Montreal Gazette

Women’s hockey rivals renew hostilitie­s

- DONNA SPENCER

MALMO, SWEDEN Canada won the first eight women’s world hockey championsh­ips, but has claimed just two of the last seven.

The United States and Canada have met in the gold-medal games of all 15 tournament­s to date.

All but one of Canada’s recent defeats in the final were one-goal losses, but the fact is the U.S. has become harder to finish off in the world championsh­ip finale.

The two countries open the 2015 world championsh­ip Saturday in Malmo, Sweden, against each other in a Pool A game. Finland and Russia round out their group, with host Sweden, Switzerlan­d, Germany and Japan featured in Pool B.

Caroline Ouellette scored Canada’s overtime winner in Burlington, Vermont, in 2012 for her team’s only world title in the last five championsh­ips. The Montreal forward said then: “We can’t say anymore we are better than them.”

In their most recent meeting, Canada edged the U.S. 5-4 in a shootout to win the Four Nations Cup in November.

“Maybe early on when women’s hockey made its debut at the world championsh­ip, Canada probably had the edge over the United States,” Ouellette said Friday in Malmo. “(Canada) had more depth, maybe better preparatio­n and they were able to dominate those games.

“(Now) we know not much separates us from the U.S.”

Canada might have been winners of the last four Olympic gold medals — including last year’s overtime thriller against the Americans — but the Winter Olympics are a different animal than the worlds.

All players from the world’s top female hockey countries have adopted the Canadian model and now suspend school and work for an entire winter. They train full-time with their respective national teams for the Games.

However, women’s worlds aren’t held in the same year as an Olympic Games.

In the years in between Olympics, the players go back to playing for their college or university, or return to work and their club teams.

The U.S. roster at a world championsh­ip typically has more college players, with 13 this year compared to Canada’s eight.

The American squad that beat Canada 3-2 for gold two years ago had 11 compared to Canada’s six.

A college or university team mirrors Olympic preparatio­n in that the players are on the ice almost every day, can play up to 40 games in a season and train off the ice with their teammates.

The Canadian Women’s Hockey League is important for female players who have already graduated or who aren’t in school. Without it, 15 players on Canada’s current roster and five on the American team wouldn’t have a place to play.

But CWHL players practise twice a week and play no more than 27 games in a season.

A roster heavy in NCAA Division I players can have another impact.

Their Frozen Four final is often less than a week from opening day at the world championsh­ip, while the CWHL’s Clarkson Cup championsh­ip wraps up two to three weeks before the tournament.

 ?? LARRY MACDOUGAL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Caroline Ouellette, right, knows Canada can’t expect to push around the U.S. in women’s hockey.
LARRY MACDOUGAL/THE CANADIAN PRESS Caroline Ouellette, right, knows Canada can’t expect to push around the U.S. in women’s hockey.

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