While it feels like the Colorado Avalanche is piecing together lineups with duct tape and popsicle sticks this season, the rosters for hockey’s first best-on-best international competition at the highest level in nine years will be announced Monday.

The rosters for the 2025 4 Nations Face-Off will be revealed in two parts: Finland and Sweden in the afternoon (noon MT) on ESPN (and NHL Network), then the United States and Canada at 4:30 pm MT on TNT.

“You speculate with some of the guys a little bit,” Avs star Mikko Rantanen said. “Team Canada and the U.S. probably have the hardest choices, because they have so many players available. You speculate a little about who might make it and who might not. It is fun.”

Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar and Devon Toews have already been named to Canada’s roster. Rantanen was one of the “original six” named to Finland’s squad as well. Unless there is a surprise, Artturi Lehkonen joining Rantanen is likely to be the only other addition from the Avalanche.

This tournament is an NHL-run event, and only NHL players will be invited. It has been posited as an appetizer for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy when a full 12-team field will be in play. Whether or not Russia will be part of the tournament or not remains to be determined.

Here is one last best guess at what the rosters could look like on Monday:

Canada

Left wing;Center;Right wing

Sam Reinhart;Connor McDavid;Mitch Marner

Brad Marchand;Sidney Crosby;Nathan MacKinnon

Alexis afreniere;Brayden Point;Mark Stone

Anthony Cirelli;Mark Scheifele;Travis Konecny

Connor Bedard;John Tavares;

Left defense;Right defense;Goalie

Devon Toews;Cale Makar;Jordan Binnington

Shea Theodore;Alex Pietrangelo;Adin Hill

Josh Morrissey;Dougie Hamilton;Marc-Andre Fleury

Evan Bouchard;;

Canada doesn’t have a lot of great left-handed options at forward. How much will that matter? Probably not a lot.

The Nova Scotia Line needs to happen, obviously. Mark Stone’s health could impact the decisions made. Anthony Cirelli, Connor Bedard and John Tavares are the last three forwards here, and there are about eight other guys who could fit as well.

A spicy take? Canada should consider Macklin Celebrini over Bedard. They’ll both probably be on the team in Italy.

The first five for the defense corps is easy. A couple of other options for the last two spots include Noah Dobson and MacKenzie Weegar. Dougie Hamilton hasn’t always been a favorite for everyone among hockey decision-makers, so we’ll see if Hockey Canada trusts him.

Canada’s goaltending is the biggest wild card in the tournament. The Canadians should take Marc-Andre Fleury as the No. 3 just for the vibes. If any team plays all three guys, it is not winning.

United States

Left wing;Center;Right wing

Kyle Connor;Auston Matthews;Clayton Keller

Brady Tkachuk;Jack Eichel;Matthew Tkachuk

Jake Guentzel;Jack Hughes;Tage Thompson

Matthew Boldy;Dylan Larkin;Vincent Trochek

Cole Caufield;J.T. Miller;

Left defense;Right defense;Goalie

Quinn Hughes;Charlie McAvoy;Connor Hellebuyck

Jaccob Slavin;Adam Fox;Jake Oettinger

Zach Werenski;Brock Faber;Jeremy Swayman

Jake Sanderson;;

J.T. Miller is currently away from the Vancouver Canucks on a personal leave of absence, which makes his status for the tournament unclear. The Tkachuk brothers should definitely play together and with one of the Jacks, though the Americans could move Jack Hughes to the wing. There are plenty of center options.

It would also be fun if Hughes, Matthew Boldy and Cole Caufield got to take some shifts together, reuniting old development program teammates. That’s probably something for 2026 or a 2028 World Cup, though.

John Carlson would make plenty of sense if one more veteran defenseman is desired, but Brock Faber and Jake Sanderson are both worthy. The defense corps isn’t particularly big, but that’s a nitpick.

There are some really good players not on here: Carlson, Brock Boeser, Alex DeBrincat and multiple goalies who might have a chance to start for Canada just to name a few. We’ll see how the Americans deal with real expectations because plenty of people will pick the U.S. as the pre-tournament favorite.

Finland

Left wing;Center;Right wing

Artturi Lehkonen; Aleksander Barkov;Mikko Rantanen

Roope Hintz;Sebastian Aho;Kaapo Kakko

Mikael Granlund;Anton Lundell;Eetu Luostarinen

Teuvo Teravainen;Erik Haula;Jesse Puljujarvi

Jesperi Kotkaniemi;Joel Armia;

Left defense;Right defense;Goalie

Esa Lindell;Miro Heiskanen;Juuse Saros

Nikko Mikkola;Rasmus Ristolainen;Ukko-Pekka Luukonen

Olli Maata;Juuso Valimaki;Kevin Lakinen

Henri Jokiharju;;

Pairing players from the same NHL team will be a popular projection for all of these teams. Finland might be the country that needs “chemistry” the least because it always feels like the Finns just get together and have it in short order.

The one place where it might make even more sense to split up the teammates is on defense because the Finns might need Lindell to lead his own pairing instead of just riding shotgun to Heiskanen. The back half of Finland’s defense might be the weakest spot for any of the four teams, depending on how you feel about Canada’s goalies.

This forward group is still plenty scary, and one good week from Saros could mean plenty of headaches for the other three clubs.

Sweden

Left wing;Center;Right wing

Filip Forsberg;Elias Pettersson;William Nylander

Jesper Bratt;Joel Eriksson Ek;Adrian Kempe

Lucas Raymond;Mika Zibanejad;Rickard Rackell

Leo Carlsson;William Karlsson;Elias Lindholm

William Eklund;Gustav Nyquist;

Left defense;Right defense;Goalie

Victor Hedman;Erik Karlsson;Jacob Markstrom

Rasmus Dahlin;Gustav Forsling;Linus Ullmark

Mattias Ekholm;Rasmus Andersson;Filip Gustavsson

Jonas Brodin;;

This is a really strong team on paper, but there are a couple of key veterans who aren’t having great seasons.

Then there’s also Hampus Lindholm’s injury, which made him enough of an uncertainty to leave off.