Nathan MacKinnon did not look like someone bothered by change. In Canada’s final preliminary game at the 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics, he slipped into a different role and produced the same familiar result. Canada crushed Team France 10-2 at Santagiulia Arena, finishing Group A without a blemish. Yet inside that routine win, sat a quieter development. Coaches were testing something bigger, and MacKinnon was right in the middle of it.
For a team already loaded with firepower, the willingness to experiment spoke volumes. Head coach Jon Cooper was not chasing answers. He was building options. With the knockout stage ahead, Canada showed it has another gear. And MacKinnon, calm as ever, made clear he is ready to help unlock it.
Nathan MacKinnon embraces new wing role as Canada builds its most dangerous Olympic line
The idea surfaced earlier against Team Switzerland when MacKinnon moved to the right wing alongside
Connor McDavid and rising star Macklin Celebrini. It worked instantly. The trio piled up three goals and eight points in one night, moving the puck with speed and purpose that few teams could handle.
Cooper returned to it Sunday. On their first shift together, Celebrini earned a penalty shot and buried it for his third goal of the tournament.
The sequence lasted seconds but confirmed the instinct behind the move. Canada later returned to its usual lines, a sign this combination is a weapon to deploy at the right moment, not something to overuse.
For MacKinnon, the adjustment might seem uncomfortable on paper. He has spent years controlling games from center. Still, he made it sound simple. “Yeah, definitely ready for whatever,” MacKinnon said. “Like I said, I’ll play with anybody. You know, it’s fun playing with every single guy on this team. So, it’s pretty good.”
The numbers explain the excitement. McDavid now leads the Olympic scoring race with nine points. Celebrini has six. MacKinnon sits close behind with five. Together, they tilt the ice quickly.
Even from the bench, captain Sidney Crosby could sense it. “It’s fast. The speed, it’s amazing to see them together,” Crosby said. “Obviously Mack’s seeing the ice really well. He’s creating a lot himself. It’s fun… Knowing everyone on the ice solely wants to find a way to shut them down or limit their chances, they work so hard. It’s fun to see them do their thing for sure.”
Crosby’s own line with Mitch Marner and Mark Stone continues to provide balance, giving Canada stability while the newer trio brings chaos.
Canada now waits for the winner between Czechia and Denmark. The experiments may be over soon. Or they may just be beginning.