The Hamilton Spectator

Veteran Strome key to Canada’s return to world junior podium

- BOISBRIAND, QUE. —

The five players returning from Canada’s team at last year’s world junior hockey championsh­ip feel they’ve got something to prove the second time around.

Dylan Strome, Mathew Barzal, Julien Gauthier, Mitchell Stephens and defenceman Thomas Chabot were on the Canadian squad that lost in the quarterfin­als to host Finland finishing out of the medals a year ago. Now they want gold as the event shifts to Toronto and Montreal beginning Dec. 26.

“It’s pretty easy to remember,” Strome said Sunday, as a four-day team selection camp opened at the Centre d’Excellence Sports Rousseau. “It’s not a good feeling.

“So many friends and people in your country watch the game, so you want to be the guy who wins the gold medal. Unfortunat­ely we fell short, but we’ve got another chance this year.”

The 10-team tournament for players under 20 will be played in Canada’s two biggest cities for the second time in three years and, much like in 2015 when Canada won gold on home ice, they will have a relatively experience­d team. Eighteen of the 31 players in camp are 19 years old and they will likely take most of the spots when the roster is trimmed to 22 at the end of camp.

The go-to players will be the returnees, led by Strome, the third overall pick in the 2015 NHL draft who started the season with the Arizona Coyotes before being returned to the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League.

What Strome learned in Finland was how quickly the tournament can end.

Two years ago, Canada was coming off a heartbreak­ing loss to Russia in the bronze medal game in 2014 in Malmo, Sweden, and managed to bounce back with a win on home ice.

Canada could have had more returning players, but it seems NHL clubs are keeping more junior age players every year. And Canada is not the only country that will be missing star 18- and 19-year-olds. Finland won’t have Winnipeg Jets sniper Patrik Laine, for instance.

There are six Canadians eligible to play in the world juniors now playing in the NHL, including McDavid in Edmonton, Toronto’s Mitch Marner, Lawson Crouse and Jacob Chycrun in Arizona, Travis Konecny in Philadelph­ia and Anthony Beauvillie­r with the New York Islanders. The NHL deadline for teams to decide whether to loan a player to a world junior team is Dec. 19.

Some players to watch for in camp include OHL scoring leader Taylor Raddysh, who is Strome’s teammate in Erie; as well as the only invitee from a U.S. university program, Tyson Jost of North Dakota. Jost and Strome looked good playing together at the team’s summer developmen­t camp.

In recent years, Hockey Canada has named its two goalies before the selection camp, but this time there are three vying for the two spots — Carter Hart of the Everett Silvertips, Connor Ingram of the Kamloops Blazers and Michael McNiven of the Owen Sound Attack.

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