๐บ๐ธ United States 3-2ย Canada ๐จ๐ฆย (SO)
Olympic Gold Medal Game
Gangneung Hockey Centre, Gangneung ๐ฐ๐ท
Thursday, 22 February 2018
After 80 minutes of end-to-end action, the women’s Olympic Gold medal was decided by a shootout. And even that went to overtime before the U.S. won, 3-2.
In fact, the shootout mirrored the game exactly. The U.S. led 1-0, trailed 2-1, and fought back to win both, 3-2. The U.S. goalie, 20-year-old Maddie Rooney, out-duelled Canada’s two-time Olympic Gold medallist Shannon Szbados to secure the win.
Jocelyne Lamoureux’s winning shootout shot was, as they say, sick. Moving in slowly, she made a couple of left-to-right dekes that had Szabados on her back.
“I was told after the fourth shooter that I was going to be the sixth one if it came to that,” Lamoureux explained. “Coach Stauber asked if I wanted it and I said, โAbsolutely.โ I came in on a few inside edges, coming in slow. I knew that was what I was going to do. Szabados is a great goalie. Sheโs an amazing goalie. I knew I had to sell the shot, and I did.”
“I canโt think about anything except pure pride, excitement, and honour for our team,” said winning captain Meghan Duggan. “A lot of us have wanted this since we saw the 1998 team win 20 years ago. To have this experience together, to represent our country is the greatest honour in the world. Itโs one of the greatest days of all of our lives.”
The U.S. men won their only Gold medals 20 years apart (1960 and 1980), and the women have now done the same thing. They won in 1998 in Nagano, but not again until today. They have now won all top IIHF tournaments since 2015, including three Women’s Worlds and this Olympics.
“It gives me the chills,” said Kendall Coyne. “Itโs unbelievable. A lot of us are here because of the โ98 team. We were inspired by their victory. So hopefully thereโs a ton of girls that pick up hockey in the United States and all over the world. This was a tremendous win, and the future generations are really going to soar from it as well.”
Canada’s run of Olympic Golds ends at four, but this was another classic between these great rivals who simply refuse to give an inch and refuse to give up.
“We didnโt come here for a Silver medal, so Iโm sure everyone can imagine how losing feels,” said Canadian forward Blayre Turnbull. “Itโs not a great feeling at all.”
“Resilience is a great word,” Duggan continued. “The situation didnโt faze us at all. Weโve talked a lot; our mission has been clear. We stay in the moment, and we showed that today. We took it minute by minute, I knew we were going to come back and tie it up. Iโm just so proud of the team, and Iโm really excited to celebrate with the girls.”
“Obviously the past impacts people,” added Gigi Marvin, “but I think even more itโs not about the past but what we take and learn from it. Every single person really dug deep and found it in themselves to never lose hope and just trust that there was a greater purpose.”
“People kept saying we never beat Canada but we knew we could be them,” said Dani Cameranesi. “We knew that we had it. We knew we had a great group of girls. Weโve been dreaming of it for so long and it feels amazing.”
“I’m extremely proud of the girls,” said Canada’s coach Laura Schuler. “It was a hard-fought game, and although it’s not the result we wanted, I think we played a good game.”
In the end, Canada’s conservative play in the third period cost them as they tried to defend a 2-1 lead. The Americans struck for the tying goal by capitalizing on a bad Canadian line change which left Monique Lamoureux wide open on the left wing. She went in on goal and wired a shot over Shannon Szabados’s glove at 13:39 to tie the game and set the stage for extra time.
The play actually started at the other end of the ice when Canada’s Laura Stacey came down on a two-on-one. Her shot to the far corner went off the shaft of goalie Maddie Rooney’s stick, and the Americans made the transition from defence to offence in a blink.
The overtime was pressure-filled, and the Americans carried the play for much of it. Megan Keller had a clear break, only to be stopped by Szabados, and with 1:35 to play the Canadians had a power play. At the side of the net, Rebecca Johnston came close, but couldn’t convert.
In the shootout, Gigi Marvin scored on the first shot but Meghan Agosta came right back to tie it. Two shots later, Canada went ahead on a goal from Mรฉlodie Daoust, the tournament MVP, but on the fourth American shot Amanda Kessel scored.
After five shots, teams were tied 2-2, and the order was reversed. On the first extra shot, Jocelyne Lamoureux scored, and Agosta, shooting again, couldn’t tie it. The Americans won gold.
The game started with extreme caution and care as neither team wanted to give the other an early advantage. The first shot of the game didnโt happen until 3:41 (Canada), and the Americans didnโt get their first until 7:48.
Once the preliminaries were done with, though, the Americans spent much of the rest of the period on the power play as Canada was whistled for the only three infractions of the opening 20 minutes.
Canada did a masterful job of killing penalties, but given the firepower on the U.S. side, this couldnโt last forever. In the final minute, a Sidney Morin shot was tipped by Hilary Knight past Szabados, with 25.4 seconds remaining, breaking the ice and giving the U.S. a 1-0 lead.
That lead didnโt last long. Canada tied the game on the merits of great hustle and great hands. Blayre Turnbull did the hustling, chasing down her own shoot-in and firing a high shot to the net for the corner boards.
The hands came to the fore when Haley Irwin batted the puck out of the air from in tight, batting it in at 2:00. But no sooner had they tied the game than they were called for a fourth straight penalty.
After killing that off, they went back to the attack and took the lead. Morin lost the puck at centre ice and Agosta tore down the left wing. As players from both teams skated to the goal, Agosta calmly passed back to Marie-Philip Poulin, the trailer, and she snapped a shot short side that beat a screened Rooney.
Canada nearly made it 3-1 when it finally got a power play midway through the period, but Jennifer Wakefield couldnโt find the puck in her skates. The rest of the period was back and forth. The Americans had the better of puck possession, but Canada looked the more dangerous.
In the end, the U.S. persevered and the Canadians made a mistake and later couldn’t convert at the right time. Hats off to the Gold medallists!
“Itโs definitely part of our legacy,” said Hilary Knight. “The things that weโve gone though as a team, both on and off the ice, the characters and group of women that we have in the room, itโs really incredible. Itโs a little bittersweet right now because we won, but at the same time, this team will never really be together in the same capacity. Hopefully we remain lifelong friends, but this has just been an incredible journey.”
The journey is over for 2018, and a new one starts tomorrow for 2022 in Beijing.
BOXSCORE
1st Period
09:35 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Wakefield, body checking
13:18 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Larocque, interference
18:26 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Nurse, interference
19:34 – ๐บ๐ธย PP GOAL – Knight (Morin, Decker)
2nd Period
22:00 – ๐จ๐ฆย GOAL – Irwin (Turnbull)
22:18 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Poulin, tripping
26:55 – ๐จ๐ฆย GOAL – Poulin (Agosta, Daoust)
32:00 – ๐บ๐ธย PEN – Morin, body checking
35:13 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Daoust, slashing
37:58 – ๐บ๐ธย PEN – M. Lamoureux, boarding
3rd Period
53:39 – ๐บ๐ธย GOAL – M. Lamoureux (Pannek)
55:49 – ๐จ๐ฆย PEN – Clark, tripping
Overtime
78:25 – ๐บ๐ธย PEN – Keller, body checking
Shootout
๐จ๐ฆ Spooner stopped
๐บ๐ธ Marvin scored
๐จ๐ฆ Agosta scored
๐บ๐ธ Brandt stopped
๐จ๐ฆ Poulin stopped
๐บ๐ธ Pfalzer stopped
๐จ๐ฆ Daoust scored
๐บ๐ธ Kessel scored
๐จ๐ฆ Jenner stopped
๐บ๐ธ Knight stopped
๐บ๐ธ J. Lamoureux scored
๐จ๐ฆ Agosta stopped
GOALTENDERS
W: ๐บ๐ธย Rooney (29-31)
L:ย ๐จ๐ฆย Szabados (39-42)
SHOTS ON GOAL
๐บ๐ธ 10+12+10+9+1 = 42
๐จ๐ฆ 7+9+8+7+0 = 31
ROSTERS
๐บ๐ธย Goaltenders: Nicole Hensley, Maddie Rooney.ย Defence: Cayla Barnes, Kacey Bellamy (A), Kali Flanagan, Megan Keller, Sidney Morin, Emily Pfalzer, Lee Stecklein.ย Forwards: Hannah Brandt, Dani Cameranesi, Kendall Coyne, Brianna Decker (A), Meghan Duggan (C), Amanda Kessel, Hilary Knight, Jocelyne Lamoureux, Monique Lamoureux, Gigi Marvin, Kelly Pannek, Amanda Pelkey, Haley Skarupa.
๐จ๐ฆ Goaltenders: Geneviรจve Lacasse, Shannon Szabados. Defence: Renata Fast, Laura Fortino, Brigette Lacquette, Jocelyne Larocque, Meaghan Mikkelson, Lauriane Rougeau. Forwards: Meghan Agosta (A), Bailey Bram, Emily Clark, Mรฉlodie Daoust, Haley Irwin, Brianne Jenner (A), Rebecca Johnston, Sarah Nurse, Marie-Philip Poulin (C), Jillian Saulnier, Natalie Spooner, Laura Stacey, Blayre Turnbull, Jennifer Wakefield.
๐บ๐ธ UNITED STATES | vs. | CANADA (C) ๐จ๐ฆ |
new champion (previous 03 Dec 2017) |
Last Title | reign ends (since 03 Dec 2017) |
124 | All-Time Wins |
219 |
61 wins | Head-To-Head (+ 1 tie) |
82 wins |
First IHLC Meeting (USA vs. CAN) ๐จ๐ฆ CAN 2-1 USA ๐บ๐ธ โ 21 Apr 1987 โ WWT โ North York ๐จ๐ฆ |
||
Previous IHLC Meeting (USA vs. CAN) ๐จ๐ฆย CAN 2-1 USAย ๐บ๐ธ โ 15 Feb 2018 โ OG โ Gangneung ๐ฐ๐ท |
||
Last IHLC Game ๐จ๐ฆย CAN 5-0 OAR ๐ท๐บ โ 19 Feb 2018 โ OG โ Gangneung ๐ฐ๐ท |
||
Next IHLC Game ๐บ๐ธย USA 5-1 FIN ๐ซ๐ฎ โ 06 Nov 2018 โ FNC โ Saskatoon ๐จ๐ฆ |
Article Credit: PyeongChang 2018
Photo Credit: PyeongChang 2018ย – IIHF – HHOF – IOC