With Olympics roster deadline looming, Team Canada coach Jon Cooper is planning ahead
With the roster deadline on Wednesday, Cooper spoke of "a little sentiment" regarding the 4 Nations and the difficult path to a gold medal.
TAMPA, Fla. — Jon Cooper said Sunday they’re pretty much there on Team Canada’s Olympic roster.
And I mean, they pretty much have to be with Wednesday’s Olympic roster deadline upon us.
“I’d say we’re crossing our T’s and dotting our I’s at this point,” Team Canada’s head coach said with his trademark smile Sunday afternoon before his Tampa Bay Lightning took on the visiting Montreal Canadiens.
These last few days have seen Cooper and Team Canada GM Doug Armstrong in constant communication as they finalize the 25-player roster for Milan ahead of Wednesday’s deadline. These have been the most painstaking conversations. That final forward debate. The eighth defenseman.
“Ultimately, I’m the coach and he’s the manager,” Cooper said. “You get down to the last player or two, somebody has to make the final decision. And you can sit here and say somebody has 49 percent of the vote and somebody’s got 51 percent (laughs). Usually it’s the manager that has 51.”
All kidding aside, everyone involved with Team Canada has been transparent in sharing that Cooper has lots of say in the roster process. He did for 4 Nations last year and has once again been very involved in the decision-making process for the Olympic team. Armstrong has said all along that he wants it that way because he wants his head coach to be comfortable with the players he has, and how and why they were chosen in specific roles. Team Canada’s GM didn’t see the logic in forcing players on the two-time Stanley Cup-winning coach.
There’s no question in my mind Cooper has had more sway in things than any previous head coach for the Canadian Olympic team when NHL players have been involved.
“I think that’s what has been great about it, because Army has given me a lot of autonomy and say in the entire process,” Cooper said. “And so I really appreciate that. And it helps you in the trenches, too, because you’re not looking at a whole slew of players that you’re not sure you want in the first place. That’s not what’s happening with Army and I and the rest of the managers.”
And so here they are, the final few days before Wednesday’s deadline for roster submission. The pressure is real. A hockey-crazed nation awaits the final, sure-to-be-controversial choices.
“To be honest, we went through this a year ago,” Cooper said of the 4 Nations roster selection process. “It’s just that I was doing it with Sweens (Don Sweeney, who was 4 Nations GM) more than I was with Army. But I’ve been through this. I think what makes it harder probably for me is that this time, I’ve coached a lot of the players, and where I hadn’t in the last tournament. So for me, there’s probably a little sentiment in there.
“But we primarily have the same group that’s picking the 4 Nations that’s picking this one. I have the utmost trust in everybody that’s involved. It’s just hard because there’s a lot of guys that are going to be left off that have some pretty impressive resumes.”