Boston Herald

Russians rocket past Americans

- By STEPHEN WHYNO

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — The blistering pace on the ice and the atmosphere in the arena was reminiscen­t of the epic showdown between the United States and Russia in Sochi four years ago.

That’s where the similariti­es end.

When the teams met again at the Olympics yesterday without NHL players, Ilya Kovalchuk and the Russians put on a clinic — outplaying, outhitting and outclassin­g the U.S. in a 4-0 shutout.

The U.S. must now play in the qualificat­ion round, while the Russians (or the Olympic athletes from Russia, as their officially referred to by the IOC) finished first in the group and move on directly to the quarterfin­als, hoping their dominance puts T.J. Oshie’s shootout performanc­e in 2014 further in the rearview mirror.

“After the last game in Sochi, I think you guys are still showing the highlights of Oshie scoring those shootouts, right?” Kovalchuk said. “So hopefully you’re gonna change that now.”

Kovalchuk, teammates Pavel Datsyuk and Slava Voynov and U.S. coach Tony Granato are the only people back from that game, which had higher stakes because of the NHL talent.

There’s still plenty at stake this time with the U.S. looking to win its first Olympic gold medal since the “Miracle On Ice” in 1980. Granato doubled down after the loss on his pre-tournament comment that the U.S. doesn’t “need a miracle” to win.

What it might need is better goaltendin­g after Ryan Zapolski allowed four goals on 26 shots, including Kovalchuk’s backbreaki­ng goals less than 33 seconds apart at the end of the second period and start of the third.

Zapolski also allowed two goals to Nikolai Prokhoroki­n, a 2012 Los Angeles Kings draft pick. But it was the costly Kovalchuk goal with 0.2 seconds left in the second period that he wants back.

“It was a knuckle-puck and from a pretty long way away,” said Zapolski, whom Granato confirmed would remain the U.S. starter moving forward. “The two other goals were really good shots. Good players are able to score goals like that, and those are some of their better players so they found a way to score.”

This game lacked the tense political subtext of the Cold War from their 1980 meeting and the pomp and circumstan­ce of Russian president Vladimir Putin attending and the pressure on the home team in Sochi in 2014, but it had the same kind of in-arena atmosphere.

Entering the game, the Russians looked as if they had better players than the U.S., and that showed in each team’s final preliminar­y-round game. The U.S. college players who shined in the first two games engaged in the physical play against the Russians but couldn’t make an impact on the score sheet.

“They’ve got a really good group over there, but I’m really confident in our squad,” Boston University’s Jordan Greenway said. “There’s things we’ve got to work on, mistakes we’ve got to learn from in this game. I’m sure we’ll see them again later in the tournament and I think the outcome will be a lot different.”

The U.S. rarely generated the kind of quality scoring chances against Vasily Koshechkin (29 saves) that the Russians did around Zapolski, who played all three preliminar­y-round games.

Recalling a semi-breakaway by former Boston College star Brian Gionta, the Team USA captain, and a shot off the crossbar by Harvard’s Ryan Donato, Granato and his players felt they had opportunit­ies and lamented the inability to finish. They sure didn’t think the game was as lopsided as the score.

“I thought we played well enough to deserve better than a 4-0 game,” Granato said. “I was really happy with the effort and the confidence that we gained in knowing that we could play with them. We just didn’t get the results.”

On this stage, the result is all that matters. And in that area, it’s not pretty.

“It’s a big loss,” alternate captain Noah Welch, a Brighton native and Harvard product, said. “They played a hard, physical game and they were the better team tonight.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? LAMPLIGHTE­R: Ilya Kovalchuk puts his second goal of the game past Team USA goalie Ryan Zapolski in their preliminar­y round men’s hockey match yesterday.
AP PHOTO LAMPLIGHTE­R: Ilya Kovalchuk puts his second goal of the game past Team USA goalie Ryan Zapolski in their preliminar­y round men’s hockey match yesterday.

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