Days after the Canadians left the qualifiers, and according to what Nick Suzuki made a great decision regarding the playing of Canada in the world championship

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Nick Suzuki and Montreal Kindins It was eliminated in the first round of the 2024-25 NHL qualifiers before Washington capitals In five games. Montreal closed the normal season with 40-31-11 and got the final wild card point in the east, with a punch in the qualifiers.

After they went out in an early match, Captain Suzuki received an invitation to play with Team Canada in the upcoming World IIHF World Championship.

Suzuki received an invitation to join the Canada team alongside his teammate Mike Mattison and big names such as Sydney Crossby, Nathan McKinnon and Mark Andre Fliuri. Early expectations were that it would accept and suit Canada to push it to gold.

However, on Thursday evening, Mark Antoine Godin from the inside, Haki, stated that Suzuki would not join the Canada team. According to the report:

“Nick Suzuki is still injured in nursing and will not join the Canada team in the world championship,” Godin said.

During his post -season’s exit interview, Nick Suzuki revealed dealing with unannounced injuries and will need a medical permit before joining the Canada team.

“The team was only evacuated, I was somewhat fired in the qualifiers and in the qualifiers. We will see what will happen,” Suzuki said about playing with the Canada team last month.

Although Canada revealed a list of 21 men with four open spots, Suzuki will not fill one of those vacancies.


Nick Suzuki wants to play in the best championship in more than the 2026 Winter Olympic Games

Nick Suzuki He put his attention to the representation of Canada in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Carkina. The attacker believes that playing in the best Olympic championship will achieve a childhood dream.

Suzuki said about this opportunity: “What is the size that is waving on the horizon? It is very large.” “I have been a dream for me since I was a child to play in the Olympic Games. So, I will try to do everything I can.”

While his participation in the 2026 World Championships is unconfirmed, Suzuki believes that his strong game this season showed that the Canadian GM team, Motors Doug Armstrong, is ready for the Olympic lights.

“I have shown what I can do as a player, and moved a kind of my game to a different level that descends in the qualifiers. If I have a good start next year, I feel that I can put my name in the hat,” Suzuki said.

Suzuki was 59 passes and 89 points in 82 regular games. In the qualifiers, he added two goals in five games.