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AMERICANS DEFEAT CANADA AS SUPER SUNDAY TURNS SOUR FOR THE HOME TEAM
VANCOUVER – Too little, too late.
Down by one in the dying minutes, after a Sidney Crosby goal threw the home team a lifeline Sunday, Team
Canada stormed the U.S. goal. But Ryan Miller stoned the Canadians and Ryan Kesler scored an empty-net goal
to secure the 5-3 win for a young U.S. team that celebrated as if it had just won the Stanley Cup.
Canada now faces a do-or-die playoff against Germany on Tuesday to get into the quarter-finals. Assuming
they win, the Canadians will face a hard road – facing tougher teams sooner than if they had moved directly
into the final eight.
“It's a must-win, no matter who we play at this point,” said Crosby. “But any team that is in the
tournament you have to respect. We have to regroup quickly.”
“I hate to say it, but it might be what we need,” Canada goalie Martin Brodeur said of the extra game.
Coming after a narrow shootout win over the modest Swiss, Team Canada is testing the patience of a nation
with high hockey expectations.
So what's the problem?
“I can't put my finger on it,” said defenceman Dan Boyle.
Miller was one obstacle. Canada outshot the U.S. 45-22.
“Ryan Miller had an outstanding game and played every bit as well as I've seen him during the season,”
said U.S. coach Ron Wilson. “He makes four, five big saves a game and he did that tonight.”
The big question for Canada is whether Brodeur will start in goal Tuesday. The Devils star looked a bit
shaky against the U.S. and was also the victim of a couple bad bounces, perhaps opening the door for Roberto
Luongo to assume the No. 1 job.
“I'll watch the game again here tonight without emotion and make a decision on that,” said Canadian coach
Mike Babcock.
Only victories will be good enough from here for Canada, with four straight wins needed to earn the gold
medal an entire country is yearning for.
Brian Rafalski scored two goals and Miller made 42 saves as the Americans – wearing the throwback jerseys
they wore at the 1960 Games when they last beat the Canadians in Olympic play – came out on top of a wildly
entertaining hockey game.
Chris Drury and Jamie Langenbrunner had the other goals for the U.S. while Eric Staal, Dany Heatley also
scored for Canada.
The young American team features just three players with past Olympic experience and has embraced the
underdog role here, hoping to summon the spirit of the 1960 and 1980 teams that delivered unlikely golds in
this tournament.
They'll need Miller to continue delivering performances like this one, where he snared a Jarome Iginla
shot while on his knees as the Canadians tried everything they could to get back in it.
The U.S. players mobbed Kesler behind the goal after he secured the win, lunging to knock the puck into an
empty Canadian goal with 44.7 seconds left.
The pre-game anticipation for the U.S.-Canada matchup was sky-high, with scalpers selling tickets at
outrageous prices and downtown Vancouver literally at a standstill while people watched on screens around the
city.
Canada Hockey Place was once again draped in red and white by a flag-waving sellout crowd that screamed
until it was hoarse. The roar started well before the puck drop when gold medal moguls skier Alexandre
Bilodeau was interviewed on the scoreboard and continued even after the U.S. got on the board just 41 seconds
into the game.
That goal came from Rafalski after Brodeur had failed to clear the puck from his team's end. The U.S.
defenceman beat him with a screen shot that glanced off Crosby's stick and in.
Brodeur also looked shaky when the Americans went ahead 2-1. Just 22 seconds after Staal had tied the game
for Canada, Rafalski skated in from the point and beat Brodeur with a shot along the ice at 9:15 of the first
period.
The Canadian team started to reclaim control of the play shortly after, dominating puck possession and
generating all kinds of chances on Miller. The forwards showed more flow than they were able to generate
three days earlier against Switzerland.
Heatley evened the score with his fourth goal of the Olympic tournament, slamming home the rebound off a
Jonathan Toews shot at 3:32 of the second period. He punched the air in celebration while the red-and-white
mass celebrated in the stands.
Canada looked ready to put it in overdrive. The team's skill was on full display as the big forwards
controlled the puck for long stretches and used their body on the smaller American players.
But Miller was able to weather the storm and his teammates responded with a flurry of chances on Brodeur,
who appeared to get rattled by a bump from David Backes just before Drury made it 3-2. The Canadian goalie
was flailing around as Drury found a loose puck at 16:46 of the second period.
American GM Brian Burke has been talking about the pressure on the Canadian team for months and the guys
wearing the Maple Leaf must have felt it most while trying to kill three successive penalties in the third
period. Langenbrunner struck on the last opportunity, tipping a Rafalski shot at 7:09 to make it 4-2.
That was all the offence his team would need as Miller managed to shut the door once Crosby had scored to
get Canada within a goal.
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