1. Price is his old self
Any lingering questions the Montreal Canadiens might have had about the health of their No. 1 goaltender were answered in the World Cup. He was back to his old dominant self, helping Team Canada to the championship.
Price finished the tournament with a 5-0-0 record, a .957 save percentage and 1.40 goals-against average. He allowed seven goals on 163 shots in his first action since Nov. 25, when he played his last game of the 2015-16 season with the Canadiens because of an MCL sprain.
None of this came as a surprise to Team Canada coach Mike Babcock, who also had Price in the 2014 Sochi Olympics, where he dominated by allowing three goals in five games to help Canada win its second straight Olympic gold medal.
Babcock, in fact, said the only thing that surprised him about Price was how he struggled in Team Canada's first pretournament game, a 4-2 loss to Team USA. Price allowed three goals on 24 shots in that game. He rediscovered his form in Team Canada's last pretournament game, a 3-2 win against Team Russia, and then rolled through the tournament with relative ease.
"He gives our group confidence and an aura of calm like no one I have been around," Babcock said.
2. Canada is just too dominant
Has Canada's dominance in these best-on-best tournaments reached the point where it's unfair to everyone else? It'd be hard to argue against that now.
Team Canada rolled through the World Cup, outscoring the opposition 24-8 in six games to win its third consecutive best-on-best tournament.
This makes it two Olympic gold medals and a World Cup championship in three tournaments under Babcock, whose teams have won 16 consecutive games. Crosby, Patrice Bergeron, Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Drew Doughty, Jonathan Toews and Shea Weber have played in all of them.
It's hard to see Canada's run of dominance stopping now wherever the next tournament takes place, be it the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics or a future World Cup. Canada's depth is too great and its future is bright, too. Team North America featured 13 Canadians on its roster, including Connor McDavid, who should be the next great Canadian hockey star, if he isn't already.
It's hard to see any country, be it the United States, Sweden or Russia, catching up to Canada's dominance in the near future.