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Canada earns bragging rights over US in clash of rivals

GANGNEUNG: Canada laid down a marker in their bid for a fifth consecutive women's ice hockey gold medal by edging the United States 2-1 in a fiery preliminary round clash on Thursday, as one of the great Olympic rivalries was renewed.
The contest between the two women's ice hockey super powers was played at a pace and skill level not witnessed in the other preliminary round contests, the display reminding everyone that the U.S. and Canada remain a class apart.
If history is any indication, the game served as an appetizer before the main event, a gold medal final on Feb. 22.
Since women's ice hockey became part of the Olympic programme in 1998, Canada and the United States have enjoyed a duopoly, playing for every gold medal except when Sweden crashed the party at the 2006 Turin Games.
The United States skated away with the first gold in 1998 but Canada has reigned supreme ever since, winning four consecutive titles.
It has been a similar story at the world championships.
Since they began in 1990, the two teams have played in every final, with Canada winning 10 and the U.S. eight, including the last four.
If familiarity does indeed breed contempt, there was plenty of that and more on show at the Kwandong Hockey Centre.
While body checking is forbidden in women's hockey, the game was a scrappy affair which would be expected from a rivalry that both sides have routinely described as "a war".
After a high-tempo scoreless opening period, Canada took control in the second on a power-play goal from Meghan Agosta and another from Sarah Nurse, who found the top corner of goalie Maddie Rooney's net with a laser-like wrist shot.
Before the end of period, the U.S. had chance to pull one back when Canada covered the puck in the crease to give up a penalty shot.
However, Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson, who two days earlier set an Olympic record when she scored goals six seconds apart against Olympic Athletes from Russia, could not convert, sending Canada to the intermission with a two-goal cushion.
The US came out flying to start the third and immediately halved the deficit, Kendall Coyne splitting the Canadian defense and snapping the puck between Genevieve Lacasse's pads just 23 seconds into the period. The Americans, however, could not complete the comeback with the game ending in a wild pile-up around the Canadian net.
Read more at http://www.uniindia.com/canada-earns-bragging-rights-over-us-in-clash-of-rivals/sports/news/1138903.html#1EVGVTCseUjht1TV.99
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