Jeremy Roenick
Tournaments: 1988, 1989
Statistics: 14 games, 13-12-25
Roenick was the first U.S. player to lead the tournament in scoring when he had 16 points (eight goals, eight assists) in seven games in 1989, and was the second U.S. forward to make the tournament all-star team (Scott Young, 1987). He also led the United States with nine points (five goals, four assists) in seven games at the 1988 WJC. Roenick's 13 goals are the most ever by a U.S. player at the World Juniors, and his 25 points are second (Jordan Schroeder, 27). The center played 20 NHL seasons with five teams.
Zach Parise
Tournaments: 2003, 2004
Statistics: 13 games, 9-10-19
Parise tied Nigel Dawes and Anthony Stewart of Canada for the 2004 WJC lead with 11 points (five goals, six assists) in seven games and was named the tournament's MVP and best forward after helping the United States win its first championship. He also scored eight points (four goals, four assists) in seven games at the 2003 WJC. The left wing will play for the Minnesota Wild this season, his 16th in the NHL.
All-time WJC starting lineups: [Canada | Czech Republic | Finland | Russia | Sweden]
Doug Weight
Tournament: 1991
Statistics: Seven games, 5-14-19
Weight's 19 points led the 1991 WJC, set a U.S. single-tournament record and are tied for the seventh-most by any player. His 14 assists are tied with Esa Keskinen of Finland for second-most in one tournament, behind Peter Forsberg of Sweden (24, 1993). The center played 19 NHL seasons with six teams.
Second line
Jordan Schroeder: 19 games (2008, 2009, 2010), 7-20-27; Derek Stepan: 7 games (2010), 4-10-14; Mike Modano: 14 games (1988, 1989), 10-10-20