China Daily Global Weekly

Hero captain makes gold look routine

Canada’s ever-reliable Poulin leads team to victory in ice hockey thriller

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Canadian captain MariePhili­p Poulin made the remarkable seem almost routine on Feb 17, clinching the Olympic gold medal-winning goal yet again in a career that shows no sign of slowing down.

Canada’s calm “Captain Clutch” developed a reputation as a quiet leader in Beijing but was anything but on Feb 17, putting up 11 assists and two goals to devastate archrivals the United States 3-2.

It was the third time that Canada won the gold off a Poulin shot, a staggering achievemen­t that dumbfounde­d even her own teammates.

“She found a way to get another game winner in a gold medal match — I’m not sure how she does that,” said netminder Ann-Renee Desbiens, who made a remarkable 38 saves on Feb 17 to help Canada to its fifth gold.

“She is obviously our leader and one of the big reasons we won. The way she carries herself on and off the ice is truly something special.

“I don’t know a more deserving captain to win the gold medal for us.”

She scored both goals in her team’s shutout win over the US in the 2010 Olympic final when she was just 18 years old and clinched it in overtime in Sochi, cementing herself as one of the most beloved stars in hockey-mad Canada.

“She is just such a competitor. She is someone that thrives in these gold medal situations. She thrives on these opportunit­ies,” said Rebecca Johnston, her teammate through three Olympics including their devastatin­g silver-medal turn in Pyeongchan­g, where the US ended their run of four straight golds.

The 30-year-old said she is not done yet, after leading the Canadian demolition in Beijing, telling reporters she would consider vying for a spot on a fifth Olympic roster in 2026.

“I love training. I love doing extra

reps so much. I love doing that extra mile when nobody is watching. It pays off,” said Poulin.

Two weeks before facing Canada in the women’s hockey final, the Americans watched first-line center and arguably their best player, Brianna Decker, get stretchere­d off the ice with a broken leg early in the tournament opener.

Try as they might to fill the gaping hole in their lineup, missing Decker

proved to be too much to overcome in a 3-2 loss to the Canadians in the gold-medal game.

“I think that we did a good job coming back with it and sticking together as a team,” said winger Amanda Kessel, whose goal with 13 seconds left was part of a frantic finish. “But it definitely didn’t help us, and we definitely missed her out there.”

Replacemen­t Abby Roque could not cash in on the scoring chances

that Decker might have. Even though Hilary Knight scored her sixth goal in Beijing and Kessel made things interestin­g in the final minute, the top-end talent for Canada came through in the clutch.

With Decker watching on the glass steps away from the bench, the US fell short and settled for silver for a fourth time since women’s hockey was introduced at the 1998 Nagano Games.

 ?? GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP ?? Gold medalists Canada celebrate during the victory ceremony of the women’s ice hockey competitio­n at the Wukesong Sports Centre on Feb 17. Team captain Marie-Philip Poulin is at lower left.
GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP Gold medalists Canada celebrate during the victory ceremony of the women’s ice hockey competitio­n at the Wukesong Sports Centre on Feb 17. Team captain Marie-Philip Poulin is at lower left.

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