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More awards for Canucks' Gaudette, DiPietro, players on European vacations

May 23, 2018, 3:04 AM ET [530 Comments]
Carol Schram
Vancouver Canucks Blogger • RSSArchiveCONTACT
I have a few minutes before I'll need to board for my flight home and re-enter the real world, so I'll check in quickly with the latest odds and ends from Canuck-ville.

Stepping away from World Championships for a moment, let's start with yet another end-of-season award for Adam Gaudette:




Also of note: 2019 draft prospect Jack Hughes won the junior player of the year.

Canucks' prospect Michael DiPietro also added another honour while he was across the pond with Team Canada:




Sounds like the World Championship was a great learning experience for him:







I noticed that some of the guys have stayed in Europe. Smart!

Pierre-Luc Dubois headed straight for Ibiza:

🚤

A post shared by Pierre-Luc Dubois (@duber18) on



Connor went to Amsterdam:

Enjoying Amsterdam! What a cool city. Where should we head next? #Eurotrip

A post shared by Connor Mcdavid (@mcdavid97) on



And not to be left out even though he wasn't on Team Canada, Troy Stecher has landed in London:




I wonder if he made it to the Royal Wedding?

Of course, the biggest and best celebration happened on Monday in Stockholm:



What a rush for Anders Nilsson and Elias Pettersson!

Tack för allt Sverige🇸🇪🏆💙💛

A post shared by Elias Pettersson (@_eliaspettersson) on



Here's more on Pettersson:




And more on Nilsson...




One other note from the tournament: Sunday's IIHF Hall of Fame induction ceremony is becoming one of my favourite events. It's pretty small, and there is opportunity to do interviews with the inductees, who are relaxed and in great moods.

Last year, I got to chat with Joe Sakic and Teemu Selanne. This year, I quizzed Daniel Alfredsson on what he has been up to since leaving the Ottawa Senators' front office last year and had a wide-ranging conversation with Rob Blake about Hockey Canada, the Olympics and building a team—which led us to a discussion of those wacky Vegas Golden Knights.

Here's my story:




After a day to decompress, I had a major tourist day on Tuesday. First, I took the half-hour train raide over to Malmo — my first time in Sweden. It's so beautiful!



Then, it was back to central Copenhagen, where I sought out The Little Mermaid:




For a 'non-hockey nation,' Denmark did an amazing job as organizers and hosts. The original target was 300,000 tickets across the two venues. They ended up with 520,481 tickets sold, making this this seventh-best attended event in World Championship history. Especially phenomenal, when you consider that Herning was the smallest host city in World Championship history.

If you get a chance, come! Baseline costs aren't cheap, but there are plenty of ways to economize. There's lots to see and do and it's not overrun with tourists like you see in other big European centres like Paris or Italy.

A huge thumbs-up for my first visit to Scandinavia!

...and with that, the screen says it's time to me to go 'to gate,' so I had better sign off. Once I get back on the ground in Vancouver, I'll start digging into the draft and the Canucks' free-agent options for the 2018 offseason.
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