I’ve spent enough time watching hockey betting markets to recognize a particular kind of confident wrongness. It shows up every time the World Cup of Hockey rolls around, concentrated in the Canada conversation, repeated by bettors who believe they’re being rational when they’re actually just agreeing with their own team loyalty. The myths about Canada’s World Cup odds are specific, persistent, and expensive for people who hold them — because Canada’s World Cup betting record is not what most fans assume it is, and the assumptions driving the bets have consistently led to poor outcomes.
The roster depth argument is genuine and the starting point for Canada’s favourite status is defensible. But “deep roster” is not a synonym for “wins regardless of matchup.” Tournament hockey involves specific tactical problems — how do you defend against Finland’s neutral-zone trapping structure? How do you handle a hot American goaltender who is playing the best hockey of his career for a ten-day tournament window? Canada’s depth helps in the aggregate. It doesn’t automatically solve the problem of facing a team that has specifically prepared for Canadian systems and enters peak condition at exactly the right moment. The myth is that quality overrides everything. It doesn’t.
This one gets the history wrong. Canada’s record across all international competitions is strong, but it’s not unbroken domination. Olympic and World Championship results are often cited, but those are different competitions with different player availability rules, different formats, and different opponent preparation contexts. The World Cup of Hockey specifically — where every team fields its best available professional players, where the bracket is short, and where everyone knows exactly what Canada brings — is a competition where Canada’s historical advantage compresses considerably. Citing Canada’s broader international record as justification for a World Cup bet is comparing different data sets and treating them as one.
Opening lines in hockey markets, particularly for a competition involving Canada, are shaped by expected betting volume as much as by probability models. Sportsbooks know that Canada will attract a disproportionate share of recreational bets — patriotic money, hopeful money, loyalty money. They price the opening line to accommodate that expected surge, which means Canada’s opening number typically sits a few points above where a purely probability-driven model would put it. The myth is that the line tells you what’s likely to happen. The line tells you what the market is pricing, which includes public emotion as a variable. Those are different things.
Tournament hockey is not an offensive statistics contest. It’s a real-time competition decided by goals in actual games, and in those games, goaltending quality — specifically the opposing goaltender’s performance, not Canada’s — has proven decisive in multiple tournament eliminations. There is no offensive depth sufficient to overcome a goaltender playing three standard deviations above his mean across two games in a knockout bracket. Canada has faced exactly that scenario, and the results reflect it. The myth that enough offensive talent renders goaltending irrelevant ignores how tournament hockey actually produces outcomes. It doesn’t, and the record shows it.
This is the contrarian version of the same error. Recognizing that the public bets Canada heavily is useful information. Concluding that you should therefore always bet against Canada is not the logical next step. The public betting on Canada is not always wrong. Sometimes Canada is the correct favourite, the price is reasonable, and the sharp money agrees. The myth is that public love for a team is sufficient reason to take the other side regardless of price. The actual signal is the gap between where the public bets and where the sharp money sits. When those two things diverge significantly, that’s information. When they align, the public might just be right.
There is a related myth here worth naming separately: that anyone who bets on Canada is being emotional rather than analytical. That’s wrong too. A bettor who has tracked the goaltending situation, assessed the roster age profile, evaluated the bracket draw, and determined that Canada at -140 represents fair value is making an analytical decision that happens to align with what the public is doing. Process matters more than position. Betting against Canada as an automatic reflex is as lazy as betting for them without thinking. The work is in the analysis, not the direction.
The bettor who has cleared away these five myths approaches Canada’s World Cup odds as a market signal rather than a statement of inevitable outcome. They check the goaltending situation before finalizing any position. They track line movement to see whether professional money agrees or disagrees with the opening price. They consider whether the specific matchup advantages — roster age, system compatibility, bracket position — support the price Canada is being offered at. And they size bets based on the actual probability implied by the line, not based on how confident they feel about Canada’s talent. That discipline won’t guarantee a win. But it will produce better results than the myths do over time.