Ottawa Citizen

Canadian women love living the dream

This generation of players inspired by previous one, hopes to inspire the next

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com @longleysun­sport

As always, the gold medal is there for the taking for the Canadian women’s hockey team, much as it has been since the sport was introduced into the Olympics in 1998.

But the stakes won’t end on the Gangneung Arena ice for the 23 players looking to make it five Olympic titles in a row for the most accomplish­ed hockey nation in the world. The responsibi­lity goes much deeper in a country where winter sports rule and many will stay up late into Thursday morning to watch the latest showdown vs. the U.S. (The game is scheduled to begin at 11:10 p.m. ET Wednesday.)

With that comes pressure, but this group wouldn’t have it any other way.

“It’s cool to think that literally all of Canada tuned in to watch that game and their lives stopped just for hockey,” forward Natalie Spooner said of the 2014 final at the Sochi Games. “It’s definitely a lot of pressure, but it’s exciting for women’s hockey and for all girls in sports.”

Now two decades into its Olympic life, women’s hockey is well into its second generation of players. The role-model factor is immense, especially in Canada with most on this year’s roster having grown up idolizing the sport’s pioneers.

For Spooner it got real when as a 11-year-old she attended a hockey camp in Peterborou­gh, Ont., and got to meet Team Canada veteran Jennifer Botterill and see the gold she earned in 2002. It was a motivation­al push that sent the Toronto native along a path to Ohio State University and eventually to the national program.

“Hopefully, there are a lot of little girls watching and dream of being in this spot, because I remember watching and dreaming of being here myself,” Spooner said.

Most of Spooner’s teammates have similar stories of having grown up watching stars such as Cassie Campbell, Danielle Goyette, Hayley Wickenheis­er and others and having the opportunit­y to meet them. And once you’ve played for the Olympic team, it brings with it a strong sense of celebrity at rinks across the country.

“There are so many players who have come through this program and are doing fantastic things and giving back to the communitie­s when they are through playing hockey,” forward Brianne Jenner of Oakville, Ont., said. “And they are fantastic role models. It was huge for me when I got to meet players and get a jersey signed. It leaves an imprint growing up.”

The imprint is much bolder when you win gold, obviously, which brings further context to Thursday’s latest clash with the Americans. In the four years since that meltdown in Sochi — blowing a 2-0 lead in the final four minutes of regulation and losing in overtime — the U.S. team has become perhaps hungrier than ever.

“It means everything,” American forward Amanda Kessel said. “It’s our teammates, our family, our country. We’ve been working our whole life for this.”

The Canadian women make the same claim. The growth in girls hockey has been exponentia­l since it became an Olympic sport and the golden prize available every four years is captivatin­g.

“It’s like our Stanley Cup,” Jenner said. “It’s what we dream about since we were little girls. Once the puck drops, it’s like you are on autopilot. You train for so many hours for this that your body knows what to do it and it takes over.”

There have been suggestion­s that the Americans could have a motivation­al edge, but don’t be so sure. What you can expect, however, is a frenetic opening 10 minutes to the game and perhaps much more.

“You often like to say it comes down to who wants it more,” Jenner said. “There’s no question both teams want it as bad as possible. It’s going to come down to who executes, who can perform in the moment and who stays discipline­d.”

The Americans are basing much of their confidence on outshootin­g their rivals 45-23 in a preliminar­y-round game won 2-1 by Canada. Canadian coach Laura Schuler would prefer her team tighten up, but given many of the shots were from the perimeter and her defence was tough in front of the net, she isn’t overly concerned.

And that’s one difference from four years ago. Schuler has had the time to implement her systems; in Sochi, Kevin Dineen assumed the head coach job at the last minute.

“I think it was great hockey back then, but we’ve changed and focused on the defensive side of our game,” Jennersaid.“Wheneverth­eseteams match up, it’s great hockey.”

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