Pavel Bure
Tournaments:1989, 1990, 1991
Statistics: 21 games, 27-12-39
Bure's 12 goals at the 1991 WJC are tied with Vladimir Ruzicka of Czechoslovakia (1983) for the second-most in one tournament, behind Markus Naslund of Sweden (13, 1993). Bure tied Jeremy Roenick of the United States for the World Juniors lead with eight goals in 1989, was named the tournament's best forward and helped the Soviet Union win the championship. Bure is the all-time leader in goals at the World Juniors and is third in points. He also helped the Soviet Union finish second to Canada in 1990 and 1991. Bure played 12 NHL seasons with three teams.
Alexander Mogilny
Tournaments: 1987, 1988, 1989
Statistics: 20 games, 18-17-35
Mogilny was named the best forward at the 1988 WJC after he led the tournament in assists (10) and points (18), was second in goals (eight) and helped the Soviet Union finish second. He scored 12 points (seven goals, five assists) in seven games to help the Soviet Union win the 1989 WJC. Mogilny played 16 NHL seasons with four teams.
Alex Ovechkin
Tournaments: 2003, 2004, 2005
Statistics: 18 games, 18-7-25
Ovechkin is tied for the fourth-most goals in WJC history, including a tournament-high seven in 2005 when he was named the best forward and helped Russia finish second. He also led the WJC with six goals in 2003 when Russia finished first. The left wing will play for the Washington Capitals this season, his 16th in the NHL.
Second line
Evgeny Kuznetsov: 20 games (2010, 2011, 2012), 12-14-26; Evgeni Malkin:18 games (2004, 2005, 2006), 8-17-25; Vladimir Krutov: 11 games (1979, 1980), 15-10-25
All-time WJC starting lineups: [Finland | Sweden]