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Phil Kessel's omission from Team USA makes zero sense

Richard Lautens / Toronto Star / Getty

Dean Lombardi and company at Team USA headquarters overthought this one.

Phil Kessel was a surprising omission from the United States' World Cup of Hockey team when the full squad was announced Friday, and the decision is no less curious 48 hours later. In fact, it's only becoming more difficult to justify, especially when you look at the numbers.

While Kessel saw a drop in production in his first season with the Pittsburgh Penguins, he still managed to score 25 goals, a number most forwards would kill for. More importantly, he's lighting it up in the playoffs. He has nine goals and nine assists in 18 games as the Penguins prepare to play for the Stanley Cup. He now has 22 goals in 40 career playoff games, all the more impressive considering the Toronto Maple Leafs wasted his prime. He rises to the occasion when the competition is the stiffest, which will be the case in the fall at the World Cup.

It's as simple as this: Only one American-born player has more points than Kessel since 2010, and only one American-born player has scored more goals than Kessel since 2010.

Goals since 2010

Rank Player Goals GP
1 Joe Pavelski 183 450
2 Kessel 177 458
3 Patrick Kane 175 414
4 Max Pacioretty 168 395
5 Bobby Ryan 139 439
6 Zach Parise 139 354
7 David Backes 135 445
8 Blake Wheeler 134 452
9 Ryan Kesler 133 413
10 James van Riemsdyk 121 368
11 Ryan Callahan 119 396
16 T.J. Oshie 104 390
25 Brandon Dubinsky 82 381
28 Justin Abdelkader 77 426

Points since 2010

Rank Player Points GP
1 Kane 433 414
2 Kessel 398 458
3 Pavelski 385 450
4 Wheeler 357 452
5 Pacioretty 319 395
6 Ryan 316 439
7 Derek Stepan 305 434
8 Backes 304 445
9 Dustin Byfuglien 288 418
10 Parise 284 354
15 Callahan 251 396
19 Dubinsky 242 381
38 Abdelkader 168 426

Canada proved at the Sochi Olympics that even in a short tournament, the most talented team is going to win. For the Americans to win the World Cup, they need the Kessels of the world on the ice, not - with all due respect - the Callahans, Dubinskys, and Abdelkaders.

"It is what it is," Kessel said Sunday of his World Cup snub. It was the diplomatic answer. The truth is, it's a foolish decision, and the Americans will regret it.

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