The Niagara Falls Review

Canada beats U.S. to win inaugural Rivalry Series

- LARRY LAGE

DETROIT — The inaugural Rivalry Series was created to give Canada and the United States another opportunit­y to put the world’s best female hockey teams on the ice together.

It went so well, there likely will be a sequel.

Brianne Jenner and Blayre Turnbull scored, Shannon Szabados made 38 saves, and the Canadians beat the Americans, 2-0, in front of 9,048 fans Sunday to win the three-game series.

“It always means a lot when you play these guys and there’s no love lost on the ice, so to get a win in their barn felt pretty good,” Jenner said.

Gina Kingsbury, director of women’s national teams for Hockey Canada, declared the event was a success in every way.

“We would love to see this repeat itself every year for sure,” Kingsbury said. “It would help generate excitement about our game outside of Olympic years.”

The Canadians beat their rivals nearly a year after the U.S. won Olympic gold in a shootout thriller and a few months after it won the Four Nations Cup against them. They meet again in April at the worlds in Finland.

“That’s the hardest part,” Alex Rigsby said after making 15 saves for the Americans. “You come off a loss and now we have to wait another six, seven weeks until we play each other again.”

The top U.S. and Canadian teams have not played regularly outside of the Olympics, worlds or Four Nations Cup, but that will change if the series is annual.

“It fits really well with our program,” USA Hockey executive director Pat Kelleher said. “And, it’s good for us to have the NHL involved as well.”

The NHL supported the event that USA Hockey collaborat­ed with Hockey Canada to conceive, making the rinks used by Detroit and Toronto available along with promoting the event. That likely helped an average of 8,725 fans at the first two games and more to show up in the Motor City for the third game that started at noon.

The U.S. won the opener 1-0 on Tuesday in London, and Canada evened the series with a 4-3 win Thursday in Toronto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada