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Milan Olympic Games

Winter Olympics Score Ratings Gold

February 24, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

STAMFORD – (Wire Service Report) – NBC Sports struck ratings gold this month with its coverage of the Milan Cortina Olympics on NBC stations and the streaming platform Peacock. The network averaged 23.5 million viewers to become the most watched Winter Olympics since Sochi in 2014, while marking a 96% ratings improvement over the 2022 Beijing Games.

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Highlight moments across the two weeks of Olympic coverage included the opening and closing ceremonies, Alysa Liu’s gold medal in women’s figure skating and gold medals for both the women’s and men’s ice hockey teams, each with victories over Canada.

“The Milan Cortina Olympics proved once again that the American audience will gather in large numbers over 17 days to experience this unmatched global competition,” NBC Olympics president Gary Zenkel said in a statement.

The viewership data, through Nielsen, is through Thursday and subject to revision.

NBC reported that all 15 days when competition took place saw at least 20 million viewers per day. Peacock and NBCU digital platforms averaged 3.3 million viewers daily.

According to Nielsen, Milwaukee led all markets with a 13.7 rating and a 49 share. That was followed by Minneapolis, Fort Myers, Fla., Pittsburgh and Dayton, Ohio.

The Milan Cortina Olympics were part of a busy sports month for NBC, which included Super Bowl LX, the most-watched show in the 100-year history of NBC and the second-most watched show of all-time across any network. The month also included the most-watched NBA All-Star Game since 2011.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games, NBC Sports

Ciao Bella: Milan-Cortino Magic

February 22, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

VERONA – (Staff and Wire Service Report) Italy said a fond farewell to the Winter Olympics on Sunday with an open-air ceremony in the ancient Verona Arena that celebrated art and sporting achievement at a Games lauded as a model for how to stage such events.

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The Games, formally co-hosted by Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, have been spread across a large area of northern Italy and passed off smoothly, with Italy also bagging a record haul of 30 medals.

The baton now passes to the French Alps, which are expected to follow a similar blueprint of using multiple existing winter sports venues in 2030 to reduce the environmental impact.

“Grazie Italia per questi Giochi magici! (Thank you, Italy, for these magical Games),” said International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry.

“You delivered a new kind of Winter Games and you set a very high standard for the future,” added Coventry, overseeing her first Olympics.

The next Summer Olympics will be in Los Angeles in two years’ time when the IOC will seek to develop a new business model, and its efforts to separate sport and politics are likely to face a daunting challenge.

MELONI PRAISES ITALIAN ACHIEVEMENTS

The closing ceremony was entitled “Beauty in Action” and featured leading Italian ballet dancer Roberto Bolle who performed an aerial routine, as well as a tribute to opera and dance music from DJ/producer Gabry Ponte.

“The Olympics have given us unforgettable emotions and a sense of pride that will remain with Italy for a long time to come,” Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni wrote on X, adding that the organization had “brought prestige to the entire nation.”

Meloni was among the crowd in the Roman amphitheater renowned for staging opera and pop concerts in the heart of the northern Italian city made famous as the setting for William Shakespeare’s play “Romeo and Juliet.”

Security was tight around the 2,000-year-old arena, with barriers set up to limit access and a helicopter circling overhead. Some tourists were surprised to find access to the main Piazza Bra restricted.

Hundreds of people marched through Verona a few hours before the Olympics closing ceremony to protest against housing costs and environmental concerns linked to the Winter Games.

The “Olympics? No thanks” rally was organized by university groups and associations that oppose hosting an event they say disrupts forests, pours concrete onto fragile land and deepens social inequality.

ATHLETES LET THEIR HAIR DOWN

However, with the Olympic medals won and lost, the tone of the closing ceremony in the arena was relaxed and free-wheeling.

Tickets were priced from 950 euros ($1,120) to a top level of 2,900 euros. Many of the athletes were in attendance but some seats appeared to remain empty on a chilly but clear evening.

Damiano Tommasi, mayor of Verona, and a former Hellas Verona and AS Roma soccer player, said staging the ceremony in such a historic location was “something unprecedented in Olympic history.”

“Personally, it motivates me to work towards planning a bid for the Summer Games in Italy, which have been missing for far too long,” he added

Rome hosted the Olympics in 1960 and the Italian capital dropped a bid for the 2024 Games, which were held in Paris.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

Filed Under: Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games

Golden Hour

February 22, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN – (Wire Service Report) – USA forward Jack Hughes scored at 1:41 of overtime to lift the United States to a 2-1 victory against Canada in the gold medal game on Sunday at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

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Hughes scored with a sweeping wrist shot from the inside edge of the left circle off a feed from defenseman Zach Werenski. The goal gave the Americans their first Olympic gold medal since the Miracle on Ice in 1980. Matt Boldy scored on the first shot of the game for the U.S. and Connor Hellebuyck made 41 saves.

Defenseman Cale Makar scored and Jordan Binnington made 26 saves for the Canadians, who were trying for their 10th Olympic gold medal. Canada was outshooting the U.S. 4-0 when Boldy split between Makar and Colorado Avalanche teammate Devon Toews at the Canadian blue line.

Toews had the best chance at snuffing out the play, but he whiffed on his clearing attempt. Boldy continued skating in on Binnington before sliding a backhand between his pads for a 1-0 lead at the six-minute mark of the first period.

Hellebuyck stopped Connor McDavid on a breakaway just before the midway point of the second period, and the Canadians failed to capitalize on a 5-on-3 power play for 93 seconds.

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The penalty kill for the U.S. went 18-for-18 in the tournament.

The Canadians avoided trailing at the start of the third period for the third straight game when Makar received a pass from Toews above the right circle and fired a wrist shot into the net to tie it 1-1 at 18:16.

Canada outshot the U.S. 19-8 in the second period to take a 27-16 advantage into the third.

Hellebuyck continued to make a string of miraculous saves early in the third, reaching back with his stick to tip a shot by Toews and then stopping Macklin Celebrini twice on a breakaway.

Canada was leveled by a four-minute double-minor high-sticking on Sam Bennett at 13:26 of the third, but the U.S. couldn’t capitalize for the first three minutes. The rest of the power play was negated by a high-sticking penalty on Hughes.

Canada played its second straight game without star captain Sidney Crosby, who was injured in the 4-3 overtime win against Czechia in the quarterfinals on Wednesday. Crosby scored the overtime winner for Canada in a 3-2 win against the U.S. in the gold medal game at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games, USA Hockey

TL’s Sunday Sports Notebook | Feb 22nd

February 22, 2026 by Terry Lyons

 

By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk and PGA Tour Brunch

BOSTON – There have been “big goals” in ice hockey games of the past, but just where does Megan Keller’s gold medal winning overtime goal for Team USA vs. Canada stand in the pantheon of greatness?

First, let us state the obvious.

There are big goals and then there are “BIG GOALS.”

Keller’s goal was a “BIG GOAL,” as it resulted with a game-winning gold medal clinching moment for the United States women’s Olympic ice hockey team. It came in overtime after an amazing come-from-behind, late third period comeback by the USA to tie Team Canada which had out-played the Americans throughout the final game of competition.

Keller’s goal, which won the game in 3-on-3 wide-open overtime, also prompted a While We’re Young (Ideas) core question. Where does the goal fit if a list of the “BIGGEST” goals were to be compiled. That is a very difficult task of you consider the complete work of art that is ice hockey, meaning men’s and women’s Olympics, NHL regular season and Stanley Cup playoffs.

Here’s a quick list, off top of head and no in-depth research from yesteryears of NHL, International  and Olympics ice hockey competitions.

  1. Mike Eruzioni’s game-winning goal against the Soviet Union in the semifinals of the 1980 Men’s Olympic ice hockey tournament.
  2. Mark Johnson’s game-tying goal in the third period of the USA vs. USSR game at Lake Placid that same tournament.
  3. Mark Johnson’s first goal, a game-tying (2-2) last second goal in the first period of the gold medal game.
  4. Megan Keller’s goal in the 2026 Olympics, described above.
  5. (Considering my lifetime) – Bobby Nystrom’s Stanley Cup-winning goal (May 24, 1980) to clinch the Cup for the New York Islanders in a hard-fought seven-game series against the Broad Street Bullies – the Philadelphia Flyers.
  6. New York Islanders’ J.P. Parise’s overtime and series-clinching goal, coming 11 seconds into overtime against the New York Rangers (at Madison Square Garden) in 1975. That goal marked the Islanders arrival from expansion team to contender.
  7. Boston Bruins defenseman Bobby Orr’s iconic 1970 Stanley Cup winning goal against the St. Louis Blues when Orr soared through the air after depositing the gmae/series winner.
  8. The 1976 Canada Cup final was a best-of-three series which was played between Czechoslovakia and Canada, as the vaunted Soviet Union sent a young, less experienced club to the tournament. After the Canadiens won game one 5-0, Czechoslovakia led, 4–3 in game two, with four minutes remaining in the third period. Canada’s Bill Barber scored the game-tying goal, and in overtime, Toronto’s Darryl Sittler received a pass from Marcel Dionne, faked and scored the series winner.
  9. Alex Ovechkin (Washington) beat G Ilya Sorokin (NY Islanders) on April 6, 2025 to score the 895th goal of his NHL career, passing “The Great One,” Wayne Gretzky to become the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer. Coincidentally, the Islanders were the team Gretzky was playing against when he scored his final NHL career goal (No. 894) in 1999, setting the mark for Ovechkin to chase.
  10. And, then, there was “The Goal” in the 1972 Summit Series between NHL greats from Canada and the Soviet Union national club.

“Cournoyer has it on that wing. Here’s a shot. Henderson made a wild stab for it and fell. Here’s another shot. Right in front, they score! Henderson has scored for Canada!”

— Foster Hewitt, calling the play-by-play description of Henderson’s goal.

The play was captured on film and by still photo (Frank Lennon/Toronto Star) in the days long, long before digital photography. In fact, it was a time stuck in a decades old Cold War that seemed more insurmountable than the great Russian goalkeeperVladimir Tretiak.

To set up “The Goal,” Team Canada had eventual Hall of Famers and their top goal scorers – Phil Esposito (Boston Bruins), Yvan Cournoyer (Montreal Canadiens) and Peter Mahovlich (Montreal Canadiens) – on the ice, but Toronto’s Paul Hendersoncalled off Mahovlich in a line change. Henderson bolted from the bench to the action in front of the Russian goal, as Cournoyer attempted to pass the puck along the boards. Henderson fell behind the net, then returned to his skates and sought position in front as Esposito took a shot that Tretiak went down to stop. with only :34 seconds remaining, Henderson spotted the rebound and slid the puck under Tretiak for the series winner, with Canada taking a 4-3-1 final game lead with the 6-5 victory.

After the ‘72 Summit Series there would be other competitions, including the Canada Cup in 1976. At the time of the ‘72 series, Team Canada had been boycotting the Olympics and the World Championships in protest of NHL professionals being banned from participating by the International Ice Hockey Federation.

It would take until 1998 at the Nagano Winter Olympic Games for NHL players to be made eligible to play in the Olympic Games.

Canada’s Paul Henderson celebrated the series winning goal with Russian goalkeeper Vladimir Tretiak sprawled down in his crease. (photo by Frank Lennon)


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The NHL (National Hockey League) and the PWHL (Professional Women’s Hockey League) could not have asked for more in these 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Although the time change will always be an issue with many an international event (Reminder: The men’s gold medal game starts at 8:00am Sunday morning, February 22), the NHL and PWHL will both look to capitalize on the success of the teams supplying the most talent to their respective leagues. The age-old question: Will the 2026 Winter Olympics provide a boost to the NHL’s and PWHL’s bottom line – via ticket sales, merchandise, international TV deals and better USA and Canadien TV ratings?

In the sport of soccer, the World Cup will be staged in North America and the powers-that-be within MLS (Major League Soccer) and NWSL (National Women’s Soccer League) are hoping for a major boost in awareness and attendance.

But, time and time again, USA success in soccer has not ignited a firestorm of interest in the professional soccer ranks. Yes, there’s been a few nice blips on the screen – name recognition for the likes of Alexi Lalas or Landon Donovan but the huge increase in affinity has never surfaced in the United States.

In the past, the 1992 USA Basketball “Dream Team” set the standard for increased global awareness for the NBA, but other Olympic sports have enjoyed significant boosts.

  • In 1972, Russian pixie Olga Korbut did her back flip off the uneven bars and ignited a huge increase in American young women joining gymnastics programs thought the 1970s.
  • In 1996, Kerri Strug, Dominique Dawes, Shannon Miller and the Magnificent Seven sent another lightning rod of attention for women’s gymnastics.
  • That was backed up by Carly Patterson who took the all-around title and fueled more interest in women’s gymnastics throughout the 2000s.
  • Then came the Simone Biles era, and Biles was supported by Aly Raisman, Gabby Douglas, McKayla Maroney and a period of USA dominance in world gymnastics, fueled by Biles.
  • The 1996 USA Basketball women’s national team was the main attraction at the Atlanta Summer Olympic Games. Among many others, UConn’s Rebecca Lobo started a new era for young women playing basketball. Counting her UConn record (35-0) and then ‘just’ the official USA Basketball exhibition games, and her first 15 WNBA games, Lobo went 60-0 during that time period and that doesn’t count another 40+ games played as scrimmages against American college teams. That promotion helped launch the WNBA in 1997.

Can ice hockey, and then later this year, soccer (Futbol) enjoy an extended boost of interest throughout the USA?


TIDBITS & NUGGETS: The Boston Bruins will hold their first post-Olympics practice at the Warrior Rink at 11:30am Sunday, just hours after the completion of the gold medal game in Milan. … On Saturday, CBS Sports’ Jim Nantz reminded viewers we’re inside seven weeks until The Masters. … Every Major League Baseball team was in action for Grapefruit or Cactus League games. … The 2026 Chairman’s Cup between the Red Sox and Minnesota Twins began Saturday with their first of eight Grapefruit League matchups, with four at Hammond Stadium and four at JetBlue Park. (Little Fenway). The clubs split the Cup in both 2024 and 2025. … The Chairman’s Cup is named in honor of the ownership chairmen of the Boston Red Sox and the Minnesota Twins, recognizing the friendly rivalry between the two clubs that share spring training facilities in Fort Myers, Florida. It’s meant as a symbolic gesture celebrating the teams’ leadership and spring training connections.

THIS JEST IN: The selection committee for the NCAA men’s basketball tournament issued their first look at potential seedings for the March Madness college basketball tourney. The top four seeds in each region were revealed on Saturday. Michigan was ranked as the No. 1 overall seed while Duke and Arizona rounded-out what the committee chair called a consensus top three. After extensive discussion, the committee settled on Iowa State to fill the fourth top seed.

UConn, Houston, Illinois and Purdue were the consensus No. 2 seeds.

*Please keep in mind, Michigan and Duke play each other (after WWYI’s deadline on Saturday night).

Gotta hope you know your college logos to decipher the rest. One hint, the two V’s are Virginia and Vanderbilt.


THINGS I WONDER ABOUT: These are things I think about now and then, and no one seems to have any answers:

  • Every now and then, our two pups cry and it’s a sound that goes right through me to the point where I’d do anything to come to their aid. My question is this: If dogs can cry, and it is so damn effective, why can’t they laugh?
  • Speaking of which, our dog Penny (Lane) can say one word in the English language, and it is “out.” Somehow, she changes her bark a bit and the sound is clear – and in the King’s English.

On another topic:

  • Who was the guy who invented the traffic circle or “Roundabout?” I’d like to get him.
  • Lastly, to decompress from watching the Winter Olympics and every ice hockey game, I plan to loop NBC hockey play-by-play man Kenny Albert’s voice forcefully stating the name – Mika Zibanejad – 45 times for each 60-minute interval for at least 10 days. “Zibanejad this, Zibanejad that. Poke check, Zibanejad. Wrist shot,Zibanejad. Everything Zibanejad and anything Zibanejad.”

EDDIE: There’s an old NBA scouting story that would relate directly to Kenny Albert’s calls on Mika Zibanejad, but you’d need to change the basketball to ice hockey. Famed New York Knickerbockers GM Eddie Donovan used to drive to many a college basketball game to scout pro prospects. Since there were no stats, no game notes (to speak of), no internet, rare TV coverage, Donovan would spend the first quarter of the games he was scouting by staying in his car and tuning into the game on radio. He would keep count of the number of times the radio announcer would mention a player’s name. Donovan would then enter the building with the tally sheet and know which players to pay the most attention to as he watched the final three quarters of the game.

As it relates to this year’s men’s Olympic ice hockey tournament, undoubtedly, the great Eddie Donovan would’ve recommended to his Madison Square Garden/New York Rangers counterpart, “You better scout this guy, Zibanejad!”

YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: Last weekend, as reported in Digital Sports Desk, there was quite a brawl between St. John’s and Providence after a Flagrant Foul take down of (former Friar) St. John’s forward Bryce Hopkins. In the postgame WPRO-Radio report by Providence College, color man Joey Hassett (he of Providence basketball – 1973-to-1977 – and later a three-point FG specialist with the Seattle SuperSonics where he won an NBA championship ring in 1979) actually said, referring to St. John’s transfer Hopkins, “he’s the one who started the fight.”

Said Hassett, “The (Providence) Friars had momentum at that point. They were up 41-40. That situation (brawl that saw two ejections, and a two game suspension to Providence forward Duncan Powell for his flagrant 2 take-down of Hopkins). They get four free throws,” added Hassett. “He gets the flagrant foul, and could’a just got up, but — he started the fight.”

Filed Under: NHL, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games, NHL, Providence, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, TLs Sunday Notes

USA Routs Slovakia; Canada is Up Next

February 20, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN  – (Wire Service Report) – The United States made light work of Slovakia with a 6-2 victory on Friday to set up the eagerly awaited Olympic men’s ice hockey final with Canada. Team U.S. was on cruise control heading into the final period, up 5-0 through Dylan Larkin, Tage Thompson, Jack Eichel and a double from Jack Hughes, before Brady Tkachuk scored between a pair of Slovakian consolation goals.

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NHL players returned to the Olympic Games following a 12-year absence and expectations had been high that the North American rivals would reap the benefits and face off in the decider.

The U.S. obliged with ease after Canada’s tense 3-2 semifinal win over defending champions Finland, and the sides will meet in Sunday’s gold-medal decider at Santagiulia Arena.

Slovakia will take on Finland in Saturday’s bronze-medal game at the same venue.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media and Digital Sports Desk

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games, Team USA

Canada’s Crosby Might Play vs. USA

February 20, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN – (Wire Service Report) – Captain Sidney Crosby missed Canada’s semifinal victory over Finland on Friday but has a chance to play in Sunday’s gold-medal game of the Milan Cortina Olympics, according to head coach Jon Cooper. Crosby, who is nursing an apparent right leg injury, watched from the wings as Canada scored a late winner to overcome a two-goal deficit and down the Finns 3-2 in Friday’s early semifinal at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

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“We have 48 hours to decide that, but I will tell you he’s got a better chance of playing in the gold-medal game than he had playing in tonight’s game,” Cooper told reporters postgame Friday.

The United States faced Slovakia in Friday’s second semifinal. The losing team will oppose Finland in the bronze-medal game Saturday.

Connor McDavid served as captain in Crosby’s absence for the semifinal and assisted Nathan MacKinnon’s game-winning power-play goal with 36 seconds remaining.

Sam Reinhart tipped in an earlier power-play goal and defenseman Shea Theodore tied the score midway through the third, helping Canada remain perfect in the tournament.

“We’re putting our country through it. A lot of stressful mornings for everyone back home,” McDavid said in a postgame interview with CBC. “But you know what? It’s been fun. It’s a best-on-best tournament. I keep on saying that. We’re playing the best teams in the world, the best players in the world, and they’re going at it and giving everything they have. The margins are razor thin.”

McDavid added he was “keeping the ‘C’ warm” for Crosby, who spoke to teammates in the locker room between periods. MacKinnon and Cale Makar were alternate captains against Finland.

Crosby was injured in Wednesday’s quarterfinal round as Canada rallied to defeat Czechia 4-3 in overtime.

“With what he’s done for the game, for our team, for all of Canada, we want to show up for him,” forward Brad Marchand said.

With six points in four appearances, Crosby is Canada’s fourth-leading scorer in Milan, trailing McDavid (13 points), Macklin Celebrini (10) and MacKinnon (seven).

One of the NHL’s most decorated players, the 38-year-old Crosby has 1,746 career points in 1,408 games over 21 seasons with the Pittsburgh Penguins. He is a three-time Stanley Cup champion and led Canada to Olympic gold at Vancouver in 2010 and Sochi in 2014.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Canada, Milan Olympic Games

Canada to Go for the Gold

February 20, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN –  (Wire Service Report) – NHL All-Star Nathan MacKinnon capped Canada’s extraordinary fightback to beat defending champions Finland 3-2 in a men’s Olympic ice hockey semifinal, firing in the kill shot with 35.2 seconds left on the clock in another nerve-searing game on Friday.

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The NHL’s leading goal-scorer, MacKinnon made magic happen at Santagiulia Arena with just one second left on a power play after Canada clawed its way back from a two-goal deficit in the second period.

Forward Sam Reinhart scored to spark the comeback, while defenseman Shea Theodore got the third-period equalizer for Canada.

Canada will face the United States for the gold, as the USA was significant winners over Slovakia on Friday. Finland will play in Saturday’s bronze-medal game. The gold-medal game is set for Sunday.

‘IT’S A CHESS MATCH’

The favored Canadians, with their roster packed with top-flight National Hockey League talent, had looked nearly untouchable early in the tournament, but have been made to work in their last two games. Canada needed an overtime nail-biter to get past the Czech Republic in the quarterfinals on Wednesday.

Their charismatic captain and former Olympic hero Sidney Crosby left that game injured and Canada were lacking some of their usual firepower as he sat out Friday’s game.

Canada had just three shots on goal through the first half of the opening period, and Finland got the chance it was waiting for when Sam Bennett was sent to the penalty box for goalie interference.

Mikko Rantanen scored three seconds into the power play and Finland piled on more pain early in the second period, when Erik Haula sent in a short-handed goal with a backhand shot.

“The start of the game, everybody’s so excited to play, and so amped up, so much adrenaline, it’s just kind of natural, you get a little bit of a feel out process,” said Canada forward Brad Marchand. “Some of these teams you haven’t played before. It’s kind of a chess match.”

The Canadians moved the right pieces around on the next power play, with defenseman Cale Makar blasting the puck through traffic toward the net, where Reinhart deflected it in to trim the lead. Theodore rocketed in a slapshot from the point to tie it midway through the third.

The Canadian joy overflowed with MacKinnon’s mighty shot in the waning moments of the game off an assist from Connor McDavid to avoid overtime. But the fans were made to hold their breath as officials weighed a challenge from the Finland bench for offside that ultimately proved unsuccessful.

The win kept alive North American fans’ hopes for a gold-medal showdown between the two preeminent ice hockey powerhouse nations, with the NHL allowing their players to compete at the Games for the first time since 2014.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Canada, Milan Olympic Games

Keller Wins Gold, Flies Like an Eagle

February 19, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN – United States’ defender Megan Keller, of Boston College,  took an outlet pass to the net and beat Canada goalie Ann-Renee Desbiens for the gold-medal winning goal at 4:07 into overtime to give Team USA a 2-1 come-from-behind victory on Thursday.

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The 3-on-3 overtime ending capped a tense finish of another epic game for the in women’s hockey finale between the neighboring North American countries.

US Captain Hilary Knight scored her 15th career Olympic goal to force overtime for the United States in the final, which featured overtime between the two countries for the third time in the past four Winter Games.

Knight knotted the score at 1 with 2:04 remaining on the goal that made her the USA women’s hockey leader in Olympic goals. Off of a face-off win, Knight caught a blue-line pass standing with her back to the goal just in front of the net and tipped it past Desbiens.

Canada took a 1-0 lead on Kristin O’Neill’s shorthanded goal in the second period with an assist from Laura Stacey.

-developing story

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games

USA Women’s Hockey Takes the Gold

February 19, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN – (Wire Service Report) -United States women’s ice hockey tasted revenge sweeter than maple syrup as they came from behind to beat defending champions Canada 2-1 to win gold in an overtime thriller at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Thursday.

Former Boston College skater Megan Keller netted the winner to dethrone their archrivals in an instant classic, sealing a spine-tingling affair and bringing a roar of American joy that echoed throughout Santagiulia Arena.

The U.S. looked headed for more disappointment after losing to their hated foes four years ago, as they were kept off the scoreboard and trailing late in the third period.

But captain Hilary Knight played the hero one more time in her fifth Olympics, tying it to take the tight-checking Games decider to three-on-three sudden death hockey, where Keller went around defender Claire Thompson and slipped the puck past Canadian goalie Ann-Renee Desbiens to clinch a third Olympic gold for the U.S. women.

The game gave fans yet another classic chapter in the sport’s greatest rivalry, and the packed stands offered dueling chants of “Canada!” and “USA!” from puck drop.

ROOK-TO-KNIGHT SENDS GAME TO OT

The Americans were the favorites after handing Canada their first-ever Olympic shutout 5-0 in the group stage, but fears of a one-sided final were soon dispelled as Desbiens put on a lights-out performance through the first period.

The U.S. had a prime chance to break the impasse with a power play at the start of the second. Instead, the crafty Canadian squad flexed its muscle as Laura Stacey gathered the puck in the neutral zone, charged forward and sent it across for Kristin O’Neill, who made a nifty backhand move to score the short-handed goal.

Behind for the first time in the tournament, the U.S. could not find a way past Desbiens until they pulled their goalie for an extra skater with just over two minutes left in regulation.

Knight redirected a shot from Olympic rookie Laila Edwards for their desperation first goal, breaking the all-time U.S. women’s goals record at the Winter Olympics in the process.

“She’s been a part of every historic moment since she’s been a part of this team. For her to get that goal was obviously most important for our team but also just a huge honor for her to break that record,” said Kelly Pannek, Knight’s teammate on their 2018 gold medal-winning group.

“It’s something we all want for her.”

This was the third time in the last four Games that the two sides have battled into overtime in an Olympic final, and the crowd held its breath before Keller finished off the Canadians with just over four minutes gone in overtime.

“Everything happened fast,” Desbiens said of the score that just squeaked over the line. “I’ll see that one for a long time.”

U.S. goalie Aerin Frankel also proved up to the test, ultimately turning aside 30 of 31 shots the Canadians sent her way.

With their coach John Wroblewski weeping tears of joy behind the bench, the American team erupted in celebration, and the Canadian side could only stand by grimly ahead of the medal ceremony, as fans danced to Miley Cyrus’ “Party in the USA.”

It marked the once-dominant Canadians’ eighth successive loss to the Americans.

RED, WHITE AND THE BLUE

The Canadians had long had the upper hand on the United States, with five Olympic golds. But cracks in the ice beneath their feet were beginning to show before they even stepped into the rink in Milan.

The United States won the world championship last year before sweeping the Canadians in the four-game Rivalry Series in November and December, leaving Canada fans with a queasy feeling just weeks before the Games were set to begin.

As American youth triumphed over Canadian experience on Thursday, U.S. fans can allow themselves to dream of more hardware to come, with several collegiate players on the team having yet to reach the professional ranks.

The U.S. was playing in its seventh Olympic championship game, having missed just one since the women were added to the program in 1998.

Switzerland took the bronze medal earlier on Thursday with a 2-1 overtime win over Sweden.

–Reuters, Special to Field Level Media and Digital Sports Desk

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Gold Medal, Milan Olympic Games, USA Women's Hockey Team

The Quad Clod

February 14, 2026 by Digital Sports Desk

MILAN – (Wire Service Report) – Kazakhstan’s Mikhail Shaidorov emerged as the shocking winner of the men’s competition at the Milan Cortina Games on Friday as heavy favorite Ilia Malinin’s free program fell apart and he finished out of the medals in one of Olympic figure skating’s biggest upsets.

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Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama took silver and countryman Shun Sato captured bronze on a night when many top skaters struggled to execute their jumps.

Malinin had been expected to pack in seven quadruple jumps, including the quad Axel which only he has landed in competition, but the American’s display unraveled as he made one mistake after another.

From the moment the expected quad Axel turned into a single Axel, he appeared to be in freefall as he made two crash landings onto the ice and ended up executing only three quads cleanly.

He looked absolutely distraught by the end of his free skate and kept shaking his head, scarcely believing the nightmare he had just endured on the biggest stage for his sport.

His score of 156.33 left him languishing in 15th place in the free skate and he ended up with a total of 264.49 points.

Shaidorov, who had finished fifth in the short program earlier this week, topped Friday’s competition with 198.64 points to earn the gold medal with a total of 291.58.

Malinin said the pressure of being the gold-medal favorite and the enormous media attention on him in his first Games was “too much to handle.”

“I’m trying to understand what happened specifically,” Malinin told reporters.

Shaidorov, who like Malinin is 21 years old and known for his technical ability, fell on his back in ecstasy on the ice at the Milano Ice Skating Arena after delivering a personal best, but few could have foreseen what was to come since all of the main medal contenders had yet to skate.

Frenchman Adam Siao Him Fa, who entered the free skate in third place, struggled mightily and Kagiyama, who was in second behind Malinin, also failed to live up to his standards.

Their errors appeared to have set the stage for two-time world champion Malinin to cruise to the title, especially since he had won 14 competitions in a row dating back to 2023.

But it was not to be.

Malinin said he was happy for Shaidorov, whose medal is Kazakhstan’s first of the Games.

“I went up to him and I congratulated him because watching him skate, I watched him in the locker room, and we’re just so proud of him,” he said.

“That’s what’s so special about the sport as well, is everyone has each other’s support.

“And I feel like we’re all a big, huge figure skating family. And I think people forget that when, you know, they see us competing against each other.”

–Reuters – Special to Field Level Media and Digital Sports Desk

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Sports Business Tagged With: Milan Olympic Games, Olympic Games

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