WJC: Russia 4 Belarus 1

With Russia playing on back to back nights and Belarus playing it’s third game in four days, it’s no surprise that the game started off kind of slow. And immediately from the drop of the puck, it was clear Belarus wanted to keep the score as close as possible.

Belarus got an early powerplay when Yevgeni Svechnikov took a boarding minor less than 2 minutes into the game, but Belarus was unable to convert.

The Russians would get their own man advantage when Alexei Busko was called for hooking at the 8:59 mark.

The penalty proved costly as a quick three way passing play ended with a Maxim Lazarev one-timer that beat goaltender Vladislav Verbitski.

The teams would trade penalties and again Belarus was unable to convert while their own penalty proved costly.

Again, it was a quick passing play and another one-timer, this time by Alexander Polunin, to beat Verbitski.

Russia would take a 3-0 lead before the period ended when Vladislav Kamenev deflected an Ivan Provorov wrister from the point.

The second period would be scoreless.

Belarus could not capitalize on another early powerplay but 6:14 into the period solved Russian goaltender Ilya Samsonov. A wrap around by Alexei Busko found the back of the net to give Belarus a little life.

But it only took the Russians 1:27 to get that back. Polunin would get his second of the game when he took a couple of strides in from the point, then cut to the middle and fired a well placed wrister passed Verbitski.

Russia would outshoot Belarus 32-18 while going 2 for 3 on the powerplay and Belarus going 0 for 3

Mid-season OHL’s Draft Eligible Rankings

The mid way point of the Ontario Hockey League season is upon us and it’s time for my mid-season rankings of players eligible for the 2016 National Hockey League Draft.

Jakob Chychrun of the Sarnia Sting. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
1. Jakob Chychrun – Sarnia Sting

 

Height: 6’2”

Weight: 215 pounds

Date of birth: March 31, 1998. Boca Raton, Florida

Position: Defence

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 1, 1st overall, 2014 Priority Selection

 

Matthew Tkachuk of the London Knights. Photo by Aaron Bell/OHL Images
2. Matthew Tkachuk – London Knights

Height:  6’1”

Weight: 195 pounds

Date of birth: December 11, 1997. St Louis, MO

Position: Left Wing

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 4, 64th overall, 2013 Priority Selection

Nylander, Alexander (1)
3. Alexander Nylander – Mississauga Steelheads

Height: 6’0”

Weight: 172 pounds

Date of birth: March 2, 1998, Södertälje, Sweden

Position: Right Wing

Shoots: Right

OHL Draft: Round 1, 12th overall, CHL Import Draft

 

Max Jones of the London Knights. Photo by Aaron Bell/OHL Images
4. Max Jones – London Knights

Height: 6’3”

Weight: 200 pounds

Date of birth: February 17, 1998, Orion, MI

Position: Left Wing

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 1, 18th overall, 2014 Priority Selection

Mikhail Sergachev of the Windsor Spitfires. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
5.Mikhail Sergachev – Windsor Spitfires

Height:  6’2”

Weight: 205 pounds

Date of birth: June 25, 1998. Nizhnekamsk, Russia

Position: Defence

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 1, 6th overall, 2015 CHL Import Draft

Alex DeBrincat of the Erie Otters. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
6. Alex DeBrincat – Erie Otters

Height: 5’7”

Weight: 160 pounds

Date of Birth: December 18, 1997 – Detroit, Michigan

Position: Right Wing

Shoots: Right

OHL Draft: Undrafted, signed as a free agent.

 

Olli Juolevi of the London Knights. Photo by Aaron Bell/OHL Images
7. Olli Juolevi – London Knights

Height:  6’2”

Weight: 185 pounds

Date of birth: May 5, 1998. Helsinki, Finland

Position: Defence

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft:  Round 1, 45th overall, CHL Import Draft.

McLeod, Michael (2)
8. Michael McLeod – Mississauga Steelheads

Height:  6’2”

Weight: 187 pounds

Date of birth: February 3, 1998. Mississauga, Ontario

Position: Center

Shoots: Right

OHL Draft: Round 1, 5th overall, 2014 Priority Selection

Brown, Logan (1).JPG
9. Logan Brown – Windsor Spitfires

Height: 6’6”

Weight: 218 pounds

Date of birth: March 5, 1998, Chesterfield, MO

Position: Center

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 1, 6th overall, 2014 Priority Selection

Bastian, Nathan (2).jpg
10. Nathan Bastian – Mississauga Steelheads

Height: 6’4”

Weight: 208 pounds

Date of birth: December 6, 1997. Kitchener, Ontario

Position: Center

Catches: Right

OHL Draft: Round 7, 127th overall, 2013 Priority Selection

All photos courtesy of Terry Wilson/Aaron Bell – OHL Images

WJC: Day 3

Preliminary Round
R Team GP W OTW OTL L GF:GA PTS
Group A
1 SWE 2 2 0 0 0 9:3 6
2 USA 2 1 0 0 1 4:3 3
3 CAN 2 1 0 0 1 8:5 3
4 DEN 2 1 0 0 1 3:7 3
5 SUI 2 0 0 0 2 4:10 0
Group B
1 RUS 2 1 1 0 0 8:5 5
2 CZE 2 1 0 1 0 3:2 4
3 FIN 2 1 0 0 1 10:6 3
4 SVK 2 1 0 0 1 4:4 3
5 BLR 2 0 0 0 2 2:10 0
Scoring Leaders
Player Team Pos GP G A PTS
PULJUJARVI Jesse F 2 2 4 6
NYLANDER Alexander F 2 1 4 5
LAINE Patrik F 2 2 2 4
TIMASHOV Dmytro F 2 2 2 4
AHO Sebastian F 2 1 3 4
BARZAL Matt F 2 2 1 3
SAARELA Aleksi F 2 2 1 3
STROME Dylan F 2 2 1 3
LAZAREV Maxim F 2 1 2 3
MARNER Mitch F 2 1 2 3

WJC: Russia 6 Finland 4

Despite the loss, the Finns’ Jesse Puljujarvi and Patrik Laine put on a display and showed the world why they are highly touted prospects and potential top 5 picks in the 2016 National Hockey League Draft.

This was a fast paced game with a little bit of everything. Special teams proved to be the difference for the Russians to earn the victory.

Sebastian Aho would get things started as he put the Finns up 1-0 with helpers going to Puljujarvi and Laine 4:13 into the game.

It would take less than two minutes for the Russians to get the equalizer. Kirill Kaprizov fired home the first of the Russian’s powerplay goals on the day.

Laine would put the Finns back on top at 18:53 of the period as he was set up by Puljujarvi. The period would end with the Finns holding a 2-1 lead and a 12-8 advantage in shots.

Just 21 seconds into the period Russia’s Yegor Rykov took a tripping penalty. It took just 33 seconds with the man advantage for Puljujarvi and Laine to set up Aleksi Saarela and a 3-1 lead for the Finns.

The Russians would then score 4 goals in just over 7 minutes.

The Russians would kill off a second penalty and then their third of the period proved costly – for the Finns as Andrei Svetlakov would score short handed.

Pavel Kraskovski would score on the powerplay to tie the score at 3 at 12:29 of the period. Vladislav Kamenen would add another powerplay marker at 15:28 to put the Russians up for good. At 16:05 Alexander Polunin would get the Russian’s first 5 on 5 goal and it would prove to be the game winner.

Saarela would pull the Finns back within one 11:18 into the third period but it wasn’t enough as Radel Fazleyev ended the scoring 2:46 later.

WJC: Sweden 1 USA 0

This game had a little bit of everything: A superb goaltending performance, powerplay after powerplay, a bad line change being the difference, a too many men penalty with under 2 minutes to go….

It took just 22 seconds for the first penalty of the game to be called and the Americans would hold the early advantage, but could not convert. That would be the story of this contest.

When the period was all said and done, the Americans would have 3 powerplays to the Swedes’ 2.

But the story of the opening frame was Swedish netminder Linus Soderstrom who faced 17 shots and stopped them all. His American counterpart. Alex Nedeljkovic stopped all 8 shots he faced.

Just 2:41 into the second, we had our only goal of the game. Sweden’s Dymytro Timoshov headed towards the American blue line with Alexander Nylander. American defenceman Nick Schmaltz, who was covering Nylander, decided to head for a line change and left the Swedish sniper uncovered.

Nylander broke in all alone on Nedeljkovic and roofed it over the goaltender for what proved to be the game winning goal.

The American’s would once again have three powerplays to the Swede’s two in the period but it was evident that it was going to take a miracle to beat Soderstrom on this day. The Americans would outshoot the Swedes  22-8.

But it was during a 1:12 two man advantage that Soderstrom was at his best. At least two spectacular saves kept the Americans off the scoreboard.

It was more of the same in the third period. The Americans dominated during the first half, but the Swedes came on in the second half.

With the Americans ready to push for the equalizer, Nedeljkovic tried to get the attention of head coach Ron Wilson and headed to the bench. As Sweden gained control in their own zone, Nedeljkovic hesitated and went back towards his goal as the extra attacker had jumped over the boards.

The Americans would be called for too many men on the ice. Any chance of a comeback was put to rest when Matthew Tkachuk took a needless high sticking penalty directly in front of the Swede goal.

Not surprisingly, Soderstrom was named the player of the game. Zach Werenski was player of the game for the USA.

WJC: Czechs 2 Slovaks 0

Pavel Zacha would miss this game after re-aggravating a lower body injury.

Enter David Pastrnak who has been loaned to the Czechs by the NHL’s Boston Bruins in what could be called a glorified conditioning stint. Except for a 2 game conditioning sting with the Bruins affiliate in the AHL – the Providence Bruins – Pastrnak hasn’t played since late October.

The first period would end with both teams going scoreless. The Czechs dominated in zone time and possession time. They would hold a advantage in shots.

It would be much of the same for most of the second period. The Slovaks would come on but still outshot 13-10, but missed the net time and time again and seemingly couldn’t hit the target.

But then at the 15:11 mark of the second, the Slovaks’ Juraj Siska would take a minor penalty for tripping. Radovan Bondra had a glorious opportunity short handed but was frustrated when Czech goaltender Vitek Vanecek made a fantastic save.

Just moments later, while on the same powerplay, a couple of future Boston Bruins teammates would connect to put the Czechs up for good. Jakub Zboril would take the puck down the left wing boards in the Slovak zone. He would send a pass back to Pastrnak, who was covering for him at the left point. Pastrnak waited, stepped in to the top of the circle, and fired a wrister to the glove side and beat a screened Adam Huska in the Slovak goal.

The Slovaks’ couldn’t muster much offense in the third, firing just six shots on goal. At 11:55 of the period, the Czechs virtually put the game out of reach and a strange goal.

Filip Hronek would send the puck towards the front of the Slovak net. The puck went off Dominik Lakotas‘ skate and then off a Slovak defenders skate and passed Huska. The play would be reviewed and the call on the ice – a good goal – stood.

Both goaltenders were named Player of the Game for their respective clubs.

The Czechs move to 1-1-0 while the Slovaks drop to 1-0-1.

Do the Cougars Still Have Teeth?

By Brandon Sudeyko

Every now and again, you got to speak up when something doesn’t make sense and lets take a look at the Burlington Cougars because something just doesn’t seem right with that they are doing.

For a few years this franchise has just been on the verge of being called a joke. Since 2012/13, when the league contracted, Burlington was entering their down turn as they finished 8th in the conference and had a 4-0 exit in the first round of the playoffs.

In the next two seasons the Cougars finished a combined, 21-78-2-6 in 107 games.

That is just terrible. But really they are not alone, from 2012-2014 the Hamilton Red Wings finished 23-80-1-4 in 108 games and you can’t forget Orangeville who had a record of 22-80-1-5 in 108 games…. Really there are lots of examples of two extremely bad years for Jr A clubs and then they have this major upswing… it is junior hockey after all… but more on that later, lets just stick with the Cougars.

So here they are after two pitiful years, 4 years without a winning record, siting 4th in the South West Conference with 20 games left to play. And they are making roster moves… but these moves don’t make that much sense.

Burlington had a good offseason with the acquisition of Jordan Peacock and Nathan Gomes from the Caledonia Corvairs of the GOJHL, both won the Sutherland Cup with the Corvairs last season. Anthony Sorrentino, Brady Cranwell and Michael Fallero were other additions over the summer and the Cougars started 6-0 before dropping their next three… then the team started making changes.

Adding Shawn Tessier before trading him only 10 days later. Adding Greg Allen before trading him 44 days later. Acquiring Austin Washkurak and holding on to 3 goaltenders for 24 days and releasing/selling Daniel Volpe to Jr B. Since the Cougars started 5-3-1, the team went 4-7 to the end of October while making 8 transactions.

The team settled down in November picking up 15 of 18 (7-1-1) available points. The team dropped a needed win against Georgetown at the start of December and picked up their next 4 W’s before the Holiday break.

In the mean time the team decides to send Jack Jeffers, their leading scorer to Orangeville for James McLaughlin. Also acquiring Stefano Alonzi from Mississauga and Anthony Baxter and Philip Lagunov from Milton.

So the team is doing good and they are heading back up the standings… so what is the complaint about? What is with these backwards moves?

What do I mean by that? You have so many OA spots for a Jr A roster and you are using two for your goaltenders while splitting their playing time. You trade your leading scorer for another team’s leading scorer. At best a lateral move. You pick up Mississauga’s Captain who really is the equivalent to Daniel Volpe in the sense he will get you those hard points in the dirty areas and acquire Anthony Baxter who is replacing Greg Allen.

Granted that these players personality’s may dictate that they need to be moved out but to bring in the same type of players, who are the exact same makeup, with an unknown disposition to your club is just playing with fire.

Currently sitting third in the division the franchise may be playing with fire with all these moves. With 10 of their last 20 games against opponents with a record under .500 it looks like all this won’t matter. But why go through all the hassle when you had the team in place. If they end up falling down the standings, you know where you can point the finger.

WJC: Day 2

Slovakia 4 Belarus 2

Thirteens were lucky for the Slovaks today as they defeated Belarus 4-2. Yes thirteen. As in 13 shots in the first, 13 shots in the second and, you guessed it, 13 shots in the third.

Slovakia got things rolling at the 6:56 mark of the first with a delayed penalty coming to Belarus and Slovak goaltender Adam Huska on the bench for an extra attacker. The Slovaks worked the puck to the point where a Patrik Koch slapper found its way threw a maze of players and hit the twine.

Belarus would tie the game at 11:33 of the period. Vadim Malinovski found himself all alone in front of Huska. He fanned on his backhand but recovered and fired the puck passed Huska. Belarus would end the period with 9 shots on goal.

Belarus would get a powerplay early in the second. At the tail end of their man advantage, as Ruslan Vasilchuk banged in a rebound to give Belarus their first lead of the game. The period would end in a 2-2 stalemate. Belarus would fire 11 shots on goal.

It took just 19 seconds into the third for the Slovaks to take the lead. A clean face off win went right to Lukas Hrusik who then fired a one-timer passed Belarus goaltender Ivan Kulbakov.

Five minutes later Belarus made a goaltending change that would last 7 or 8 minutes before Kulbakov returned.

The game ended in rather bizarre fashion. With Kulbakov on the bench for an extra attacker. Juraj Siska broke out of his zone down the left wing. Kulbakov jumped out from his bench to stop him but fell and hurt his leg. Siska’s shot at the goal was blocked by a defender but the referee called it an automatic goal with 19 seconds remaining.

Denmark 2 Switzerland 1

Karma?

Maybe so. The Swiss were missing 3 players serving suspensions from their opener versus Sweden and could very well face delegation after this loss.

The Swiss opened the scoring 8:21 into the first as Noah Rod tipped in a floater from the point to beat a surprised Thomas Lillie.

The Swiss would hold the 1-0 lead until early into the third period. Soeren Nielsen would carry the puck into the Swiss zone and fire a hard wrister over a falling defenceman and passed goaltender Joren van Pottelberghe.

Denmark would take the lead at 6:20 when Mathias From broke down the left wing and fired a shot on goal. Van Pottelberghe made the original stop but couldn’t hold on and From banged in his own rebound.

After the final whistle a scrum ensued and Denmark’s Mathias Lassen was assessed a five minute major and game misconduct for a check to the head.

Standings

Preliminary Round
R Team GP W OTW OTL L GF:GA PTS
Group A
1 SWE 1 1 0 0 0 8:3 3
2 USA 1 1 0 0 0 4:2 3
3 DEN 1 1 0 0 0 2:1 3
4 CAN 1 0 0 0 1 2:4 0
5 SUI 2 0 0 0 2 4:10 0
Group B
1 FIN 1 1 0 0 0 6:0 3
2 SVK 1 1 0 0 0 4:2 3
3 RUS 1 0 1 0 0 2:1 2
4 CZE 1 0 0 1 0 1:2 1
5 BLR 2 0 0 0 2 2:10 0

Statistics

Scoring Leaders
Player Team Pos GP G A PTS
NYLANDER Alexander F 1 0 4 4
PULJUJARVI Jesse F 1 2 1 3
TIMASHOV Dmytro F 1 2 1 3
AHO Sebastian F 1 0 3 3
PETTERSSON Marcus D 1 0 3 3
KESSLER Tino F 2 2 0 2
ROD Noah F 2 2 0 2
MATTHEWS Auston F 1 1 1 2
SISKA Juraj F 1 1 1 2
WERENSKI Zach D 1 1 1 2

Dmitry Sokolov – Player Profile – Sudbury Wolves

Height: 6’0”

Weight: 220 pounds

Date of birth: April 14, 1998, Omsk Russia

Position: Center/Left Wing

Shoots: Left

OHL Draft: Round 1, 3rd overall, 2014 CHL Import Draft

Last season, Sokolov played junior with Omskie Yastreby of the MHL in his native Russia. In 29 games he scored 13 goals and added 3 assists. But it was at the World Hockey Challenge Under-17 where Sokolov put up a dominating performance scoring 6 goals and 3 assists in 6 games and led Russia to Gold. He also performed well at the WJC Under-18 with 2 goals and 3 assists in 5 games.

When you look up the definition of enigma, you can easily replace it with this:

Dmitry Sokolov of the Sudbury Wolves. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
Dmitry Sokolov of the Sudbury Wolves. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images

Sokolov has the skill level to be a first round pick, top 15, perhaps top 10. First and foremost, he’s built like a tank. He possesses a lethal shot with high end playmaking skills and a force on the powerplay. Simply put, he has the skill level to take over and dominate games. He’s put up decent points playing for a weak Sudbury Wolves team.

However, when I think of Sokolov, one thing comes to mind: The Russian Phil Kessel.

Concerns surfaced that he came to Sudbury’s camp out of shape and overweight. More alarming is that he showed disinterest in wanting to work on those concerns. While those same problems have always been attributed to Kessel, Sokolov lacks the skating skills, abilities and speed of a Phil Kessel.

Sokolov also lacks in the intensity and consistency department. He almost appears lazy at times, especially when the puck is not on his stick. He certainly has the skill set to be listed as a top 10 player from the OHL for the NHL draft, but unless he shows improvement in the second half on his consistency and work ethic, the skill alone will not be enough.

Sokolov made NHL Central Scouting’s preliminary list of players to watch as a B prospect – which means a second or third round prospect. On their November list, he was moved down to a C prospect – which means a fourth, fifth or sixth round prospect.

At this point, it remains to be seen whether Sokolov has the willingness and determination to disperse the cloud over the second half. If he does, and combined with his skill set, he’ll climb. If the status quo is what we see, then he’ll continue to drop.

WJC: Standings and Stats Day 1

Preliminary Round
R Team GP W OTW OTL L GF:GA PTS
Group A
1 SWE 1 1 0 0 0 8:3 3
2 USA 1 1 0 0 0 4:2 3
3 CAN 1 0 0 0 1 2:4 0
4 SUI 1 0 0 0 1 3:8 0
DEN 0 0 0 0 0 0:0 0
Group B
1 FIN 1 1 0 0 0 6:0 3
2 RUS 1 0 1 0 0 2:1 2
3 CZE 1 0 0 1 0 1:2 1
4 BLR 1 0 0 0 1 0:6 0
SVK 0 0 0 0 0 0:0 0
Scoring Leaders
Player Team Pos GP G A PTS
PULJUJARVI Jesse F 1 2 1 3
TIMASHOV Dmytro F 1 2 1 3
AHO Sebastian F 1 0 3 3
NYLANDER Alexander F 1 0 3 3
PETTERSSON Marcus D 1 0 3 3
KESSLER Tino F 1 2 0 2
MATTHEWS Auston F 1 1 1 2
WERENSKI Zach D 1 1 1 2
WHITE Colin F 1 1 1 2
CARLSSON Gabriel D 1 0 2 2