Sports

US Women's Hockey Team Takes Gold After Tense Shootout

It's the first time since 1998 the team has won the gold medal. Canada had won the last four.

GANGNEUNG, SOUTH KOREA — For the first time in 20 years, the U.S. women's hockey team is wearing gold. After a tense shootout and a dazzling deke, they defeated Canada 3-2 on Thursday in a gold-medal game, claiming a spot among the Olympics' most thrilling moments in recent memory.

"They should make a movie on it," forward Hilary Knight said. "We had all the drama and everything. It's sort of a storybook ending to an incredible series of accomplishments."

Canada had won the last four Olympic golds, including four years ago in Sochi when they rallied from a two-goal deficit to shock the Americans. But this time, the U.S. bounced back from a 2-1 deficit in the third period. Down one score with just seven minutes left in the game, Monique Lamoureux-Morando scored to tie the game at two goals a piece. Then came the shootout.

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Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson skated slowly back and forth toward the net, showing forehand, then leaning quickly to the left to fake a backhand that pulled Canadian goalie Shannon Szabados out of the crease.

On the sport's biggest stage, against the Americans' greatest rival, with all her teammates leaning eagerly over the boards watching her every move, the three-time Olympian came back to her forehand to finish off a dazzling, triple-deke move by sliding the puck into the net past the outstretched glove of Szabados for the deciding goal in the sixth round of a shootout thriller.

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"I've butchered it a thousand times, just ran into tires, tripped over tires just working on my hands," Lamoureux-Davidson said. "Just glad it worked out this time."

See: Olympic Hockey: Women Win Gold In Dramatic Fashion

Lamoureux-Davidson also said: "I knew when that went in that Maddie was going to stop the next one."

That would be 20-year-old goalie Maddie Rooney, who stuffed the last two Canadian shooters to wrap up the victory.

The Americans piled over the boards, throwing gloves in the air before piling on top of Rooney on the ice — 20 years after their last gold medal in women's hockey and 38 years to the day after the men's famous "Miracle on Ice" victory over the Soviet team in group play at Lake Placid.

"Joy's the only word that comes to mind," said Gigi Marvin, a three-time Olympian and at 30 the oldest American on the roster.

U.S. coach Robb Stauber said the win means everything for the country.

"I am just so thankful for the outcome," he said. "It was a thrilling final. It was unreal."

You can watch the game in its entirety here.

See also: Kendall Coyne Wins Gold As U.S. Women's Hockey Team Beats Canada

This victory capped a year that started with the Americans threatening a boycott of the world championships to secure more money and the same kind of treatment that USA Hockey gives to the men's team.

Nothing was more incredible than the move by Lamoureux-Davidson, who decided to use the deke called "Oops, I did it again " — something she had practiced uncounted times in practice, skating around tires set up on open ice to mimic defenders.

Her twin said coach Peter Elander, now at Ohio State, had taught the sisters the shootout move when the three were at the University of North Dakota.

"Not everyone can take the pressure like that, and she took it like a champ," she said.

See also: Rockville's Haley Skarupa Wins Gold On U.S. Women's Hockey Team

Marvin and Amanda Kessel also scored in the shootout, another nail-biter ending four years after Canada won its fourth-straight gold medal in Sochi after rallying to stun the Americans in overtime.

Knight gave the U.S. a 1-0 lead with 25.4 seconds left in the first, redirecting a shot from Sidney Morin through Szabados' pads to give the Americans a jolt of energy.

That lasted only 2 minutes into the second when Haley Irwin tipped a midair pass from Blayre Turnbull over Rooney's left leg for Canada. And when Morin lost the puck, Melodie Daoust grabbed it and passed to Meghan Agosta who hit Marie-Philip Poulin for the wrister into the left side of the net at 6:55 for a 2-1 lead.

Lamoureux-Morando tied it up with a breakaway with 6:21 left in regulation. Knight also had a goal and Rooney was spectacular, making 29 saves for the win. Rooney stopped the last two Canadian shooters in the shootout in Brianne Jenner and then Agosta on her second attempt.

Pressure? Rooney's grin was clear to see throughout the shootout.

"Right before she came down, I just looked over at the bench and saw my teammates like pointing at me, just one more," Rooney said. "And to have their support made it a whole lot easier. I just reacted to her, and then everything kind of went into a blur."

It was sweet redemption for the 10 Americans who watched the Canadians snatch gold away in Sochi. Not only did the Americans end the Canadians' stranglehold on Olympic gold, they ended a skid of five straight against their rival coming into this game, including a 2-1 loss in the tournament a week ago.

Poulin and Irwin each scored goals for Canada. Agosta and Daoust scored in the shootout.

The Canadians, who had pushed the Americans around for much of the game and taken penalties for it, wept on the ice as they accepted their silver medals. Jocelyne Larocque took hers off immediately and held it in her hands as the Americans stood nearby awaiting their gold.

"It's just hard," Larocque said. "You work so hard. We wanted gold but didn't get it."

The Canadians said they didn't like the shootout format , preferring overtime to settle a game of such magnitude.

"We've trained so hard," Agosta said. "It's unfortunate this had to come down to a shootout. When it comes down to a shootout it can be anybody's game."

Added Canada coach Laura Schuler: "There's not a lot of words that can describe how you feel. It was a great game of hockey. It's what we expected: back and forth hockey."

The Americans had dominated the women's game in non-Olympic years, winning the last four and eight of the last 10 world championships, including a 3-2 overtime victory over Canada last spring.

It only made the lack of gold at the Olympics all the more noticeable, and Canada has been in their way since losing the inaugural gold in Nagano in 1998. Canada had won 24 straight Olympic games to go along with those four consecutive gold medals — a streak of success in a women's team sport second only to the U.S. basketball team's current streak of six straight gold.

This was the eighth time these North American rivals had met in the Olympics and the fifth with gold on the line. None has been decided by more than two goals.

Stauber went with Rooney in net after she won the only three games the U.S. took from Canada last fall during a pre-Olympic exhibition tour.

And like Lamoureux-Davidson, the youngster delivered in the biggest moment.

"Everything got into a blur, seeing my teammates sprinting at me ," Rooney said. "It's an indescribable feeling."

By TERESA M. WALKER, AP Sports Writer

Photo credit: Jae C. Hong/Associated Press