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Ice Hockey, Women

Date10 – 22 February 2018
StatusOlympic
LocationKwandong Hockey Centre, Coastal Cluster, Gangneung
Participants182 from 8 countries
FormatRound-robin pool, followed by classification matches.

Women’s ice hockey had been contested at the Winter Olympics since 1998, and Canada and the United States had dominated the sport. The USA won the initial gold medal at Nagano, but Canada had won the next four gold medals (2002, 2006, 2010, 2014). The two nations were similarly dominant in international play as they always finished 1-2 at the World Championships, held since 1990.

The United States seemed to have the upper hand in the years preceding PyeongChang, winning the World Championships in 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2017. The two nations played several friendlies in the intervening four years, with the USA also winning more than they lost. In the last few months before PyeongChang, however, Canada won several consecutive games, and the gold medal seemed to be a toss-up.

Eight nations qualified for the Olympic tournament; five of them did automatically by virtue of their ranking by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), two by a qualification tournament, and the Koreans as hosts (their first ever Olympic ice hockey tournament). The South Korean women had trained for several years, with an American coach and several Korean-American and Korean-Canadian players. Shortly before the Games, the IOC negotiated with DPR Korea (North) to allow them to participate and it was agreed that North and South Korea would field a combined, mixed women’s ice hockey team. The team would have 35 players, well above the 23 maximum, although only 22 would dress for each match.

Some of the South Korean players were unhappy, feeling that they would lose playing time. In the end, the mixed Korean team lost all its matches, although it acquitted itself well, and the international goodwill that the mixed Korean team generated made up for any untoward or hurt feelings. The two Koreas competing together on a playing field was historic for the Olympic Movement and the Korean Peninsula.

To avoid Canada and the USA dominating pool play by too great a margin, they were placed together in pool A, with Canada winning the pool when they defeated the Americans 2-1. The top two teams in pool A qualified for the semi-finals, with the third team and the top three teams from pool B facing each other in a knock-out round to advance to the semis. As expected Canada and the United States easily won their semi-final matches, both teams winning 5-0, over OAR and Finland, respectively.

The gold medal final was closely matched, with Canada taking a 2-1 lead after two periods. In the final period the United States’ Monique Lamoureux tied the match with 6:21 left and that score held through the end of regulation play. An overtime period ensued, but neither team could score, so they went to penalty shots. After four rounds that shoot-out was also tied at 2-2, when Monique’s twin sister Jocelyn Lamoureux-Davidson netted her shot, and when Meghan Agosta’s penalty shot was stopped by US goalie Maddie Rooney, the United States had finally won an Olympic gold, 20 years after their first and last one. The loss ended Canada’s record-setting Olympic winstreak of 24 games, but it took a classic to do it.

In the bronze medal game, Finland had a two-goal lead twice and held off the Russians (OAR) in the third period after they had narrowed the margin to one. Finland had now won three Olympic medals in women’s ice hockey, all of them bronze (Vancouver 2010, Nagano 1998).

PosTeamNOC
1United StatesUSAGold
DefenseLee Stecklein
DefenseCayla Barnes
DefenseMegan Keller
DefenseKali Flanagan
ForwardMonique Lamoureux
DefenseEmily Pfalzer
ForwardMeghan Duggan
ForwardHaley Skarupa
ForwardKelly Pannek
ForwardBrianna Decker
ForwardJocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson
ForwardGigi Marvin
ForwardHannah Brandt
ForwardHilary Knight
DefenseKacey Bellamy
DefenseSidney Morin
ForwardDani Cameranesi
ForwardKendall Coyne
ForwardAmanda Kessel
GoalkeeperNicole Hensley
GoalkeeperMaddie Rooney
ForwardAmanda Pelkey
GoalkeeperAlex Rigsby DNS
CoachRobb Stauber
2CanadaCANSilver
GoalkeeperShannon Szabados
ForwardMeghan Agosta
DefenseJocelyne Larocque
DefenseBrigette Lacquette
DefenseLauriane Rougeau
ForwardRebecca Johnston
ForwardLaura Stacey
DefenseLaura Fortino
ForwardJenn Wakefield
ForwardJillian Saulnier
DefenseMeaghan Mikkelson
DefenseRenata Fast
ForwardMélodie Daoust
ForwardBailey Bram
ForwardBrianne Jenner
ForwardSarah Nurse
ForwardHaley Irwin
ForwardNatalie Spooner
ForwardEmily Clark
ForwardMarie-Philip Poulin
GoalkeeperGeneviève Lacasse
GoalkeeperAnn-Renée Desbiens
ForwardBlayre Turnbull
CoachLaura Schuler
3FinlandFINBronze
DefenseIsa Rahunen
DefenseRosa Lindstedt
DefenseJenni Hiirikoski
DefenseMira Jalosuo
DefenseElla Viitasuo
ForwardVenla Hovi
ForwardLinda Välimäki
ForwardAnnina Rajahuhta
ForwardRiikka Välilä
DefenseMinttu Tuominen
ForwardPetra Nieminen
ForwardEmma Nuutinen
ForwardSanni Hakala
ForwardNoora Tulus
ForwardSara Säkkinen
ForwardSaila Saari
ForwardMichelle Karvinen
GoalkeeperNoora Räty
ForwardTanja Niskanen
ForwardSusanna Tapani
DefenseRonja Savolainen
GoalkeeperEveliina Suonpää-Mäkinen DNS
GoalkeeperMeeri Räisänen DNS
CoachPasi Mustonen
4Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC
GoalkeeperValeriya Tarakanova
DefenseAngelina Goncharenko
ForwardLyudmila Belyakova
DefenseLiana Ganeyeva
DefenseYekaterina Lobova
DefenseNina Pirogova
ForwardValeriya Pavlova
ForwardFanuza Kadirova
ForwardOlga Sosina
DefenseMariya Batalova
ForwardDiana Kanayeva
GoalkeeperNadezhda Aleksandrova
DefenseSvetlana Tkachova
ForwardYekaterina Likhachova
ForwardAlyona Starovoytova
ForwardYelena Dergachova
ForwardAlevtina Shtaryova
ForwardViktoriya Kulishova
DefenseYekaterina Nikolayeva
ForwardYekaterina Smolina
GoalkeeperNadezhda Morozova
ForwardYevgeniya Dyupina
ForwardAnna Shokhina
CoachAleksey Chistyakov
5SwitzerlandSUI
GoalkeeperJanine Alder
ForwardSarah Forster
ForwardLara Stalder
DefenseNicole Gass
DefenseShannon Sigrist
DefenseSabrina Zollinger
ForwardLisa Rüedi
ForwardSara Benz
ForwardEvelina Raselli
ForwardMonika Waidacher
ForwardNina Waidacher
ForwardTess Allemann
DefenseChristine Meier
DefenseLaura Benz
DefenseLivia Altmann
DefenseNicole Bullo
ForwardIsabel Waidacher
ForwardAlina Müller
ForwardDominique Rüegg
DefenseStefanie Wetli
GoalkeeperFlorence Schelling
ForwardPhoebe Stänz
GoalkeeperAndrea Brändli DNS
CoachDaniela Diaz
6JapanJPN
GoalkeeperNana Fujimoto
DefenseShiori Koike
DefenseAyaka Toko
DefenseSena Suzuki
DefenseMika Hori
DefenseAkane Hosoyamada
DefenseAina Takeuchi
ForwardHaruna Yoneyama
ForwardYurie Adachi
ForwardChiho Osawa
ForwardMoeko Fujimoto
ForwardHaruka Toko
ForwardRui Ukita
ForwardNaho Terashima
ForwardSuzuka Taka
ForwardMiho Shishiuchi
ForwardHanae Kubo
ForwardTomomi Iwahara
ForwardAmi Nakamura
ForwardShoko Ono
DefenseAoi Shiga
GoalkeeperAkane Konishi
GoalkeeperMai Kondo DNS
CoachTakeshi Yamanaka
7SwedenSWE
GoalkeeperSara Grahn
DefenseEmmy Alasalmi
DefenseJohanna Fällman
ForwardSara Hjalmarsson
DefenseJohanna Olofsson
DefenseAnnie Svedin
DefenseEmilia Ramboldt
DefenseMaja Nylén-Persson
DefenseElin Lundberg
ForwardSabina Küller
ForwardLisa Johansson
ForwardPernilla Winberg
ForwardAnna Borgqvist
ForwardMaria Lindh
ForwardFanny Rask
ForwardErica Udén-Johansson
ForwardRebecca Stenberg
ForwardErika Grahm
ForwardHanna Olsson
ForwardEmma Nordin
ForwardOlivia Carlsson
GoalkeeperMinatsu Murase
GoalkeeperSarah Berglind
CoachLeif Boork
8Korea TeamCOR
ForwardKo Hye-In
DefenseEom Su-Yeon
ForwardKim Un-Hyang
ForwardCaroline Park
ForwardChoi Yu-Jung
ForwardDanelle Im
DefenseKim Se-Lin
ForwardPark Jong-Ah
ForwardChoi Ji-Yeon
DefensePark Yee-Un
ForwardKim Hee-Won
ForwardRyo Song-Hui
DefensePark Chae-Lin
ForwardSusie Jo
ForwardHan Soo-Jin
GoalkeeperHan Do-Hee
ForwardLee Yeon-Jeong
ForwardJung Si-Yun
DefensePark Yoon-Jung
DefenseCho Mi-Hwan
ForwardKim Hyang-Mi
ForwardJong Su-Hyon
ForwardLee Jing-Yu
GoalkeeperSin So-Jeong
ForwardRandi Griffin
ForwardHwang Chung-Gum
DefenseHwang Sol-Gyong DNS
DefenseRyu Su-Jong DNS
DefenseChoe Jong-Hui DNS
GoalkeeperGenny Kim Knowles DNS
ForwardLee Eun-Ji DNS
ForwardKim Un-Jong DNS
GoalkeeperRi Pom DNS
DefenseJin Ok DNS
ForwardChoe Un-Gyong DNS
CoachSarah Murray

Preliminary Round

Date10 – 15 February 2018

Group A

Date11 – 15 February 2018
FormatRound-robin pool. First two teams qualified for semi-finals. Third- and fourth-place teams advance to quarter-finals.
PosCompetitorsNOCWinsOvertime WinsOvertime LossesLossesPointsGoals
1CanadaCAN3000911-2Q
2United StatesUSA200169-3Q
3FinlandFIN100237-8
4Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC000301-15
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #111 Feb 16:40United StatesUSA3 – 1FinlandFIN
Match #211 Feb 21:10CanadaCAN5 – 0Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC
Match #313 Feb 16:40CanadaCAN4 – 1FinlandFIN
Match #413 Feb 21:10United StatesUSA5 – 0Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC
Match #515 Feb 12:10CanadaCAN2 – 1United StatesUSA
Match #615 Feb 16:40FinlandFIN5 – 1Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC

Group B

Date10 – 14 February 2018
FormatRound-robin pool. First two teams qualified for quarter-finals. Third- and fourth-place teams advance to classification matches.
PosCompetitorsNOCWinsOvertime WinsOvertime LossesLossesPointsGoals
1SwitzerlandSUI3000913-2Q
2SwedenSWE2001611-3Q
3JapanJPN100236-6
4Korea TeamCOR000301-20
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #110 Feb 16:40SwedenSWE2 – 1JapanJPN
Match #210 Feb 21:10SwitzerlandSUI8 – 0Korea TeamCOR
Match #312 Feb 16:40SwitzerlandSUI3 – 1JapanJPN
Match #412 Feb 21:10SwedenSWE8 – 0Korea TeamCOR
Match #514 Feb 12:10SwitzerlandSUI2 – 1SwedenSWE
Match #614 Feb 16:40JapanJPN4 – 1Korea TeamCOR

Classification Round 5-8

Date18 February 2018
FormatClassification matches.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #118 Feb 12:10SwitzerlandSUI2 – 0Korea TeamCOR
Match #218 Feb 16:40JapanJPN2 – 1SwedenSWEAET

Quarter-Finals

Date17 February 2018
FormatSingle elimination matches.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #117 Feb 12:10Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC6 – 2SwitzerlandSUI
Match #217 Feb 16:40FinlandFIN7 – 2SwedenSWE

Semi-Finals

Date19 February 2018
FormatSingle elimination matches.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match #119 Feb 13:10United StatesUSA5 – 0FinlandFIN
Match #219 Feb 21:10CanadaCAN5 – 0Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC

Final Round

Date20 – 22 February 2018
FormatClassification matches.
MatchDate/TimeCompetitorsNOCResultCompetitorsNOC
Match 1/222 Feb 13:10United StatesUSA2 – 2CanadaCANAET, 3-2 PS
Match 3/421 Feb 16:40FinlandFIN3 – 2Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC
Match 5/620 Feb 16:40SwitzerlandSUI1 – 0JapanJPN
Match 7/820 Feb 12:10SwedenSWE6 – 1Korea TeamCOR