National Post

Not a good Knight for Canada

OT win for U.S. and 4th straight world title

- Michael Traikos mtraikos@ postmedia. com twitter. com/ Michael_ Traikos

In the end, there were no surprises. There never really is when these two countries f ace each other. Canada and the United States have played each in the fi nal of every world championsh­ip since the tournament began. That wasn’t including the five times they also met in the gold medal game of the Olympics.

As Canadian head coach Laura Schuler said of the familiarit­y between the two countries, “I think they could probably write out our game plan and we could write out their game plan.”

It was another way of saying this was going to be a close game. Schuler was right. It came down to the wire, but in front of a soldout crowd of 3,917 at USA Hockey Arena, the Americans defeated Canada 3-2 in overtime.

The goal, scored with 9:43 remaining in the extra frame on a one- timer from Hilary Knight, capped off a backand-forth game that lived up to the hype and history between these two teams.

This was the seventh time in the last eight finals that the U. S. had defeated Canada to win the world championsh­ip. And though the tables had been turned at the Olympics, with Canada winning each of the last four times, the fact that this was the last meaningful game between the two countries before heading to PyeongChan­g, South Korea, was not lost on the players.

“We know what we need to do,” said Poulin. “We’ve lost the last three championsh­ips, so we’re on a mission right now.”

That it was Canada versus the U. S. — and that it was once again a nail- biter of a finish — was what everyone had expected. And yet, the road to the final could not have been more different for either team.

The U. S. had shutout Canada 2- 0 in the round robin portion and had steamrolle­d through the tournament, outscoring opponents 25- 3. Canada, on the other hand, had taken a rockier path to get here. Aside from the loss to the Americans, the Canadians had also lost to Finland for the first time ever.

“I think our team has come a long way,” said Schuler.

The last time these two teams played, Canada admitted it had been nervous and a bit overwhelme­d by the pro- U.S. crowd. On Friday, there was none of that.

“We know what we have to do,” Canadian captain Marie-Philip Poulin had said prior to the game. “We’ve been losing the last few championsh­ips. We’re on a mission right now. We want to bring it back home.”

Schuler had said that Canada needed “to play smart, play fast and we have to play with resiliency.” More importantl­y, the Canadians needed to play with heart, an overused characteri­stic that really meant they needed to want to win more than the U.S. did.

“I think because you have two amazing teams — two great teams — and anytime those two teams face each other it’s back and forth hockey and you don’t know which way it’s going to go,” said Schuler. “I think these games really come down to heart and passion, who’s going to have the most.”

Canada came out attacking early and often, striking out to a 1- 0 lead when Meghan Agosta picked the top corner on a two- onone play 61 seconds after the opening face off. But the U.S. was obviously not going to go down quietly.

About three minutes after Canada’ s goal, U.S. defenceman Kacey Bellamy tied the game on a heavy point shot that appeared to change direction as it went past goalie Shannon Szabados.

From there, the teams went into the trenches.

The second period was a mix of cross- checks, close calls and questionab­le body contact. If playing each other time and time again had bred familiarit­y, it had also bred contempt. That was where the reference to playing with heart came in.

After a scores second period, the U.S. took a 2-1 lead 42 seconds into the third period after swarming Canada’s crease.

Taking a between-thelegs pass from Hilary Knight, Bell a my s nuck down low and scored her second goal of the game.

But in a reversal of the first period, Canada ended up tying it on a one- timer from Brianne Jenner that beat the sliding U.S. goalie. Initially, the goal was waved off because on- ice officials mistakenly believed the puck didn’t actually cross the line. But upon video review, goalie Nicole Hensley’s pad crossed the line and the goal counted.

Overtime was complete madness, as the teams traded chances looking for the winner. Amanda Kessel of the U.S. had a breakaway thatSza bad os stopped. And with the puck sitting in the crease, Canada’s Halli Krzyzaniak later swept what could have been a sure- goal out of danger.

But in a tournament that the U.S. dominated from the start, the American forwards were too just much for Canada to handle.

OVERTIME WAS COMPLETE MADNESS, AS THE TEAMS TRADED CHANCES LOOKING FOR THE WINNER.

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