The greatest team ever assembled
I did some research on Canada's greatest team and found a thread on reddit. It is a bit of a read, but the writer is spot on with his analysis.
Over the years, Canada has had its share of great teams in international hockey. As a result, I'm wondering what you all think is the greatest Team Canada of all time.
Here are the contenders off the top of my head:
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1976 Canada Cup. Out of 25 guys on the roster, 18 of them (72%) are in the Hall of Fame. The core of the team were players from the high-flying Montreal Canadiens and rough-and-tumble Philadelphia Flyers, together with greats from teams like the Sabres, Kings, and Leafs (Darryl Sittler scored the OT winner in the final game). Bobby Orr played in his only international tourney, and a battered knee didn't stop him from winning MVP honours. Bobby Hull said that "he was better on one leg than the rest of us were on two."
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1987 Canada Cup. Widely hailed as one of the greatest international tournaments in history, full of passion, excitement, and drama. Canadian fans were salivating at the thought of Wayne Gretzky (in his absolute prime as a player) and an up-and-coming Mario Lemieux playing together, and boy did they deliver. Mario, of course, scored the winner against the Soviets in the final game, taking a pass from Gretzky on a 2-on-1. 12 out of 23 members of this team (52%) are Hall of Famers.
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2002 Olympics. The team that won Canada's first Olympic gold medal in hockey in 50 years, featuring Gretzky as GM and Pat Quinn as coach. 14 of 23 players (61%) are Hall of Famers, including Lemieux, who captained the squad. Tournament MVP Joe Sakic scored the clinching goal in the gold-medal game vs. the USA on a breakaway. On a personal note, this win was especially memorable for me, as it was sweet, sweet revenge for Canada's loss to the Americans in the '96 World Cup and a ray of happiness after losing my father a month earlier. The losses in '96 to the States and to the Czechs at the '98 Olympics had many Canadians questioning whether our national teams were up to the mark. The win in 2002 put all that to bed, however.
- 2005 World Juniors. I've been watching the World Juniors since 1995, and I've seen Canada win a lot of these tournaments. However, I've seen NO team that has utterly dominated a WJHC like the '05 Team Canada that stormed to the gold in Grand Forks, North Dakota. As the NHL was mired in a lockout at the time, Canada was the beneficiary of having many players available that otherwise would've played in the NHL. They won all six of their games, outscoring their opponents 41-7 and blasting the Alexander Ovechkin-led Russians 6-1 in the gold medal contest. The first line consisted of Ryan Getzlaf, Jeff Carter, and Andrew Ladd, who were a combined +35 and never had a opposing goal scored when they were on the ice. What was the second line, you ask? Oh, only Sidney Crosby, Patrice Bergeron, and Corey Perry. This was another sweet win in my books, as the Canadians had lost the previous year's WJHC in Finland to the Americans on an own goal by Braydon Coburn. To come back the way they did after that demoralizing defeat, and win it all on American soil, was nothing short of marvellous. That this group formed the backbone of future victorious Canadian Olympic teams makes this championship all the more significant.
- 2014 Olympics. Probably the greatest Olympic team I've ever witnessed. This Mike Babcock-coached group perfected the art of puck possession en route to an undefeated tournament and a gold medal in Russia. Surprisingly, only Latvia, who had an impressive goalie in Kristers Gudlevskis, gave them a scare, but Canada pulled it out in a squeaker, 2-1. In their two highest-pressure games of the tournament, the semi-finals against the USA and the gold medal game against Sweden, they didn't allow a single goal. Carey Price hardly touched the puck in the gold medal contest! This tournament proved that Canadians could win on the big ice surfaces in Europe, which is something some people said they couldn't do in the past. I'm sure a bunch of the guys on this team (Crosby, Toews, Bergeron, Perry, Getzlaf) are headed to the Hockey Hall of Fame as well.
For my money, I'm going to go with the '76 Canada Cup team as the greatest Team Canada ever. You can't beat almost three-quarters of your roster being Hall of Famers. Also, a lot of the guys on this team were from the Montreal Canadiens, who were about to embark on the greatest season an NHL team has ever had (60-8-12, 132 points and the Stanley Cup), and the group was coached by Scotty Bowman, the Canadiens' coach and the winningest bench boss of all time. I didn't see the '76 and '87 teams (wasn't born yet and was too young, respectively), but I wish I had. For the teams I've seen, the '05 and '14 teams take the cake.