
Mark and Dale Hunter will lead Team Canada at 2026 world junior hockey championship
This coming December, they will attempt to repeat the feat in Minnesota.
On Tuesday, Hockey Canada announced that Mark Hunter will be back as Canada's general manager and Dale Hunter will return as head coach for the next world junior tournament.
Canada is coming off consecutive quarter-final losses in 2025 and 2024 in Ottawa and Gothenburg, Sweden, respectively.
Dale admits that an opportunity like this feels special every time you are asked.
'As a player or as a coach, every time you get a chance to represent Team Canada is awesome. It's a challenge and it's fun and it's going to be a battle because all of the teams are good and we will have to be ready.'
Story continues below advertisement
Team Canada's first order of business will be the World Junior Summer Showcase, which will bring together Canada, Sweden, Finland and the host Americans, who have won world junior gold two years in a row.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
Team Canada and Team USA will have two squads at the event, making for six teams in total.
It will run from July 25 to Aug. 2 at Ridder Arena on the campus of the University of Minnesota.
Knights defenceman Henry Brzustewicz will be a part of Team USA at the showcase.
That week can help to establish a foundation for the team that will take to the ice when the big event begins in Minnesota on Dec. 26.
'It's a puzzle,' Dale Hunter says. 'You need to have the right combination of players and styles of games. We like a good, skilled team so we will aim to develop that and remember some of your best players are always playing in the National Hockey League and won't be able to help you so you have to plan for that.'
In 2020, Canada's toughest opponent was Russia. A 6-1 loss to Russia in the round-robin led to a fair bit of pressure heading into a tournament rematch with the gold medal on the line.
When Russia scored to make it 3-1 at the 8:46 mark of the third period, a repeat looked likely, but goals by former London Knight and current Washington Capital Connor McMichael and by Barrett Hayton, who now plays for the Utah Mammoth, knotted things up 3-3.
Story continues below advertisement
That's when Dale Hunter's gut instinct took over behind the bench.
'I was kind of scrambling around for lines right then and trying to see who was going the best and just by knowing Akil (Thomas) and all of the big goals he had scored against (the Knights) … he has a knack for the net and I played a hunch and put him out there and he ended up getting a breakaway and scoring the winning goal.'
Canada will be in Group B in 2026 and will face Finland, Czechia, Latvia and Denmark in round-robin games.
Group A will comprise two-time defending champion Team USA, Sweden, Slovakia, Switzerland and Germany.
Games will be played at the Xcel Energy Center, which is the home of the Minnesota Wild, and also on the campus of the University of Minnesota.
Canada leads all other countries with 20 gold medals dating back to 1977.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
7 hours ago
- Global News
Judge to deliver verdicts in high-profile world junior sex assault trial
Five members of Canada's 2018 world junior hockey team accused of sexual assault will learn their fates in their high-profile trial Thursday. Superior Court Justice Maria Carroccia will deliver her verdicts inside a London, Ont., courtroom in the case of Michael McLeod, Alex Formenton, Carter Hart, Dillon Dube and Callan Foote. The five men have been on trial since late April – accused of engaging in non-consensual group sex with a then-20-year-old woman in June 2018. All five men pleaded not guilty to sexual assault; McLeod also pleaded not guilty to an additional charge of being a party to the offence of sexual assault. It initially started as a jury trial, but just a few days in, a mistrial was declared out of concern about a tainted jury after a juror accused Hillary Dudding, one of Formenton's lawyers, of initiating conversation while in line for lunch. Story continues below advertisement Dudding denied this and said any contact with the juror was inadvertent. 2:16 Hockey Canada sexual assault trial nears verdict The trial resumed the following week with a new jury. They would go on to watch videos of the complainant, known as E.M., taken by McLeod, hear from then-teammate Taylor Raddysh about a group-chat screenshot he took capturing talk of a '3 way' sent by McLeod, and hear from E.M. herself. The now-27-year-old woman, whose identity is protected under a standard publication ban, was subject to intense cross-examination during her nine days on the stand. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Court heard the team was in London for events marking its gold-medal performance at that year's championship, and that the complainant was out with friends when they met at a downtown bar on June 18, 2018. Story continues below advertisement After being with McLeod and his teammates at the bar, E.M. would go on to have consensual sex with McLeod in his room in the early morning hours of June 19. Court has heard that E.M., who testified she was drunk and not of clear mind, was in the washroom after she had sex with McLeod and came out to a group of men in the room allegedly invited by McLeod in the group chat. It was then that the Crown alleges several sexual acts took place without E.M.'s consent. 2:28 World junior defence wraps closing submissions, Crown begins final pitch Defence lawyers have suggested E.M. wasn't as drunk as she has testified she was, wanted a 'wild night' with the players and was 'egging' them on to have sex with her, and accused her of having a 'clear agenda' at the trial. E.M. pushed back against those claims and at points outright rejected them, saying she was coaxed into staying in the room and was disrespected and taken advantage of by the group, who she said 'could see I was out of my mind.' Story continues below advertisement After E.M. finished her testimony, then-teammate Tyler Steenbergen took the stand as a Crown witness, but his testimony was halted just two days in. Court received a note from a juror stating they believed Formenton's lawyers, Dudding and Dan Brown, would 'turn to each other and laugh as if they are discussing our appearance' when the jury was entering the room. 0:33 What's the biggest takeaway from the world junior hockey trial? Carroccia said she was concerned this could impact some jurors' ability to fairly decide the case and that it could have a chilling effect on the defence lawyers. Brown and Dudding called the juror's note an 'unfortunate misinterpretation' and said 'the very idea of counsel making light of a juror is illogical and runs directly counter to our purpose and function.' Carroccia went on to dismiss that jury, and the trial would go on by judge alone. Story continues below advertisement Only Hart would testify at the trial, while the other players' lawyers cited evidence and police interviews that had already been played in court as part of the reasons why their clients were reserving their right not to testify. Hart testified in part that E.M. was asking the players to have sex with her, and he chose to ask for oral sex because he did not want to have intercourse. He said it was 'consensual' and brief because it was 'weird.' Hart would agree with Crown prosecutor Meaghan Cunningham under cross-examination that he was 'putting a lot of faith in your friend, Mr. McLeod, to set something up that was morally acceptable to you.' During closing submissions, defence lawyers called the trial 'historic' and repeatedly attacked E.M.'s credibility, saying she 'created a lie' out of regret and embarrassment, and that throughout the night, her 'communication of consent is overwhelming.' Meanwhile, the Crown urged the judge to convict the men, with prosecutor Meaghan Cunningham arguing the men were 'reckless' for engaging in group sex with E.M. and not seeking her affirmative consent. Cunningham said E.M. is a credible witness because she was abundantly fair in the trial, clear and concise, not resentful and confirmatory. She argued that many defence submissions on E.M.'s behaviour are based on assumptions about how someone in her situation would act.


Global News
11 hours ago
- Global News
Old school baseball carries Blue Jays past Yankees
TORONTO – The Toronto Blue Jays made a strong case for old school baseball in their series win over the long-ball loving New York Yankees. Bo Bichette's two-run homer capped off a wild victory as Toronto held on for an 8-4 win over the visiting Yankees on Wednesday. The Blue Jays' other six runs came from smart baserunning, heads-up plays, and forcing New York into a handful of errors. 'Geez, we can score runs in so many different ways,' said Ernie Clement, who went 2 for 4 at the plate, including a triple, scoring a run and driving in another. 'Pitching has been a common theme for the last few years. Those guys just give us a chance to win every single night. 'Now we're rounding it out, we've got a little offence to go along with it. I think we really have a team identity. Whether that's old school baseball or just playing the game the right way, I don't know.' Story continues below advertisement Toronto benefited from New York's four errors and other fielding miscues, eking out runs on walks, dropped balls, wild pitches, and overthrows. Bichette's two-run blast — his 13th home run of the year — was the Blue Jays' cleanest score of the game as Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had led off the inning with a double. Clement believes that Toronto's hard-nosed approach put pressure on the Yankees' fielders to play defence faster, leading to their handful of mistakes. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'They know we play the game hard,' said Clement. 'There's no doubt that they pick their heads up (after fielding the ball) and we're halfway to first base, head down, running hard. 'As a fielder, that puts all the pressure in the world on you. You've got to be clean. If you bobble the ball at all, I mean, we're safe.' Story continues below advertisement The Blue Jays and Yankees have played seven games at Rogers Centre in the past two weeks, with Toronto going 6-1 to take a four-game lead in the American League East, lock up the season series and therefore the tiebreaker should the two teams end the year with identical records. 'In these two series, we've given them too many outs and it's cost us,' said New York manager Aaron Boone. 'You can't give good teams extra outs. 'And, again, that's what we've done in these two series.' Chris Bassitt (11-4) was solid for 7 1/3 innings, striking out eight and allowing four runs — three earned — on three hits and no walks. Blue Jays relievers Justin Bruihl and Yariel Rodriguez preserved the win. 'Every single day, they're working their absolute butts off, and then they go out there and they're giving effort,' said Bassitt of Toronto's positions players. 'Extremely old school, I would say. 'If you know me, I'm a fan of old school. I love this team.' By contrast, New York lives and dies by the long ball. All four of the Yankees runs came from homers on Wednesday. New York entered the game with a Major League Baseball-best 162 home runs, five more than the Los Angeles Dodgers. Shohei Ohtani had L.A.'s one homer in its 4-3 win over the Minnesota Twins earlier Wednesday. Story continues below advertisement The Blue Jays travel to Detroit for a four-game series starting Thursday. The Central-leading Tigers play a more scrappy style of baseball similar to Toronto and it shows in their record. The Blue Jays (60-42) are tied with the West-leading Houston Astros for the best record in the American League, with Detroit a half-game behind them. 'We're going to play a team that does the exact same thing in Detroit, so you have to be ready for it,' said Toronto manager John Schneider. 'This game is hard, you know what I mean? This game is hard. 'I think that every team is built a little bit differently, so we really pride ourselves on taking care of the baseball.' Eric Lauer (5-2) will take the mound for the Blue Jays in Detroit. Reese Olson (4-3) gets the start for the Tigers (60-43). This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 23, 2025.


Global News
13 hours ago
- Global News
Bichette's two-run shot caps wild Blue Jays' win
TORONTO – Bo Bichette's two-run homer capped off a wild vicotry as the Toronto Blue Jays held off the New York Yankees 8-4 on Wednesday. The victory tied the Blue Jays with the Houston Astros for the best record in the American League. Myles Straw's double drove in Ernie Clement for the go-ahead run in the sixth inning as Toronto (60-42) won the best-of-three series and locked up the tiebreaker between the two AL East rivals. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had an RBI double in the fourth, then drove in two more runs in the fifth on a fielder's choice, as the Blue Jays and Yankees traded leads. Clement's basehit in the fourth also scored a runner and pinch-hitter Will Wagner plated Straw in the sixth. Chris Bassitt (11-4) was solid for 7 1/3 innings, striking out eight and allowing four runs — three earned — on three hits and no walks. Relievers Justin Bruihl and Yariel Rodriguez preserved the win. Story continues below advertisement Aaron Judge's two-run homer in the sixth tied the game 4-4 for New York (56-46), but that lead disappeared in the bottom of the inning thanks to Straw and Wagner's RBIs. Jasson Dominguez had a home run in the second and Anthony Volpe added a solo shot in the fifth. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Ace Max Fried (11-4) struggled, giving up five runs — four earned — on six hits and three walks, striking out three over 5 1/3 innings. Jonathan Loaisiga, Scott Effross and JT Brubaker all came out of the visitor's bullpen, with Effross giving up two runs. Takeaways Yankees: The long ball remains the key to success for New York, with all four of its runs coming from homers. The Yankees entered the game with a Major League Baseball-best 162 home runs, five more than the Los Angeles Dodgers. Shohei Ohtani had L.A.'s one homer in its 4-3 win over the Minnesota Twins earlier Wednesday. Story continues below advertisement Blue Jays: Toronto benefited greatly from New York's four errors and other fielding miscues, eking out runs on walks, dropped balls, wild pitches, and overthrows. Bichette's two-run blast — his 13th home run of the year — was the Blue Jays' cleanest score of the game as Guerrero had led off the inning with a double. Key moment Davis Schneider was caught stealing by Yankees catcher J.C. Escarra with one out in the fifth inning. A video replay overturned the call on the field, however. George Springer drew a walk in the next at bat and Guerrero drove them both home when Escarra dropped the ball trying to tag Schneider at the plate. Key stat The Blue Jays expanded their lead in the AL East to four games over New York with the victory. Toronto and the Yankees will play three more times this year but the Blue Jays now have the tiebreaker should they wind up with identical records by the end of the regular season. Up next Eric Lauer (5-2) will take the mound as the Blue Jays begin a four-game series in Detroit. Reese Olson (4-3) gets the start for the AL Central-leading Tigers (60-43). This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 23, 2025. Story continues below advertisement