Olympic Hockey Jonathan Willcott Olympic Hockey Jonathan Willcott

U.S. edges Canada 2-1 in overtime to claim gold at Milano Cortina

Canada pushed hard but ran into a dominant performance from Connor Hellebuyck, who stopped 41 shots and even added an assist on the overtime winner. A highlight-reel effort from Matt Boldy and Jack Hughes’ early overtime finish proved decisive as Canada settled for silver at Milano Cortina.

MILANO CORTINA — The United States won Olympic gold in men’s hockey with a 2-1 overtime victory over Canada, as Jack Hughes scored 1:41 into the extra frame to decide the final.

Hughes’ fourth goal of the tournament came from the left side of the offensive zone after receiving a pass from the opposite corner. With space, he snapped a shot five-hole past Jordan Binnington. Zach Werenski recorded the primary assist, while Connor Hellebuyck picked up the secondary helper on the golden goal.

The Americans opened the scoring in the first period through Matt Boldy, who delivered a highlight-reel individual effort. Boldy flipped the puck into the air, batted it forward between two Canadian defenders, and finished along the ice inside the left post to give the United States a 1-0 lead.

Canada responded late in the second when Cale Makar stepped in from the right point and wired a shot just over Hellebuyck’s stick-side pad to tie the game 1-1.

Hellebuyck, the two-time Vezina Trophy winner, stopped 41 of 42 Canadian shots for a .976 save percentage and factored into the overtime winner. Binnington made 26 saves on 28 shots for a .929 save percentage in defeat.

Neither side broke through in the third period before Hughes sealed the gold medal game early in overtime, leaving Canada with silver at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympic Winter Games.

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Olympic Hockey Jonathan Willcott Olympic Hockey Jonathan Willcott

Canada vs USA Hockey: Olympic Orientation Camps Set Stage for Milan 2026 Gold Medal Showdown

CALGARY — The stage is set for one of the most anticipated Olympic hockey showdowns in decades.

With NHL players returning to the Games for the first time since 2014, both Canada and the United States are building rosters that could define a generation. Their orientation camps this month — USA in Plymouth, Michigan, and Canada in Calgary — revealed not just depth charts, but bold declarations about what’s at stake.

For Team USA, the message was crystal clear.
“The expectation is to go to Milan and win the gold medal,” Vegas Golden Knights star Jack Eichel said. “Anything short of that would be disappointing.”

Head coach Mike Sullivan doubled down. “We feel like the United States is at the pinnacle of the sport. We feel like we are every bit as good, if not better, than any country. These events give us the opportunity to prove it.”

The Americans haven’t touched Olympic gold since the 1980 “Miracle on Ice.” But hockey in the U.S. has grown massively in the decades since. Participation has tripled, and a roster led by Eichel, Auston Matthews, Adam Fox and Quinn Hughes is proof of a system that now churns out elite talent.

Meanwhile, north of the border, Canada flexed its own muscle. Hockey Canada’s orientation camp brought together a mix of legends and rising stars. Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby and Nathan MacKinnon headline the forwards, while 18-year-old phenoms Connor Bedard and Macklin Celebrini represent the future. On defense, Cale Makar, Drew Doughty and Josh Morrissey add world-class skill on the back end.

“The depth is unmatched,” one Hockey Canada official said. “We believe we’re building a team that can defend Canada’s tradition of success at the Olympics.”

That tradition is heavy with hardware. Canada has won three of the five Olympic tournaments featuring NHL players: Salt Lake City in 2002, Vancouver in 2010 and Sochi in 2014. The only misstep came in 2006 at Turin, where Canada stumbled to seventh place.

The contrast between the two programs is striking. Canada arrives with proven winners — players with multiple Cups and gold medals. The U.S. brings hunger and belief that its time has finally come. General manager Bill Guerin still bristles at February’s overtime loss to Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off.
“That was emotional. That was hard,” Guerin said. “We can’t just sit here and say, ‘Hey, great job, it was close.’ That’s not good enough. We have to figure out a way to get over the hump.”

For Vancouver captain Quinn Hughes, the goal is non-negotiable.
“USA Hockey has put so much work in with youth programs and development. I feel like they’re starting to see dividends,” Hughes said. “It’s kind of gold or nothing, personally.”

The Olympics in Milan are still months away, but the tone has already been set. Canada vs. USA isn’t just about bragging rights this time. It’s about legacies. One country will leave with validation. The other, with bitter disappointment.

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