Canadian men’s hockey has a golden Olympic shimmer once again.
The Canadian national team hung on for a stressful 3-2 victory in
overtime to give the country a second Olympic gold medal to celebrate
in eight years.
Sidney Crosby provided the heroics Sunday, seven minutes and 40
seconds into the extra period. He capped off a give-and-go with Jarome
Iginla for the winner.
This time around, it obviously wasn’t as easy as when Mario Lemieux,
Joe Sakic and Co. stormed to a 5-2 victory in Salt Lake City. But
winning at home at Canada Hockey Place was more satisfying and ignited
one heck of a party nationwide.
The hockey win also gave Canada an Olympic-record 14 gold medals by a country in a single Winter Games.
The Canadians held a one-goal
advantage entering the final 20 minutes. To protect the lead, they sat
back and played a 1-2-2 trap that the Americans simply couldn’t
penetrate until the final seconds.
U.S. forward Patrick Kane fired a shot at the net that hit teammate
Jamie Langenbrunner’s skate and went on the Canadian goal. Zach Parise
was Johnny-on-the-spot to knock in the rebound with 24.4 seconds left
in regulation time.
Crosby had a breakaway with slightly more than three minutes left,
but the puck was bouncing on him and he couldn’t get a shot off on U.S.
goalie Ryan Miller.
NHL legend Gordie Howe, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and singer
Michael Buble were just many of the VIPs in the building. Of course,
there also were a number of gold-medal-winning Canadian athletes like
skeleton’s Jon Montgomery and the women’s hockey team's captain, Hayley
Wickenheiser.
Canada strikes 1st
Canada had a 1-0 lead after the first period and held a 2-1 advantage following 40 minutes.
The atmosphere was electric once game time arrived and the Canadians
wanted to keep the raucous environment alive. That was something they
failed to accomplish in their preliminary-round match against the U.S.
a week ago, when the U.S. scored on the first shift.
The game was fierce and physical in the first period as both teams
tried to establish themselves in that department. U.S. defenceman
Brooks Orpik was among the most physical. He almost deposited Canadian
forward Dany Heatley into the U.S. bench with a bone-crunching hit.
Orpik, along with his defence partner, Jack Johnson, received the
checking assignment on Canada’s line of Crosby, Eric Staal and Iginla.
There weren’t many excellent scoring chances early on. But with 7:10
remaining in the first period, Canadian forward Mike Richards stripped
U.S. defenceman Brian Rafalski at the side of the U.S. goal. Richards
put a shot on goal that produced a rebound his linemate Jonathan Toews
lifted over Miller’s left pad.
Although Canada did not have last change, the Toews, Richards and
Rick Nash trio were out on most shifts against the dangerous U.S. line
of Paul Stastny, Parise and Jamie Langenbrunner.
U.S. on the board
Canada
went ahead by two goals after a pass attempt from Canada’s Ryan Getzlaf
to Patrick Marleau hit U.S. defenceman Ryan Whitney and bounded to a
trailing Corey Perry for a goal.
The U.S. finally got on the board when a crease-crashing Ryan Kesler
redirected a pass from his linemate Patrick Kane and squeezed past
Canadian goalie Roberto Luongo, who is Kesler’s teammate with the
Vancouver Canucks.
The U.S. had an opportunity to tie the game on a two-on-one break
shortly a few shifts later, but Parise held onto the puck and Luongo
made the save.
Kesler remarked in a second intermission interview that Luongo was fighting the puck and the Canadians were tightening up.
Canada hit two posts early in the third period on shots from
defencemen Shea Weber and Chris Pronger. Patrick Marleau and Heatley
had two excellent chances off a Marleau steal, but Miller made stops on
both close calls.
The Olympic tournament all-star team was Miller, Ralfaski, Weber,
Slovakia's Pavol Demitra, Toews and Parise, with Miller earning MVP
honours. Rafalski was named the tournament's top defenceman, while
Toews was named the top forward.