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no. 3 draft pick

Jonathan Drouin puts on a Tampa Bay Lightning jersey after he was selected by the Lightning as the third overall pick in the 2013 National Hockey league (NHL) draft in Newark, New Jersey, June 30, 2013.BRENDAN MCDERMID/Reuters

Jonathan Drouin will have to wait a while before he can again wear the jersey that he covets most.

But while he was disappointed not to make the Tampa Bay Lighting out of training camp this season, the third-overall choice in this year's NHL draft still hopes to shine in two other teams' uniforms.

Drouin has a chance to help Canada win a world junior title, and he will be counted on to be a key contributor in the Halifax Mooseheads' quest to repeat as QMJHL and Memorial Cup champions.

The 18-year-old Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Que., native is getting ready to join Team Canada in preparation for the world junior championships over the Christmas holidays in Malmo, Sweden.

"Putting that [Canadian] jersey on is always exciting," Drouin said this week in a telephone interview, after it was announced he was among 25 invitees to Canada's evaluation camp from Dec. 12 to 15 in Toronto.

"We have a good team again this year, and we have a lot to prove after we didn't win that gold medal," he said.

He is looking forward to taking part in his second world junior tournament after excelling as an upstart 17-year-old with the squad that finished fourth in the 2013 event in Ufa, Russia.

After captaining a QMJHL all-star team to a pair of wins over Russia in this year's Subway Super Series, he has a chance to play the same leadership role as Canada seeks its 15th medal in the past 16 world junior tournaments.

When asked if he is looking forward to the chance to serve as captain during the international event, Drouin offers a stock answer, noting the team will have many leaders. Then, he merely acknowledges it would be "great" to wear a second C when Canada faces the world's top hockey nations.

But Drouin, the CHL's 2012-13 player of the year who is in his third and likely final season of a junior career spent entirely with Halifax, makes less of an effort to play down the anguish he felt after the Lightning returned him to the Mooseheads.

"Obviously, it's disappointing getting cut from the big league," he said. "It took me some time to get adjusted back to the [QMJHL] level."

Although Tampa general manager Steve Yzerman could have kept Drouin around for nine games this season before his NHL entry-level contract would have kicked in, he returned him to Halifax for more seasoning. Yzerman wants Drouin to benefit from more ice time than he would get with the Lightning.

Although Lightning star Steven Stamkos's broken leg created an opening at centre with the NHL club, Drouin refuses to play the what-if game.

"I don't think I want to wait for injuries to play in the NHL," he said. "I don't want a guy to get hurt so they can call me. I think I want to be there when the whole team is [healthy]. Obviously, it was sad to see Stammer go down like that. I'll be back there next year – hopefully, as a regular."

While with Tampa in the NHL exhibition campaign, Drouin, formerly a winger, shifted to centre. He has assumed the No.1 centre role with the Mooseheads after former teammate Nathan MacKinnon was drafted first overall and stayed with the Colorado Avalanche.

Despite having more defensive responsibilities, Drouin has not slowed down offensively. In November, he was chosen QMJHL player of the week on two consecutive occasions. He sits second in the QMJHL with 15 goals and 32 assists after a recent 14-game streak in which he racked up 39 points (13 goals).

"It's special to go on a streak like that," he said. "When your team is winning, the [shots] go in easier."

He led the Mooseheads to 10 consecutive wins in November before they were blanked 2-0 by Moncton last Sunday. Heading into Friday's home game against Victoriaville, the Mooseheads (21-10-0) sit first in the Maritimes Conference, tied for second overall in the QMJHL, and seventh in the CHL's weekly rankings.

"When I got adjusted [to life in the QMJHL] again, I think my play went up a level, and I got back to the way I was playing last year," he said.

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