The Mercury News

USA hockey in a must-win situation

Russians dominate spirited hockey rivalry inpoolplay­final

- By Adam Kilgore

Russia outclassed the United States, 4-0, on Saturday in the group stage of the Olympics. The loss forces the U.S. to win an eliminatio­n game to make the quarterfin­als stage.

GANGNEUNG, SOUTH KOREA >> It was a night for Cold War nostalgia and present-day geopolitic­al angst, a night for feisty, postwhistl­e scraps in the corners and for cheap jokes on Twitter — Boy, that last two minutes sure was an indictment of the Russian power play, am I right? It was a night drenched in history at the start and simmering with ill feeling at the end. It was a night for wild flag-waving and raucous chanting, for a little arena on an Asian peninsula to get its roof blown off for a hockey game, of all things.

It was even a night for competitiv­e hockey, even if the scoreboard suggested a beatdown. The Americans were fast, physical and relentless. They outshot the Olympic Athletes from Russia. But they were a ramshackle band of college kids, minor leaguers and retirees. They were playing grizzled KHL veterans and former NHL stars. The difference in skill — passing, stick-handling, finishing — was roughly the size of Siberia, and that is what the scoreboard showed.

The team of Russians outclassed the United States 4-0 on Saturday morning at Gangneung Hockey Center in the group stage of the Olympic hockey tournament. The final two Russian goals, the ones that turned an antagonist­ic scrap into a rout, came off the stick of Ilya Kovalchuk, a 34-year-old who once signed a $102-million NHL contract. The U.S. may have megaprospe­ct Jordan Greenway, but with the NHLers back in North America on commission­er Gary Bettman’s decree, it doesn’t have anybody like Kovalchuk.

It does have a backbone. In the final seconds of the blowout, Russian coach Oleg Zinarok reinserted his first line, providing Kovalchuck a chance at a hat trick and poking the U.S. in the eye. Asked later if he was upset at

the tactic, U.S. coach Tony Donato said, sternly, “Yes.” In the moment, Greenway ended up in another tussle, the last a night-long series.

“We didn’t get the win, but we wanted to send a message that we’re not going to just back down because we’re down 4-0,” Greenway said. “We’re still here to do big things, and we’re not just going to fall over.”

No matter what is going on in the world, hockey games between Americans and Russians carry special meaning. Granato said Saturday had the pace and the intensity of a Stanley Cup playoff game. There is the 1980 Miracle on Ice, of course, but Russians have not forgotten the last Olympics, when the United States deprived Russia of a medal by winning an eight-round

shootout in which T.J. Oshie scored on four of his six chances.

“No anger,” Kovalchuk said to a pack of American reporters. “It’s sports. It’s emotion. After the last game in Sochi, I think you guys are still showing Oshie scoring those shootouts. Hopefully, we’re going to change that now.”

The loss dropped the U.S. to 1-2 in pool play, which will force them to win an eliminatio­n game simply to make the quarterfin­als of a 12-team field. The path to a medal will be long, and it likely will go through OAR, which reasserted its position as the prohibitiv­e favorite. After Saturday, the U.S. would prefer it that way.

“I’d like to play this team again sometime,” Donato said. “I think they respect how hard we played against them. I think they realize they were in a good fight out there.”

Even a half-hour before the puck dropped, chants of “U-S-A!” competed with bellows of “Russ-i-a!” until all that emerged was one unintellig­ible growl. There were No. 8 Ovechkin sweaters, No. 21 Eruziones, No. 30 Craigs and even a few jerseys with the No. 80 and “Miracle” across the back shoulders. It seemed, at times, flag-wavers in the lower bowl outnumbere­d the flagless. Behind the U.S. goal, Russian fans wore shirts, one letter per person, spelling out “Russia In My Heart,” “Red Machine” and another phrase in Russian.

“It was intense right from the puck drop,” defenseman Jonathon Blum said. “Hopefully we meet

them later down the road. You knew going in when they made the schedule, that third game was going to be important.”

Whistles almost always resulted in squabbles, dust-ups and facewashes. In the second period, Chris Bourque and Nikolai Prokhorkin shoved after a whistle, with Greenway in the middle of a connected scrum. At another point, Greenway and Prokhorkin tangled all the way up the boards, with the pair flopping together to the ice.

“I don’t know really what started it,” Greenway said. “He wouldn’t let me go. He wanted to do a little dance. I’m always down for a little dance.”

Russia seized the lead on a gorgeous goal. Alexander Barabanov possessed the puck behind the net and wheeled a pass to Sergei Mozyakin, who ripped a touch pass to Prokhorkin in front of the net. Prokhorkin

one-timed it past Ryan Zapolski. It was just the kind of sequence the U.S., given appearance­s Saturday, seems incapable of.

The U.S. played back-andforth hockey, not letting the Russians control the game, and they could have tied it when forward Ryan Donato blasted a wrister off the crossbar. The backbreake­r came as the second period ended. With 0.2 seconds left, Kovalchuk sniped a deep wrist shot over Zapolski’s shoulder to make it 3-0. Just 28 seconds into the third period, Kovalchuk scored again.

Despite the lopsided score and Russia’s last-second kick to their shins, the Americans’ confidence had not waned. They believe they will see Russia again, and they believe it will be different.

“I don’t see any reason why we’re not in the goldmedal game,” Greenway said.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former NHL star Ilya Kovalchuk shoots the puck past Team USA Ryan Zapolski and scores for Russia in the third period.
JULIO CORTEZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS Former NHL star Ilya Kovalchuk shoots the puck past Team USA Ryan Zapolski and scores for Russia in the third period.
 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? United States’ Garrett Roe and Russia’s Sergei Andronov vie for the puck Saturday in South Korea.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES United States’ Garrett Roe and Russia’s Sergei Andronov vie for the puck Saturday in South Korea.
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 ?? MATT SLOCUM – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Broc Little of Team USA tries to stick the puck past Russian goalie Vasili Koshechkin.
MATT SLOCUM – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Broc Little of Team USA tries to stick the puck past Russian goalie Vasili Koshechkin.

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