Montreal Gazette

Crosby gives Team Canada the edge

- STEPHEN WHYNO

The morning after the Pittsburgh Penguins were eliminated from the playoffs, Jim Nill had a text message from Sidney Crosby. Team Canada’s two-time Olympic gold medal-winning star wanted to play at the world championsh­ip.

“He considers himself one of the leaders of hockey in Canada and he took it upon himself to reach out to us,” Nill said.

When Crosby stepped onto the ice with his Canadian teammates Tuesday in Austria, coach Todd McLellan noticed an extra skip in his players’ stride and a renewed energy. With Crosby, Canada is the favourite at the tournament, which begins Friday in Prague and Ostrava in the Czech Republic.

“He does make our team better and he should with his talent level and his experience,” McLellan said from Vienna. “But it has to be about the group and not just Sid.”

This Canadian forward group is the best since at least 2009, as it includes Crosby, fellow 2014 Olympian Matt Duchene, Claude Giroux, Tyler Seguin, Taylor Hall and Nathan MacKinnon. Dan Hamhuis, who was the seventh defenceman in Sochi, and goaltender Mike Smith — the No. 3 netminder at the 2014 Winter Games — will also be key players in Prague beginning Friday in the opening game against Latvia.

“Pretty cool to play with those (Olympians) again,” Duchene said in a phone interview Wednesday. “Last time we played together, we had the biggest success we could’ve asked for and now we’re looking for some more.”

While some teams won’t have elite players because of injury (Sweden’s Erik Karlsson) or the NHL playoffs (Russia’s Alex Ovechkin), Canada is stacked and looks primed to win world gold for the first time since 2007.

“Paper, it gives you that expectatio­n when you look at our lineup,” McLellan said. “But our flag basically dictates that that expectatio­n is that high. We’re expected to perform here. We’re representi­ng Canada and that’s what we do.”

Duchene doesn’t consider the expectatio­ns a burden. Quite the opposite.

“I think Canadians perform best when the expectatio­n and the pressure is on,” he said. “We’ve grown up with that and we always expect to win and we like when it’s expected of us to perform under pressure.”

Compared to the Olympics, this tournament hasn’t historical­ly drawn the best North American players compared to those from European countries. The United States, for example, is a young group with one returning Olympian in defenceman Justin Faulk.

The Americans will lean on players such as 18-year-old Jack Eichel and 20-year-old Seth Jones.

At 19, MacKinnon is Canada’s youngest player and this is his second straight worlds. Nill has left the door open for Connor McDavid, but the Erie Otters are one victory away from the Ontario Hockey League final, so his addition would come very late, if at all.

Crosby was 19 in his only other appearance at this tournament and he dominated. He put up eight goals and eight assists in nine games in 2006.

“It’s been a while since I played in that, so I’m excited,” Crosby told reporters in Pittsburgh earlier this week.

Crosby looked at the roster and expressed excitement at the chance to win gold.

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Sidney Crosby

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