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Posted: Friday December 26, 2008 2:07PM; Updated: Tuesday December 30, 2008 7:25AM
Allan Muir Allan Muir >
INSIDE THE NHL

The 2009 World Juniors preview

Story Highlights

Host Canada is shooting for its fifth straight gold with nine NHL first-rounders

The undersized Canadians will be challenged by bigger U.S. and Swedish squads

Seven U.S. players from the '08 WJC team form the tourney's most explosive unit

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van.riemsdyk.jpg
WJC veterans Jordan Schroeder, James van Riemsdyk and Colin Wilson (left to right) form Team USA's top line.
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The World Junior Championships in Ottawa are being hyped mainly for the host country's drive to win a fifth consecutive title. While it's never smart to rule out the Canadians, that's not likely to happen.

Sure, the Canucks boast nine NHL first-rounders, along with 2009 eligibles John Tavares and Ryan Ellis, and you can't underestimate the impact of the team's confidence. The Canadians see World Junior gold as their birthright, and they pursue it with grim determination.

But the home side has lost several important players to the NHL, forcing them to ice an undersized, smallish squad. That opens the door for the Swedes and the Americans, a pair of big, talented and more experienced teams to challenge for the gold. Of course, you never know how things will unfold at an event where hot goaltending and upsets have a way of surprising even the most dedicated observers.

Here's how I see the tournament shaking out -- and remember, you can watch all Canadian and American games in the U.S. on the NHL Network. (Click here for the WJC schedule.)

Sweden

The Swedes come to Ottawa looking to exact revenge after playing bridesmaid to the Canadians in last year's gold medal match. On paper, they're bringing a lineup with enough speed, experience and high-end skill to get the job done.

Florida pick Jacob Markstrom is primed to emerge as the tournament's standout performer. He'll need to live up to his billing as arguably the top junior-aged goaltender in the world to elevate Tre Kroner into contention. The defense will rely heavily on potential first-overall pick Victor Hedman and Ottawa Senators prospect Erik Karlsson, the top blueliner at the World U-18s. As a group, they're highly mobile and excellent in transition.

That quality amplifies the potential impact of a front line that includes Calgary Flames' first-rounder Mikael Backlund (seven points at the 2008 event), Mattias Tedenby (New Jersey) and Oscar Moller, who has looked solid as a rookie with the Kings. Scouts will be watching Magnus Svensson-Paajarvi, the 17-year-old winger whose speed and hockey sense make him a likely top-five pick this summer.

The one area of concern for the Swedes is depth, but if the top-end stars (especially Markstrom) live up to their billing, they have enough to win gold.

U.S.A.

While the Canadians routinely exceed expectations at the World Juniors, the Americans always seem to find a way to disappoint. Chemistry and coaching --two hallmarks of Canadian success -- routinely bedevil them.

Those areas remain concerns, but both might be mitigated by what appears to be the tournament's most skilled, physical and experienced roster. Seven players return from last year's team, including first liners James van Riemsdyk (Philadelphia), who led the tournament in scoring (5-6-11), Colin Wilson (Nashville) and 2009-eligible Jordan Schroeder. The trio should form the tourney's most explosive unit, and they'll be ably backed by skilled bangers Eric Tangradi (Anaheim), Aaron Palushaj (St. Louis) and Drayson Bowman (Carolina).

As deep as they are up front, their real strength will be on the blueline. Team captain Jonathan Blum (Nashville) of the Vancouver Giants will be one of four first-rounders in a mobile group that also includes Ryan McDonagh (Montreal), Ian Cole (St. Louis) and Kevin Shattenkirk (Colorado). With Detroit first- rounder Thomas McCollum in net, the Americans won't give the opposition much to work with. Count on them making it to the finals. The question is: do they have the heart and the leadership to finish the job?

Canada

A victim of its own development success, the host nation is familiar with the problem of losing top junior eligibles to NHL employment. This time though, the four-time defending champs might not be able to overcome the loss of potential tentpoles like Steve Stamkos, Drew Doughty and Luke Schenn.

Still, no country boasts the depth of the Canadians, and that quality -- along with the undeniable benefit of home ice -- means they'll contend. There's plenty of speed and pop up front, with potential first-overall pick Tavares, Edmonton prospect Jordan Eberle and Cody Hodgson, the Vancouver draftee who had nine points in three pre-tournament exhibitions, leading the offense. But there's little size up front -- Jamie Benn (Dallas) is the biggest forward at 6-1, 202 -- and coach Pat Quinn has yet to find chemistry on the wings for Tavares.

The blueline is mobile and has a couple of redwoods in Tyler Myers (Buffalo) and Colten Teubert (Los Angeles), but it lacks experience -- only Thomas Hickey (LA) and P.K. Subban (Montreal) return.

Neither goaltender, Chet Pickard (Nashville) nor Dustin Tokarski (Tampa Bay), has asserted himself as the No. 1 starter, but whoever picks up the torch for the medal round will need to deliver a career-defining performance for the Canadians to have any chance to repeat.

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