2012 IIHF Women's World Championship

United States 9 - Canada 2
 

CANADA SUFFERS TOUGH 9-2 LOSS TO UNITED STATES, BUT WILL “REGROUP AND COME BACK HARD”

BURLINGTON, Vt.—Canada’s National Women’s Team took its worst beating ever from the United States, losing 9-2 to open the 2012 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship on Saturday night.

The Americans scored five goals in the first five minutes and 32 seconds. Canada had never given up more than seven goals to the U.S. in 102 previous meetings.

Jocelyne Lamoureux scored a hat trick for the U.S, winner of the last three women’s world titles. Her twin sister Monique Lamoureux-Kolls, and Hilary Knight, both contributed two goals. Captain Julie Chu and Josephine Pucci also scored. Lamoureux-Kolls also had three assists for a six-point night. Molly Schaus stopped 19 of 21 shots for the win.

Natalie Spooner (Scarborough, Ont./Ohio State University, WCHA) and Marie-Philip Poulin (Beauceville, Que./Boston University, HE) replied for Canada.

“We have two choices,” head coach Dan Church said. “We can wallow in our own self-pity or we can get back on the horse and go hard.

“I’m pretty sure the players are going to choose the latter, and let this be something that helps us get better and we learn from it.”

Fuelled by the adrenaline of playing a world championship on home ice for the first time since 2001, the Americans attacked from the opening faceoff and scored on their first shift.

Canadian goaltender Charline Labonté (Boisbriand, Que./McGill University, CIS) was pulled at 3:32 of the first period after allowing three goals on six shots. The Americans quickly scored twice in the next two minutes on Shannon Szabados (Edmonton, Alta./Northern Alberta Institute of Technology, ACAC).

Labonté went back in net for the start of the second period and made 15 saves on 22 shots overall. Edmonton’s Szabados stopped nine of 11.

“It’s a hard game to talk about because the score was just out of hand,” Labonté said. “I’m probably going to watch all the goals and see what I personally could have done better.”

The pain extended to more than the scoreboard for Canada. Forward Haley Irwin (Thunder Bay, Ont./University of Minnesota Duluth, WCHA) left the game midway through the first period with a lower body injury. She fell hard into the boards behind the American net.

Irwin tried to hobble on one skate to the Canadian bench for almost a minute before the whistle mercifully blew and she could be helped off the ice. She immediately went to hospital for X-rays, Church said, adding she didn’t suffer a fracture and was not expected to play Sunday against Finland.

The Canadians seemed to have recovered for the second period when they outscored and outshot the U.S. But the Canadians were in tough again in the third, and they managed just five shots on Schaus.

“We gave them space on the ice when they shouldn’t have had it,” Canadian captain Hayley Wickenheiser (Shaunavon, Sask./University of Calgary, CIS) said. “Just making it way too easy for them.”

The Americans blew holes in Canada’s defensive zone coverage with speed and quick passes in the opening minutes. Their stretch passes created odd-man rushes. The U.S. outshot Canada 17-6 in the first period.

The tournament format is different this year with the top four countries — the U.S., Canada, Finland and Russia — in Pool A. Pool B is teams four through eight, which are Sweden, Switzerland, Slovakia and Germany. The top two teams in Pool A earn byes to the semifinals. The bottom two meet the top two from Pool B in the quarter-finals.

After Finland on Sunday, Canada concludes the preliminary round Tuesday versus Russia.

“It’s a disappointing loss for us, but fortunately it’s not the one that really matters,” Wickenheiser said. “We’ve got a lot of hockey left. Win or lose, it doesn’t mean anything until you get to the big one, but we’ve got to get there first.

“When you get beat this bad, you’ve got to regroup and come back hard.”

In the other Pool A games, Nina Tikkinen each scored twice in the third period to lead Finland to a 5-4 win over Russia. In Pool B games, Sweden defeated Slovakia 5-1 and Germany edged Switzerland 3-2.

Notes: Canada’s most lopsided loss to the U.S. prior to Saturday was a 7-3 defeat on Jan. 6, 2002 in Detroit. . . . Canada has a 61-41-1 record versus the U.S.

» Game Notes

 

Game Information
Game Number 4 Round Preliminary
Arena Gutterson Fieldhouse City, Country Burlington, VT
Month / Day / Year 04/07/2012 Time 07:00 PM ET
Attendance Game Status Final

Box Score   1     2     3   Total
United States (USA) 5 1 3 9
Canada (CAN) 0 2 0 2

Goals/Penalties
First Period
Goals:
   00:37 USA 17 Jocelyne Lamoureux (16 Kelli Stack, 7 Monique Lamoureux-Kolls)
   01:24 USA 21 Hilary Knight (14 Brianna Decker)
   03:32 USA 7 Monique Lamoureux-Kolls  PP
   04:52 USA 13 Julie Chu (21 Hilary Knight) PP
   05:32 USA 7 Monique Lamoureux-Kolls (16 Kelli Stack)

Penalties:
   01:39 CAN 25 Tessa Bonhomme (Roughing)
   04:37 CAN 2 Meghan Agosta (Hooking)
   06:46 CAN 10 Gillian Apps (Hooking)
   12:22 USA 24 Josephine Pucci (Interference)
   15:34 CAN 3 Jocelyne Larocque (Interference)

Second Period
Goals:
   00:39 CAN 24 Natalie Spooner (13 Caroline Ouellette, 22 Hayley Wickenheiser)
   03:10 USA 17 Jocelyne Lamoureux (25 Megan Bozek)
   17:03 CAN 29 Marie-Philip Poulin (16 Jayna Hefford, 6 Rebecca Johnston)

Penalties:
   11:47 USA   (Too Many Men)

Third Period
Goals:
   05:29 USA 24 Josephine Pucci (7 Monique Lamoureux-Kolls)
   07:38 USA 21 Hilary Knight (12 Jenny Potter)
   11:17 USA 7 Monique Lamoureux-Kolls (19 Gigi Marvin, 16 Kelli Stack)

Penalties:
   10:00 CAN 8 Laura Fortino (Elbowing)
   12:43 CAN 10 Gillian Apps (Charging)
   16:14 USA 22 Kacey Bellamy (Roughing)
   16:14 CAN 8 Laura Fortino (Interference)


Goaltenders
United States
1 Molly Schaus On 1/00:00 Off 3/20:00
Canada
32 Charline Labonté On 1/00:00 Off 1/03:32
1 Shannon Szabados On 1/03:33 Off 1/20:00
32 Charline Labonté On 2/00:00 Off 3/20:00

Shots on Goal   1     2     3   Total
United States 17 5 11 33
Canada 6 10 5 21