Canuckistan wins Gold

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Canuckistan wins Gold

Post by Tyyr »

Damn it, looks like the 51st state pulled it out in OT and won Men's Hockey gold.

3 to 2 Final Score
By IRA PODELL, AP Hockey Writer 5 hours, 4 minutes ago

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP)-Sidney Crosby sized up goalie Ryan Miller in overtime and delivered hockey gold to a nation that not only craved it, but demanded it, too.

Silver wouldn't satisfy. Not in this sport and not in these Olympics.

Canada needed a pick-me-up to call the past 17 days a success. With a wrist shot Miller wasn't expecting, Crosby wiped away a whole lot of hurt. The scoreboard read Canada 3, USA 2. A happy-yet relieved country-rejoiced Sunday.

The death of a luger before the Olympic cauldron was lit, disheartening glitches and a slow start in the medals race had Canada down on these games. But after finishing tops among all nations with a Winter Olympics record 14 gold medals, including the one it wanted most, the hosts held their heads high.

'O Canada' surely never sounded as sweet as when the Maple Leaf flag rose above the ice to honor hockey's latest champions. And the way the Canadians pulled it off was truly dramatic. Crosby and Canada shook off a shocking tying goal by Zach Parise that gave the United States hope in the closing seconds of regulation.

"I'm very proud to be Canadian," forward Jarome Iginla said. "You know what, I'm really proud of setting the gold-medal record for Canada."

Remember the time: 7:40 into the extra session. That's the moment Sid the Kid grew up on the world stage and scored the winning goal. It set off howls, chants, sobs and cheers inside a packed Canada Hockey Place that was so proud of the guys decked out in red and white.

"It's a pretty unbelievable thing," the 22-year-old Crosby said. "Being in Canada, that's the opportunity of a lifetime. You dream of that a thousand times growing up. For it to come true is amazing."

For the past few years, Crosby has basically been on loan. He plays below the border in Pittsburgh-a working-class American town that celebrated him and the Stanley Cup title he and the Penguins brought to the Steel City last year.

For the past two weeks, he was back home for Canada to reclaim as its own. There could be no more fitting ending to the Vancouver Games than to have the favorite son bring home the gold medal to a country that loves hockey more than any other sport.

At times, it seemed as if the pressure and expectations on this group of Canadian hockey players might be too much too handle. There was the early scare against Switzerland that produced a victory, a scaled-down one in a shootout, and then the crushing loss to the Americans at the end of preliminary round play.

Canada was stuck in a play-in game just to get into the quarterfinals. Could they realistically be expected to win four times in six days to capture gold?

The answer was a resounding yes.

"We talked about not getting discouraged if the tournament didn't go our way right off the bat," defenseman Scott Niedermayer said. "Believe in each other and get our team game the way it needs to be to win, and we did it."

To win, Canada withstood a remarkable and determined effort from a U.S. team that wasn't supposed to medal in Vancouver, much less roll through the tournament unbeaten before losing in the first overtime gold-medal game since NHL players joined the Olympics in 1998.

"No one knew our names. People know our names now," said Chris Drury, one of three holdovers from the 2002 U.S. team that also lost to Canada in the gold-medal game.

Miller graciously accepted the silver medal around his neck, but the disappointment was easy to read on his face.

"He was the main reason we were in the gold medal game and why we got it to overtime," forward Ryan Callahan said.

Drury, Miller's former teammate with the Buffalo Sabres, hugged the devastated goalie near the U.S. bench as the celebration roared all around them.

"He's pretty down, but there's no chance we're here without the way he played the whole tournament," Drury said. "It's heartbreaking to lose in OT of a gold-medal game, but he should be proud of everything he did the last two weeks."

Miller was done in on Sunday by a couple of costly mistakes by his typically sure-handed defensemen. The gaffes led to shots that gave the rock-solid goalie little chance to stop.

Even with an early 0-2 deficit-the first for the Americans' in this stunning Olympic run-Miller proved to be as brilliant as he had been throughout the tournament.

A two-goal hole was already deep for the Americans. Three would have been almost too monumental to overcome.

Miller knew it and never let it get that far. He watched from the bench after being pulled for an extra attacker and saw Parise net the goal that made it 2-2 with 24.4 seconds remaining that forced a most improbable overtime. Ryan Kesler began the comeback when he cut the deficit to 2-1 with 7:16 left in the second.

Whatever momentum was gained by Parise's exhilarating goal was mostly gone by the time the teams returned after a lengthy break before overtime.

"Once we got past about 10 minutes into the intermission we realized, 'You know what? We've still got a chance here,"' Crosby said. "We just said, 'Let's go after it.'

"I didn't want to have any regrets."

Canada was in control throughout extra time, keeping the puck in the U.S. zone and the pressure squarely on the young Americans. Their speed, the Americans' greatest strength, seemed to slow as the game wore on under the constant hitting from the much-bigger Canadians.

Crosby scored from the bottom of the left circle on a shot Miller didn't think would come.

Now, Crosby joins Lemieux-whose goal beat the Soviet Union in the 1987 World Cup-and Paul Henderson, who beat the Soviets with a goal in the 1972 Summit Series, among the instant national heroes of Canadian hockey. At age 22, Crosby has won the Stanley Cup and the Olympics in less than a year's time.

"He's got a little destiny to him-his entire career, throughout minor hockey, junior hockey, NHL," Canada executive director Steve Yzerman said about Crosby. "So it's just another monumental moment in his career. And he's what, 22 still? He's a special, special guy. Kind of like Gretzky."

Minutes after the game ended, delirious fans chanted, "Crosby! Crosby! Crosby!" International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge paused before giving the final medal to Crosby as the crowd got even louder. Then he gestured with his right hand, calling for more cheers for Crosby.

"It's just fitting, I think, that Sid would get it," goalie Roberto Luongo said. "I couldn't think of anyone better."
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Didn't we already beat beaver-land once during this Olympics? Anyway, congrats to Canada - at least it was a hell of a game. And on the plus side, Shatner was pretty funny and Michael J. Fox finally officially used the word "took" last night. But WTF with the inflatable beavers?!
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

Post by Aaron »

Good, now the mens team can stop moping about looking like the womans team cut off their balls.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

Post by Tyyr »

Yeah we beat them 5-3 earlier in the tournament.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

Post by Angharrad »

Go Canada!










Is it baseball season yet? :takecover:
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Bah, Baseball. Cricket for people with low attention spans.




And people with lives. :P
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Reliant121 wrote:Bah, Baseball. Cricket for people with low attention spans.




And people with lives. :P
Yeah, sorry - I like my spectator sports to not have to "pick back up in the morning."
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Mikey wrote:Yeah, sorry - I like my spectator sports to not have to "pick back up in the morning."
At least there's less standing around doing nothing than handegg.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

Post by Angharrad »

Reliant121 wrote:Bah, Baseball. Cricket for people with low attention spans.
I don't have a short, hey what's that shiny object over there, attention, uh, what was the question?
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Captain Seafort wrote:
Mikey wrote:Yeah, sorry - I like my spectator sports to not have to "pick back up in the morning."
At least there's less standing around doing nothing than handegg.
As long as you don't count stopping play for lunch, tea, dinner, the evening news, bedtime, and breakfast...
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Mikey wrote:As long as you don't count stopping play for lunch, tea, dinner, the evening news, bedtime, and breakfast...
And? Handegg games stop three times in the course of a match to give the players a rest - the lunch and tea intervals, and bad light stopping play are no different fundamentally.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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No different fundamentally?! Football games - even the interminable soccer games which you call football - all start and finish on the same date.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Mikey wrote:No different fundamentally?! Football games - even the interminable soccer games which you call football - all start and finish on the same date.
1) The duration of football matches, unlike handegg games, at least vaguely resembles their official duration - they don't take three or four hours to complete. This is possible because play continues for (considerably) more than five seconds at a time.

2) In handegg (and football for that matter), there are breaks between quarters and at half time to let players have a break from physical and mental exertion. In cricket matches there are breaks and lunch, tea and close of play to let players have a break from physical and mental exertion. Fundamentally, there's no difference.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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If you want to ignore the sheer length of stoppage then yes.
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Re: Canuckistan wins Gold

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Captain Seafort wrote:1) The duration of football matches, unlike handegg games, at least vaguely resembles their official duration - they don't take three or four hours to complete. This is possible because play continues for (considerably) more than five seconds at a time.
First, you are someone who has grown accustomed to the Beeb. Much of the stoppage in play in American football stems from the need to be commercial-television friendly. Networks pay exorbitant sums for partial broadcast rights to the football season. Second, Pictish football seems to flow more because the clock continues to run even while there is no actual play occurring - the clock runs while the ball is being retrieved for a throw-in, set up for a corner kick or goalie kick, etc. - during which, by all rights, the clock should be stopped. Certainly there are occassions in American football in which the clock continues to run between plays, but I don't feel like getting into a discussion of the rules and you probably don't care. Suffice it to say that it leads to clock management becoming a (sometimes dramatic) element of coaching strategy.

On a tangent, one of humanity's defining assetts is opposable thumbs. Why don't we make a game in which only two of the twenty-two players can use their hands? :roll:
Captain Seafort wrote:In cricket matches there are breaks and lunch, tea and close of play to let players have a break from physical and mental exertion. Fundamentally, there's no difference.
No difference in purpose, maybe (except as described above for American spectator sports.) However, to say that there's "fundamentally no difference" still ignores the fact that for a working man to watch an entire test cricket match, he'd have to schedule vacation time from work.
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