Toronto Star

ARTISTIC TRIUMPH

Focusing on creative play over avoiding mistakes helps Canada get even better

- BRUCE ARTHUR

BEIJING Frankly, it was hard to find mistakes. In a lopsided Olympic women’s hockey quarterfin­al, Sweden wore their peerless yellow uniforms, and Canada often made them like canaries trying to fight off hawks.

But after that 11-0 win, veteran defender Jocelyne Larocque said that for all the skill and speed and size and determinat­ion, trying to get better is the engine of this team. And that came with a different way to think about themselves, too.

“What I think drives it is the openness to try new things, and we don’t have any fear of making mistakes,” Larocque said. “In the past, I think we were a little bit fearful of making mistakes, and honestly, this environmen­t that (head coach) Troy Ryan, our coaches, (GM) Gina Kingsbury have set out, it’s an environmen­t where people can be creative, within structure, but people aren’t scared to make mistakes.

“It’s a huge change in our culture and our program, and it’s really exciting to be a part of.”

You can pick your favourite way to spell out the way things went Friday. Canada dominated possession while on the penalty kill. Brianne Jenner scored Canada’s opening goal, the first of her three, though in fairness she was subsequent­ly stopped on a 2-on-0 by Swedish goalie Emma Soderberg. Twentyone-year-old Sarah Fillier scored two goals in 36 seconds and, after finishing with a hat trick, has matched Jenner with a tournament-high eight goals, all in her first 15 Olympic periods of play. Uh, pretty good. At one point Canada scored eight goals in 12:04 of game time.

Meanwhile, the U.S., which had outshot Canada in its head-to-head matchup and lost, also had trouble finishing in a 4-1 quarterfin­al win over the Olympic rookie Czechs. That game was tied 1-1 headed to the third period. Canada did something else.

Larocque said one reason Canada’s offence has been such a tidal wave — Canada has outscored Switzerlan­d, Finland, Russia, the U.S. and now Sweden 44-5 in five games — was that nobody was gripping their sticks too tightly. Ryan said the team’s leadership decided last year to tip in that direction, which is hockey’s most essential philosophi­cal debate: more offence or more defence, with defence winning more of the time. Canada plays

ruthless and relentless defensive hockey, and that hasn’t changed. But freedom to try stuff is not always welcome in the sport of onegoal games.

“One of the things we tried to talk about early on is, to make this team, you had to be willing to make mistakes,” Ryan said. “You had to be willing to add to your game. It’s always an evaluation process at this level, and every time they come together, how do you get better if you don’t open yourself up a little bit? So we just tried to create that.”

The fear of mistakes for a program trying to play perfect hockey is perhaps understand­able. Every big game against the U.S. is a one-goal monster.

“I think it was maybe pressure,” Larocque said. “Honestly, I think in the past, we maybe put too much pressure on ourselves, and maybe the games against the U.S., we made them bigger than what they are. And not that they’re not big. But it’s that your approach and your mentality need to say the same, game in, game out.”

It’s not the 1980s Oilers, and drat the luck. And maybe in a gold-medal game it’s rebound goals and Fillier and Marie-Philip Poulin that make the difference. But it’s something. Ryan didn’t take credit for the offence: after all, in the pandemic every nation’s players played themselves, which might also have something to do with this. The

Swedes, when possible in an underfunde­d program, played the Swedes. Canadians played Canadians. You get better that way. They were already great.

Now they are a game away from the gold-medal game, facing either Russia (if Finland beats Japan in the last quarterfin­al) or Japan (if Japan wins), and the goals could keep coming in their semifinal.

“I think, when you really look at the way we play, we got a lot of talented players that can play offence,” Ryan said. “And when they start a little bit more working as a group, those creative plays tend to unfold.”

Yes. It’s progress. But it’s Canada too.

‘‘ Honestly, I think in the past, we maybe put too much pressure on ourselves.

JOCELYNE LAROCQUE TEAM CANADA DEFENDER

 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK AP ??
PETR DAVID JOSEK AP
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 ?? ANTHONY WALLACE AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Canada’s Natalie Spooner scores past Sweden’s goaltender Emma Soderberg in quarterfin­al play Friday in Beijing.
ANTHONY WALLACE AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Canada’s Natalie Spooner scores past Sweden’s goaltender Emma Soderberg in quarterfin­al play Friday in Beijing.

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