The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

’16 World Cup provides lessons

- By Stephen Whyno

Sidney Crosby was two months removed from lifting the Stanley Cup when he turned his attention to winning another championsh­ip.

It was early September 2016, and the Pittsburgh Penguins captain stepped on the ice in Ottawa for Canada’s training camp ahead of the World Cup of Hockey. Players had gone four months since any game action when NHL camps opened July 13 and they started preparing to jump right into the Stanley Cup playoffs.

A lengthy, unschedule­d break because of a pandemic is something new for all involved, but the World Cup experience of transition­ing from time off directly into meaningful competitio­n is something the more than 100 players left from that tournament can draw on during the NHL’s restart. The lessons learned — good and bad — could determine who packs up early and who battles for hockey’s storied trophy.

“It’s very similar to that,” Crosby said. “You kind of have a short, abbreviate­d training camp and then you’re right into it. You’ve got to be ready, but you also have to understand that you’ve just got to get better with every game. It’s just about getting momentum and getting better every day. Whether it’s training camp or Game 1, you just have to have that mentality. I think everyone’s had different experience­s that can help them in this case, but it’s definitely got that feeling of the sprint.”

Teams get only two weeks of camp at home, then travel to Toronto or Edmonton for one exhibition game before competitio­n gets going for real. Before that, players had a month of voluntary workout time, similar to a typical summer offseason.

Only this time, it’s not a prelude to an 82-game season. Except for the top four teams in each conference that get round-robin tuneup play, the remaining 16 go directly into a five-game eliminatio­n round right away. No pressure, right?

“It didn’t matter what you did all summer,” said Winnipeg Jets captain Blake Wheeler, who played for the U.S. in 2016. “It was tough. And it’s going to be tough in Edmonton. We go in there knowing that it’s not going to be easy.”

U.S. teammate Ryan McDonagh figures this training camp is a little easier because of the built-in familiarit­y. His Tampa Bay Lightning and the other 23 teams coming back had played roughly 70 games together before the season was halted in mid-March.

“It’s not like you’re really trying to jell with new teammates out of the blue,” McDonagh said. “Guys know what their roles are on this team. It’s not like they have to kind of figure out where they’re supposed to be and what kind of player we’re being asked to be, so we can really just focus on getting our skills where they want to be, getting our pace and letting everything take its course.”

That winding course is something hockey’s best players and coaches can recall from 2016. New York Islanders coach Barry Trotz, who was an assistant when Canada won the World Cup, considers that tournament the closest comparison because he anticipate­s the same frantic shifts of momentum.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canada’s Sidney Crosby hoists the trophy after his team won the World Cup of Hockey in 2016.
BRUCE BENNETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canada’s Sidney Crosby hoists the trophy after his team won the World Cup of Hockey in 2016.

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