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Hockey Canada unveils men's camp invites

CTVOlympics.ca
Posted Thursday, July 2, 2009 10:02 AM ET

 The list of invitees for Canada's 2010 Olympic men's hockey team orientation camp features a mix of Olympic veterans and young up-and-comers.

On Thursday, Hockey Canada released a roster of 46 players who have been invited to the camp, including five goaltenders, 16 defencemen and 25 forwards. The camp will run from August 24-27 at the Pengrowth Saddledome in Calgary. 

The list of players includes 40 players with senior international experience, either at the Olympics, IIHF World Championship or World Cup of Hockey/Canada Cup, while 36 of the 46 players played for either the National Junior Team or National Men's Under-18 Team.

The list of five goalies includes three-time Olympian Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils), and 2006 Olympian Roberto Luongo (Vancouver Canucks). Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Marc-André Fleury has been invited, as have Steve Mason (Columbus Blue Jackets) and Cam Ward (Carolina Hurricanes). Two-time Stanley Cup champion Chris Osgood was not invited, although many had debated his chances during the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Just five of the 16 defencemen invited have Olympic experience: Jay Bouwmeester (Calgary Flames), Dan Boyle (San Jose Sharks), Scott Niedermayer (Anaheim Ducks),  Chris Pronger (Philadelphia Flyers), and Robyn Regehr (Calgary Flames). Dion Phaneuf of the Flames gets his shot after being left off the 2006 roster for his youth. Rounding out the mix on defence are: Marc Staal (New York Rangers), Shea Weber (Nashville Predators), François Beauchemin (Anaheim Ducks), Brent Burns (Minnesota Wild), Drew Doughty (Los Angeles Kings), Stéphane Robidas (Dallas Stars), Mike Green (Washington Capitals), Dan Hamhuis (Nashville Predators), and Chicago Blackhawks duo Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook.

Pittsburgh Penguins star Sidney Crosby highlights the list of forwards. The group of 25 has 11 from the 2006 Olympic team roster, including Shane Doan (Phoenix Coyotes), Simon Gagné (Philadelphia Flyers), Dany Heatley (Ottawa Senators), Jarome Iginla (Calgary Flames), Rick Nash (Columbusn Blue Jackets), Joe Sakic (Colorado Avalanche), Martin St-Louis (Tampa Bay Lightning), Eric Staal (Carolina Hurricanes), Joe Thornton (San Jose Sharks), Vincent Lecavalier (Tampa Bay Lightning) and Ryan Smyth (Colorado Avalanche). Youngsters getting a chance are: Jeff Carter (Philadelphia Flyers), Ryan Getzlaf (Anaheim Ducks), Milan Lucic (Boston Bruins), Patrick Marleau (San Jose Sharks), Andy McDonald (St. Louis Blues), Brenden Morrow (Dallas Stars), Corey Perry (Anaheim Ducks) Michael Richards (Philadelphia Flyers), Derek Roy (Buffalo Sabres), Patrick Sharp (Chicago Blackhawks), Jordan Staal (Thunder Bay, Ont./Pittsburgh, NHL) Jonathan Toews (Winnipeg, Man./Chicago, NHL) and Dan Cleary, who has impressed with the Detroit Red Wings. One youngster not included on the list is Tampa Bay's Steven Stamkos, who drew attention during his performance at the 2009 world championship.

"[Stamkos] was a guy we debated down to the last minute," said Yzerman, noting that the depth at the centre position made it tough to narrow the forward group. "He'll still be a player I watch this fall."   

Although three-time Olympian Sakic has been injured and missed much of the 2008-09 season, executive director Yzerman said he is a big part of this list.

"He's been such a great player and an example to the young guys," said Yzerman. "If he's playing at the time, I want him at the camp."

One name that few experts had on their projected rosters was Boston's Milan Lucic, who has impressed with his muscle of late.

"He has potential to really add a dimension to this team that could really be beneficial," said Yzerman. "He's not there just because he's a big, strong guy."

Players not invited to the orientation camp can still be considered for both the 2010 Olympic Winter Games and 2010 IIHF World Championship. Although the 2002 and 2006 Olympic teams were comprised entirely of players who had been invited to camp.

"I'm very impressed with this list, and I think anyone that's a fan of Canadian hockey should be impressed," said Olympic hockey analyst Pierre McGuire. "They haven't missed anyone at any of the positions, I think that's a very strong list."

Calgary was chosen as the city for the camp over Vancouver -- site of the 2010 Olympics -- because Calgary is where the women's team and the sledge hockey team will also be training in August, and Hockey Canada wanted the unique opportunity to have the three gathered in one city.

 

 

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Comments (15)

Burnszieee
Jul 10, 2009 | 1:15 AM ET

just a thought.... What about Paul Karyia? wasnt he on steve's line when we won gold? 946 career points i dont think hes that good? i think he should be the captain never mind being left off the list
anthony57
Jul 02, 2009 | 10:35 PM ET

lol truth,I bet when yashin pulled that stuff in Ottawa you had a different opinion,if he is playing at the start of the year,take him,if he does not show up for camp,drop him,they should have waited to add him till after trainning camp started,do your research it was not the new coach that caused Danny to miss out on 50 goals this year ,his average, 1 goal in 2.18 games under old coach,with new coach he averaged 1 goal every 2 games, so your wrong there,he did better under the new coach,maybe he was the reason Ottawa,s fall started in 2007 2008 season,cause he plays 1 way, he is a great player,but he has to realize he is 28 yrs old,he signed a contract, and got bonus money yesterday,why didn,t he tell the Sens hold the bonus and trade me,he went to the media first instead of going to Murray to request a trade,the media ran with it ,the fans got on him,and you say behind the scenes stuff ,ppl should know about,well a real man would have done it differentlykept his mouth shut and went to the GM,that way no one knows,if he gets traded fine,if not, then no 1 knew he wanted a trade, do you remember when a deal was with a handshake,well now its not even worth the ink used to sign it,they gave up a pretty good player to get him out of Atlanta, you must remember why he wanted to leave Atlanta,
Rmalt
Jul 02, 2009 | 10:10 PM ET

I heard Heatley might suit up for Team Germany, as he has duel citenzenship
pikey7883
Jul 02, 2009 | 10:06 PM ET

I like the list, I like the combination of veteran olympic guys with the combination of some new guys who have also had some success at the world junior level. Personally I would have like to see Marc Savard on this list, as well as Mike Camalleri. But escpecially Savard. Canada has potential to have great chemistry within it before even playing together, because of teamate and linemate combos and as well as from the experiences from the World Juniors and I really think they should build off of that.
Richard_The_Great_One
Jul 02, 2009 | 10:03 PM ET

The've chose Stamkos over the experience Spezza or Brad Richards? There goes my hope for gold. I'll take a dedicated Jason Spezza over a disgrunted BRAT (aka: Dany Heatley) any day.
sailorbri
Jul 02, 2009 | 8:06 PM ET

a note for " iamcanadian " . just because you chose to use this name it doesn't actually give you the right to be the voice of all of canada !!! when you say canada has lost trespect for this player , show me the poll ?
sailorbri
Jul 02, 2009 | 8:03 PM ET

it is so hard to pick a team canada . even with as many as 46 picks there will always be questions about a player who was left out . we could ice 2 teams easy and maybe even 3 and all would be competitive !. so if your favorite player is not picked for some reason , if things were changed your way then someone elses fav would be left out lol. yzerman had a hard job and i commend him for his choices . and as far as heatly is concerned , i dont really know what the truth is about him and nobody else commenting here does either . i agree with "truth "! i would not want to leave one of the top natural goal scorers in hockey off of the team just because of his contract difficulties !! and i am sure yzerman knows much more about what is gfoing on there than any of us do when he made his choice !
canadian182
Jul 02, 2009 | 7:28 PM ET

It makes me sick that Heatly's name is on this list , he didn't want to play in Ottawa, and he didn't want to play in Edmonton. Why should we want him to play for Canada ? I'd rather have a proud canadian with heart on the team then that cancer. Besides that I'm super excited to see this team on the ice
truth
Jul 02, 2009 | 7:05 PM ET

First off, Oilerswife...you should actually read the article. Ryan Smyth is not under the "youngsters getting a chance" category. Secondly, Messierforlife is exactly right....why not Savard. Lastly, all you guys that are bashing Heatley don't know jack about hockey. There is so much going on behind the scenes, maybe do some research instead of watching what the media pumps out...there job is to attract people, you're foolish enough to listen. Heatley is one of, if not the best natural goal scorer in the NHL right now. He's a 50 goal scorer, two consecutive years and had an off year becuase of a coach who chopped his ice time and a team that couldn't break out of their own end. Iamcanadian50...since when are you the voice of Canada? I haven't lost any respect for Heatley at all, he still is and always will be one of my favourite players in the NHL, and when he suits up for Canada you'll be cheering for him...so don't be a hypocrite. Everytime the red lamp lights from his stick i'll chuckle musing all you haters jumping up and down cheering for the guy you snubbed. Think before you speak, and don't be such a hypocrite! If you truly were a hockey fan you'd understand the politics that go along with it.
oilerwife
Jul 02, 2009 | 11:51 AM ET

MAJOR error with this article. Ryan Smyth is called "captain Canada" for a reason...he has played on Team Canada more than anyone else! He is 33 years old, and not only did he play on Team Canada at the '06 olympics, but he also won gold with the team in 2002. He should NOT be in the "youngsters getting a chance" category. It's laughable really.
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