Coming off the holiday break, most players were back in action this week. Although Belleville continued to struggle with back-to-back six goal losses over the weekend, the hope of things to come from Drake Batherson and Alex Formenton provided a ton of excitement.

Stats Sheet

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Last week, Colin provided an update on the annual World Juniors tournament after the preliminary round. Finland’s Markus Nurmi led all Sens prospects with three points in four games, followed by the Canadian duo of Batherson/Formenton with two, and Logan Brown with one.

First, on Brown — he clearly worked hard to try and return for Team USA, and played limited minutes in their semi-final matchup against Sweden, but was unable to play in their bronze medal contest against the Czech Republic. It’s a minor knee injury for Brown; he’s likely to return in 1-2 weeks.

Next, Markus Nurmi’s tournament ended in the quarterfinals as Finland was upset by the Czech Republic. Nurmi was held pointless, but his three points in five games are more than most observers projected going in, seeing as he was playing a primarily defensive, bottom-six role with PK duty.

Onto the standouts: the gold medal winning duo of Drake Batherson and Alex Formenton. Batherson is the cream of the crop — he ended up scoring 5 goals in his remaining three games (all elimination contests) and was named one of Canada’s top-three players on the team (as selected by his coaching staff) over other, highly touted prospects. His stick from those three elimination contests is now off to the Hockey Hall of Fame, as Jordan Kyrou actually borrowed it for one of his goals in Canada’s quarterfinal against Switzerland.

He was responsible for two big moments. One: his hat-trick against the Czech Republic in the semi-finals.

Two: with the Gold medal game tied in the final two minutes, Batherson goes in hard on the forecheck, collects the puck, and sweeps it over to Conor Timmins. Timmins’ pass finds Tyler Steenbergen for the golden goal.

LOVE THE DRAKE. What a job by @drrakebatherson to win that battle as makes it 2-1! Oh baby. #WorldJuniors #Batherson #nsproud pic.twitter.com/YrOA7ux5IQ — Hockey Nova Scotia (@HockeyNS) January 6, 2018

Batherson’s seven goals was the third-most in the tournament after Kieffer Bellows (NYI) and Filip Zadina (2018), and he finished second on Team Canada in shots. He ended up as an offensive leader when he was pegged to be a depth player.

Formenton also wanted a piece of the “big game” pie, and sealed the gold medal for Canada with an empty-net marker. Out to shut down the game after Batherson’s heroics, Formenton used his speed and defensive awareness to win a battle, collect the puck, and deposit it into the empty net.

He finished the tournament with four points in seven games, and was a trusted defensive anchor for Canada.

Silver Linings