Canada’s brain trust reflects on world junior exit: ‘It’s always a little empty’
GOTHENBURG, Sweden — Scott Salmond and Peter Anholt watched Canada’s hopes at the world junior hockey championship evaporate in an instant.
Seated in the last row of an aging Scandinavium arena, the program’s brain trust had cobbled together a roster without five players in the professional ranks, plus two more lost to injury and illness that forced last-minute additions.
The Canadians looked good for stretches of the under-20 tournament, and completely disjointed in others. The second and third periods of Tuesday’s quarterfinal against Czechia was probably their best hockey.
Salmond and Anholt, like fans watching at home, were baffled by players’ refusal to shoot the puck from prime positions.