Gritty USA-Canada rivalry explodes again in women's hockey final

Canada and the United States, the most intense rivals in women's hockey, will play for Pyeongchang Winter Olympic gold Thursday in a gritty showdown both teams have awaited for years

Canada and the United States, the most intense rivals in women's hockey, will play for Pyeongchang Winter Olympic gold Thursday in a gritty showdown both teams have awaited for years. "A battle for the ages, as usual," Canada's Brianne Jenner said. "It's the biggest stage. On the one hand it's like any other tournament and on the other it's our (NHL) Stanley Cup." Defending champion Canada plays for a fifth consecutive Olympic gold, having won 24 Olympic contests in a row. "It always is (chippy)," said Canada's Rebecca Johnston. "We're both competitive and we both want to win that gold medal. It's going to be a rough game." The reigning world champion Americans seek their first Olympic gold in 20 years, since the inaugural women's event in 1998 at Nagano. "It would mean everything to us," said US goaltender Maddie Rooney. "We're ready to go to battle," said US forward Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson. The teams have met in all but one Olympic or world final, each team beating the other 11 times. "Those games don't matter. Those games are in the past," Johnston said. "We've been getting better throughout the tournament, that's what we're focusing on." In 2014, the Americans were seconds from Olympic gold and saw a clinching shot at an empty net clank off a goalpost. Canada then equalised in the final seconds and won in over-time. "We've worked hard the past four years," US captain Meghan Duggan said. "We looked ourselves in the mirror and figured out what we can take from it. "That was a long time ago, it's a new team, we're ready to go. We've learned from things in the past but we're looking forward. "This team is ready, it's full of passion, energy and excitement." - 'Powerhouses go at it' - Canada won a group-stage clash over the US women 2-1 last week, a game that ended with a melee in front of the Canadian goal and two roughing penalties as shoves escalated. "That's how it has always been. It's a great history," Canada coach Laura Schuler said. "It's awesome on the world's biggest stage for everybody to see two powerhouses go at it." The Americans have won the past four world titles, three of them since Canada took a fourth consecutive Olympic crown. "The rivalry has been there since I was born," said 22-year-old US forward Dani Cameranesi. "It's always a great game." Canada's Jenner says she is living out her childhood dream playing for gold. "But once the puck is dropped you're on auto-pilot," Jenner added. "You train so many hours for this that your body knows what to do and takes over." Canada's Meghan Agosta seeks her fourth gold medal and says this year's team has a special bond. "Our team is the closest it has ever been, we're like a family," she said. "We have a lot of speed, talent and skill and we're ready." The Olympic Athletes from Russia play Finland on Wednesday for bronze.