IT WAS THE BEST OF TIMES, IT WAS THE WORST OF TIMES.
On Feb. 24, 2002,
Canadians celebrated a long-awaited victory — the magnitude of which we haven’t seen since. In Salt Lake
City, our men’s Olympic hockey team defeated their rival Americans 5-2, in an emotional and decisive win that
would put our nation atop the men’s hockey podium for the first time in 50 years. If the 100m dash is the
showpiece of the summer Olympics, the men’s hockey final is the premiere event of its winter counterpart. Our
hockey-obsessed nation’s team had won it all, reassuring the country that despite almost a decade of American
teams winning the Stanley Cup, and a disastrous medal-round unravelling in Nagano four years prior, Canada
was still king of the rink.
But our rightful place in the hockey empire didn’t last long. Four years later with a renewed swagger in
their skate, Canada failed to live up to expectations. At the 2006 Turin Games, they faltered in their
opening group A games, winning only three of five, placing third behind Finland and Switzerland (yes,
Switzerland). They promptly lost to Russia in the quarterfinals and poof, their hopes of medal contention
were gone.
After Canada’s 2002
victory, general manager Wayne Gretzky said, “Our country desperately needed to win this tournament.” Eight
years later, the desperation is creeping back in.
HOPES
OF A NATION
The 2010 Olympics
loom, and bearing much of the brunt of the country’s expectations, dreams and skepticism is Team Canada’s
executive director, Steve Yzerman. It’s a leadership position well-earned. Captain of the Detroit Red Wings
for two decades (beginning at age 21), and currently serving the franchise as vice-president/alternate
governor, Yzerman is revered, known simply as “The Captain” by Wings fans and Detroiters.
Part of the victorious 2002 Olympic squad and winner of three Stanley Cups with the Red Wings, his one and
only team of 22 seasons on the ice, Yzerman knows about winning. He’s hesitant, though, to make comparisons
between the glory of Salt Lake and the woes of the Turin team, of which he was not a member. With any Olympic
tournament, there’s precious little time to prepare. (In 2010, for example, NHL games will be played until
Feb. 14, Team Canada will get together to practice on the 15th, and they’ll begin play on the 16th.) With
that in mind, Yzerman says the tournament can be “a little bit of a crapshoot.”
After 2002’s win, Wayne Gretzky said, “Our country desperately needed to win this tournament.” Eight years later, the desperation is creeping back in.
Team selection and
health may have contributed to the 2006 outcome as well. “They had some players come into the tournament with
some injuries who didn’t play up to the level everyone expected,” he says. “They basically went with a lot of
the ‘02 team and a lot of the ‘04 World Cup team and kind of rolled them into the ‘06 team, and maybe left
off some younger players that had really taken a step forward since the ‘04 World Cup.”
Yzerman is doing what he
can to avoid the mistakes of his predecessors. “What it told me was really pay attention to who’s playing
well; don’t assume a player’s on a team a year before the event,” he says. “Things can change. Players can
recover from injury and younger players are a year older, a year more experienced and can really take
off.”
Yzerman chuckles when
asked about his master plan for avoiding an ‘06 repeat. “We’re going to have 23 players and once we
officially start the tournament that’s our 23, so we can’t change it,” he says. “But the first three games
kind of feed you for the knockout stages, and that allows you a little bit of time to sort things out if
things don’t start off the way you plan.”
RUSSIANS AND
AMERICANS AND SWEDES, OH MY!
The first three countries that Team Canada will face are Norway, Switzerland and our rival to the south, the
United States. Seems like a relatively easy warm-up. Comfortable victories over Norway and Switzerland, and a
good test against the Americans to prepare for the one-game elimination rounds. But Yzerman isn’t resting on
the team’s historically patchy laurels. One only has to look back to Turin to see that Canada has logged a
loss against Switzerland. “To be honest, I worry about [every team]... So much can happen in any one game,”
he says, citing the 2002 Games when red-hot Sweden was punted from the tournament by Belarus in the
quarter-finals.
He says he’ll be nervous
for each game, but it’s clear who Yzerman considers legitimate gold-medal contenders. “I think there’s a
handful of countries that can win this tournament,” he says. “Sweden is a defending Olympic gold medallist
with some of the top players in the game. Henrik Lundqvist is possibly the most informed goaltender in the
league or in the world right now.” And though their recent Olympic record is far from stellar, those Yanks
are definitely on Yzerman’s radar. “Very quietly the United States is assembling a really young, really
talented team with big, strong, young athletic defencemen,” he says.
And then there’s the Russian squad, which will no doubt feature the fierce duo of Evgeni Malkin at centre and
Alexander Ovechkin at left wing, both of whom could be argued best player currently in the NHL. (Chill,
Crosby fans, we’re getting to him). “Having faced [Russia] in the championships the last two years and they
beat Canada both times, and with the forwards they have — big, strong, skilled, some of the top forwards in
the NHL — I gotta put them in there as the favourites to win this tournament,” says Yzerman. “They’re going
to be a formidable team to hold back.”
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