
Ryan Bourque seeks to follow brother Chris' path to the World Junior Championships
August is a month of relative tranquility for the NHL, but for USA Hockey, it’s one of the most important months of the calendar year. Each August, more than 50 of the most accomplished young American hockey players gather for a week in Lake Placid for the 2008 National Junior Evaluation Camp. For most, their performance during this camp determines their viability for the U.S. Under-20 team that competes in the World Junior Championships at year’s end.
The camp includes the participation of the national junior teams from Sweden and Finland, and the approximately 50 Americans are split into two teams, White and Blue, resulting in a four-team, eight-game round robin slate of exhibitions. The results this month were largely good for USA Hockey: the two American squads won five of the eight games.
August 5: USA Blue 4, Finland 1; USA White 2, Sweden 3
August 6: USA White 7, Finland 1; USA Blue 7, Sweden 1
August 8: USA White 3, Sweden 7; USA Blue 4, Finland 5 (OT)
August 9: USA White 5, Finland 2; USA Blue 5, Sweden 4 (SO)
Thirteen Americans who were in Lake Placid have already been selected in the first round of the past two NHL drafts; 10 more were tabbed in round 2. There were a number of ‘09 and even ‘10 draft eligibles who will surely swell those ranks. We could see first-round talent skating on the American 4th line this December.
NHL.com offered blogging coverage of the camp that is worth checking out.
Quality and consistent netminding has been an achilles heel for the Americans at the World Juniors in recent years, but this August’s Evaluation Camp hinted that better days in net could be on the horizon. Three of the goalies in camp have already been drafted, including Detroit’s first-rounder from this past June, Thomas McCollum of the Guelph Storm. 2007 second-rounder Jeremy Smith (Nashville) played so well for Plymouth in 2006-07 — 23-6-0-1, with four shutouts — that he made the Caps’ talented goaltending prospect Michal Neuvirth expendable. Smith went 4-0 at the 2008 World Juniors, but he’ll need to improve on a .894 save percentage for the Americans to contend for gold. The Americans have fielded strong World Junior teams in recent years, and have played some excruciatingly competitive hockey against four-time gold medalist Canada then, but the Canadians have consistently boasted stud talent (Cam Ward, Carey Price) between the pipes.
Seven 17-year-olds were at this month’s Evaluation Camp, and perhaps none generated more buzz than netminder Mike Lee. NHL.com has already weighed in on Lee’s talent. He played high school hockey for Roseau in Minnesota last season, but he went 27-2-0 with a 1.10 goals-against and a .936 save percentage. Some of the most respected names in American hockey are already sold on Lee’s ability.
“I don’t see many goalies better than Mike Lee,” says Dean Blais, coach of the expansion Fargo Force in the United States Hockey League, “and I’ve coached three World Junior teams.”
Blais, a former coach at the University of North Dakota, doesn’t easily throw around praise. He sees something special in Lee and has made him the No. 1 goalie with the expansion Force this season. Lee has passed up his senior season at Roseau High to join forces with the Force.
“I have a pretty good feeling about him, that he will be a success at whatever he does,” said Blais. “He’s a very good goalie, fundamentally solid and competitive.”
Lee [is] already on NHL Central Scouting’s preseason watch list for players eligible for the 2009 Entry Draft . . .”
On the blueline, the Americans will return just three talents with World Juniors experience: Jonathon Blum, Ian Cole, and Cade Fairchild. But the American reinforcements on the back end are exciting: Zach Bogosian, drafted third overall by Atlanta this past June; Kevin Shattenkirk, 14th overall by Colorado in 2007; and Ryan McDonagh, 12th overall by Montreal in ‘07.
Caps’ 2008 first-rounder John Carlson will get a good look. Keep an eye on 16-year-old Cam Fowler of Canton, Mass. In the past two years two OHL teams (Kitchener, Windsor) have selected Fowler in the OHL’s first round attempting to lure him away from his commitment to Notre Dame. He’s a wild card longshot who’s been ranked among the best talents in the world in his age group for years — including skating with the U.S. Under-17s as a 14-year-old.
Up front, the Americans will rely on the firepower of James vanRiemsdyk, Jordan Schroeder (8 points in the 2008 WJC), and Colin Wilson, the latter of whom enjoyed a breakout World Juniors in the Czech Republic last year that launched him into the the top 10 of this past June’s NHL draft (7th, Nashville). Jim O’Brien spent just one season with Minnesota of the WCHA before signing with Ottawa this summer. Two American forwards put up more than 100 points in the WHL last season: Santa Ana, California’s, Colin Long notched 112 points in 79 games with Kelowna in ‘07-08, and Drayson Bowman went for 53 goals and 49 assists in 87 games with Spokane.
Caps’ fans might be interested in the name of another Lake Placid camp attendee: Ryan Bourque, brother of Chris. Like his brother, he’s packaged small (5′8, 170), but he enjoyed a strong season with the Under-17 team and had a solid Under-18 World Championship (5 points in 7 games).
This year’s World Juniors will be contested in Ottawa beginning December 26.

On Sunday, February 22, 2009, the Capitals matinee-host the Pittsburgh Penguins at Verizon Center. That day will commemorate the 29th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice, the greatest day in the history of hockey and the greatest day in the history of sports. Summertime question for you: what do you think of the idea of the Caps doing something radically different with their sweaters that day — like, say, wearing re-issues of the Lake Placid heroes’ sweaters? Before you dismiss the idea out of hand, let’s first have a little chat among patriots about the matter.
The next obstacle to address would be a purported “forced nationalism” on a contemporary NHL club necessarily comprised of nationals from a half dozen or more foreign nations. Specifically, wouldn’t there be awkward irony in an Alexander Ovechkin and his Russian teammates wearing “USA” across their chests the third Sunday of next February?
If Al Michaels was the voice of the Miracle on Ice, Jim McKay — ABC’s only studio presence on the evening of Friday, February 22, 1980 — was surely its face. I was too young to remember the McKay of Munich; in my adolescence of ‘80 I hung on his every word.
In reading memorials of his career this week I was struck by the breadth of events he covered. He was ABC’s go-to guy for special events, for decades. He was a seminal media figure at horse racing’s Triple Crown races, and with ‘Wide World of Sports’ he’d anchor one of the most successful sports programs in television history.
In 2010, Anaheim Ducks’ GM Brian Burke will be heading to Vancouver — not to manage the Canucks, but as General Manager of Team USA’s Olympic squad. Former Washington Capitals GM David Poile will serve as the team’s Associate GM.
Potomac, Md.’s, Jeff Halpern has been named captain of the American hockey team competing this week at the IIHF World Championships in Halifax and Quebec City. The former Washington Capital follows current Caps’ captain Chris Clark, who wore the ‘C’ for the Americans in Moscow last May.
CANADA: Commemorating the inaugural Canada Cup, the sons of the Great White North will be sporting the split-leaf jersey from 1976. The retro sweater game is May 6th against the United States.
RUSSIA: This one could not have been an easy decision with the all the success the Russians have enjoyed. Fedorov, Ovechkin, and Semin will be rocking the red in the retro threads from 1956 commomorating Russia’s first Olympic gold. The sweater will be “modern retro” with Rossiya replacing CCCP. Since the 1956 Olympics were held in Italy, the retro sweater game will be on May 2nd versus Italy.
UNITED STATES: Naturally, the US is going back to the miracle on ice. Though it’s the first one in 1960 that occurred in Squaw Valley, California. The US game is on May 2nd with Latvia.
There’s been some discussion recently about the economics of hockey. Did you know that more money means more success on the ice? According to
You think the Tampa Bay Lightning have goaltender issues now? Their 2006 first-rounder, Riku Helenius, didn’t make it out of today’s second period against the United States at the World Juniors.
What is it about no-name American rosters and their matchups against Russia?






























