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The Guardian - US
Sport
Beau Dure

Winter Olympics women’s ice hockey final: USA beat Canada 2-1 in overtime – as it happened

The United States are Olympic champions.
The United States are Olympic champions. Photograph: David W Černý/Reuters

And the report from tonight’s game can be found here:

Not enough overtime action for you. Norway has taken the Canadian curling men to an extra end!

Maybe I’ll watch that now. Time to sign off from here, but there’s still a little bit of curling and a good bit of figure skating to follow today and a big three-day weekend ahead. We might even see the USA v Canada on the hockey ice again for another final on Sunday, this time in the men’s game.

Thanks for the emails. See you next time.

The PWHL will resume soon, and a lot of these players are teammates.

Canadian goalie Ann-Marie Desbiens and captain Marie-Philip Poulin play with US forward Hayley Scamurra in Montreal. Hilary Knight plays with Canada’s Julia Gosling in Seattle.

But the USA also have a bunch of players from the University of Wisconsin – Laila Edwards, who had a couple of key plays, and Caroline Harvey, who was a menace through the whole game.

We have dramatic finishes in curling at the moment as well. Check the main blog:

Hilary Knight speaks and admits they came out slow in the first period and just had to throw everything at them in the third.

She speaks very highly of Frankel.

And she dodges talk of retirement.

Elizabeth White checks in again and just says “NOOOOOOOOO!!!”

The good news for Canada is that you still have Rachel Homan. The better news is that Cassie Sharpe appears to be OK after a horrific crash in the halfpipe. The bad news is that Marc Kennedy is making the shots that will keep the men’s curling team in the headlines.

Canada actually rebounded very well in these Games, as I wrote a couple of days ago …

What … just … happened …?

Based on the first 55 minutes or so, there’s no way the USA should’ve won this game. It was only after they pulled Aerin Frankel, who came up big many times, that they got the tying goal on an assist from the young Wisconsin Badgers player Laila Edwards to the captain, Hilary Knight.

Edwards, who didn’t look up to the task on many occasions in this final, made a terrific defensive play.

A couple of minutes later, Taylor Heise threaded the puck along the boards up to Megan Keller, who slipped diagonally past a defender and slid the puck under Desbiens’ pads. The outstanding Canadian goalie didn’t realize it was past her at first, but the crowd reaction must have alerted her. She looked back and saw the puck in her own net.

Heartbreak. Joy. Unexpected things. This matchup usually lives up to the hype, and it certainly did here.

USA win the gold medal!!!

Alternate captain Megan Keller with the winner, just barely getting through Desbiens and trickling over the line.

16:00 left. We’re in sudden-death 3-on-3 OT … AND IT’S OVER!!!!

Fast is in, and Edwards, as if answering my comment that she’s not showing the speed to participate in 3-on-3, recovers to poke it away. I take it back.

Desbiens saves at the other end.

Fillier (CAN) on a 2-on-2 and she shoots! Frankel can only knock it down and it’s free but it’s played with a high stick, and the faceoff is out of the zone.

17:06 left. Faceoff in Canadian zone. Glitch in broadcast stream. Please call the paramedics.

Poulin (CAN) shoots! All she does is win hockey games with clutch goals. Not on that shot, though.

Scofield (USA) shoots, and Desbien covers up.

Keller (USA) shoots! Desbiens raises an arm for the save!

Edwards (USA) has had a rough game despite assisting on the goal, but she’s in the game here. She’s just a few steps too slow for this, and it shows.

Breakaway for Watts! But Murphy (USA) recovers to poke it away. Can’t remember the last time the USA won a race like that.

Harvey’s on the ice for the USA. No surprise. USA maintaining possession but not able to get a clear path to goal.

Canada had outshot the USA 29-28 in regulation. Now it’s 29 each.

I’ll only give time updates periodically. Should be a lot of action here.

3-on-3 sudden-death overtime starts

(OK, 4-on-4 if you include the goalies.)

After 20 minutes, it’ll be a shootout. Are you not enter-

… OK, puck drops …

Jane O’Hara:

So nerve-wracking reading your coverage! I am a Canadian vacationing in Mexico where we can’t get the game….or maybe we can but haven’t really gone to many sports bars to see.

Still hoping for the Maple Leaf to pull this one out!

I would love to be watching this in a sports bar with a bunch of Canadians. As long as they didn’t mention curling.

Gilbert Tagalog:

Stay where you are beau!!

On Wednesday I took a loo break and the next thing I knew Marner scored for the Canadians!!

It’s always in the first five or the last five minutes of the OT period…

There was a plotline in the great-but-not-as-great-as-it-should’ve-been sitcom Sports Night in which a character never wants to talk about having covered a famous home run – because he had gone to the facilities when it happened.

Elizabeth White:

Following your updates in Canada because I almost can’t bring myself to watch. If you’re wondering about the unannounced delay. it was a commercial break. This is a huge country so most Canadians have always followed their team on the radio or TV because it’s difficult to travel to away games. Starting with the earliest days of the NHL there’s always been ads.

If this goes to shoot outs my nerves won’t manage. Just gotta keep my stick on the ice.

I live in a country that’s legendary for sticking ads in and on everything, and they didn’t break then. Weird.

Bruce Brooks:

I hope the poobahs of Europe’s best football leagues will watch the sudden-death OT & rethink their lame policy of resolving ties not by playing more football, but by taking penalty shots at the goalie. There’s no tension in the sports world gripping that sudden-death overtime.

Hmmm … story idea … are my editors reading this? Hello?

Here we go …

Richard Hirst wins the inbox:

So after time slippin’ the USA flew like an eagle.

Doot doot dooh-dooo …

Hilary Knight scored her first Olympic goal in Vancouver. I was … several miles north of there in Whistler, watching the US men claim their first medal in Nordic combined. I really wanted to be covering curling, but the Nordic combined team that year was impressive.

Also discovered that watching biathlon on TV is great but isn’t that great an experience when you have to stand in a mixed zone where you can’t even see live results or see anyone crossing the finish line. Aside from that, what a great experience that was.

More good news for the USA from Daniel Gallan at the main blog:

Amber Glenn from the USA pulls off a stunning routine to take a commanding lead in the figure skating!

She leaves the ice with a score of 147.52 and a combined score 214.91.

Probably won’t be enough to bridge the 9-plus-point gap to the podium places after the short program, but seeing someone rebound from collapsing into tears after a short program is never not gratifying.

The bad news for Everyone Who Goes Curling And Does Not Live In Canada is that the villainous quartet lead Norway 3-2 in the ninth end with hammer.

It’s so weird to find a Canadian team objectionable, isn’t it? But lamenting that “the spirit of curling is dead” while you’re holding the bloody knife is so un-Canadian.

USA and Canada go to overtime

They were flailing. Canada had outplayed them at every turn. Faster to every puck. Forcing more action from the goalie.

But Frankel kept them in it. And the captain got in front of the net and tipped a puck down so that it skidded past the excellent Desbiens.

Do I have time to go for a jog or something? Probably not. And I’m too overweight and knock-kneed to jog anyway. Happy to take your email.

20 seconds. USA possessing.

Scramble. Desbiens smothers. 9.5 seconds. Can the USA conjure a late winner?

1-1.

Knight now has 15 goals in her Olympic career. She has scored in three straight gold-medal matches. She just got engaged to Brittany Bowe. Legend.

52 seconds left.

Play resumes. Not sure why Canada weren’t called for a penalty. Not sure how the USA tied this.

Overtime would be 20-minute sudden-death 3-on-3 (which is really 4-on-4 if you include goalies).

USA 1-1 Canada (Knight 57:56)

How did that get through???

Replay shows the captain parked herself in front of the net and tipped a shot from Edwards.

Canadian defenders collapsing on whoever has the puck … wait … what???

USA pull the goalie

Analytics insist it’s the right call. Right?

USA 0-1 Canada, 2:25 left. Is this a timeout? Can someone make an announcement? Why are we stopped?

Frankel save. Canadian attacker whiffs on a shot. USA can’t get control. Now they get it behind the Canadian net and sit on it. Pause. 2:25.

USA across center ice, Bad pass, Canada clear to Maltais. 3:00

USA absorb a Canadian flurry. Clear. Reset. 3:30 left.

We’re at the point in the game in which I won’t be giving the score with every update.

Power play over with 4:22 left.

USA 0-1 Canada, 4:50, 3rd period: On another note, my “k” key was stuck as I tried to type “killers.”

USA still not letting Canada set up, though they concede a shot that hits Frankel’s mask. Finally, Frankel has to catch and hold, and Canada will have the puck in the USA zone.

USA 0-1 Canada, 5:33, 3rd period: So it’s a Canadian power play, but the USA penalty-killers are aggressive and disruptive.

USA 0-1 Canada, 6:37, 3rd period: Desbiens in dangerous territory with a misplay behind her own net, but the USA can’t capitalize. Harvey and Winn play back and forth but can’t find any offensive help.

Rash hit near the boards by Curl on Ambrose, who remains down. It’s a penalty. It might not be a two-minute minor. They’ll review, and … it remains a minor penalty. Big concern dodged there by the USA.

USA 0-1 Canada, 7:30, 3rd period: I think the referees have forgotten the existence of the icing rule. That, or Canadian forwards are just so much faster than the US defense that they assume the Canadian can get there.

Has the speed difference just not been an issue in other recent games between these teams?

Long, unexplained stoppage here. Now we resume.

USA 0-1 Canada, 8:48, 3rd period: Time keeps on slippin’, slippin’, slippin’ …

Still an eternity left in hockey terms, but is this starting to get away from the USA?

USA 0-1 Canada, 9:17, 3rd period: Stecklein has all day to shoot but still waits too long, and it’s blocked by Stacey.

Icing on Canada.

USA 0-1 Canada, 10:25, 3rd period: USA now leading in shots, 25-23.

USA 0-1 Canada, 10:45, 3rd period: For some reason, I’ve just remembered of the song Hit Somebody by the legendary Warren Zevon. It’s a story of a player who dreamed of being an offensive force but instead is trained to be a big-time brawler.

Not an option in women’s hockey.

USA 0-1 Canada, 12:00, 3rd period: But Canada continue to win most of the races for the puck, and this one leads to an open shot, albeit from an angle Frankel had well covered.

USA 0-1 Canada, 13:00, 3rd period: Harvey sends a speculative shot from the blue line. Knocked down. Another shot is blocked. Canada trying to weather the storm here.

USA 0-1 Canada, 13:58, 3rd period: The US attack has truly found the plot. Crisp cross-ice passes. An aggressive forecheck.

Desbiens snags a shot with her glove and hangs on to give her defense a chance to reset.

USA 0-1 Canada, 15:45, 3rd period: Winn holds the puck behind her own net while players change and catch their breaths. This is frenetic action.

USA 0-1 Canada, 17:30, 3rd period: We should call this end-to-end stuff now. This won’t end 1-0.

USA 0-1 Canada, 18:30, 3rd period: It’s a brighter start for the USA. Has Harvey come off the ice at all?

USA 0-1 Canada, 19:38, 3rd period: “They’re looking for offense,” commentators say of the USA. Indeed. Little wonder the puck has gone to Harvey.

Sharpe has waved to the crowd, and coincidentally, I’ve just received a bunch of email …

Several people have complained that I noted the incredibly strong hockey team that would exist if Canada and the USA merged. But is that not true? Not saying it would be a good idea for thousands of other reasons, but as one reader noted, all other competition would be meaningless.

Max Bilson: “As a Canadian with very British roots I thank you for a very entertaining minute by minute while I sit here at work somewhere north of the 49th parallel. The mbm has not made its way over here - so I either have to break the rules and stream the game (which as the boss I would have to enforce against myself) or… find another source.”

I can attest that people in the USA are well-versed in finding creative ways to not work.

Gilbert Tagalog: “This strategy is the hockey equivalent of Ali’s rope a dope when he bested foreman in the rumble in the jungle in ‘74 Zaire (DRC). Back then it was an aging but still gifted fighter against a younger and more fancied opponent. Much like today’s game? Hoping the Canadian women can strike a blow for their team and their nation today - floating like a butterfly and stinging like a bee?”

We’ve resumed.

Not really inclined to do my usual intermission banter while we’re awaiting a good sign from Sharpe.

In terms of this game – if the USA equalize, I’d bet Caroline Harvey is involved. She’s playing with another gear her teammates don’t seem to have so far.

Unfortunate news for Canada in the main blog – ski halfpipe star Cassie Sharpe has had a bad crash.

End 2nd period: USA 0-1 Canada

Bad US giveaway, Stacey gets it, and Frankel has to cover. Not sure if anyone is doing advanced stats for this game, but the giveaways have to be at least 2-1 in “favor” of the sloppy US team.

That’s the end of the period. The positives for the USA are that they’re getting some solid chances, and Frankel has kept the score from being worse than 1-0. The negatives are everything else, including the scoreboard.

USA 0-1 Canada, 44.6, 2nd period: Haley Winn puts a solid shot on net, and Canada have to clear the rebound.

USA reclaim and get it back on Desbiens, who has to cover up. Much better from the USA here.

USA 0-1 Canada, 2:00, 2nd period: Canada’s Claire Thompson gets possession and drives almost perpendicular to Frankel but is stopped.

Canada are just playing faster and smarter.

USA 0-1 Canada, 3:30, 2nd period: Shots now 18-16 in favor of Canada, responding after the US had taken the lead in that stat.

Cameras longer on a fan who made a great catch when a puck went sailing into the stands. A couple of people from my curling club are in the stands somewhere as well. Maybe they’re chatting with Tom Brady.

Harvey tries to thread the puck through about five Canadian hockey players and probably Rachel Homan and Tracy Fleury as well. Not happening.

Quick reminder that Frankel is nicknamed the Green Monster by appreciative fans in Boston, where she played college hockey and now plays professionally:

USA 0-1 Canada, 4:40, 2nd period: HUGE SAVE BY FRANKEL as Canada just pick apart the US defense.

USA 0-1 Canada, 5:05, 2nd period: Icing on the USA.

Imagine the hockey team that would be unleashed if Canada really did join the USA.

USA 0-1 Canada, 5:35, 2nd period: Tom Brady is chatting with Mike Eruzione. Seth Meyers is here. No Canadian celebrities? Where’s Geddy Lee? Or Dave Foley?

Frankel hangs on after a bad US giveaway leads to an quick shot from the blue line.

USA 0-1 Canada, 5:47, 2nd period: CHANCE! And ANOTHER CHANCE! Shot from the circle, deflected, Curl-Salemme gets a stick to it but flips it over the net.

USA 0-1 Canada, 6:50, 2nd period: If you’re a fan of counterattacking soccer, you might appreciate what Canada are doing here. Five players packed back near the goal. They might give up a shot, they might give up possession, but they’ve already shown how devastating they can be when they intercept and take off.

USA 0-1 Canada, 8:42, 2nd period: Caroline Harvey has decided to start carrying this team, and it’s not a bad strategy. She sets up one shot, recollects and recycles the puck.

USA 0-1 Canada, 9:10, 2nd period: The USA are putting a lot of players in front of the Canadian net. The positive outcome from such a tactic is that a shot can be deflected into the net. The negative outcome is that it can be blocked away from it.

USA 0-1 Canada, 10:40, 2nd period: Could the momentum be changing a little? Maybe? They get a sustained possession, but Canada tie things up along the boards and kick it back like a rugby player sending it back from the scrum, and Canada calmly clear.

USA 0-1 Canada, 11:55, 2nd period: Now THAT is a chance that deflects up and hovers in the air near the Canadian goal.

And then there’s a giveaway that sends Canada going the other way, and the USA are lucky that so many players were streaking back to fall on top of the puck.

USA 0-1 Canada, 12:30, 2nd period: The US players either haven’t adjusted to the fact that Canadian players are busily buzzing around them, or they’re so unnerved by it that they don’t know what to do with the puck.

The shots are even at 10 each, but the USA had a headstart in that stat, and Desbiens hasn’t had much to do.

USA 0-1 Canada, 14:48, 2nd period: We have our first post-whistle shoving. Canada was called for offside, but no one could hear the whistle. I’m a soccer ref – shall I loan them mine? The commentators note that it’s loud in there, but come on … this isn’t Detroit.

USA 0-1 Canada, 15:26, 2nd period: Best chance of the game for the USA, with a neat pass to a player on the doorstep who sends it to the ceiling.

USA 0-1 Canada, 15:30, 2nd period: I’m starting to think the USA should get curling skip Tabitha Peterson, who hit a clutch draw earlier today to get the USA to the semifinals and beat the dominant Canadian team earlier in the Games, to come in and give the second-intermission pep talk.

USA 0-1 Canada, 17:30, 2nd period: Allow me to offer some non-expert analysis here – Canada, appropriate for a country with a lot of good short-track skating, is just faster than the USA. If they aren’t literally faster, then they’re just anticipating a lot better.

If you saw the 5-0 score early in the tournament and figured this would be easy for the USA … I did warn you, didn’t I? But I didn’t think Canada would be a good solid level or two higher, and they certainly have been through 22 1/2 minutes.

Goal! USA 0-1 Canada (O'Neill 20:54)

It’s a 2-on-2 short-handed chance for Canada, and the first two beat the second two. The US duo put no pressure on Laura Stacey, who made a very simple pass to Kristin O’Neill. From there, O’Neill faked one way and then deposited the puck in the net.

USA 0-0 Canada, 19:08, 2nd period: It takes a while for the USA to set up the power play, but they get some good chances out of … uh oh …

US captain Hilary Knight was mic’d up. She mostly yelled for teammates to keep going. She also yelled, “Right behind you” – but I don’t think her teammate heard her.

The USA will start the second period on the p-p-p-p-power play. (That’s how they say it in a lot of NHL venues.)

First period stats

Shots: Canada 8-6
Faceoffs won: Canada 11-10
Shots that made me go “ooooh”: Canada 3-1
Loose pucks won through sheer hustle: Canada 387-8 (approximate)

End 1st period: USA 0-0 Canada

Canada try to kill the first 14.1 seconds of the power play by falling onto the puck after the faceoff, but the USA dig it out, and Carpenter’s redirect of a shot from the blue line zips just wide.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 14.1 left: A bad trip in the Canadian zone, and the USA get an extra attacker on the ice while the referee signals for a delayed penalty. Not sure why Shelton did that.

Canada touches the puck, so the power play will start with 14.1 seconds left and will continues well into the second period.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 1:20 left: First US shot in a while, but it’s right at Desbiens.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 1:55 left: Frankel is tested but manages to get her right leg to a shot.

Canada win possession again and shoot, forcing Frankel to hold on.

But after the faceoff, the USA clear, and the power play is killed.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 3:55 left: But Canada’s Fast loses control after a faceoff win, and the USA are off to the races? It’s race that Fast, appropriate for her name, wins, and there’s no US short-handed shot.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 4:55 left: Another Canadian power play as Dunne rather pointlessly trips a Canadian player near the Canadian net.

Updated

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 5:21 left: The most ominous sign for the US defense is that twice in the last 30 seconds, they’ve simply been beaten to a puck that’s been sent ahead by an opportunistic Canadian attack.

Frankel hasn’t had to be spectacular yet, but these are nervous times for the USA. They might need to shake things up between periods.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 6:00 left: The IIHF has a shot tracker that shows how much the balance of play is shifting toward Canada.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 7:00 left: Canada is looking much more dangerous here. The passing combinations are there. The shots aren’t quite getting there.

Now one is – Frankel has to be alert to get across the crease to make a save at close range. The stat keeper has not yet noticed.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 8:00 left: Each team is stuck on four shots. Reminder that in hockey, they only count shots that are saved or go into the net, so the long-range attempt Canada just sent into traffic doesn’t count.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 9:30 left: I still can’t get over how many stats are mentioned from the rest of this tournament. There’s simply no comparison between a USA-Canada game and a game between one of these teams and the rest of the world. It’ll be good for the sport when that changes.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 11:01 left: Canada still seem to have slightly the better of play, but it’s still choppy, as you’d expect from two teams that won’t give each other much space.

Figure skating update

Yes, we’ll keep tabs for you.

Amber Glenn will skate at 2:42 ET/8:42 in Italy. Isabeau Levito skates at 3:44, when this game may well be over. The top six don’t start until 4 p.m. ET or thereabouts.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 12:26 left: There’s a momentary scramble as the puck is loose near US goalie Aerin Frankel, but it’s cleared, and the penalty is killed.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 14:27 left: Canada dumps, chases and comes up with a shot that’s blocked. Caroline Harvey then sends a cross-ice diagonal pass to Murphy for the shot.

But we’ll have a power play for too many players on the ice. Murphy will serve the time in the box while Canada have the player advantage.

We’re told the USA are a perfect 100% on the penalty kill in this tournament. So they’re due to concede one?

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 15:13 left: Poulin with the shot. Remember that she was out injured when these teams played earlier in these Games. The USA won’t want to let her have many touches.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 15:57 left: To underscore the point, NBC commentator AJ Mleczko, fresh from calling part of yesterday’s men’s game with Snoop Dogg, recalls a year in which her US team lost once – in the Olympic final.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 16:22 left: Good setup for Canada, with Watts drifting around the net and sending it back for a one-timer that misses.

The USA answer with a long shot that’s snared and collected for a faceoff in the Canadian zone.

NBC reminds us that the USA have won the last seven games between these two teams. That means absolutely nothing right now.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 17:48 left: And now an offsides call against Canada. A little discombobulated. But it’s not as if the USA have had time to set up, either.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 18:17 left: Our first stoppage is an icing call against Canada.

The USA have been credited with a shot somehow, but it was tame.

USA 0-0 Canada, first period, 19:00 left: Is Canada coming out tentative? Their first two times across the blue line have been 1v3 efforts with no teammates coming up to join them.

Faceoff

Away we go …

Revenge for curling!

Canada’s men’s curling team has embarked on a mission of sabotaging and/or bringing a lot of attention to its sport. And earlier today, they aggravated the US curling community to no end.

If you had checked the tiebreaking scenarios, you would’ve seen that if Switzerland beat Italy and Canada beat Norway, the US men would have had a shot at the playoffs. Germany beating China would also simplify things, but the US men ranked highly enough in DSC (Draw Shot Challenge, the measure of how close a team can deliver rocks to the center of the house when they attempt it before each game starts) that it didn’t matter.

Switzerland took care of business against Italy. So all the US needed was for their neighbors to the north to atone for their role in the Great Curling Kerfuffle of 2026 and beat Norway, propelling Daniel Casper and company into the semifinals. Instead, they didn’t even set the snooze alarm, allowing Norway to race out to a 5-1 lead en route to an 8-6 win.

We’re going to assume that someone has briefed the US women’s hockey team on the intricacies of men’s curling tiebreakers and the Canadian men’s shattering of the normative behavior that makes curling special, and that will give them extra incentive.

OK, more seriously – this is a massive rivalry. No extra incentive is needed. But the fact that recent games have gone the USA’s way will only inspire Canada that much more.

So if the people of the USA want to send a message to the US women’s hockey team, first, they’d say congratulations to captain Hilary Knight on her engagement to speedskater Brittany Bowe. Then they’d say to go out and win this one for Curling Rambo and the long-suffering US curling fanbase.

Preamble

Imagine Manchester City v Manchester United, Celtic v Rangers, Duke v North Carolina or Yankees v Red Sox – if those two teams were the only one who ever won the league or national championship.

That’s the USA-Canada women’s hockey rivalry, and if you think that’s an exaggeration, consider this list of every women’s hockey world championship and Olympic final.

1990 WCh: Canada 5-2 USA
1992 WCh: Canada 8-0 USA
1994 WCh: Canada 6-3 USA
1997 WCh: Canada 4-3 USA (OT)
1998 Oly: USA 3-1 Canada
1999 WCh: Canada 3-1 USA
2000 WCh: Canada 3-2 USA (OT)
2001 WCh: Canada 3-2 USA
2002 Oly: Canada 3-2 USA
2004 WCh: Canada 2-0 USA
2005 WCh: USA 1-0 Canada (shootout)
2006 Oly: Canada 4-1 Sweden
2007 WCh: Canada 5-1 USA
2008 WCh: USA 4-3 Canada
2009 WCh: USA 4-1 Canada
2010 Oly: Canada 2-0 USA
2011 WCh: USA 3-2 Canada (OT)
2012 WCh: Canada 5-4 USA (OT)
2013 WCh: USA 3-2 Canada
2014 Oly: Canada 3-2 USA (OT)
2015 WCh: USA 7-5 Canada
2016 WCh: USA 1-0 Canada (OT)
2017 WCh: USA 3-2 Canada (OT)
2018 Oly: USA 3-2 Canada (shootout)
2019 WCh: USA 2-1 Finland (shootout)
2021 WCh: Canada 3-2 USA (OT)
2022 Oly: Canada 3-2 USA
2022 WCh: Canada 2-1 USA
2023 WCh: USA 6-3 Canada
2024 WCh: Canada 6-5 USA (OT)
2025 WCh: USA 4-3 Canada (OT)

Get the picture?

Yes, it’s a problem for women’s hockey that no one else has broken through except on two occasions. It’s unfortunate that all the early rounds of any competition are so predictable.

The good news is that these finals are not predictable. The USA won the group-stage between these two teams in a rout. Today, that means exactly squat. Nada. Nothing. Nil.

Women’s hockey international tournament are a long wait for a big payoff. Enjoy.

Beau Dure will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s how the men’s teams fared yesterday:

With NHL players returning to the Winter Olympics for the first time since 2014, these Games were expected to be a relative stroll for Canada and USA. However, both star-packed teams struggled in Wednesday’s men’s ice hockey quarter-finals.

Quinn Hughes scored in overtime to put the US past Sweden 2-1 after giving up the tying goal to Mika Zibanejad with 91 seconds left in the third period. Dylan Larkin deflected Jack Hughes’ shot in for the only US goal in regulation.

“Just relief,” Hughes said when asked about his emotions after the game.

Meanwhile, Canada’s quarter-final was an even tighter affair. Nick Suzuki tied the game on a deflection with 3:27 left, Mitch Marner scored in overtime, and Canada avoided what would have been a stunning exit at the Olympics by rallying to beat the Czech Republic 4-3.

“I never had a doubt, but it was getting a little nerve-racking,” defenseman Drew Doughty said.

Canada fell behind with 7:42 remaining when Ondrej Palat scored off a pass from Martin Necas. The goal sent the Czech bench and fans into a wild celebration, but their excitement was short-lived.

Suzuki just about did it all on the tying goal, sending the puck out to the point to Devon Toews and then redirecting the defenseman’s shot past Lukas Dostal. The Canadians still could have lost: Jordan Binnington denied David Pastrnak on a breakaway with 70 seconds left to send the game past regulation.

Then Marner’s backhanded goal 1:22 into overtime put Canada into Friday’s semi-finals.

“It’s the it-factor, man: Mitch Marner’s got it,” coach Jon Cooper said. “He doesn’t disappoint. Sometimes your hair falls out at times, but in the end, he never disappoints.”

Canada has won more golds than any nation in Olympic ice hockey history. But this year’s men’s team have concerns beyond their struggles in Wednesday’s game. They lost star Sidney Crosby to injury five minutes into the second period after his right leg appeared to buckle as he braced for contact with rugged Czech Republic defenseman Radko Gudas. Crosby left the ice second later after he was crunched against the boards by Gudas and Necas.

“Everybody had complete faith in whoever was going over the boards,” Cooper said. “It just felt it was like a matter of time. It was going to happen.”

The US will face Slovakia in one semi-final on Friday night. Just before that, Canada will play Finland in the other.

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