The U.S. women’s hockey team wins Olympic gold medal and did it the hard way, clawing back from the brink before sealing a 2–1 overtime victory over Canada on Thursday in Milan. For nearly the entire final, the Americans chased the game, tested by a Canadian side that refused to bend. Then came the response that defined their tournament. Hilary Knight forced overtime late in regulation, and Megan Keller delivered the winner moments later, turning tension into triumph and restoring American supremacy on the Olympic stage.It was not just a win. It was a reversal of doubt. Canada had defended with discipline and led deep into the third period, threatening to repeat its 2022 Olympic success. Instead, the Americans found clarity in chaos. Their persistence ended Canada’s hopes and extended a rivalry that continues to shape women’s hockey history. The gold was the United States’ third in Olympic play and its first since 2018, earned through patience and belief when both seemed close to slipping away.
USA snatch Olympic gold from fierce rivals Canada after nerve-shredding overtime comeback for the ages
Canada struck first when Kristin O’Neill scored short-handed early in the second period, finishing a breakaway that stunned the previously flawless American defense. It was the first time the United States had trailed all tournament. Canada’s structure tightened after that, frustrating an offense that had overwhelmed every opponent until the final.Time slipped away. Chances came and went. Then, with less than three minutes left, Knight changed everything. Stationed in front of the net, she redirected Laila Edwards’ shot through traffic to tie the game and ignite the American bench.“Just epic,” Knight said. “I don’t really have words to describe it. But I’m just so happy we were able to be in the position we were.“We were chasing that game against an incredible team, legends on the other side of the ice. To find the back of the net in the fashion we did, and for Meg to just do her thing and dance, you couldn’t have written a better script.”Overtime did not last long. Just three minutes in, Keller pushed the puck past Canadian goaltender Ann-Renée Desbiens, setting off an explosion of celebration. Players flooded the ice, years of preparation released in a single moment.Inside the chaos, Keller later described “a lot of hugs, a lot of ‘Let’s go!’ A lot of smiles,” adding, “This is the moment that you dream of and you work for your entire life.”For Canada, the ending cut deep. Forward Laura Stacey called the loss “crushing,” a reflection of how close her team had come to reclaiming gold.The victory added another chapter to a rivalry that has defined the sport since 1998. Once again, the margin was razor thin. Once again, everything came down to a single goal.