Unheralded Kazakhstan ready to battle for world juniors survival - Action News
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Unheralded Kazakhstan ready to battle for world juniors survival

It's taken a decade, but Kazakhstan is back at the world juniors.

Country returns to top-level competition a decade after being relegated to lower division

Kazakhstan goalie Andrei Yankov fends off Canadian shooter Jamie Benn during first period action at the 2008 world juniors in Ottawa, when the Central Asian country last played at the tournament. (Tom Hanson / The Canadian Press)

Few are expecting much from Team Kazakhstan when it hits the ice in Victoria on Thursday afternoon against a heavily favoured Finland squad.

Butthe unheralded team from Central Asiamay be more ready than first thought, having battled more than most teams to return to the world juniors main event after a decade away.

The two last-placed teams in each world juniors group play a best-of-three series, with the loser being relegated into a lower-profile competition that most recently featured non-traditional hockey countries like France, Italy and Japan.

Since its relegation a decade ago, the junior Kazakhstan team has fought its way back up through the ranks to earnits spot at this year's tournament.

Hockey is "very big" in Kazakhstan, according to former Canadian world juniors alum Dustin Boyd. The former Calgary Flames forward represents the country at the senior levelinternationally and is now in his seventh season with HCBarys Astana, the loneKazakhstan-based team in the Kontinental Hockey League.

"The fans are great," he says. "They support the sport so it's fun to play here."

Kazakhstans Dustin Boyd, right, celebrates scoring a goal with teammate Nigel Dawes during a world championship game against Sweden in Russia in 2016. (Pavel Golovkin / The Associated Press)

At this year's world juniors, having fun might be tricky in agroup with not only the powerhouse Finns, but also strong Swedish and American sides and a Slovakian team that's produced several NHL players overthe years.

Avoiding the relegation series won't be easy.Butthrough an official team translator, coachSergeyStaryginsays he expects his team to not only hold its place but to also possibly pull off an upset.

Hockey history

Kazakhstan hasn't had many victories in its relatively short hockey history.

Before it became an independent country, its best players, like defenceman Evgeny Paladyev who played in the 1972 Summit Series against Canada, were swallowed up by the Soviet Union's sporting machine.

Since then, the country has produced 19 NHL draft picks, five of whom went on to play in the league.

Former Toronto Maple Leaf Nik Antropov and former Detroit Red Wings Stanley Cup winner Maxim Kuznetsov, as well as Kazakh-born Russian international Evgeni Nabokov, are likely the country's most recently recognizablehockey names.

More recently, the country's senior national team has drawn from non-Kazakh born KHL players including Boyd, as well as fellow Canadian NHL alums Nigel Dawes and Brandon Bochenski.

"We thought it wouldbe a good opportunity," said Boyd. "We play with those guys all year around so why not try to help them?"

Team Kazakhstan's Nikolai Ivanov takes out Canadian defenceman Alex Pietrangelo at the world juniors in Ottawa in 2008. (Tom Hanson / The Canadian Press)

Cue the upset?

To survive, Kazakhstan will have to dig deep for a shock victory something the country's teams have done before.

At the 1998 world juniors, Team Kazkhstan stunned an apatheticCanadian team 6-3 in the seventh-place placement game. A few months later at the Nagano Olympics, the country's senior men's team upset a Slovkia side featuring the NHL's Peter Bondra and Lubomir Visnovsky to reach the quarter-finals.

Usually though, it's gone the other way including a 15-0 drubbing by Canada at the 2009 world juniors.

Forward Artur Gatiyatovhad seven points in five games at last year's Division I tournament and is this year's topgoalscorer for the team. On defence,Valery Orekhovhas already played two KHL seasons with BarysAstana, and will be among his country's most experienced players in Victoria.

"He's got great speed, and he likes to join the rush a lot," said Boyd of his club teammate. "He's a pretty good player so I'm looking forward to see how he does against top competition over there."

Boyd says while Kazakh teams embrace the underdog role, he's hopeful a day will come where they can play as favourites.

"They've got lots of hockey programs here for the young kids," he said. "It just takes some time for them to developa lot of young good players."