Junior World Championship | Why not leave in fear

Before boasting about the number of Canadian hopes at the World Junior Championship, we will always have to remember the 2019 tournament.




That year, the Canadian’s 2017 first-round pick, Ryan Poehling, earned MVP honors with five goals and three assists in five games with the American team, en route to the silver medal.

Alexander Romanov, drafted in the second round in 2018, inherited the title of best defender, at only 18 years old, by virtue of his eight points in seven games with Russia.

PHOTO DARRYL DYCK, CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES

Russia’s Alexander Romanov celebrates a goal against Denmark at the 2018 World Junior Championship in Vancouver.

Montreal had five other representatives: defenseman Josh Brook and forward Nick Suzuki with Canada, winger Jesse Ylönen with Finland, center Jacob Olofsson with Sweden and goaltender Cayden Primeau with the United States. There would have been eight if Joni Ikonen had not had to withdraw due to injury.

Five years later, only one, Suzuki, plays an impact role with the Canadian. Romanov was exchanged in time. It made it possible to obtain Kirby Dach and we now see his limits. His offensive production with Russia was a mirage. He is a caliber defender top 4but very limited in attack.

Poehling was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2022 for nothing in return. Montreal wanted to free his salary from the payroll. He’s found a niche for himself in Philadelphia this year, even earning a promotion to a third line recently, on the eve of his 25th birthday, but isn’t expected to move up any further.

At 24, goaltender Primeau is still trying to establish himself in the NHL. Ylönen seems doomed to a fourth line, but he has reached the National League at least, unlike Brooks, Ikonen and Olofsson, whose dream is now extinguished.

Few elected

Since 2010, the Canadian has been able to count on 33 representatives at the World Junior Championship. Among these players, 10, or almost a third, have never played a single game in the NHL and 22 have never been able to establish themselves permanently in the National Hockey League.

Only eight, Brendan Gallagher, Alex Galchenyuk, Artturi Lehkonen, Mikhail Sergachev, Alexander Romanov, Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield and Kaiden Guhle, have made an impact in the National Hockey League, although Galchenyuk prematurely wasted a career due to his off-ice behavior, that Lehkonen finally flourished offensively after leaving Montreal and that Romanov remains at best a fourth defenseman.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Kaiden Guhle is today an important cog in the Canadian’s defense.

Quality obviously always trumps quantity. CH had only three representatives in 2021. But two of them, Cole Caufield and Kaiden Guhle, are now important players in Montreal. Jan Mysak is still in the American League.

This is the grace we wish for the Canadian this year, with four participants, goalkeeper Jacob Fowler and defender Lane Hutson with the United States, center Owen Beck with Canada and winger Filip Mesar with Slovakia.

Hutson has the most potential of the lot. He was on the American team last year, will now play in the first pair of defensemen and the first wave on the power play. He had 20 points in 15 games at Boston University, following his 48-point season in 39 games last season. This late second round pick in 2022 should join CH at the end of the season.

PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Canadian prospect Lane Hudson will be on the American team in a leading role.

Fowler, a 2023 third-round pick, will battle for the No. 1 goalie job with Trey Augustine, a member of last year’s team. Fowler, however, has been superior to him in the NCAA since the start of the season.

Owen Beck, first pick in the second round in 2022, was amazing in his first training camp with the Canadiens two years ago. He did well this year as well, without being as dominant, but we should not see him as a possible offensive center. His role may even be modest within the Canadian team, especially with the arrival of Matthew Poitras, on loan from the Bruins.

Small forward Filip Mesar, drafted late in the first round in 2022 with the Flames’ pick obtained for Tyler Toffoli, should be an offensive leader for Slovakia. It was already there last year. Mesar is more dominant this year in the junior ranks, with 32 points in 20 games in Kitchener, but he will turn 20 in a few weeks, let’s not forget that. Montreal has several small forwards in its organization, let’s see how far the young man can slip through the hierarchy.

Juraj Slafkovsky would be eligible for the tournament, but we won’t snatch him from the Canadian’s first line, where he does very well. We forget how very young he is still, even more so than Mesar, Hutson and Beck!

David Reinbacher will stay with his club in Switzerland since his junior team, Austria, is playing in the secondary tournament with clubs like France, Japan, Hungary and Denmark.

CH hopes at the World Junior Championship between 2010 and 2022

  • Danny Kristo (USA 2010)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Maxim Trunev (Russia 2010)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Louis Leblanc (Canada 2010)
    50 games or less in the NHL
  • Joonas Nattinen (Finland 2010, 2011)
    50 games or less in the NHL
  • Petteri Simila (Finland 2010)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Jarred Tinordi (Canada 2012)
    NHL player in a supporting role
  • Brendan Gallagher (Canada 2012)
    Leading CH player for several seasons
  • Nathan Beaulieu (Canada 2012)
    Almost ten-year career in a supporting role
  • Daniel Pribyl (Czech Republic 2012)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Alex Galchenyuk (USA 2013)
    Promising start to career, exiled to KHL
  • Sebastian Collberg (Sweden 2012, 2013, 2014)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Charles Hudon (Canada 2014)
    More games in the American League than in the NHL
  • Jacob de la Rose (Sweden 2013, 2014, 2015)
    Supporting role for a few seasons in the NHL
  • Zachary Fucale (Canada 2014, 2015)
    Fewer than 10 NHL games
  • Artturi Lehkonen (Finland 2013, 2014, 2015)
    Support player in Montreal, leading player in Colorado
  • Sven Andrighetto (Switzerland 2012, 2013)
    A few seasons in a supporting role in the NHL
  • Martin Reway (Slovakia 2013, 2014, 2015)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Noah Juulsen (Canada 2017)
    More games in the American League than in the NHL, victim of serious injuries
  • Mikhail Sergachev (Russia 2017)
    Elite defender in Tampa, unfortunately traded for Jonathan Drouin
  • Victor Mete (Canada 2018)
    Now an American League defenseman after a few seasons in the NHL
  • Ryan Poehling (United States 2018, 2019)
    Player of 3e4e trio in Philadelphia. Permanent in the NHL.
  • Josh Brook (Canada 2019)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Joni Ikonen (Finland 2018)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Cayden Primeau (United States 2019)
    Still fighting for an auxiliary goalkeeper position
  • Jesse Ylönen (Finland 2019)
    Fourth line player in Montreal
  • Alexander Romanov (Russia 2019, 2020)
    Permanent NHL defenseman in a defensive role with the Islanders. Kirby Dach reported.
  • Jacob Olofsson (Sweden 2019)
    Never played a single game in the NHL
  • Nick Suzuki (Canada 2019)
    Number one center for the Canadiens
  • Jordan Harris (USA 2020)
    Permanent mid-training defenseman in the NHL, with the Canadiens
  • Mattias Norlinder (Sweden 2020)
    Fewer than 10 NHL games
  • Cole Caufield (USA 2020, 2021)
    Elite scorer, member of the Canadiens’ first line
  • Kaiden Guhle (Canada 2021)
    Already a leading young defender in Montreal
  • Jan Mysak (Czech Republic 2020, 2021, 2022)
    Never played a single game in the NHL


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