Los Angeles Times

Young U.S. checks off box

Men’s hockey team shows it can handle physicalit­y with win against Germany to move to quarterfin­als.

- HELENE ELLIOTT

UNITED STATES 3 GERMANY 2

BEIJING — A team young enough that several players brought schoolwork with them to the Olympics aced a different and bigger test Sunday.

There was no question before the Games began that the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team would have skill. There was no question the team would have speed throughout the lineup, even though the tradeoff for emphasizin­g speed and skill would mean they wouldn’t be the biggest team in the tournament.

Any questions about whether they’d be able to handle a rugged game were answered on Sunday when they stood up to a veteran and physically punishing German team and held on for a 3-2 victory at Wukesong Sports Centre in the final game of preliminar­y round play. They won Group A with a 3-0 record and earned a bye into the quarterfin­als on Wednesday. They will face the winner of the qualificat­ionround game between Slovakia and Germany.

The Americans weren’t intimidate­d by the Germans’ heavy play Sunday. Nor were they surprised by it.

“Teams are going to try to run us out of the rink,” U.S. captain Andy Miele said, “but I think so far we’ve proven that that’s not going to happen.”

They faced few physical challenges in their tournament-opening rout of China. The intensity ramped up in their 4-2 victory over Canada in their second game, preparing them for the nastiness that developed early against Germany and led to seven minor penalties in the first period.

The Americans matched them push for push and shove for shove until both teams settled down and

eliminated most of the chippy play. There were four penalties in the second period and none in the third. “I think that’s what teams are going to try and do against us, is just be physical, being a younger, more skilled team,” said forward Nick Abruzzese, whose lunging wraparound pass set up Matt Knies for the second U.S. goal, at 4:50 of the second period.

“I think the last two games we’ve done a really good job of weathering that, and I think that’s something that we’ve got to improve upon moving forward.”

They might also consider improving their starts. For the second straight game they gave up the first goal, but, as they had done against Canada, they came roaring back.

Germany connected first, on a power-play goal. Kings defense prospect Brock Faber was serving a holding penalty when Germany capped a sequence of good puck movement by setting up Matthias Plachta for a long shot that was redirected by Patrick Hager past goaltender Drew Commesso at the twominute mark.

The U.S. matched that with a power-play goal of its own. Steven Kampfer, a onetime Ducks draft pick who played 231 NHL games for Boston, Florida, the New York Rangers and Minnesota, took a shot that got through the traffic in front of goalie Danny aus den Birken at 4:26. It was the first goal by a U.S. defenseman in the tournament.

“It’s nice to get goals from anybody,” coach David Quinn said, “but you’re going to need everybody contributi­ng at different times and in different ways.”

Knies put the U.S. ahead thanks to Abruzzese’s fine pass, ending a period of sustained pressure in the Germans’ zone that included Aus den Birken losing his stick. “It was a pretty surreal play and I just had to put it in the back of the net,” Knies said of the goal, which Germany unsuccessf­ully challenged.

Nathan Smith, who was one of the top scorers in college hockey for Minnesota State before joining the Olympic team, capitalize­d on a turnover caused by the Americans’ strong forecheck to pad the lead to 3-1 at 2:47 of the third period. Germany pushed back, scoring on a third effort by Tom Kuhnhackl — who won the Stanley Cup with the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2016 and 2017 — but Commesso withstood some late challenges.

“This was another great building block for our team,” said Commesso, 19, who plays at Boston University and was drafted 46th by the Chicago Blackhawks in 2020.

“Coach has been preaching to us all tournament that we have to get better every single game and this game definitely taught us a lot. They’re a very physical team. They’re big and they brought it to us. We know that teams are going to try and do that to us moving forward. We’re a little bit of a younger team and we play with speed and skill and that’s how teams are going to try and counter us, but we have faith in our coaches to get us prepared.”

Quinn said he’d like to see fewer soft plays when his team is leading but he has little else to complain about. “We keep making progress. Here we are 3-0 and the No. 1 seed after the preliminar­y round,” he said. “It’s about all we could accomplish up to this point. We’ve done it.”

But now comes the real test: knockout play. Quinn thinks they’re ready.

“There’s a swagger to us right now and it’s not arrogance,” he said. “There’s a believabil­ity that’s gone on here over the past week and it’s put us in this position, but we haven’t really accomplish­ed anything that we want to accomplish yet.”

 ?? ??
 ?? Petr David Josek Associated Press ?? MATT KNIES of the U.S. does a celebratio­n after his go-ahead goal against Germany in preliminar­y play.
Petr David Josek Associated Press MATT KNIES of the U.S. does a celebratio­n after his go-ahead goal against Germany in preliminar­y play.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States