Weekly Cupcakes: Olympics edition

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 15: Nathan MacKinnon #29 of Team Canada controls the puck through a stick check. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images
  • ‘That’s an easy one’: Canada, France react to Tom Wilson’s Olympic fight in response to hit on Nathan MacKinnon. [Sportsnet]
  • U.S. men’s hockey stays unbeaten, is the No. 2 seed for knockouts. [ESPN]
  • Poulin returns in Canada’s biggest victory in quarterfinal win over Germany. Canada to face Switzerland in semifinals on Monday at 3:10 p.m. ET. [CBC]
  • USA downs Germany, earns bye to Olympic men’s hockey quarterfinals. [USA Today]
  • Elimination round schedule has been revealed for men’s hockey at Milano Cortina.
2026 Olympic Men's Hockey Playoff Bracket
Quarterfinals on Wed. Feb. 18:
1. CAN 🇨🇦 vs. Winner CZE 🇨🇿/ DEN 🇩🇰
2. USA 🇺🇸 vs. Winner SWE 🇸🇪 / LAT 🇱🇻
3. SVK 🇸🇰 vs. Winner GER 🇩🇪 / FRA 🇫🇷
4. FIN 🇫🇮 vs. Winner SUI 🇨🇭 / ITA 🇮🇹

Semifinals (Feb. 20) then re-seed based on these standings:… pic.twitter.com/D97kG4NSAf

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) February 15, 2026
  • Why team Canada is wearing Nike and not Bauer in Olympic hockey. [National Post]
  • Undefeated U.S. women’s hockey team punches ticket to semifinals with their win over Italy. [The Athletic]
  • What’s next for the LA Kings with star forward Kevin Fiala out for the rest of the season after suffering injury in Swiss game against Canada? [Mayor’s Manor]

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/daily-cupcakes-sandie/61909/weekly-cupcakes-olympics-edition
 
Sleepless Star: The kid in MacKinnon drives Canada’s quest for Olympic Gold

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The stadium lights in Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena may glow in a smaller barn and on a shorter sheet, but they burn brighter as the elimination portion of the Men’s Ice Hockey tournament kicks into high gear tomorrow. Nathan MacKinnon is built for the heat—and he’ll be right at the center of any Team Canada Olympic glory.

2026 Olympic Men's Hockey Playoff Bracket
Quarterfinals on Wed. Feb. 18:
1. CAN 🇨🇦 vs. Winner CZE 🇨🇿/ DEN 🇩🇰
2. USA 🇺🇸 vs. Winner SWE 🇸🇪 / LAT 🇱🇻
3. SVK 🇸🇰 vs. Winner GER 🇩🇪 / FRA 🇫🇷
4. FIN 🇫🇮 vs. Winner SUI 🇨🇭 / ITA 🇮🇹

Semifinals (Feb. 20) then re-seed based on these standings:… pic.twitter.com/D97kG4NSAf

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) February 15, 2026

Eyes may be wide from the Olympic scale, but that just lets MacKinnon see the game on a level few can match.

He may not be sleeping as soundly these nights, but between the whistles? He hasn’t shown a hint of it.

Managing Nerves​


Ahead of Canada’s tournament opener against Czechia on Feb. 12, Nathan MacKinnon laid it bare: the Olympic weight was real. “The Olympics are huge, and I was nervous,” he said. “I can usually sleep before a game, and I could not sleep.”

Men's #Olympics preliminary round Power Rankings are here!🔥 #IIHF

🔗 More: https://t.co/cxouR8tNlc pic.twitter.com/6o4vD0wnK7

— IIHF (@IIHFHockey) February 15, 2026

Those nerves haven’t surfaced on the ice. Canada dominated the group stage—3-0, outscoring opponents 20-3, capped by a 10-2 rout of France on Feb. 15—and MacKinnon has been electric. He followed up with: “We are good at what we do, but we feel like kids at this tournament.”

That wide-eyed wonder is a superpower. Staying connected to the kid who fell in love with the game keeps the pressure from crushing you; it channels it. And make no mistake—for Team Canada, the pressure is immense as single-elimination begins tomorrow.

As Canadian captain Sidney Crosby framed it pre-tournament: “There’s expectations, there’s pressure that comes with that, but it’s about our group and trying to be the best team we can. It’s on all of us to help each other, and that’s what we’ll try to do.”

So far, all that pressure has done is polish MacKinnon into a sharper diamond. The Avalanche star arrived feeling the magnitude; now he’s shining under it, ready for the knockout rounds.

Humble in Highlights​


One clear sign of MacKinnon honoring that younger self is his humility amid Canada’s dominance in the group stage.

After burying a power-play goal on a feed from Connor McDavid and Sidney Crosby, he deflected credit: “Two of the best players in the world, and passing it to me was cool. I did not do a lot on that one. Anyone could put that in.”

He’s shown similar grace toward 19-year-old phenom Macklin Celebrini, the youngest NHL player ever to suit up for Canada at the Olympics (with NHL players).

When asked if he could have matched Celebrini’s poise and production on this stage, MacKinnon told Arpon Basu of The Athletic: “I was an idiot. No, no. Not good enough, not mature enough, not anything enough.”

Some might push back—after all, an 18-year-old MacKinnon torched the NHL in his rookie year and shone in the playoffs—but this stage carries heavier stakes and deeper anxiety.

I think the same 18-year-old Nathan would be pretty proud of where he is today—on the cusp of adding the one piece of hardware he’s never had the chance to win: Olympic gold.

Business Time​


One of the early narratives of this tournament tried (yet again) to paint Nathan MacKinnon as a no-fun, super-serious, emotionless robot—as headlines latched onto his claim that he wasn’t in Milan for fun, but to win gold.

Emotionless? Nothing could be further from the truth.

What we’re witnessing at the 2026 Olympic Winter Games is pure, unadulterated passion, pride, and purpose.

MacKinnon is in Milan for one thing: to win a gold medal and honor the young Nathan who watched Sidney Crosby score the golden goal in 2010 and surely thought, “That’s gonna be me one day.”

That “one day” is now.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...ckinnon-drives-canadas-quest-for-olympic-gold
 
Necas makes Czech history in clutch 3-2 win over Denmark

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Milan, ITALY — The Marty party stormed Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena as the do-or-die qualification round kicked off at the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics. In a tense battle for a quarterfinal spot against powerhouse Canada, Colorado Avalanche star Martin Necas delivered the spark: a power-play goal early in the second and an assist to fuel Czechia’s three-goal outburst in the period.

Czechia overcame Denmark’s resilient push—two second-period tallies kept it close at 3-2 heading into the third—but a scoreless final frame sealed the 3-2 victory and advancement. Necas’ clutch playmaking and sniper touch (1G-1A) lifted Czechia past a gritty Danish side featuring Frederik Andersen in net, setting up a blockbuster quarterfinal showdown.

Martin Necas and David Pastrnak helped Czechia move on in the Olympic qualification playoff 👏

They will meet Canada in the men's quarterfinals! pic.twitter.com/O46PdbHrTr

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) February 17, 2026

This bounce-back win keeps Czechia’s medal dreams alive after a tough group stage, with Necas proving once again why he’s the Avalanche’s dynamic force on the international stage.

The Game​


The first period came and went as both teams felt each other out. Shots finished 8-6 in favor of Czechia, but neither side generated many dangerous chances. That changed dramatically in the second period.

Martin Necas struck first at 25:39 on the power play, ripping a one-timer from the dot that echoed the kind we usually see Nathan MacKinnon hammer home. It was the first real flash of dominance, but Necas was arguably the best player on the ice all game, and that edge carried throughout.

An absolutely diabolical angle of Martin Necas' power play goal today! #GoAvsGo | @MileHighHockey | #Olympics2026pic.twitter.com/TI1itRN6Zx

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 17, 2026

Alexander True answered quickly at 29:02 with his first-ever Olympic goal, tying it 1-1 and saying, “Yeah, just good play by Joachim there, finding me back, and I just had to put it in the empty net, so that was nice.”

Then the Czechs poured it on with two goals in a span of under two minutes and change: David Kampf buried one on the doorstep at 30:15, set up by Necas’ nice saucer pass for the secondary assist. Roman Cervenka followed with a top-shelf snipe at 31:24, assisted by David Pastrnak, to make it 3-1.

FIVE-TIME Olympian Roman Cervenka buries the chance as Czechia take a lead into the third period in a #WinterOlympics elimination showdown. 🍿 pic.twitter.com/8K3C7ahyTU

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 17, 2026

Denmark refused to fold, getting one back late in the period on a power-play goal from Nick Olesen with 2:54 left in 2nd, cutting it to 3-2 and keeping the tension high.

The third period was a masterclass in shutdown hockey from Czechia. They weathered Denmark’s push—outshot 12-5 in the frame—and held firm even after Frederik Andersen was pulled for the extra attacker. No further goals, and Czechia sealed the 3-2 win to advance.

By the Numbers​


Czechia will meet Canada in the quarterfinals roughly 22 hours after today’s game ended—a brutal, quick turnaround against one of the tournament’s undisputed powerhouses.

Martin Necas has a goal in three consecutive games, setting a Czech Olympic record in tournaments featuring NHL players. He’s also tied with Teemu Selanne (and a select few others like Jere Lehtinen and Connor McDavid) for the longest multi-point streak in NHL-era Olympic history at three straight games.

All five goals in this contest came in the second period, underscoring the game’s wild flow: tight checking early, an offensive explosion mid-game, and then Czechia slamming the door shut with a scoreless third. Lukas Dostal was lights-out in net (24 saves on 26 shots), preserving the 3-2 win and the quarterfinal berth.

Necas now sits at 3 goals and 6 points through four Olympic games—tying Vinny Prospal for third-most points by a Czech in an NHL-era single Olympics—proving he’s carrying the load for his nation.

Avalanche Spin​


Martin Necas’ standout play in this Olympic tournament is going a long way toward legitimizing the infamous Mikko Rantanen-for-Necas (plus Jack Drury and picks) blockbuster trade from January 2025. If he carries this momentum back to North America post-Olympics—where he’s already been a seamless fit on the top line— it’ll fully quiet any doubters.

His rocket from the left face-off dot today on the power play? That’s the kind of sniper shot we usually see Nathan MacKinnon unleash, proving MacK isn’t the only Avs weapon who can bomb from that spot and highlighting Colorado’s stubborn commitment to that PP setup.

Tomorrow brings the ultimate Avalanche subplot: Necas and Czechia vs. Toews, Makar, and MacKinnon on Team Canada in the quarterfinals. Necas already summed it up perfectly ahead of their first meeting in the prelims (a 5-0 Canada win): “Obviously, it’s much easier to be playing with them than against them.”

Which @Avalanche player has looked the best during the #Olympics2026?

(If other, write in)@MileHighHockey | #GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 17, 2026

An upset here would be massive—shocking the hockey world and giving Necas bragging rights back in the Avs locker room. But that’s gonna be tough sledding against the stacked, top-seeded Canadians. Czechian captain Radko Gudas had this to say following the game regarding meeting team Canada and being intimidated:

“If you get intimidated, you shouldn’t be playing pro hockey,” and followed up with, “We have to improve on the things we did today, and if we can limit those and play smart hockey, we have a chance.”

Let us know what you thought of the game in the comments!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...-czech-history-in-clutch-3-2-win-over-denmark
 
Lehkonen overtime hero sending Finland to Olympic semi-final

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Feb 18, 2026; Milan, Italy; Artturi Lehkonen of Finland celebrates scoring their third goal in overtime to win the match against Switzerland in a men's ice hockey quarterfinal during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images | Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

Anyone who says clutch doesn’t exist isn’t familiar with Artturi Lehkonen. All the Finnish forward does is score big goals and today was no exception as he struck the back of the net in overtime to send Finland to the semi-finals at the Olympics in a 3-2 win over Switzerland.

HOCKEY M –L'ancien du Canadien Artturi Lehkonen 🇫🇮 complète la remontée de la Finlande et propulse son équipe en demi-finales🤩@LNH_FR#MilanoCortina2026 #rcsports #hockey #jeuxolympiques pic.twitter.com/iCCfkvRqhr

— Radio-Canada Sports (@RC_Sports) February 18, 2026

It wasn’t looking so hot for Finland as they were losing the majority of the contest to underdog Switzerland after Damian Riat and Nino Niederreiter scored in the first period to put the Swiss up comfortably 2-0. There was no scoring in the second period and it was all but over for Finland as they watched the minutes tick away in the third frame.

With just over six minutes remaining Finland got on the board from Sebastian Aho and then in the final minute Finland found the equalizer at Miro Heiskanen found the back of the net. The overtime hero Artturi Lehkonen saved his best for last and potted the winning goal a few minutes into the extra period. It was his second goal and fifth point, in which has already been a successful Olympics for him.

More from Lehkonen on controlling OT nerves:

"We were talking about it during the break, that we just wanted to keep grinding, keep plugging away. We knew that chances would come and we’d bury one and grind out that victory."#GoAvsGo | @MileHighHockey | #Olympics2026

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 18, 2026

Now Finland faces a tough task against Canada in the semi-final but they still have a chance to defend their gold medal at this juncture. Puck drop is at 8:40 a.m. MT on Friday, February 20th.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...me-hero-sending-finland-to-olympic-semi-final
 
List of Potential Avalanche Trade Targets

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DENVER, COLORADO - DECEMBER 19: Nathan MacKinnon #29 of the Colorado Avalanche faces off against Jonathan Toews #19 of the Winnipeg Jets. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

It’s that time of year to fantasize about all the veteran depth players who might be wearing burgundy and blue within a month’s time. Once the Olympic roster freeze lifts after February 22nd there could be a sudden flurry of activity. The Colorado Avalanche like to do their NHL trade deadline shopping early and certainly have a wish list, are any of the following players on their radar?

Forwards​


Jonathan Toews

After numerous reports that the Avalanche were finalists for his services over the summer, it’s curious why there hasn’t been much talk about acquiring veteran forward Jonathan Toews from the Winnipeg Jets, who are clearly in a selling position sitting at over ten point out of a playoff spot currently. He’s enjoyed a decent season with 19 points in 56 games in his comeback after sitting out two seasons.

The 37-year-old center has a very affordable contract of just $2 million for this season but he can earn up to $5 million more in performance bonuses. Most are for games played, which he’s already earned but there’s additional money for playoff performance including an extra $1 million for a Stanley Cup win. Colorado would have to sort out the financials and it’s unclear if Winnipeg would be on the hook for bonuses earned while he was a Jet if he gets traded. If not, at least any bonuses earned over the salary cap can be deferred until next year. But Toews is an intriguing option for veteran center depth which shouldn’t cost a lot to acquire with confirmed interest from the Avalanche in the past.

Chris Johnston: Jonathan Toews is likely deciding between Winnipeg and Colorado – Chris Johnston Show

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) June 17, 2025

Boone Jenner

Word on the street is that Colorado has been keeping a close eye on the Columbus Blue Jackets lately. The Ohio team is still undecided about selling but currently sitting four points out of a playoff spot must mean they are considering it. No doubt GM Chris MacFarland would love to get his hands on Blue Jackets captain Boone Jenner making an affordable $3.75M in the last year of his contract to fortify center depth. As a rental Jenner could even go back to Columbus in the offseason making a quick reunion with MacFarland even more appealing. Jenner has had a productive and healthy-ish season with 27 points in 42 games.


Bobby McMann

There probably is a long line of suitors for a hard-nosed player who is on pace for his second consecutive 20 goal season, who skates well with size at 6-foot-2 and has a very affordable $1.35M cap hit on an expiring contract. Therefore, it might cost a premium asset or two to nab the 29-year-old McMann, currently rumored to be two second round picks, but if the Avalanche expect to extend him it could be worth it. There’s also the fact of a big goal he scored in Toronto’s overtime win over Colorado just several weeks ago, which surely Chris MacFarland made a mental note of.

🚨 BOBBY MCMANN COMES OUT OF NOWHERE WITH HIS LIGHTNING FAST SPEED TO TIE THE GAME UP ON THE BREAK

WHAT A GOAL 😮‍💨💪
2-2

Via @Sportsnet #LeafsForever

pic.twitter.com/0sf5dU5mBV

— Leafslatest (@Leafslatest) January 13, 2026

Defense​


Luke Schenn

Another potential trade target from the Winnipeg Jets is defenseman Luke Schenn. He is on an expiring contract with a $2.75M cap hit. At 36-years-old he is just the veteran defensive depth a contender is looking for, though he is a right shot which Colorado already has a surplus of. There’s a rumor that Luke would ideally like to get moved to the same destination as his brother forward Brayden Schenn, who happens to be a good friend of Nathan MacKinnon. On a contract with more years of $6.50M, a move for Brayden from St. Louis Blues would need a lot more help to make this deal happen but Luke could be the much more affordable addition on his own.

Nick Kypreos: It's believed Brayden and brother Luke Schenn are communicating that they'd like to play together, so it's possible there's an organized effort to get them both at the same time – Sportsnet (1/14)

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) January 16, 2026

Brett Kulak

The Pittsburgh to Colorado pipeline, and vice versa, has been strong over the past few years and the Ilya Solovyov move earlier in the year only greased the wheels on potential future deals. Defenseman Brett Kulak would give the Avalanche a depth left shot option on the back end at a reasonable $2.75M price tag for the rest of the season. His experience going to the Stanley Cup finals with the Edmonton Oilers multiple years only enhances his resume. The 32-year-old has already been moved once this year from the aforementioned Oilers, which could mean the Penguins wouldn’t mind flipping him despite currently still holding on to a playoff spot in the Metropolitan Division. Fun fact, Kulak also spent half a season with the ECHL Colorado Eagles in 2014-15 as a member of the Calgary Flames organization.

Old Friends​


We can never discount familiar faces heading back to the Avalanche, especially those who would seamlessly fit back into the dressing room. There’s been continual speculation about a reunion with several former centers, who would all be a good fit and give the Avalanche needed depth down the middle. Former centers Nashville’s Ryan O’Reilly ($4.5M for one more year) and Calgary’s Nazem Kadri ($7M for two more years) have term on their deals and wouldn’t be easy to acquire or afford but if the Avalanche are truly looking to make a splash at the trade deadline they could be options. There’s also the irony that if Columbus’ Charlie Coyle hadn’t been last year’s Avalanche center trade deadline acquisition he’d be the perfect fit on an expiring $5.25M contract enjoying a very productive season of 42 points in 56 games thus far.

Who would you like to see Colorado acquire? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/nhl-trade-deadline/61552/list-of-potential-avalanche-trade-targets
 
Mitch Marner’s OT heroics lift Canada past Necas and Czechia— Crosby injured

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Milan, ITALY — Once again, the Milano Santagiulia Ice Arena was the stage, and win-or-go-home hockey delivered pure drama. Martin Necas and the Czechs pushed Team Canada to the brink—building leads and refusing to fold—but in the end, Mitch Marner sealed it with a clutch overtime backhand winner. Canada dodged disaster, though not without a major loss: captain Sidney Crosby left with a lower-body injury and didn’t return.

The Game​


This quarterfinal at Milano Santagiulia Ice Arena came loaded with surprises—but Team Canada jumping out to the first goal? No shock there. Just 3:05 into the game, teenage phenom Macklin Celebrini etched another chapter in his budding Olympic legend, roofing a low snipe off a slick back pass from Connor McDavid to make it 1-0.

Martin Necas had dropped that bold pre-game bomb: “We let them win the first one cause we knew we weren’t gonna win two in a row against Canada.”

That felt prophetic when Czechia roared back. Lukas Sedlak tied it at 1-1 early, then David Pastrnak unleashed a rocket on the power play to give Czechia a 2-1 lead in the second. The underdogs were barking loudly.

A soft call led to a Canadian man advantage, and Nathan MacKinnon did what Mack does best—a filthy little shimmy to shake coverage, then a laser wrister through heavy traffic that snuck top shelf on Lukas Dostal. Top cheddar, game knotted at 2-2.

Then came the gut punch for Canada.

Early in the second, Sidney Crosby absorbed a barrage—first a crunch from Ondrej Palat, then a sandwich special from Radko Gudas and Martin Necas along the boards. It was a Radko Gudas hit that had Crosby’s right leg buckled awkwardly; he winced, favored it, skating to the bench, and slowly limped to the locker room.

Concern would be an MCL injury for Crosby

Majority are longer than day-to-day timelines so his tournament may be over 😢 pic.twitter.com/WpFa8VqzDg

— Dr. Harjas Grewal (@Harjas_Grewal) February 18, 2026

The captain was done for the night. Post-game, Cale Makar kept it real: “Yeah, I mean, at this point, it’s next man up. You lose a guy like that, it’s really tough. I hope he’s okay. I haven’t seen him yet.”

Nathan MacKinnon, on the injury: “Obviously, it sucks that he got hurt. Um, you know he’s obviously our captain, our leader. I hope he’s doing okay.”

Heading into the third tied 2-2 without Sid? Not the script most pundits had.

Czechia, physical and relentless, kept the pressure on. Then, with 7:42 left, they struck gold: Martin Necas threaded a perfect feed on an odd-man rush, and Ondrej Palat snapped it past Jordan Binnington’s blocker for a 3-2 lead. The Milano crowd erupted—Czechia was on the verge of one of hockey’s all-time upsets.

Minutes from glory.

But Canada refused to fold. With 3:27 remaining, Nick Suzuki played hero, tipping Devon Toews’ point shot perfectly—deflection magic to tie it 3-3. Heart rates skyrocketed.

Regulation’s dying seconds brought one last gasp: Martin Necas broke free on a breakaway with just over a minute left, going backhand five-hole… but he couldn’t beat Binnington, who was a wall late. Post-game, Necas reflected: “I tried to go backhand five hole and kinda missed the window there.”

Overtime arrived, 3-on-3 chaos. Just 1:22 in, Mitch Marner took a drop pass (from Celebrini in the rush), danced through three Czech defenders like they were pylons, and buried a slick backhander past Dostal. 4-3 Canada. The favorites survived the scare, advancing to the semis while keeping their gold-medal dream alive.

Mitch Marner says this is the biggest goal of his life, bigger than 4 Nations: “It’s even more special. I have my son here with me.” 🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/hBoCv1jWTo

— luke fox (@lukefoxjukebox) February 18, 2026

By The Numbers​


The Canadian side overcame two-defecits including one in the third period. No team entering the third period down a goal has won in this tournament, so to be down with just 3 minutes left in the third and somehow pull it off is quite a feat. Nathan MacKinnon had this to say about emotions inside this game, “Yeah, it was obviously emotional, nerve-wracking. I’m glad we got the win.”

It only took 1:22 of three-on-three overtime action for Mitch Marner to win the game for Team Canada. Not bad for a guy who was labeled a big game disappearing act by fans in Toronto.

Team Canada registered 41 shots on Lukas Dostal, who did all he could to earn his team the upset. Compare that to the 24 saves by Binnington, and I’d say he was the better netminder today.

Jordan Binnington made the saves late, but his overall performance will raise more questions heading into the semi-finals, seeing as his .875 SV% tonight probably won’t cut it going forward.

Avalanche Spin​


The Avalanche spin in this one is pretty obvious. As I wrote after his history-making performance yesterday, Martin Necas is clearly one of the best players in the tournament for any team—and he did even more to prove it today. Some detractors said it was easy for Marty to dominate against lesser prelim teams, but he showed up huge against the top-seeded Canadians, setting up their go-ahead goal and nearly stealing it late on a breakaway.

Necas had quite the quote about the upcoming rematch vs Canada in the quarters 😂

(Via @drosennhl) pic.twitter.com/SDsQSSKo3H

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) February 17, 2026

Nathan MacKinnon with another power-play tally, and Devon Toews with a primary assist on the game-tying goal. I said before the tourney that I wanted to see Toewser get in on some big ones, and that Suzuki tip-in might be the biggest play of the tournament so far (outside of Mitch Marner’s OT winner)

Let us know what you thought of this thriller in the comments

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...-canada-past-necas-and-czechia-crosby-injured
 
MacKinnon’s late power-play dagger sends Canada to Olympic gold-medal game

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Milan, ITALY — Canada entered the men’s hockey semifinal against Finland at Milano Santagiulia Ice Arena without captain Sidney Crosby, sidelined by a lower-body injury from the quarterfinals, and it showed early. Through the first period, the star-studded lineup looked off-pace, trailing 2-0 after Finland capitalized on special teams with a power-play goal from Mikko Rantanen and a shorthanded tally from Erik Haula.

But Canada, loaded with firepower, was never going to go quietly. As Cale Makar said after the win, “The amount of resilience in this team is just unmatched. When you have a lot of leaders, everybody is just communicating, being positive to one another, and it’s a great feeling.”

Their second-period power-play goal from Sam Reinhart (tipped off Cale Makar’s shot) tightened the collar and sparked the rally. In the third, Shea Theodore tied it, and Nathan MacKinnon delivered the game-winner with 35 seconds left on the power play—erasing the deficit and propelling Canada to a 3-2 victory. They overcame the early hole and the absence of their leader, advancing to the gold-medal game against the resilient Finns led by Rantanen, Artturi Lehkonen, and Juuse Saros.

NATHAN MACKINNON DELIVERS FOR HIS COUNTRY 🐶

Watch Canada in the gold medal game at the #MilanoCortina2026 #WinterOlympics SUNDAY at 8:10a ET on @NBCSports, @peacock, @cbcsports, @cbcgem, & @Sportsnet! pic.twitter.com/WPboUa7zPm

— NHL (@NHL) February 20, 2026

The Game​


The first frame featured the heavy hitting and tight checking we’ve grown accustomed to in this best-on-best tournament. It had that two-teams-feeling-each-other-out feel early until Sam Bennett crashed the net after his shot was gloved by Saros, driving a Finnish defender into the goalie and drawing a goaltender interference penalty.

Finland had been controlling play leading up to the call, outshooting Canada 7-6 and winning 80% of faceoffs at that point. That faceoff advantage proved key: on the power play’s first draw, Mikko Rantanen lofted a knucklepuck over Binnington’s shoulder at 16:55 for a 1-0 Finland lead heading into the first intermission.

The second period saw Canada earn their first power play three minutes in. Nathan MacKinnon couldn’t settle the puck, leading to a break for Erik Haula. With MacKinnon and Makar still on the ice, Haula accelerated—his fake shot to backhand drew Binnington out, allowing him to elevate the puck into the net for a shorthanded goal.

That made it 2-0 Finland on what should have been an equalizing chance.

Canada then drew another power play when Brad Marchand was high-sticked by Anton Lundell.

This time, they converted: Cale Makar’s point shot was deflected by Florida Panthers forward Sam Reinhart through traffic to beat Juuse Saros. Saros took four pucks to the mask in the period, and traffic and deflections were the way past him.

2-1 Finland at the second intermission, with a flurry of hits as the horn sounded.

This game was far from over.

The third period began with both teams exchanging chances. This was more in line with expectations for Canada—strong zone entries and attacks whenever they gained possession. Finland had effectively contained that pressure through two periods, but Canada is known for maintaining their game until the opponent wears down. That’s what happened in the third.

Canada sustained pressure and forced opportunities. At 10:34, Shea Theodore fired a shot from the point through traffic to tie it 2-2. Finland thought about challenging for goaltender interference with Brad Marchand making contact with Saros before the goal. It appeared too risky for Finland, which did not challenge.

Artturi Lehkonen had this to say regarding the potential for goaltender interference: “I have no idea. I didn’t really see it so hard for me to say.”

Then, with under three minutes left, Canada earned a power play.

It was Macklin Celebrini with Connor McDavid setting up Nathan MacKinnon, who scored short side with 35 seconds remaining for a 3-2 lead. Finland’s offside challenge failed, but had MacKinnon nervous, who said, “Scary, yeah, you know our guys said it was good, but they looked at it for a long time. You never really know,” as he left the ice. “Happy they counted it,” he finished.

THE MACKINNON GAME WINNING GOAL WITH 35 SECONDS LEFT 😤🇨🇦

(Via @NBCOlympics)

pic.twitter.com/BgTthfClf6

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) February 20, 2026

Canada 3, Finland 2—a comeback from 2-0 down, advancing them to the gold-medal game despite missing captain Sidney Crosby. A hard-fought semifinal. We asked MacKinnon if he preferred facing Slovakia or the USA, and he replied with a smile, “Agh, either one.”

MacKinnon was asked USA or Slovakia and he replied with a smile:

“Agh, either one.”

#GoAvsGo | #Olympics2026 | @MileHighHockey

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 20, 2026

I think it’s safe to say most want USA vs. Canada.

By the Numbers​


Nathan MacKinnon has 74 game-winning goals in his NHL career (regular season + playoffs), so he’s no stranger to sealing wins for his side. That said, he’s never scored a bigger one than this Olympic semifinal dagger—well, maybe one or two in the Stanley Cup Final, but let’s give recency bias the benefit of the doubt.

Juuse Saros entered the semifinal with a .938 save percentage through four games and proved it wasn’t a fluke. Facing Canada’s relentless attack, he stopped 36 of 39 shots (.923 in the game), giving Finland every chance to advance despite the late collapse.

Team Canada has been dominant in recent Olympic playoff rounds, winning 14-straight with NHL players involved—pushing their streak forward as they head to the gold-medal game against either Slovakia or the United States.

Avalanche Spin​


Well, whenever Nathan MacKinnon is scoring game-winners, the Avalanche spin is obvious—but in the best way possible. MacKinnon’s been excellent throughout this tournament, tallying his fourth goal with that late dagger, and he’s carried himself as one of the true leaders on a team that, as he put it, “We have 25 leaders.” His burying the power-play winner with 35 seconds left—assisted by Connor McDavid and Macklin Celebrini—while Sidney Crosby looks on? That’s one of those moments that makes you ask, “Who said sports aren’t romantic?”

This doesn’t mark the end of the road for Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta, who now shift to the bronze-medal game on Saturday. Kiviranta saw more ice time than most expected in this one and held his own defensively. Neither registered a point here, and I’ll admit I’m a bit shocked we didn’t get another clutch moment from Lehkonen after his OT heroics against Switzerland.

Cale Makar assisted Canada’s opening goal (Reinhart’s deflection off his point shot) and has been in on several big plays for Canada. It’s encouraging to see both he and MacKinnon elevate their games on this stage. Makar said this when asked how often he sees MacKinnon doing amazing things like his winner, “A lot, yeah, it’s amazing. I think for us there it’s great. He pushes me to be a better player I feel like I try to do the same for him. It’s amazing to play with a guy like that all the time.”

Hopefully, they bring that same fire, confidence, and leadership back to the Avalanche for the rest of the NHL season—no matter how the gold-medal game shakes out.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...agger-sends-canada-to-olympic-gold-medal-game
 
Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta earn bronze medal

gettyimages-2262862594.jpg

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 21: Erik Haula #56 of Team Finland, Artturi Lehkonen #62 of Team Finland and Mikael Granlund #64 of Team Finland wear their medals after the Men's Bronze Medal match between Slovakia and Finland on day fifteen of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 21, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It wasn’t the medal they hoped for but team Finland defended their 2022 gold medal with a bronze medal finish in a 6-1 defeat of Slovakia at the 2026 Winter Olympics. A duo of Colorado Avalanche forwards Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta are bringing home the hardware.

Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta secure the bronze in Italy 🇫🇮 pic.twitter.com/mHCHlssUOn

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) February 21, 2026

It was a quick start to the game for Finland when Sebastian Aho put the Finns on the board early in the first period and naturally Lehkonen earned the primary assist. They added to their lead in the second frame on a goal from Erik Haula but the game got tighter when Tomas Tatar cut the lead by the end of the period with Slovakia’s first score.

Sebastian Aho cashes in for Finland! pic.twitter.com/U419h3oRLm

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 21, 2026

The Finns had renewed purpose in the third period and added four goals in the last 20 minutes to arrive at the 6-1-final score, earning the bronze medal.

It was a successful tournament for both Finnish Avalanche players, too. Joel Kiviranta played in five games and scored two goals. Artturi Lehkonen played in six games scoring two goals and four assists including the overtime winner in the quarterfinals against Switzerland. Hopefully they can bring back this momentum to Colorado rejoining their other Olympian teammates.

With Finland capturing bronze 🥉 in Milan, they've now earned seven medals in the last nine men's hockey tournaments at the Olympics.

— Chris Johnston (@reporterchris) February 21, 2026

Up next is the gold medal showdown between USA and Canada concluding the men’s ice hockey tournament bright and early at 6 a.m. MT on Sunday morning.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...lehkonen-and-joel-kiviranta-earn-bronze-medal
 
Open Thread: United States vs. Canada (Gold Medal Game)

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 18: Cale Makar of Team Canada celebrates a goal during the Ice Hockey Men Quarterfinals match between Canada vs Czechia. (Photo by Stefano Guidi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We all wanted it. Well, we got it.

The United States will face Canada for the gold medal in the final event of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milan, Italy.

United States (3-0-0) vs. Canada (3-0-0)​


Location: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena (Milan, Italy)

Time: 6:10 A.M. MST/8:10 A.M. EST

Watch: NBC/Peacock (US National Broadcast), CBC (Canadian National Broadcast)

United States – How Did We Get Here?​


The United States may not boast the level of firepower as their Canadian counterparts, but they certainly didn’t have any trouble during group play as they outscored their opponents 16-5 to earn a “bye” for the qualification round. Head coach Mike Sullivan (New York Rangers) has opted to slot Jack Eichel (Vegas Golden Knights) as his top center, and paired Brady and Matthew Tkachuck (Ottawa Senators and Florida Panthers, respectively) as first line wingers. If there was ever a thought that Canada’s Tom Wilson (Washington Capitals) might consider playing on the edge of physical hockey allowed in international play against his squad, Sullivan has insulated Eichel with two players who won’t—and haven’t—hesitated to bring their own flavor of physical play to the forefront. They have also shown they can put up points: both have combined for three goals and eight assists for eleven points thus far.

While there were some questions about some of the decisions that United States General Manager Bill Guerin (Minnesota Wild) made in assembling his roster, the addition of defenseman Quinn Hughes (Minnesota Wild), certainly wasn’t one of them. Having missed last year’s Four Nations Face-Off, Hughes has made an immediate impact for the United States. Coming into the gold medal game, Hughes leads all skaters with seven points, and his overtime goal against Sweden (captained by Colorado Avalanche captain Gabe Landeskog, who was defending him on the play) sent the United States into the semifinal round against Slovakia, a game that would see them win by a score of 6-2.

Brock Nelson is the lone representative from the Avalanche on the roster. His inclusion continues a family legacy that is steeped in the greatest on-ice successes for the United States. His grandfather, Bill Christian, and his great uncle, Roger Christian, won the very first gold medal for the United States in the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley. Nelson’s uncle, Dave Christian, won gold at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. To his credit, Nelson has two goals and one assist as he prepares to add a third gold medal to his family’s legacy.

Coming into the gold medal contest, the United States has not allowed a power play goal throughout the Olympic tournament. Keeping Canada off the power play would be ideal, but having a solid penalty killing unit will go a long way in keeping such a high-powered offense limited.

Today’s contest marks the first time since 2010 that the United States has the chance to win an Olympic medal. They previously won silver at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

It’s also noteworthy, despite having lost three straight games in head-to-head matchups against Canada, that the gold medal game is taking place exactly one year after the loss at the Four Nations tournament, and forty-six years after the Miracle on Ice.

As the Cigarette-Smoking Man in The X-Files once said, “What’s the matter? Don’t you believe in miracles?”

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Brady Tkachuk (OTT) – Jack Eichel (VGK) – M. Tkachuk (FLA)
Jake Guentzel (TBL) – Auston Matthews (TOR) – Matt Boldy (MIN)
Jack Hughes (NJD) – Dylan Larkin (DET) – Tage Thompson (BUF)
J.T. Miller (NYR) – Brock Nelson (COL) – Vincent Trocheck (NYR)
Clayton Keller (UTA)

Defense:
Quinn Hughes (MIN) – Charlie McAvoy (BOS)
Jaccob Slavin (CAR) – Brock Faber (MIN)
Zach Werenski (CBJ) – Jake Sanderson (OTT)
Noah Hanifin (VGK)

Between the Pipes:
Connor Hellebuyck (WPG)
Jeremy Swayman (BOS)

Canada – How Did We Get Here?​


With NHL players returning to the Olympics for the first time in twelve years, Canada didn’t waste any time in loading up its roster with premier talent. The entire lineup is stacked with multiple Stanley Cup champions, goal-scoring threats up and down each line, and a defense that is certainly the envy of every nation competing in Milan.

The Colorado Avalanche have healthy representation on Canada’s roster. Nathan MacKinnon has been centering Canada’s second line, while Devon Toews and Cale Makar have been Canada’s top defensive pair. The trio has combined for six goals and seven assists for a total of fourteen points coming into the gold medal game.

Led by captain Sidney Crosby, who is competing in his third Olympics, Canada outscored its opponents in Group A by a combined total of 20-2, easily claiming a “bye” in the qualification round. During Canada’s quarterfinal game against Czechia, MacKinnon was noticeably under the weather in this contest, but that didn’t stop him from laying a solid hit on Avalanche linemate Martin Nečas and scoring the game-tying goal in the second period. Mitch Marner (Vegas Golden Knights) scored the game winning goal to send Canada to the semifinal round. Crosby, however, did not finish the game after suffering a lower body injury.

With Crosby out of the lineup, head coach Jon Cooper (Tampa Bay Lightning) shuffled his lines, placing Nick Suzuki (Montréal Canadiens) at center on the third line and Bo Horvat (New York Islanders) on MacKinnon’s wing. Facing off against fellow Avalanche teammates Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta (and former linemate Mikko Rantanen), MacKinnon drew a high sticking penalty in the final minutes of the contest to put Canada on the power play, scoring the game winner with less than thirty seconds in regulation. After Canada’s team practice today, Cooper did say that Crosby did skate during practice, but he will be a “game time decision” for tomorrow’s contest. Even if there’s the slightest chance that Crosby can play, it’s nearly impossible to think that he won’t be in the lineup.

As the top seed in the Olympic tournament, Canada will have the last roster change, so Cooper will be able to dictate the match-ups to benefit his roster.

This will be the third time that Canada has faced the United States in head-to-head Olympic play. A gold medal victory will be their first since the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, where Crosby scored the game-winning goal.

“Oh, Canada!”

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Macklin Celebrini (SJ) – Connor McDavid (EDM) – Tom Wilson (WSH)
Brandon Hagel (TBL) – Nathan MacKinnon (COL) – Nick Suzuki (MTL)
Mitch Marner (VGK) – Sidney Crosby (PIT)* – Mark Stone (VGK)
Brad Marchand (FLA) – Bo Horvat (NYI) – Sam Reinhart (FLA)
Seth Jarvis (CAR)

Defense:
Devon Toews (COL)Cale Makar (COL)
Thomas Harley (DAL) – Colton Parayko (STL)
Travis Sanheim (PHI) – Drew Doughty (LA)
Shea Theodore (VGK)

Between the Pipes:
Jordan Binnington (STL)
Logan Thompson (WSH)

*Game Time Decision

Follow along in the comments below!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/open...hread-united-states-vs-canada-gold-medal-game
 
Gold Medal Preview: Border Conflict

gettyimages-2262717587.jpg

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 20: Jack Eichel of Team United States celebrates a goal during the Ice Hockey Men United States vs Slovakia Semifinals on day fourteen of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 20, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Stefano Guidi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We all wanted it. Well, we got it.

Canada will face the United States for the gold medal in the final event of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milan, Italy.

Canada (3-0-0) vs. United States (3-0-0)​


Location: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena (Milan, Italy)

Time: 6:10 A.M. MST/8:10 A.M. EST

Watch: NBC/Peacock (US National Broadcast), CBC (Canadian National Broadcast)

Canada – How Did We Get Here?​


With NHL players returning to the Olympics for the first time in twelve years, Canada didn’t waste any time in loading up its roster with premier talent. The entire lineup is stacked with multiple Stanley Cup champions, goal-scoring threats up and down each line, and a defense that is certainly the envy of every nation competing in Milan.

The Colorado Avalanche have healthy representation on Canada’s roster. Nathan MacKinnon has been centering Canada’s second line, while Devon Toews and Cale Makar have been Canada’s top defensive pair. The trio has combined for six goals and seven assists for a total of fourteen points coming into the gold medal game.

Led by captain Sidney Crosby, who is competing in his third Olympics, Canada outscored its opponents in Group A by a combined total of 20-2, easily claiming a “bye” in the qualification round. During Canada’s quarterfinal game against Czechia, MacKinnon was noticeably under the weather in this contest, but that didn’t stop him from laying a solid hit on Avalanche linemate Martin Nečas and scoring the game-tying goal in the second period. Mitch Marner (Vegas Golden Knights) scored the game winning goal to send Canada to the semifinal round. Crosby, however, did not finish the game after suffering a lower body injury.

With Crosby out of the lineup, head coach Jon Cooper (Tampa Bay Lightning) shuffled his lines, placing Nick Suzuki (Montréal Canadiens) at center on the third line and Bo Horvat (New York Islanders) on MacKinnon’s wing. Facing off against fellow Avalanche teammates Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta (and former linemate Mikko Rantanen), MacKinnon drew a high sticking penalty in the final minutes of the contest to put Canada on the power play, scoring the game winner with less than thirty seconds in regulation. After Canada’s team practice today, Cooper did say that Crosby did skate during practice, but he will be a “game time decision” for tomorrow’s contest. Even if there’s the slightest chance that Crosby can play, it’s nearly impossible to think that he won’t be in the lineup.

As the top seed in the Olympic tournament, Canada will have the last roster change, so Cooper will be able to dictate the match-ups to benefit his roster.

This will be the third time that Canada has faced the United States in head-to-head Olympic play. A gold medal victory will be their first since the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, where Crosby scored the game-winning goal.

“Oh, Canada!”

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Macklin Celebrini (SJ) – Connor McDavid (EDM) – Tom Wilson (WSH)
Brandon Hagel (TBL) – Nathan MacKinnon (COL) – Nick Suzuki (MTL)
Mitch Marner (VGK) – Sidney Crosby (PIT)* – Mark Stone (VGK)
Brad Marchand (FLA) – Bo Horvat (NYI) – Sam Reinhart (FLA)
Seth Jarvis (CAR)

Defense:
Devon Toews (COL)Cale Makar (COL)
Thomas Harley (DAL) – Colton Parayko (STL)
Travis Sanheim (PHI) – Drew Doughty (LA)
Shea Theodore (VGK)

Between the Pipes:
Jordan Binnington (STL)
Logan Thompson (WSH)

*Game Time Decision

United States – How Did We Get Here?​


The United States may not boast the level of firepower as their Canadian counterparts, but they certainly didn’t have any trouble during group play as they outscored their opponents 16-5 to earn a “bye” for the qualification round. Head coach Mike Sullivan (New York Rangers) has opted to slot Jack Eichel (Vegas Golden Knights) as his top center, and paired Brady and Matthew Tkachuck (Ottawa Senators and Florida Panthers, respectively) as first line wingers. If there was ever a thought that Canada’s Tom Wilson (Washington Capitals) might consider playing on the edge of physical hockey allowed in international play against his squad, Sullivan has insulated Eichel with two players who won’t—and haven’t—hesitated to bring their own flavor of physical play to the forefront. They have also shown they can put up points: both have combined for three goals and eight assists for eleven points thus far.

While there were some questions about some of the decisions that United States General Manager Bill Guerin (Minnesota Wild) made in assembling his roster, the addition of defenseman Quinn Hughes (Minnesota Wild), certainly wasn’t one of them. Having missed last year’s Four Nations Face-Off, Hughes has made an immediate impact for the United States. Coming into the gold medal game, Hughes leads all skaters with seven points, and his overtime goal against Sweden (captained by Colorado Avalanche captain Gabe Landeskog, who was defending him on the play) sent the United States into the semifinal round against Slovakia, a game that would see them win by a score of 6-2.

Brock Nelson is the lone representative from the Avalanche on the roster. His inclusion continues a family legacy that is steeped in the greatest on-ice successes for the United States. His grandfather, Bill Christian, and his great uncle, Roger Christian, won the very first gold medal for the United States in the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley. Nelson’s uncle, Dave Christian, won gold at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. To his credit, Nelson has two goals and one assist as he prepares to add a third gold medal to his family’s legacy.

Coming into the gold medal contest, the United States has not allowed a power play goal throughout the Olympic tournament. Keeping Canada off the power play would be ideal, but having a solid penalty killing unit will go a long way in keeping such a high-powered offense limited.

Today’s contest marks the first time since 2010 that the United States has the chance to win an Olympic medal. They previously won silver at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

It’s also noteworthy, despite having lost three straight games in head-to-head matchups against Canada, that the gold medal game is taking place exactly one year after the loss at the Four Nations tournament, and forty-six years after the Miracle on Ice.

As the Cigarette-Smoking Man in The X-Files once said, “What’s the matter? Don’t you believe in miracles?”

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Brady Tkachuk (OTT) – Jack Eichel (VGK) – M. Tkachuk (FLA)
Jake Guentzel (TBL) – Auston Matthews (TOR) – Matt Boldy (MIN)
Jack Hughes (NJD) – Dylan Larkin (DET) – Tage Thompson (BUF)
J.T. Miller (NYR) – Brock Nelson (COL) – Vincent Trocheck (NYR)
Clayton Keller (UTA)

Defense:
Quinn Hughes (MIN) – Charlie McAvoy (BOS)
Jaccob Slavin (CAR) – Brock Faber (MIN)
Zach Werenski (CBJ) – Jake Sanderson (OTT)
Noah Hanifin (VGK)

Between the Pipes:
Connor Hellebuyck (WPG)
Jeremy Swayman (BOS)

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olympic-games/62031/gold-medal-preview-border-conflict
 
Honoring Johnny Gaudreau with Olympic Gold: Hughes nets OT winner, Hellebuyck stars over Canada

gettyimages-2262491636.jpg


Italy, MILAN — The dream matchup fans craved since the NHL committed to the 2026 Winter Games finally unfolded: USA vs. Canada for Olympic men’s hockey gold at Milano Santagiulia Arena. Cale Makar, Devon Toews, and Nathan MacKinnon vs. Brock Nelson. It delivered pure drama.

Matt Boldy struck first for the U.S., slipping past Toews and Makar with a slick chip-and-deke to beat Binnington short-side for a 1-0 lead early.

Canada answered in the second, dominating play before Cale Makar wired a signature wrist shot from the dot to tie it 1-1 late in the period.

The third was a tense deadlock—Canada pressed hard, Hellebuyck stood tall with huge saves (including a robbery on Toews), and late high-sticking penalties (Bennett on Hughes, then Hughes on Canada) created chaotic 4-on-4 and brief power plays, but no goals.

Regulation ended 1-1. In sudden-death 3-on-3 overtime, Jack Hughes sealed it at 1:41 with a rocket past Binnington, giving Team USA a 2-1 victory and their first men’s Olympic hockey gold since 1980—46 years to the day—in an epic rivalry classic. Hellebuyck’s 41-save gem was the backbone.

The Game​


The reason fans wanted to see this matchup was the talent it brought. Not just the flashy stuff, but talent in all aspects and approaches to each position—from lightning-quick forwards to lockdown defensemen and elite goaltenders. That turned into a hectic, electric open with Canada making the ice look even shorter with their show-stopping speed.

USA’s first shot on net was a beauty: Matt Boldy pulled off a slick little chip to himself, exploding through Devon Toews and Cale Makar, then deked forehand-backhand to put it short-side on Jordan Binnington, who bit hard on the five-hole fake. The Americans weathered Canada’s ferocious initial onslaught—waves of pressure, bodies flying—and clung to that early 1-0 lead.

The rest of the first featured power plays from both sides, tense and tight, but stellar penalty kills, and ironclad goaltending kept the scoreboard quiet.

The second period was all Canada—they tilted the ice dramatically with relentless zone time and a barrage of shots. They earned a 5-on-3 advantage after quick whistles on Jake Guentzel (holding) and Charlie McAvoy (hooking), but America’s gutsy, desperate effort—led by Dylan Larkin’s blocks and Hellebuyck’s acrobatics—killed it off masterfully. Momentum had shifted hard north, though.

Cale Makar seized control with space no one wants to give him: from just below the face-off dot, he wired a laser-perfect wrist shot far side, beating Hellebuyck clean in a clinic of sniper precision we’ve come to expect from Cale. The period ended tied at one apiece. Surprise, surprise—classic North American showdown brewing into a one-goal-or-overtime thriller.

IT’S CALE MAKAR 🥬🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/ZvJM8O0t7Q

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) February 22, 2026

The third period kicked off with more of the same: Canada on the absolute front foot, pouring on sustained pressure, but Connor Hellebuyck was a brick wall in net. His highlight-reel stick save on Devon Toews, robbing what looked like a sure tap-in amid a chaotic flurry, kept the game knotted despite Canada’s dominance.

Late drama arrived when Sam Bennett’s high stick caught Jack Hughes square in the teeth, drawing blood and earning the U.S. a timely four-minute power play. They couldn’t convert, though the zone time shifted momentum just a hair. Then Hughes took a retaliatory high-sticking minor, turning it into 4-on-4 chaos for a stretch before a brief 43-second man-advantage for Canada. Nathan MacKinnon had the golden look at a gaping net, but shot it off the side of the net. MacKinnon had this to say regarding his missed open net chance: “I missed off the side of the net. (It would) be nice to get that one back. Just wasn’t meant to be, it felt like.”—heart-breaker.

MacKinnon will see this empty net in his dreams the rest of his life. pic.twitter.com/ooHSlsVe1U

— Drew Livingstone (@ProducerDrew_) February 22, 2026

This classic rivalry delivered the goods: a tense, low-scoring, edge-of-your-seat battle dominated by suffocating defense, heroic goaltending (Hellebuyck standing on his head against Canada’s 41+ shots), and elite skill on full display. Locked at 1-1 through 60 minutes, we head to sudden-death 3-on-3 overtime to crown Olympic champions in the most fitting way possible. Who would be the hero?

The golden goal came 1:41 into sudden-death 3-on-3 overtime when Jack Hughes, playing through visible pain from the high-stick that knocked out two of his front teeth earlier in the third, ripped a one-timer past Jordan Binnington to seal USA’s 2-1 victory and their first men’s Olympic hockey gold since 1980.

Hughes, through broken teeth, mentioned that Connor Hellebuyck was the undeniable hero of the game and the extra frame, even though he scored the game-winner.

“He was our best player by far,” Hughes said of Hellebuyck post-game, summing up the grit and brilliance that defined the night for the Americans in this unforgettable hockey game.

The US team would watch their flag be raised while the crowd sang the star spangled banner. Matt Tkachuk and Zach Werenski held Johnny Gaudreau’s kids for a gold medal photo, with Johnny Gaudreau’s jersey held in front.

A beautiful moment that Brady Tkachuk explained post-game: “What he means to our entire team, what he means to USA hockey,” he started, “We just wanted to show the Gaudreau family that he was so near and dear to a lot of us.” Brady finished with, “We did it for him.”

Brady Tkachuk on bringing Johnny Gaudreau's jersey out for the photo:

"What he means to our entire team, what he means to USA hockey."

"We just wanted to show the Gaudreau family that he was so near and dear to a lot of us."

"We did it for him."#Olympics2026 | @USAHockey pic.twitter.com/DklXoV4Yfi

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 22, 2026

By the Numbers​


Connor Hellebuyck is the story of this gold-medal victory, making 41-42 saves and standing tall in spite of the ever-dangerous Canadian side. Connor has gotten a ton of grief for not performing his best in the NHL playoffs, but we saw none of that at the Olympics. He should be proud.

Team Canada outshot Team USA 42-26, and I’m sure many in the comments will attempt to detract from the USA victory by questioning the OT format. Here’s the thing: it was 3-on-3 on both sides, and Hellebuyck’s performance counts for something and earned the US their gold medal.

The CLEAR MVP in the Gold Medal game, take a bow Connor Hellebuyck. 👏🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/rZrYMV9Ek1

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) February 22, 2026

It only took 1:41 seconds to anoint a gold medal winner. Shouldn’t surprise us that it ended so quickly. Tough for goalies in the 3-on-3 situation and against so much talent.

Avalanche Spin​


As I watched Nathan MacKinnon accept his silver medal with a steely-eyed look of disappointment, my first thought was, “Well, how is this gonna effect the Avalanche?”

We often joke on the Mile High Hockey Lab that MacKinnon has to synthesize motivation, but I don’t think that will be required now.

Now he’s going to want to set the whole league on fire. He missed a wide-open net that could have put Canada ahead.

Cale Makar and Devon Toews played well all tournament and in this game. The first USA goal was a really good play by Boldy althought I’m sure the D pair will take accountability. Makar’s tying goal illustrates his impact in this game.

Toews had this to say following the loss, “Tonight we generated more looks, better looks, you could say. The analytics probably show that.” He lamented, “It just didn’t go our way.”

Cale and Toewser want this one back.pic.twitter.com/sliWUYNmOY

— Mile High Hockey (@MileHighHockey) February 22, 2026

This is an incredible result for Brock Nelson, who is now the third generation of his family to win Olympic gold in men’s ice hockey. Cementing his name in American and family history should surely help him continue his streak of great play for Team USA and the Colorado Avalanche. “Man, unbelievable. Dream come true.” Brock said after the game, “That first phone call with my grandpa is gonna be a fun one, that’s for sure.”

Let us know what you thought of this instant classic in the comments!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...s-nets-ot-winner-hellebuyck-stars-over-canada
 
Weekly Cupcakes: Brock Nelson is an Olympic gold medalist

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 22: Brock Nelson #29 of Team United States celebrates following the Men's Gold Medal match between Canada and the United States. (Photo by Catherine Steenkeste/Getty Images) | Getty Images
  • Colorado Avalanche’s Gabriel Landeskog heartbreakingly describes Sweden Olympics exit. [Sporting News]
  • USA’s Brock Nelson continues family legacy with his Olympic gold medal achievement. [Sports Illustrated]
  • MacKinnon: ‘You be the judge of who was the better team’. [The Score]
  • The kid in MacKinnon is what drives him. [Mile High Hockey]
  • Lehkonen’s father missed his Olympic overtime goal while broadcasting a different game. [NHL]
  • Both Artturi Lehkonen and Joel Kiviranta earn bronze medals with team Finland. [Mile High Hockey]
  • The Avalanche announce new ECHL affiliate next season with expansion team New Mexico Goatheads. [Pro Hockey Rumors]
  • ‘Here with us in spirit’: USA carries Johnny Gaudreau jersey on ice after their gold medal win. [Sportsnet]
  • Why Hockey Canada must rethink the women’s program now after these Olympics. [National Post]
  • The future is bright for Olympic gold medal winning U.S. women’s hockey. [ESPN]
  • Alina Müller overtime goal secures a bronze medal for Swiss over Sweden. [CBC]

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/daily-cupcakes-sandie/62083/weekly-cupcakes-olympics
 
‘Nothing Better Than That’: Tkachuk bros one win from childhood dream of Olympic Gold

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Milan, Italy — In the electric confines of the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on Friday night, February 20, 2026, the United States men’s hockey team delivered a commanding performance. Before a packed crowd buzzing with anticipation for the high-stakes semifinal, Team USA dismantled third-seeded Slovakia 6-2, building an insurmountable 5-0 lead by the end of the second period. The victory—powered by multi-point efforts from stars like Jack Hughes (2 goals), Tage Thompson, Jack Eichel, and Brady Tkachuk (1 goal)—propels the unbeaten Americans into Sunday’s gold medal showdown against rival Canada at 2:10 p.m. local time (8:10 a.m. ET), a rematch of the 2010 Vancouver final that promises to captivate hockey fans worldwide.

Matthew and Brady Tkachuk were jovial and comfortable during the post-game press conference, fielding questions with the easy confidence of players thriving on the biggest stage.

“I mean, you guys have been looking forward to this one,” Brady said, gesturing toward the media members. “You guys have been talking about it for a while, so now you get to enjoy it.”

No one seems to enjoy the spotlight more than the players with “Tkachuk” emblazoned on the back of their Team USA jerseys. From the preliminary round through the quarterfinals and now the semifinals, the Tkachuk brothers have been key contributors and consistent performers. Through five tournament games, Brady has tallied 3 goals and 2 assists for 5 points (+7 rating), including his third-period tally in the 6-2 rout, while Matthew leads with 6 assists (0 goals, 6 points, +5 rating) and has been a playmaking force on the top line alongside Brady and Jack Eichel.

What a move by Brady Tkachuk 🔥

(via @NBCOlympics)pic.twitter.com/7VNVPHQ7AB

— Sports Illustrated (@SInow) February 20, 2026

Brady is absolutely right by the way.

This matchup—USA vs. Canada—is the gold medal game hockey fans around the world (aside from die-hard supporters of other nations) have been anticipating, a best-on-best clash loaded with history and intensity.

U.S. head coach Mike Sullivan sat beside Matthew during the formal press conference and responded to a question about finally getting over the hump to win Olympic gold:

“What I can tell you is I think this American team is the best team that I’ve ever been around.” He continued, “The group has a personality that is contagious.”

Matthew Tkachuk (USA 🇺🇸) on the ‘always a bridesmaids’ exchange with Leon Draisaitl (GER 🇩🇪):

"Some guys you have to play harder than most, physically, and maybe sometimes after the whistle, too. I thought our line and (Jack) EICHEL did an unbelievable job of giving him nothing… pic.twitter.com/PLgiSDltrU

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) February 16, 2026

Personality is right—and Matthew and Brady are major factors in that. It’s something they likely inherited from their father, Keith Tkachuk, a legendary NHL power forward and one of the greatest American-born players in league history. Keith, a first-round pick (19th overall) by the Winnipeg Jets in 1990, played 18 NHL seasons (1991–2010) with the Jets/Phoenix Coyotes, St. Louis Blues, and Atlanta Thrashers. He amassed 1,065 points (538 goals, 527 assists) in 1,201 games—one of only four U.S.-born players to reach 500 goals—and was a five-time NHL All-Star known for his physical, goal-scoring prowess. He also represented the U.S. in multiple international tournaments, including four Olympics, instilling a competitive fire and pro-sports exposure in his sons from an early age.

Matthew was asked about his mental preparation methods ahead of big games, such as the upcoming gold medal matchup.

“My dad just told me growing up to play better,” he joked at first.

“No, (seriously)—I watch a lot of film, visualize a lot.”

He went on to describe how he thinks about specific zones of the ice and the types of plays he wants to execute, mentally rehearsing them in detail.

Brady, meanwhile, already had dinner on his mind when asked about handling the stress and buildup to the final. “Same thing that we usually do: eat pasta, hang out, and relax,” he said. “Save that for Sunday at 2 o’clock.”

Both brothers have expressed a recurring theme of gratitude and seizing the opportunity. It’s clear they fully appreciate the magnitude of what they’re on the cusp of achieving. They’ve already lived out the childhood dreams they used to pretend to do as kids—everything except one thing: winning Olympic gold.

“Feels like this is a game where everybody is gonna be watching and tuning in,” Brady said. “It’s gonna be a real special moment. Just an opportunity to achieve your childhood dream… nothing better than that.”

Brady Tkachuk and his brother, Matthew, will play in a gold-medal game 24 years after their father, Keith, earned silver vs. Canada at 2002 Olympics. What has he heard about what to expect?

“Basically all I’ve heard is that there’s just a lot of regret if you don’t win.” pic.twitter.com/wAwG3ss5Ic

— Andrew Greif (@AndrewGreif) February 20, 2026

Let us know what you think of the USA vs. Canada gold medal game!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/olym...-one-win-from-childhood-dream-of-olympic-gold
 
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