Friday, the Canadian women's team ended its futility
streak against the American women, winning the gold
medal game, 3-2, after going 0-8 against Team USA in
pre-Olympic play. Team USA also upset Team Canada four
years ago to claim gold in Nagano.
Two days later, the Canadian men rode the luck of the
loonie to end a 50-year gold medal drought in Olympic
ice hockey competition.
Gretzky pulled the now-famous coin out of his Team
Canada jacket during the post-game press conference,
showing it to the media. After the game, the Canadians
dug the coin out of its icy resting place.
"I don't know if the guy is going to get fired, but it
was just something nice for him to do," said
Gretzky.
Gretzky plans to give the one-dollar coin to the
Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto for display, so it can
be seen by all Canadian hockey fans.
Gretzky doesn't gloat
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The mixture of players selected by Gretzky and the rest of the Canadian brain trust turned out to be correct.
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During his uncharacteristic outburst the day after Canada's loss to Sweden, Gretzky made some pretty bold statements.
At the time, Gretzky said that Canada would be the team left standing at the end of the tournament. Turns out he was right.
But instead of saying 'I told you so' in his post-medal press conference, Gretzky was back to being his gracious self and explained why he stepped out of character.
"I just felt on Monday that our team had taken so much criticism that I needed to take the heat off them and let them relax," Gretzky said.
After losing to Sweden 5-2 in its Olympic opener, the Canadian media was ready to heap scorn upon Gretzky and the players for their performance.
Gretzky essentially set his team on a "Canada vs. the world" course, saying his players were under a lot of pressure and everyone outside Canada wanted to see them lose.
In hindsight, it now appears that the loss to Sweden was a blessing. The Swedes won the group and built early confidence. By winning the group and perhaps being over confident, they set themselves up for their ill-fated quarterfinal meeting against Belarus.
"Whenever you win anything like this, you need a little bit of luck and a lot of hard work," Gretzky said.
As luck had it, Canada got Belarus in the semi's while the Americans matched up against a tougher Russian squad.
The Sweden game also established the leadership ideal within the Canadian dressing. Mario Lemieux and Joe Sakic were able to set an example in a game that wasn't going Canada's way.
"The locker room was really good," Gretzky said. "It was 5-1 in the second period against Sweden and guys like Mario and Sakic set the tone. They didn't just throw their sticks out on the ice, they went out and continued to play hard and set an example."
The mixture of players selected by Gretzky and the rest of the Canadian brain trust turned out to be correct.
"In Canada when you pick 23 guys it's difficult," Gretzky said. "We have so many good players. When you pick a group of 23 guys, we're probably the only country to critique each and every one."
Magnificent Mario
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Mario had one assist in Sunday's game, finishing with two goals and four assists. With six points, he finished just one point behind Joe Sakic in the scoring race for Team Canada.
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Team Canada captain Mario Lemieux had so much invested
in these Olympics, basically sacrificing his health to
appear in his first Olympic competition and try to
help the Canadians end their 50-year gold medal
drought.
Sunday, he received the payoff as a gold medal was
draped around his neck by International Ice Hockey
Federation president Rene Fasel at center ice of the E
Center.
Lemieux, who missed a good portion of the National
Hockey League season after undergoing hip surgery, was
sidelined for Canada's second game of the tournament
when the injury flared up again.
But, he returned for the final four games of the
tournament, and was dominating at times for the
Canadians. Mario had one assist in Sunday's game,
finishing with two goals and four assists. With six
points, he finished just one point behind Joe Sakic in
the scoring race for Team Canada.
But, those in the winning dressing room say it was the
intangibles that Mario brought to the table that
meant the most in Canada's march to gold.
"For Mario, what a job he did," said Paul Kariya, the
right wing on Lemieux's line for the last four games
of the tournament. "He provided great leadership. He
played two-way hockey out there. It's great for
him."
Team Canada's Brendan Shanahan agreed.
"He was a great leader for us," said Shanahan. "In a
tournament like this, the little things mean so much.
Mario was backchecking, taking the body and taking
short shifts, all that stuff. When your best player is
doing that, it becomes contagious."
Lemieux said throughout the tournament he was willing
to do whatever it took to claim that elusive gold.
"My goal was to come here to win a gold medal for my
country, and to play with all these great players,"
said Lemieux. "You don't get that opportunity very
many times."
Now that he has accomplished his mission, Lemieux will
return the focus to his Pittsburgh Penguins, which are
battling for an Eastern Conference playoff berth.
"You know, as I said, whatever happens after this,
I'll do my best for the city of Pittsburgh, and,
hopefully, I can get the guys back in the
playoffs."
Consolation prize
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Richter deserved the all-tournament honor. The American goalie went 2-1-1 in the tournament, often saving the Americans from near disaster. He finished the tournament with 2.25 goals-against average and a .938 save percentage.
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Team USA might have lost the gold medal game, but they
dominated the tournament's All-Star team.
The Americans placed four players -- goalie Mike
Richter, defensemen Brian Leetch and Chris Chelios and
forward John LeClair on the six-man squad. Canadian
forward Joe Sakic, the tournament's MVP, and Sweden's
Mats Sundin were the only non-Americans to make the
cut.
Leetch finished the tournament with five assists and a
plus-2 rating. Chelios, Team USA's captain, had just
one goal, but led his squad with a plus-6 rating.
LeClair was dominant early in the tournament, tallying
six goals and one assists. He, however, did not tally
a point in the last two games.
Sakic, who had two goals and two assists in Sunday's
gold medal game, finished the tournament leading
Canada with seven points. Sundin, Team Sweden's
captain, tallied five goals and four assists in the
four games before the Swedes were upset by Belarus in
the quarterfinals.
But, it was Richter who most deserved the
all-tournament honor. The American goalie went 2-1-1
in the tournament, often saving the Americans from
near disaster. He finished the tournament with 2.25
goals-against average and a .938 save percentage.
He was at his best in the two games against Russia,
earning a 2-2 tie in Group play and a 3-2 win in the
semifinals, but was better than the scoreline
suggested in Sunday's final. Richter finished with 34
saves Sunday, and had his team down 3-2 entering the
third before allowing late goals to Jarome Iginla and
Sakic.
"[Richter] played outstanding," said Ryan Smyth, a
forward for Team Canada. "He was flopping around out
there and made some great saves. We could have buried
them during that 5-on-3 [advantage in the second
period], but we couldn't beat Richter."