Hockey Canada Narrows Player List for 2015 World Under-17 Hockey Challange
Friday October 9, 2015
CALGARY, Alta. – Dreams will come true for the 66 young men who’ve been selected to represent Canada in their first international competition when they take to the ice at the 2015 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge, Oct. 30 to Nov. 7 in Dawson Creek and Fort St. John, B.C.
Hockey Canada and the Canadian Hockey League released the full event roster on Friday; over the next few weeks, the Canadians will be named to one of three squads – Canada Black, Canada Red, and Canada White. Prior to 2014, Canada was represented by five regional teams: Atlantic, Ontario, Pacific, Quebec, and West.
The 66 players include 59 currently playing in the CHL with 24 from the Ontario Hockey League, 20 from the Western Hockey League, and 15 from the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.
CHL Players:
Goaltenders:
Michael DiPietro (Windsor Spitfires)
Kyle Jessiman (Cape Breton Screaming Eagles)
Ian Scott (Prince Albert Raiders)
Matthew Welsh (Charlottetown Islanders)
Defencemen:
Yan Aucoin (Baie-Comeau Drakkar)
Evan Bouchard (London Knights)
Jakob Brahaney (Kingston Frontenacs)
Josh Brook (Moose Jaw Warriors)
Jocktan Chainey (Shawinigan Cataractes)
Antoine Crête-Belzile (Blainville-Boisbriand Armada)
Hayden Davis (Niagara IceDogs)
Walter Flower (Halifax Mooseheads)
Jérémy Groleau (Chicoutimi Sagueneens)
Nolan Kneen (Kamloops Blazers)
Brady Lyle (North Bay Battalion)
Max Martin (Prince George Cougars)
Jacob Paquette (Kingston Frontenacs)
Markus Phillips (Owen Sound Attack)
Jonathan Smart (Kelowna Rockets)
Scott Walford (Victoria Royals)
Nick Watson (Lethbridge Hurricanes)
Reilly Webb (Hamilton Bulldogs)
Forwards:
Jaret Anderson-Dolan (Spokane Chiefs)
Jordan Bellerive (Lethbridge Hurricanes)
Shawn Boudrias (Charlottetown Islanders)
Maxime Comtois (Victoriaville Tigres)
Louis-Philip Côté (Rouyn-Noranda Huskies)
Brett Davis (Lethbridge Hurricanes)
MacKenzie Entwistle (Hamilton Bulldogs)
Zach Gallant (Peterborough Petes)
Brady Gilmour (Saginaw Spirit)
Cody Glass (Portland Winterhawks)
James Hamblin (Medicine Hat Tigers)
Dawson Holt (Vancouver Giants)
Peyton Hoyt (Cape Breton Screaming Eagles)
Ben Jones (Niagara IceDogs)
Austen Keating (Ottawa 67’s)
Jake Leschyshyn (Regina Pats)
David Levin (Sudbury Wolves)
Stelio Mattheos (Brandon Wheat Kings)
Ryan McLeod (Mississauga Steelheads)
Antoine Morand (Acadie-Bathurst Titan)
Brett Neumann (Erie Otters)
Kyle Olson (Tri-City Americans)
Hayden Ostir (Spokane Chiefs)
Josh Paterson (Saskatoon Blades)
Michael Rasmussen (Tri-City Americans)
Isaac Ratcliffe (Guelph Storm)
Brendan Semchuk (Vancouver Giants)
Matthew Strome (Hamilton Bulldogs)
Matthew Struthers (Owen Sound Attack)
Jack Studnicka (Oshawa Generals)
Nick Suzuki (Owen Sound Attack)
Joël Teasdale (Blainville-Boisbriand Armada)
Robert Thomas (London Knights)
Owen Tippett (Mississauga Steelheads)
Joseph Veleno (Saint John Sea Dogs)
Gabe Vilardi (Windsor Spitfires)
Alex-Oliver Voyer (Rimouski Oceanic)
“We have had a chance to get a look at these players through this summer’s development camp, and as they started their season”, said Ryan Jankowski, Hockey Canada’s director of player personnel. “We have assembled a strong group for the World Under-17 Hockey Challenge.”
The 66 players were selected by Jankowski, together with Joël Bouchard, a member of Hockey Canada’s Program of Excellence management group, and regional scouts Carl Bouchard (Quebec), Barclay Branch (Ontario), Wade Klippenstein (West), Kevin Mitchell (Atlantic) and Darrell Woodley (Ontario). These same gentlemen are charged with making up the three Team Canada rosters, which will be announced the week prior to the tournament’s start.
“It’s an exciting step for these players to represent their country for the first time, and we have a very talented group who will certainly give the fans in Dawson Creek and Fort St. John a lot to cheer about,” said Shawn Bullock, senior manager of hockey operations and men’s national teams for Hockey Canada. “We’re happy with the depth we’re seeing with the under-17 group; it bodes well for the future of our program as these players look to progress through our system to the under-18 and junior programs.”
The 2015 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge brings together the top players in the world born in 1999 or later. The three Canadian teams will be joined by the Czech Republic, Finland, Russia, Sweden, and the United States, forming two groups of four teams. All eight teams will qualify for the quarter-finals, with the winners advancing to the semifinals, and losers facing off in placement games. The full schedule can be found here.
The 22-game tournament will officially kick off Nov. 1 at the Encana Events Centre in Dawson Creek with Canada Black taking on Canada White, while Canada Red opens its tournament against Finland at the North Peace Arena in Fort St. John. Both cities will also host two pre-tournament games on Oct. 30.
Full-tournament ticket packages are still available, as well as new, $80 evening-only packages which include six games. In addition, A ‘Family 4-Pack’(pre-tournament and preliminary round)is also available, starting at $25 for four tickets.
Limited quantities are still available of all ticket packages. Single-game ticket information will be announced closer to the start of the tournament. For more information on tickets, including how to purchase, CLICK HERE.
The gold medal game is Saturday, Nov. 7 in Dawson Creek at 9:30 p.m. ET/6:30 p.m. PT, and will be shown on TSN and RDS, Hockey Canada’s official broadcasters, along with the bronze-medal game and the semifinal played in Dawson Creek. All other tournament games, including 12 preliminary-round games, four quarter-finals, two placement games and the semifinal played in Fort St. John, will be available live through FASTHockey webcasts at www.hockeycanada.ca/wu17.
Since the first World Under-17 Hockey Challenge (then known as the Quebec Esso Cup) in 1986, more than 1,500 NHL draft picks have played in the tournament, including 12 of the last 15 first-overall selections (Ilya Kovalchuk, 2001; Rick Nash, 2002; Marc-André Fleury, 2003; Alexander Ovechkin, 2004; Erik Johnson, 2006; Patrick Kane, 2007; John Tavares, 2009; Taylor Hall, 2010; Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 2011; Nathan MacKinnon, 2013; Aaron Ekblad, 2014; Connor McDavid, 2015).
For more information on the 2015 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge, visit www.hockeycanada.ca/wu17 or follow along via social media at www.facebook.com/worldu17 or www.twitter.com/hc_wu17.