Olympics-Ice hockey-Poulin urges team to take pride despite silver


Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics - Ice Hockey - Women's Victory Ceremony - Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, Milan, Italy - February 19, 2026. Emily Clark, Emma Maltais and Marie-Philip Poulin of Canada with their silver medals during the ceremony REUTERS/Mike Segar

MILAN, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Canada captain Marie-Philip Poulin leaves Milan with an injured knee ⁠but her pride intact, praising her teammates for a well-fought overtime effort ‌that came up short against the United States 2-1 in the Olympic women's ice hockey final.

Up 1-0 with little more than two minutes left in regulation, Canada looked to have the golden touch before Hilary ​Knight levelled it for the Americans and the defending ⁠champions slipped to silver after ⁠Megan Keller's overtime heroics.

"We came out, we wanted to play, we wanted to make it ⁠difficult ‌for them and we did. Honestly, we knew it was going to be a battle, it was going to be up and down, and it ⁠was," said Poulin, who missed the final two games of ​the group stage with ‌a knee injury before returning in the quarter-finals.

"Overtime against the US? I don't ⁠think it's a ​surprise for anybody."

The 34-year-old "Captain Clutch" has been the architect behind some of Canada's greatest Olympic moments since she burst onto the global stage in 2010 to claim her first of three ⁠goals when she was just 18 years old on ​home soil.

She added another line to her legacy in Milan, where she broke the all-time Olympic goal-scoring record during the semi-final. The future without her feels almost unthinkable for Canada, ⁠where she is regarded as a national hero.

But the powerful centre who has packed a punch through her 16-year Olympic career bobbed and weaved around a reporter's question on Thursday when asked if her fifth Games would be her last, saying she was ​not yet sure.

Instead, she heaped praise on her teammates, urging ⁠them to wear their silver with pride.

"Just letting them know that that (loss) does not ​define them, that I'm proud of them, that they ‌showed up," she said. "They can keep their head ​high because it's truly an honour to be along their side."

(Reporting by Amy Tennery, Giulio Piovaccari and Janina Nuno Rios in MilanEditing by Christian Radnedge)

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