Sports

Canada names 2026 Olympics men’s hockey roster: Who’s going to Milan?

Canada will be a favorite at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics after winning the 4 Nations Face-Off in February.

The country also won gold at the last two Olympics that featured NHL players (2010 in Vancouver and 2014 in Sochi).

Canada already named Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby (who scored the golden goal in 2010), Edmonton’s Connor McDavid, Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar, Tampa Bay’s Brayden Point and Florida’s Sam Reinhart.

The rest of the team was unveiled on Wednesday, Dec. 31. San Jose Sharks youngster Macklin Celebrini was named, but Connor Bedard didn’t make the list.

Here are the Canadian players who will be going to the 2026 Winter Olympics:

Canada’s first six named

F Sidney Crosby, Penguins

F Connor McDavid, Oilers

F Nathan MacKinnon, Avalanche

F Brayden Point, Lightning

F Sam Reinhart, Panthers

D Cale Makar, Avalanche

Canada’s remaining forwards

Macklin Celebrini, Sharks

Anthony Cirelli, Lightning

Brandon Hagel, Lightning

Bo Horvat, Islanders

Brad Marchand, Panthers

Mitch Marner, Golden Knights

Mark Stone, Golden Knights

Nick Suzuki, Canadiens

Tom Wilson, Capitals

Canada’s remaining defensemen

Drew Doughty, Kings

Thomas Harley, Stars

Josh Morrissey, Jets

Colton Parayko, Blues

Travis Sanheim, Flyers

Shea Theodore, Golden Knights

Devon Toews, Avalanche

Canada’s goaltenders

Jordan Binnington, Blues

Darcy Kuemper, Kings

Logan Thompson, Capitals

Canada Olympic hockey roster analysis

Lots of offense on this team. McDavid, MacKinnon and Celebrini are the top three scorers in the NHL, and Marchand, Reinhart, Crosby and Horvat join them as 20-goal scorers. Suzuki is a top playmaker.

There’s grit, too, with Marchand and Wilson. Their inclusion left playoff MVP Sam Bennett off the roster. Two-way players Cirelli and Hagel are back from the 4 Nations Face-Off. Lightning/Canada coach Jon Cooper can testify to their importance.

The defense is solid. It’s the same one as at the 4 Nations, led by the gifted Makar. Harley played a big role at the 4 Nations after arriving as an injury replacement.

The question is the goaltending. That was a question heading into the 4 Nations, too, though Binnington shined there. He’s struggling big time this season, but his body of work (also a 2019 Stanley Cup) won out. Thompson has been strong this season and could do well in net if Binnington doesn’t rebound behind a stronger defense.

Team Canada biggest snubs

Canada’s pool is so deep that it’s not really snubs, just hard choices. And GM Doug Armstrong said players could be considered as injury replacements.

Bedard, the 2023 No. 1 overall, was having a breakout season and Armstrong said he was considered until the end. Bedard’s injury didn’t play a role, he said.

Winnipeg forward Mark Scheifele didn’t make the cut for the second year in a row.

Defenseman Matthew Schaefer was generating buzz at 18, but didn’t make the team. He’ll be there in future tournaments.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY