first three games but we just haven’t found a way to score enough goals. It’s going to come with more time so we have to find a way to buckle down now.”

The U. S. has no more time. It’s now a single- eliminatio­n tournament, and there’s nothing from the last week to indicate the Americans are on the verge of an incredible run.

Follow me on Twitter @ DanWolken.

 ?? | GETTY IMAGES ?? Garrett Roe gets into a scrap with Russia’s Bogdan Kiselevich on Saturday. With the loss, the U. S. must play in the qualificat­ion round Tuesday to reach the medal round.
| GETTY IMAGES Garrett Roe gets into a scrap with Russia’s Bogdan Kiselevich on Saturday. With the loss, the U. S. must play in the qualificat­ion round Tuesday to reach the medal round.
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