Home Ice Hockey (NHL)Building an All-World Olympic Hockey Team – The Hockey Writers –

Building an All-World Olympic Hockey Team – The Hockey Writers –

by Marcelo Moreira

The 2026 Winter Olympics have finally arrived, and, for the first time since 2014, NHL players are allowed to participate in the men’s hockey tournament.

This year’s participants include:

  • Group A: Canada, Czechia, France, and Switzerland
  • Group B: Finland, Italy, Slovakia, and Sweden
  • Group C: Denmark, Germany, Latvia, and the United States

Not included are Russia and Belarus, who were banned from the 2026 Winter Games by the IIHF following the invasion of Ukraine.

A vast majority of NHL players come from the participating countries. There are plenty of others who do not, though. And that got me thinking – what would an All-World team look like? A 2026 spin on Team Europe from the 2016 World Cup of Hockey.

For the sake of this exercise, all players from the 2026 participating countries and Russia were excluded. Belarussian-born players were included since this is a conglomerate team, not Belarus specifically. 

Let’s take a look at what the rest of the world has to offer.

All-World Olympic Hockey Team Roster

LW C RW
Aleksei Protas Anze Kopitar Yegor Sharangovich
Mats Zuccarello Marco Rossi Patrick Thoresen
Nathan Walker Marco Kasper Michael Brandsegg-Nygard
Ilya Protas Vincenz Rohrer Daniel Sprong
Nikita Mikhailis Liam Kirk  
LD RD G
Emil Lilleberg Artyom Levshunov Aleksei Kolosov
Stian Solberg Jordan Spence Nikita Tolopilo
Ilya Solovyov David Reinbacher Andrei Shutov
Maksymilian Szuber Vladislav Kolyachonok  

Player Breakdown by Country

  • Austria (4): Marco Kasper, David Reinbacher, Vincenz Rohrer, and Marco Rossi
  • Australia (2): Jordan Spence and Nathan Walker
  • Belarus (8): Aleksei Kolosov, Vladislav Kolyachonok, Artyom Levshunov, Aleksei Protas, Ilya Protas, Yegor Sharangovich, Ilya Solovyov, and Nikita Tolopilo
  • Great Britain (1): Liam Kirk
  • Kazakhstan (2): Nikita Mikhailis and Andrei Shutov
  • Netherlands (1): Daniel Sprong
  • Norway (5): Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, Emil Lilleberg, Stian Solberg, Patrick Thoresen, and Mats Zuccarello
  • Poland (1): Maksymilian Szuber
  • Slovenia (1): Anze Kopitar

All-World Team Can Compete

This hypothetical All-World Olympic team is a reminder of how much high-end hockey talent exists across the globe. While I wouldn’t expect this team to medal at the 2026 Winter Games, they certainly have the talent and competitiveness to give most countries a run for their money.

Of course, Anze Kopitar is the centerpiece of this roster. The 38-year-old can still play, and would have no problem serving as the 1C. Along with Aleksei Protas and Yegor Sharangovich, the All-World team would have a top line that can play a heavy possession game while still generating offense.

Former teammates Mats Zuccarello and Marco Rossi give the second line creativity and pace, making for a solid top six. In addition, Marco Kasper, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, and Ilya Protas add to an already competitive roster as high-energy scorers.

On defense, David Reinbacher and Artyom Levshunov would likely take on the toughest matchups, combining length, poise, and puck-moving ability. Both have high upside and could break out on the world stage. Additionally, Emil Lilleberg and Stian Solberg add a physical edge, while Jordan Spence provides a mobile option for transition play and power-play usage. There’s enough balance here to roll three pairs without a clear weak link.

Goaltending is the biggest mystery, though. Aleksei Kolosov and Nikita Tolopilo are wild cards and neither has an especially impressive resume. Still, in a short tournament, a hot goalie behind a structured defensive group could steal a game or two.

Related: Guide to the 2026 Winter Olympics Men’s Hockey Tournament

Make no mistake, there’s minimal star power here. But this All-World team can compete – and that could be enough to win a couple games.

Final Cuts

Alex Kannok Leipert (Thailand), Ken Andre Olimb (Norway), Hiroto Sato (Japan), Josh Waller (Great Britain), and Dominic Zwerger (Austria).

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