Las Vegas Review-Journal

USA women forged unity that brought them the gold

- By Helene Elliott Los Angeles Times

LGANGNEUNG, South Korea to the national anthem play for them, seeing the U.S. flag rise above the ice at Gangneung Hockey Center in their honor after they had defeated Canada in a six-round shootout to earn Olympic gold, members of the U.S. women’s hockey team stood with their arms around each other and swayed gently to the sweetest song they had ever heard.

They were together, of one mind and one heart, smiling and crying, in shock after their 3-2 victory had ended Canada’s four-tournament winning streak and halted a 20-year

HOCKEY

U.S. gold medal famine, but keenly aware of the magnitude of their accomplish­ment.

“It’s the greatest moment of our lives,” said forward Meghan Duggan, who added gold to the silver medals she won after close losses to Canada in 2010 and 2014. “We worked really hard to put ourselves in position to win this thing. We’ve come a long way. We talked about it, our process, our mission. It’s been very clear since day one. I’m just so proud and honored to be here.”

By “here” she meant atop the hockey world, a pinnacle they reached late Thursday after forward Jocelyne Lamoureux-davidson’s spectacula­r stick-handling and clever release produced their third shootout tally and goaltender Maddie Rooney thwarted Canada’s Meghan Agosta for her fourth save in six shots. That stop triggered a sudden downpour of high-flung hockey sticks and gloves as U.S. players poured off the bench to celebrate.

“Frickin’ Maddie Rooney,” forward Amanda Pelkey said, affectiona­tely. “She just kept calm the whole time. And there wasn’t any doubt in my mind that she was going to make that save and win it for us.”

They got this far only because they stuck together through challenges that easily could have driven them apart.

Last spring, shortly before the World Championsh­ips, players issued a statement saying they would boycott that competitio­n if USA Hockey executives didn’t treat them as equals to the men’s team.

The women wanted greater pay — they were receiving $1,000 stipends only for the six months leading up to each Olympics, and many players worked multiple jobs — and wanted insurance and travel benefits equal to what the millionair­e men’s players got. USA Hockey tried to break them by recruiting replacemen­t players but failed.

A few days before the World Championsh­ips began in Plymouth, Michigan, the women reached an agreement for better pay and a promise of more marketing and developmen­t

efforts by USA Hockey. They then won their fourth straight world title and seventh in eight years.

They thought of that Thursday, of what their solidarity meant to them and what USA Hockey’s investment in girls programs could mean to those who follow the path they’ve blazed.

“I think this performanc­e sort of transcende­d our sport just because we weren’t receiving the right support of a gold medal-winning team,” forward Hilary Knight said. “And this is what a gold medal-winning team looks like with the right support. We’re taking steps in the right direction, but there’s still a long ways to go.”

They also shared some nervous moments in early September when they had to evacuate their apartments at their training base in Wesley Chapel, Florida, and take shelter when Hurricane Irma struck. Their discomfort was brief, but it reinforced their trust and reliance on one another, qualities that proved important Thursday.

“We played this game in our minds a thousand times, and we’ve won it

every single way possible,” Monique Lamoureux-morando said. “There’s just something unbelievab­le with this team, the belief in the locker room, even going into the third being down by a goal and not playing our best game. We just knew we were going to get it done.”

The top three teams — Finland won bronze — had beribboned medals placed around their necks by Angela Ruggiero, a member of the first U.S. women’s team to win gold, in 1998 and, until Thursday, the only one with that distinctio­n.

Many Canadian players cried. Defenseman Jocelyne Larocque quickly took her medal off. Most of the Americans vowed to sleep with their precious hardware.

To Pelkey, having Ruggiero bestow that honor was the perfect touch on a perfect day.

“She is and will always be a legend. She is one of the biggest advocates of our sport, our women’s program, and USA Hockey in general,” Pelkey said. “It all tied together so perfectly that she was the one giving us the medal.”

No one gave them anything. They earned this. Together.

 ?? Jae C. Hong ?? The Associated Press U.S. player Gigi Marvin celebrates Thursday after the U.S. defeated Canada for the gold medal.
Jae C. Hong The Associated Press U.S. player Gigi Marvin celebrates Thursday after the U.S. defeated Canada for the gold medal.

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