The Record (Troy, NY)

4-time Olympian Knight headlines US team for Beijing

- By Dave Campbell and John Wawrow

MINNEAPOLI­S » Hilary Knight was selected for a USA Hockey record-tying fourth Olympics, one of 15 players with prior Winter Games experience on the U.S. women’s national team seeking to defend its gold medal in Beijing next month.

The final 23-player roster was announced Saturday night at the second intermissi­on of the NHL’s Winter Classic game in Minneapoli­s, where the players stood on minirinks next to the main ice for an introducti­on to the crowd at Target Field. Six players on the team are Minnesota natives.

Knight joined Jenny Potter, Angela Ruggiero and Julie Chu as the only American women to make four Olympic hockey teams. Knight, the 32-yearold forward, broke the national team’s career world championsh­ips scoring record last summer that was previously held by Cammi Granato.

“You look at stats alone, she’s the most decorated player for our sport, from the U.S. side, anyway,” teammate Brianna Decker said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. “But you look at how much she’s done off the ice as far as growing the game and being that image and being that figure for young girls to look up to, it’s incredible.”

Decker and fellow forwards Kendall Coyne Schofield and Amanda Kessel and defenseman Lee Stecklein were all named to their third Olympic team.

The other returners from 2018 are defenseman Cayla Barnes, forward Hannah Brandt, forward Dani Cameranesi, goalie Alex Cavallini, goalie Nicole

Hensley, defenseman Megan Keller, forward Kelly Pannek and goalie Maddie Rooney, who has rejoined the team after being sidelined by an injury that kept her out of the world championsh­ips last summer. Defenseman Megan Bozek and forward Alex Carpenter were on the 2014 team.

The first-timers are forward Jesse Compher, defenseman Jincy Dunne, defenseman Savannah Harmon, defenseman Caroline Harvey, forward Abbey Murphy, forward Abby Roque, forward Hayley Scamurra and forward Grace Zumwinkle.

“The women in that room are incredible, and it’s intoxicati­ng in a way. You just want to be a part of it,” Knight told The AP in October.

Harvey, who just turned 19 in October, has been groomed to lead the power play. She made her national team debut in August at the world championsh­ips and scored against Japan in the quarterfin­al round.

The most notable player left off the list was defenseman Kali Flanagan, who played in all five games in

South Korea. Twin sisters and key members of the 2018 team Monique

Lamoureux and Jocelyne Lamoureux have retired, as have Meghan Duggan and Gigi Marvin.

The team is coached by Joel Johnson, who replaced Bob Corkum in April. Johnson also recently took over as the women’s coach at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota, which made the jump to the NCAA Division I level this season.

The U.S. team beat Canada 3-2 in a shootout to win the 2018 gold, after the Canadians had won the previous four Olympic tournament­s.

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