Ice hockey-Canada captain Poulin to undergo knee surgery for torn ACL and meniscus


Feb 19, 2026; Milan, Italy; Marie-Philip Poulin (29) of Canada control the puck against the United States in the women's ice hockey gold medal game during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Amber Searls-Imagn Images

June 25 (Reuters) - Canada ⁠captain Marie-Philip Poulin, widely considered the ⁠best women's ice hockey player in ‌the world, will undergo surgery on hertorn anterior cruciate ligament and torn meniscus, herPWHL club Montreal ​Victoire announced on Thursday.

Poulin first ⁠injured her knee ⁠at the Milano Cortina Olympics, where Canada lost ⁠to ‌theU.S. in overtime of the gold-medal game, and aggravated it ⁠in March before returning to lead Montreal ​to their ‌first PWHL title while being named ⁠most valuable ​player of the playoffs.

• Poulin's surgery is scheduled for late July, and the Victoire ⁠will provide updates as appropriate

• "If ​I want to continue playing at a high level, surgery is necessary," Poulin said ⁠in press release

• She missed Canada's final two preliminary round games at Olympics with injury butreturned for quarter-finals

• Owns the ​women's all-time Olympic scoring record ⁠with 20 career goals

• Poulin scored the ​gold-medal game-winning goals in ‌three Olympic finals for ​Canada (2010, 2014, 2022)

(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; editing by Clare Fallon)

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