
Patchwork Panthers: How Florida built a perennial contender
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Kristen Shilton, ESPN NHL reporterJun 1, 2024, 08:00 AM ET
Close- Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Paul Maurice could tell his team was different.
The Florida Panthers‘ head coach joked — at first — that players this season compared to last didn’t find him so funny. They’d lost a former appetite for schtick with a side of hockey talk. Florida had tasted greatness on a Cinderella run to the 2023 Stanley Cup Final. Falling short there was no laughing matter.
The Panthers’ tone had shifted. Maurice saw it in training camp. The Panthers regrouped, expecting to be Cup contenders. One player in particular embodied the attitude adjustment.
“That’s the value of [Aleksander] Barkov,” Maurice said. “He will not stop, and he won’t quit; how does anybody else? Because he is the face, the driver and the captain, he does set a bar for work. Your fourth-line guys are going to come out and work as hard as they can because they have to make the team. But how hard [Barkov] drives the team is the expectation of everybody else. He’s not an aloof captain. He’s part of the group. So he sets that tone.”
If the Panthers were a house, then Barkov is the foundation. He’s the franchise’s longest-tenured player after Florida drafted him second overall in 2013 to be a cornerstone playmaker. Barkov is a rarity in more ways than one. The top-line center is one of just four players on the Panthers’ current roster that the team drafted themselves — and one of only three who’ve never dressed for another NHL club.
Compare that to Florida’s opponent in the Eastern Conference finals. The New York Rangers have nine draftees in their postseason lineup — plus Adam Fox. He wasn’t technically drafted by New York, but the Rangers acquired his signing rights from the Carolina Hurricanes (who had previously acquired them from the Calgary Flames) before he had played in the NHL. So the Rangers basically have 10 players from the inside who have helped make them so potent.
Florida’s roster was mostly constructed after — and around — Barkov. There have been strategic trades. Deliberate signings. Calculated risks. And plenty of patience.
These are the patchwork Panthers. Practically every piece was uniquely sourced, and the construction over time was complicated. But when Florida was finally sewn together, the result was a perfectly balanced final product.
How the Panthers were built is as compelling an off-ice story as the one Florida continues to write on it. It began with Barkov. Then the real work got started.
The draftees
Florida was the NHL’s worst team when the lockout-shortened 2012-13 campaign ended. But due to the Colorado Avalanche winning the draft lottery, that earned the Panthers the second overall pick. Florida used it on Barkov.
The Finnish-born pro was the No.1 ranked European skater by NHL Central Scouting, a 6-foot-3 center who could easily define a franchise. Barkov has done exactly that in Florida.
The 28-year-old stands as the Panthers’ all-time leader in every important category, from games played (737) to goals (266), assists (445), points (711), power-play goals (75), game-winning goals (48) and … well, you see the pattern. His postseason stats have been equally strong, with 17 goals and 54 points through 62 games.
Florida named Barkov its 10th captain in team history on September 17, 2018. He was their youngest player to hold that designation. Now, six years in, Barkov has also held it for the longest time. Given his current contract runs through 2030 — and he may well keep playing from there — it’s unlikely any future Panther will surpass his captaincy length.
Barkov hasn’t just been brilliant compared to his own team. He’s earned league-wide recognition as a two-time Selke Trophy winner (including this year) and has one Lady Byng on his resume.
Barkov has been better than ever this postseason, collecting six goals and 17 points while shutting down the opponent’s top skaters (especially the Rangers’). He plays on both special teams while dominating at even strength.
Florida did, suffice it to say, turn their pain into power going from the NHL’s basement to selecting Barkov. It’s unlikely they anticipated doing that again so quickly. As in, the following season.
The Panthers finished marginally better in the 2013-14 standings, second-to-last, and this time captured a draft lottery win to open the door for selecting Aaron Ekblad first overall.
(Picked second overall that year? Sam Reinhart, by the Buffalo Sabres. But we’ll get to him later.)
Ekblad was that season’s top prospect for good reason. He’d been the first defenseman ever granted exceptional status in the CHL, and he won a slew of awards to put him atop any NHL team’s wish list. The Panthers grabbed Ekblad to be the present — and future — of their blue line, and he has delivered over the course of his 676-game career (complete with 115 goals and 347 points).
Despite Ekblad’s injury troubles over the years, he’s been the jewel of Florida’s back end. Throughout these playoffs he’s averaged over 22 minutes of ice time per game, and tossed in four assists while taking on the toughest matchups.
When Florida’s next high draft pick came along they were back on the offensive — selecting forward Anton Lundell 12th overall in 2020. Like Barkov, Lundell was a big (6-foot-1), Finnish, left-shot center with excellent two-way potential. Lundell has grown thoroughly over his first two NHL seasons (putting up career-best totals this season, with 13 goals and 35 points), and it’s paid off in the playoffs.
Lundell has been paired with different teammates and kept improving. His game-winning goal in Game 5 of the conference finals (his third marker of the postseason) on Friday reinforced why that “Baby Barkov” nickname has been well-earned.
“He’s his own type. But there’s similarities in our games,” Barkov said. “Both players want to play a two-way game and he’s elite at that. He’s really good on every aspect of the game. So that’s the similarity. But he’s walking in this own path and learning from different guys every day … and becoming better. I’m really happy to see that.”
The trade additions
These days, Vincent Trocheck is leading the Rangers in playoff goals (eight) and points (15).
But for six and a half seasons — from 2013-20 — he was in Florida, right up until the February 2020 trade deadline when the Panthers shipped Trocheck to Carolina in exchange for a package that included Eetu Luostarinen. Their new arrival started with the Panthers’ American Hockey League affiliate, but Luostarinen eventually found his NHL groove and has been a staple in Florida’s bottom six through the playoffs, potting one goal and four points while skating over 15 minutes per game.
The Panthers’ next trade addition was, well, somewhat more newsworthy.
Florida sent shockwaves through the 2022 offseason when they acquired Matthew Tkachuk from Calgary that July in exchange for the team’s then-leading scorer Jonathan Huberdeau and defenseman MacKenzie Weegar.
Tkachuk has been worth every penny of his eight-year, $76 million contract extension. The matured winger can toe the line of sass and skill with ease, and that’s already manifested on the Panthers’ history book. After two seasons, Tkachuk holds the franchise record in assists per game (0.82) and points per game (1.24).
The 26-year-old was credited by teammates for single-handedly helping to will Florida into the playoff picture last season (and Tkachuk rightly earned a Hart Trophy nomination in that process). He played Game 4 of the Cup Final against Vegas with a broken sternum, rehabbed all summer and still started this season on time (finishing second on the club in points with 88 in 80 games). Tkachuk has carried that success to the playoffs again, where he’s pacing the Panthers in points (19) and has two game-winning goals.
Florida went big bringing on Tkachuk (and extending others), which put the Panthers in some salary cap troubles. That forced Florida into trading Anthony Duclair to San Jose in July 2023, for forward Steven Lorentz. The latter has been a fine depth piece for the Panthers, and a staple on their fourth line throughout the playoffs, with two goals and three points.
Like most good teams, the Panthers identify quality role players when they’re available. Florida felt on the cusp of another long playoff run this spring, and secured some complementary pieces before the March trade deadline to make it a reality.
First, the Panthers netted Vladimir Tarasenko from Ottawa. He’s been like a rover in the lineup, capable of slotting in everywhere, and has had a solid postseason with two goals and five points. He’s one of the only Panthers with a Cup on his resume — from the St. Louis Blues‘ run in 2019 — and is not shy about sharing his thoughts. Maurice credited Tarasenko for engaging with linemate Lundell on the bench during Game 5 and giving the young skater some quality attention — right before Lundell scored the game-winning goal. Those intangibles are invaluable.
While Tarasenko has his name etched on hockey’s holy grail, Kyle Okposo came to Florida hoping to do the same. The then-Sabres captain knew this team would offer him a chance to chase a title, and Okposo is game to do whatever he can to ensure Florida reaches its goal. Okposo has accepted being a healthy scratch when required, but has embraced the opportunities he does get, like entering midway into Florida’s second-round series against Boston and leaving an impression on teammates.
“I think with us, [the key is] it’s just a good group of depth,” Ekblad said. “Big pieces like [Okposo] that come in and have an instant impact like he did in [Boston]. And I just think it’s it’s just a tight-knit group of guys; it’s kind of hard to say [exactly] why it works.”
The 2021 group
Florida made three moves in 2021 that warranted a second trade-related category of their own.
It was a late-starting season amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic so the deadline had been shuffled along to April. The change in time didn’t affect Florida’s urgency to target players who would be integral parts of the Panthers’ current makeup.
First, Florida acquired defenseman Brandon Montour from Anaheim for a third-round pick in the 2021 draft. It was a classic buy-low-and-be-amazed scenario. The Panthers signed Montour to a three-year extension, and he responded with a breakout season in 2022-23. Montour finished as the league’s fifth-highest scoring defenseman by doubling his own career-best numbers (at 16 goals and 73 points).
Montour was a difference maker for Florida during their Cup Final run last year, and he’s been excellent again in these playoffs with three goals and nine points while averaging a team-high 23:46 of ice time per game.
That same April, the Panthers also got punchier when they landed Sam Bennett from Calgary for a second-round pick in 2022 and the rights to prospect Emil Heineman. Bennett, like Montour, immediately signed a contract extension with the Panthers — and, like Montour, followed that with a personal-best season the following season, collecting 28 goals and 49 points.
Whatever is in the Panthers’ water continues to work it’s charm on Bennett, with another strong regular season and playoff stretch including four goals and seven points in 10 games. The feisty forward hasn’t made friends along the way — particularly in Boston — but he is, as Maurice has noted, the “prototypical” Panther. Not a bad moniker to wear.
There are a whole host of superlatives for the season Sam Reinhart just had. The second overall pick in 2014, Reinhart was swapped to Florida for a 2022 first-round pick and Devon Levi in July 2021. It was a steep cost that Reinhart has repaid in full. Since Reinhart arrived in South Florida, he’s scored 121 goals and 243 points through 242 games.
Reinhart’s best work came this season, when he wowed the league with a 57-goal, 94-point showing (including 27 goals on the power play). Reinhart has had to answer questions all season about his impending free agency, but he’s appeared unbothered by that in the playoffs, producing eight goals and 12 points.
It’s not just what Reinhart does individually, either. He elevated linemates all season, including Barkov, who didn’t forget to thank Reinhart after being named the 2023-24 Selke winner.
“The players I’m playing with, without them nothing would be possible,” Barkov said. “I’ve got to give credit to [Reinhart]. I played with him the whole year. He helped me a lot.”
1:07
Sam Reinhart scores OT winner for Panthers to even series
Sam Reinhart scores a slap shot goal during a power play in overtime to give the Panthers a win over the Rangers in Game 4.
The “castoffs”
Sometimes, things don’t work out for a hockey player and a particular NHL team.
Lucky for the Panthers.
Carter Verhaeghe technically started his NHL tenure as a Toronto Maple Leaf. But before Verhaeghe ever played for the Leafs, they traded him to the New York Islanders in a multi-player deal centered on Michael Grabner. Verhaeghe never dressed for the Islanders either before they traded him to Tampa Bay in 2017.
It would take another two years for Verhaeghe to finally debut with the Lightning in 2019-20, the year Tampa won its first of two consecutive championships. Verhaeghe wouldn’t be a part of that second title though, because the Lightning didn’t offer the then-restricted free agent a qualifying offer and he was subsequently a UFA. The Panthers pounced with a contract offer, Verhaeghe accepted and — stop if you’ve heard this one before — he broke out the following season, with a 55-point campaign. Verhaeghe has been on a tear ever since, producing 72 points in 76 games this season, and pacing the Panthers in postseason goals (nine) to boot.
Gustav Forsling also knows about being a diamond in the rough. The defenseman was placed on waivers by Carolina in January 2021, the ultimate gut-punch for any young player. The Panthers were there to claim Forsling from the wire and offer him a fresh start.
Forsling responded by blossoming under the Florida sun. He’s now the Panthers’ top-pairing defender who inked an eight-year, $46 million extension this March. Forsling now leads Florida in points by a defenseman in the postseason (10) and will be patrolling its blue line through the prime of his career. Forsling’s impact in these playoffs — four goals and 11 points, while averaging over 23 minutes of ice time per game — has garnered him serious accolades.
“In his style, he’s the best defenseman in the world,” Maurice said after Game 5 on Friday.
2:34
Gustav Forsling on 3rd period success: ‘We’ve done it all year’
Gustav Forsling joins Scott Van Pelt and breaks down the secret behind the Panthers’ success in the third period this season following their 3-2 Game 5 victory over the New York Rangers.
Oliver Ekman-Larsson didn’t have to experience the waiver process. But being bought out by Vancouver in June 2023 likely wasn’t a much better feeling. He was available on the open market as a UFA when the Panthers once again found what they believed to be an undervalued player.
The veteran has been revitalized on Florida’s third pairing, and as the quarterback of Florida’s second power-play unit. The opportunity to be in the hunt for an elusive championship is only further fuel for Ekman-Larsson’s solid playoffs, and has shown the league he’s not done yet.
“That he could come back and re-establish himself as a defenseman, that was the opportunity that we had for him,” Maurice said of Ekman-Larsson. “And he certainly made the most of it.”
The “choosers”
Players will wait their whole careers to personally pick a landing spot.
Sergei Bobrovsky‘s opportunity to do it came in July 2019. He took his talents to South Beach.
Florida invested in their new No. 1 netminder with a seven-year, $70 million contract meant to solidify the Panthers’ goaltending for the foreseeable future. It hasn’t always been smooth sailing, though. Bobrovsky — who was a two-time Vezina Trophy winner with Columbus — struggled to consistently establish that award-winning form for Florida.
In 2022-23, Bobrovsky began so poorly there were questions around whether he’d lose the net entirely to prospect Spencer Knight. That didn’t come to fruition, but Bobrovsky was replaced by Alex Lyon late in the season while he was sidelined with an illness. Lyon played so well he was the Panthers’ playoff starter — but Bobrovsky was their hero. When Lyon stumbled, Bobrovsky stepped in to help Florida reach the Cup Final. And that momentum carried into this season, where he allowed the second-fewest goals by an NHL regular (behind Connor Hellebuyck) and was nominated for his third Vezina. Bobrovsky has given the Panthers confidence again in these playoffs, with a 10-5 record, .904 SV% and 2.29 GAA.
Belief is a critical factor not just in major signings but smaller ones, too. The Panthers have filled in the gaps with fourth-line forwards Ryan Lomberg — who inked his first deal with Florida in October 2020 — and Nick Cousins, who came on board in July 2022. They were textbook energy-drivers in the regular season, and have provided hard-working minutes when called upon in the postseason as Maurice shuffled the decks here and there to maximize the Panthers’ matchups.
One skater not drawing out has been defenseman Niko Mikkola — especially not against his former team. Mikkola was acquired by the Rangers (along with Tarasenko) ahead of last year’s deadline to aid in their postseason quest, which ended abruptly with a first-round ousting. The blueliner didn’t stick around with the Blueshirts and signed in Florida as a free agent in July. Mikkola skated in all 82 regular-season games for the Panthers, and has been on a strong pairing with Forsling throughout the playoffs, averaging nearly 20 minutes of ice time per game.
Anthony Stolarz was another July addition for Florida. Lyon had moved on to a larger role in Detroit, and Stolarz was an ideal journeyman to fill in the gap behind Bobrovsky. The veteran was terrific at that, posting a 16-7-2 record with .925 SV% and 2.03 GAA in the regular season.
Florida’s last man in during the July signing season was Evan Rodrigues. The versatile forward has been a fixture in the Panthers’ top nine, and can seemingly find chemistry with any linemate. That’s how Rodrigues has enhanced his value in the playoffs, particularly when Florida lost Bennett to an injury early. Rodrigues’ performances in Game 3 and Game 4 against Boston — when he tallied two goals and two assists — helped carry Florida through.
“I think that those are his two best games of the year for us,” Maurice said after Game 4 vs. the Bruins. “I think Evan is the kind of guy that can elevate his play in the playoffs. He’s a really good skater and he looks like he’s getting into a lot of holes and getting pretty good offense off.”
The bonus pair
Let’s call this the re-return.
We’ve gone through the three Florida draft picks still in their lineup — but mentioned there was a fourth draftee to be named later. That’s Dmitry Kulikov.
Florida selected him 14th overall in 2009, and Kulikov played seven seasons for the Panthers (from 2009-2016) before he was traded to Buffalo. The blueliner bounced around between six other teams from there before accepting a one-year free agent contract from the Panthers in July.
Kulikov was home again. And while the years had passed, his ability to contribute had not. He’s been a constant on their third pairing, and puts up reliable minutes at even strength and on the penalty kill. Like no time passed at all.
And that brings us to the final piece of Florida’s puzzle.
Let’s call this: The (unexpected) replacement.
The Panthers didn’t look to be in the market for a new coach after Andrew Brunette — as interim bench boss following Joel Quenneville stepping down — guided Florida to a Presidents’ Trophy winning season in 2021-22.
Turns out, the Panthers had someone else in mind for the full-time role: Maurice. Florida made it official with the 25-year coaching veteran in June 2022, months after Maurice had excused himself from the head role in Winnipeg after a slow start to the Jets’ season.
It was Maurice’s “experience” and “intellect” that drew GM Billy Zito in. Maurice has proven his worth by bringing out the best in Florida.
“He’s the perfect coach for our team,” Tkachuk said in September.
THE PANTHERS’ 2024 STORY isn’t finished yet.
They lead the Eastern Conference finals 3-2, with Game 6 on Saturday (8 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN+). Florida has home-ice advantage with an opportunity to reach a consecutive Cup Final. The end of this chapter is still being written.
Florida’s origin story is at the heart of it. The Panthers went from literal bottom-dwellers to collecting talent that’s shaped them into a powerhouse. Not every team gets there. Not all of them can. There’s something innate about the Panthers’ culture though that makes players — regardless of background or where they were before — have faith in their own potential.
And you can’t put on a price on that.
“They got me right into the group,” Forsling said. “And I feel like I’ve played here my whole career. Everyone is very welcoming and friendly, you know? When I got here, everyone was just [making you feel good] that way.”
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Can USA Hockey get more elite players to go to the IIHF World Championship?
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April 7, 2025By
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Ryan S. ClarkApr 7, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Ryan S. Clark is an NHL reporter for ESPN.
Less than an hour after the United States lost to Canada in overtime of the 4 Nations Face-Off championship game, Detroit Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin was asked about the growth of American hockey and what lies ahead.
“You know what I think it does? I think we’ve had a tough time with USA Hockey getting guys to play in the World Championships,” said Larkin, a five-time World Championships participant. “I think guys are at home watching this and I hope they are wanting a piece of this.
“They gotta go to the World Championships and prove themselves and play for their country. We gotta start winning that tournament. I think that’s where Canada, those guys go and they play.”
Larkin’s words have since sparked a discussion about one of the largest challenges facing the nation’s governing body for the sport as it tries to become the world’s strongest men’s hockey power. Getting there means having an investment that goes beyond marquee events such as the 4 Nations Face-Off or the Olympics, and it all starts with how players regard participation in the IIHF Men’s World Championship.
The leadership team at USA Hockey have heard or read about what Larkin said, as have his peers in the NHL. But a gap persists in getting all of those peers to buy in.
ESPN spoke to 10 sources, including players and management, about why it’s been a struggle for USA Hockey to get more top-level NHL players to participate at the World Championships. And while this year’s edition presents a potential path toward a player making a case for the Olympics roster next February, there are those who feel that shouldn’t be the only motivation to play for Team USA.
“We have to rebuild our culture that the tournament is important and it should be more important than it is for our players,” said Minnesota Wild general manager Bill Guerin, who was Team USA’s GM for the 4 Nations Face-Off, and will also manage the 2026 Olympic team. “The excuses that I hear for guys not going over, they’re not good enough. We need guys to go over. We want to try to start winning more often than we do, and we need our best players to consider going over.
“I know there’s real-life situations. I know there’s injuries. I know there’s contracts. But some of the excuses I’ve heard? Quite honestly, they’re not good enough.”
THE AMERICAN HOCKEY LANDSCAPE has changed dramatically since when Guerin and John Vanbiesbrouck, who is the assistant executive director for hockey operations for USA Hockey, were in the NHL.
Neither of them were born when the U.S. won its second World Championship along with its first Olympic gold medal in 1960. They were youths when the “Miracle On Ice” team made up of amateur players beat the Soviet Union before winning America’s second hockey gold at the 1980 Olympics.
Initially, the annual World Championships tournament was limited to amateur players as well, but the IIHF allowed professionals to participate starting in 1977. The IIHF’s decision came in the wake of the Canada Cup, a six-team tournament featuring pro players that was held five times between 1976 and 1991.
Eventually, the Canada Cup was replaced by the World Cup of Hockey in 1996. The NHL then allowed its players to participate in the Olympics starting in 1998.
This created opportunities for players such as Guerin and Vanbiesbrouck to represent the U.S. throughout their professional careers. It also presented a contrast in terms of how rosters were constructed.
For example, Vanbiesbrouck represented the U.S. at the World Championships four times and was on two Canada Cup teams. He made the roster for both tournaments in 1991. The U.S. roster for the World Championships that year had 10 players younger than 23 while the Canada Cup team had only four players younger than 23.
While Guerin never played at the Worlds, he represented the U.S. at three Olympics and twice at the World Cup of Hockey. Guerin was part of the gold-medal winning team at the 1996 World Cup of Hockey, and the silver-medal winning team at the 2002 Olympics. Team USA’s median age when Guerin played was 30.
“Our expectations have changed,” Vanbiesbrouck said. “Whenever somebody wears the jersey, there’s a certain expectation. There’s an element of national pride to wear a jersey, to honor the flag and honor those people who came before you. It’s a great element in our game.”
One item that helped with elevating those expectations was the creation of the United States National Team Development Program in 1996. The NTDP became an incubator for the nation’s premier U18 and U17 male players.
Prior to the NTDP, the U.S. had medaled only twice — with a pair of bronze-place finishes — at the IIHF U20 World Junior Championships. The NTDP has since played an instrumental role in the U.S. establishing itself as a WJC powerhouse. Team USA has captured seven gold medals since 2010 and won its second consecutive gold earlier this year.
1:02
USA wins world junior hockey title on Teddy Stiga’s golden goal
Teddy Stiga nets the winning goal in overtime as the United States tops Finland to win the world junior hockey championship for the second year in a row.
Between the NTDP producing 98 first-round picks and the success at the World Juniors, it created the hypothesis that USA Hockey should be able to easily recruit players to represent the nation. That much was evident after the 4 Nations Face-Off, and it’s part of why the U.S. is considered to be one of the front-runners for gold at the 2026 Olympics.
“A lot of guys went through the NTDP and even coming here for two weeks, it was the closest group I’ve been around,” Columbus Blue Jackets and Team USA defenseman Zach Werenski said after the 4 Nations Face-Off. “It was awesome being here for two weeks and it was so much fun being around these guys. Everyone bought in. I think that’s a testament to what USA Hockey is doing from younger ages on right now.
“We expect to win. We expect to be in gold medal games and to be in these positions against Canada and the best teams.”
Players like Larkin and Werenski have a different experience compared to those who came before them. Fewer international opportunities existed, because the NHL didn’t allow players to participate in the Olympics in 2018 or 2022, while there have been only two World Cups (2004, 2016) since the first one in 1996.
It left the World Championships as the primary consistent option that could come close to replicating those best-on-best tournaments. But even as the demand for international hockey grows, there remains a disconnect when it comes to U.S. players and the World Championships.
The timing of the World Championships could be a factor. This year’s tournament runs from May 9 through May 25, which is simultaneous to the second round and conference finals of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
This limits the player pool to those whose teams didn’t qualify for the playoffs, or who were eliminated in the first round.
“It’s the time of year when everyone’s really looking for a break, and to go for a month, give it your all and sacrifice? It’s a lot for players,” Vanbiesbrouck said. “Most of the guys in the NHL are family guys, which we can all appreciate. Another is with the hip injuries that are happening today, they need a whole summer to recuperate and there’s so many significant injuries now that take such a long time that we understand. But I think that’s a big factor.”
WINNIPEG JETS DUO Connor Hellebuyck and Nikolaj Ehlers represent just how much differently the World Championships are viewed in the United States compared to the rest of the world.
Hellebuyck grew up in Commerce Township, Mich., which is a 45-minute drive from the NTDP’s headquarters. He grew up watching the Detroit Red Wings and went to games. He watched American-born players such as fellow goalie Jimmy Howard, who he idolized.
But he first learned about the tournament as a 21-year-old who had just finished his first AHL season in 2015, when he received a call from USA Hockey asking him to join the team for the World Championships.
“When USA Hockey called, it was cool. It was a cool experience,” Hellebuyck said. “The more I did it, the more I started to realize it is for the experience and it’s for the young guy trying to get better. It’s not for the veteran unless he wants to travel, unless he wants to see the world or he wants to play a little more hockey.”
American-born players like Hellebuyck often grow up associating hockey in May with the Stanley Cup playoffs. Major League Baseball, the NBA Finals and the PGA Championship, among many other sporting events, are also going on at that time. Having that many options plays into the lack of visibility.
Compare that to Ehlers. He grew up in Aalborg, Denmark where there was a pro hockey team, but nothing like the NHL. As a nation, Denmark has around 5,000 registered hockey players. But it hosted the World Championships for the first time in 2018, and had the eighth-highest total attendance in tournament history. Denmark will co-host this year’s tournament in May with Sweden.
In Europe, the World Championships have become a tentpole event within the European sporting landscape in nations such as Czechia, Finland, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland, home of the IIHF’s headquarters. Last year’s tournament in Czechia set a new tournament total attendance record of 797,727 fans. Five of the 10 most attended tournaments have come since 2010, none of which were in North America.
The U.S has hosted the tournament three times — with the most recent coming in 1962, when it was hosted in Colorado Springs and Denver. Canada, which has won the tournament a record 28 times, has hosted the World Championships just once, back in 2008.
Vanbiesbrouck said there haven’t been any discussions throughout his time with USA Hockey about trying to host the event, adding that he would like to challenge the status quo and “be able to say that we could do this.”
Ehlers, who played in his first Worlds in 2016, said the tournament has such a reverence in Europe that fans will travel to support their respective homelands. But for nations such as Denmark, Ehlers said the Worlds provide them a chance to show they do belong.
“To be able to have had the amount of NHL players that we’ve had over years and the way that we’ve gone at The Olympics, they reached the quarterfinals at the last Olympics,” said Ehlers, who is one of 17 Danes to play in the NHL. “We’ve beaten Canada and Sweden and teams like that. We go out there to try to prove we are not a small hockey country even though we are in the big picture.”
Or as Guerin said: “Because it matters to them. It’s important and it needs to be important for us.”
WHAT CAN USA HOCKEY do to get more NHL players to play at the Worlds?
Guerin said that the organization has developed a program allowing players to bring their family members and/or friends to Europe for the tournament. Vanbiesbrouck added that it’s something they’ve evolved after observing what Canada had with its program.
Utah Hockey Club coach Andre Tourigny — Canada’s coach for the past two cycles — said Hockey Canada created a family environment. He said bringing families over for the tournament means there’s a chance for them to share what it means to be in a different part of the world. But when it’s time to play, those individual families then create their own community despite being thousands of miles away from home.
“Admittedly, USA Hockey has had to do a better job of getting the people and bringing them over with a certain standard and they’ve done that,” Guerin said. “The last little while they’ve stepped up to the plate and made it a better experience for the players, their wives and their families. It can just be a great opportunity to play for your country. Hopefully, we start to see more guys feel the importance of that tournament.”
Wild forward Matt Boldy said that Guerin and others within USA Hockey have done a strong job of emphasizing why the World Championships matter, and how they used it in their process for creating Team USA’s 4 Nations Face-Off roster.
Boldy said he viewed going to the World Championships as a chance to show how he could be counted upon playing in a different system in international play. Especially when he saw other nations bring more of their best players to the tournament.
A two-time World Championship team member, Boldy got a chance to learn from Johnny Gaudreau and Brock Nelson, two players he grew up watching. While Boldy learned from them on the ice, he also got a chance to know them as people, which he said helped when it came to establishing a dynamic with teammates.
“I think the more that we can get our USA guys there playing together, comfortable with each other … it just makes things easier so in tournaments like the 4 Nations, it makes that transition smoother,” Boldy said. “It’s a big tournament. Every country wants to win it including the U.S. If we can get our biggest guys there and everyone kind of spends that extra time together, it could mean a lot.”
Guerin and Vanbiesbrouck said that they have heard from the agents of American players who missed out on the 4 Nations Face-Off about wanting to be involved in the Olympics. Vanbiesbrouck said that the 4 Nations event also made older players realize that the 2026 Olympics might be their final opportunity to play for Team USA.
“It’s one of those things where if you want to be in one of those tournaments and participate, then, be a part of it,” Guerin said. “Don’t be a part of it when you want to be a part of it. A lot of the guys we’ve had have gone to the World Championships and done that. If you want to have a better shot of something like the 4 Nations and the Olympics, help us in other areas. We need it. It’s not just trying to win the 4 Nations or The Olympics.
“The World Championships go on every year and we want to try to win it. That’s the bottom line.”
Sports
Sources: Jays give Vlad Jr. 14-year, $500M deal
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7 hours agoon
April 7, 2025By
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First baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays are in agreement on a 14-year, $500 million contract extension, pending physical, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Sunday night.
This is a monumental, no-deferral deal to keep the homegrown star in Toronto for the rest of his career, and comes as the 5-5 Blue Jays are in the midst of a road trip that takes them to Fenway Park to meet the Boston Red Sox on Monday.
Guerrero, 26, a four-time All-Star and son of Hall of Famer Vladimir Guerrero, had said he would not negotiate during the season after the sides failed to come to an agreement before he reported to spring training. The sides continued talking, however, and sealed a deal that is the third largest in Major League Baseball history, behind only Juan Soto‘s 15-year, $765 million contract with the New York Mets and Shohei Ohtani‘s 10-year, $700 million pact with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The Blue Jays, snakebit in recent years by Soto and Ohtani signing elsewhere, received a long-term commitment from their best homegrown talent since Hall of Famer Roy Halladay.
They had tried to sign Guerrero to a long-term deal for years to no avail. Toronto got a glimpse of Guerrero’s talent when he debuted shortly after his 20th birthday in 2019 and homered 15 times as a rookie. His breakout season came in 2021, when Guerrero finished second to Aaron Judge in American League MVP voting after hitting .311/.401/.601 with 48 home runs and 111 RBIs.
Guerrero followed with a pair of solid-but-below-expectations seasons in 2022 and 2023, and in mid-May 2024, he sported an OPS under .750 as the Blue Jays struggled en route to an eventual last-place finish. Over his last 116 games in 2024, the Guerrero of 2021 reemerged, as he hit .343/.407/.604 with 26 home runs and 84 RBIs.
With a payroll expected to exceed the luxury tax threshold of $241 million, the Blue Jays ended the season’s first week atop the American League East standings. Toronto dropped to 5-3 on Friday after a loss to the Mets, in which Guerrero collected a pair of singles, raising his season slash line to .267/.343/.367.
Between Guerrero and shortstop Bo Bichette‘s free agency after the 2025 season, the Blue Jays faced a potential reckoning. Though Bichette is expected to play out the season before hitting the open market, Guerrero’s deal lessens the sting of Toronto’s pursuits of Ohtani in 2023 and Soto in 2024.
Toronto shook off the signings of Soto and first baseman Pete Alonso with the Mets, left-hander Max Fried with the New York Yankees and infielder Alex Bregman with the Boston Red Sox to retool their roster. Toronto gave outfielder Anthony Santander a heavily deferred five-year, $92.5 million contract, brought in future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer on a one-year, $15.5 million deal, bolstered its bullpen with right-handers Jeff Hoffman and Yimi Garcia, and traded for Platinum Glove-winning second baseman Andres Gimenez, who is hitting cleanup.
Toronto’s long-term commitments will allow for significant financial flexibility. In addition to Bichette and Scherzer, right-hander Chris Bassitt and relievers Chad Green and Erik Swanson are free agents after this season. After 2026, the nine-figure deals of outfielder George Springer and right-hander Kevin Gausman come off the books, as well.
Building around Guerrero is a good place to start. One of only a dozen players in MLB with at least two seasons of six or more Wins Above Replacement since 2021, Guerrero consistently is near the top of MLB leaderboards in hardest-hit balls, a metric that typically translates to great success.
Like his father, who hit 449 home runs and batted .318 over a 16-year career, Guerrero has rare bat-to-ball skills, particularly for a player with top-of-the-scale power. In his six MLB seasons, Guerrero has hit .288/.363/.499 with 160 home runs, 510 RBIs and 559 strikeouts against 353 walks.
Originally a third baseman, Guerrero shifted to first base during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season. Had the Blue Jays signed Alonso, they signaled the possibility of Guerrero returning full time to third, where he played a dozen games last year.
With the extension in place, the 6-foot-2, 245-pound Guerrero is expected to remain at first base and reset a market that had been topped by the eight-year, $248 million extension Miguel Cabrera signed just shy of his 31st birthday in 2014.
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