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Labonté good but Vetter better as Canada settles for silver at worlds

Published: 12 April 2009

(CAPTION: Labonte jumps to avoid teammate Catherine Ward. Photo courtesy of HHoF/IIHF Images)

HÄMEENLINNA, Finland – ֱ’s Charline Labonté was named as the tournament’s best goaltender but Jessie Vetter, her American counterpart, made 39 saves and skated away with gold as the United States defeated Canada 4-1 to capture their second straight IIHF world hockey championship before 3,046 at Patria Arena in Finland, Sunday.

Defenceman Caitlin Cahow tallied a pair of goals and singles went to Meghan Duggan and Hilary Knight, who added an empty-net goal to round out the scoring. Winnipeg's Jennifer Botterill replied for Canada.

The Americans, which won gold for only the third time in 12 trips to the “worlds”, pounced on their first shift of the game as Cahow snuck in from the blueline, took a pass from Jenny Potter on the edge of Canada's crease and backhanded the puck over Labonté's pad 24 seconds after the opening face-off. It was the fastest-ever goal in an IIHF gold medal game.

“If you just look at our faces, it's pretty obvious what happened here,” said a disappointed Labonté to the media. "I don't think that we came out the way we should have. The U.S. played very well and it just kind of showed that they wanted it more. This is not the game we wanted to play and I don't think we proved anything here tonight."

Canada regrouped after opening goal and held the U.S. scoreless for the rest of the periodand the game settled into a typical USA-Canada game with speed, skill and scoring chances. Botterill evened the score in the middle period but the U.S. put the game out of reach with a pair of third-period markers.

The Canucks had a 40-29 edge in shots but could muster many good scoring opportunities against Vetter, a 5-foot-8 senior who helped the University of Wisconsin win the NCAA championship last month and won the Patty Kazmaier memorial award as the top player in NCAA women's hockey.

Labonté, the Boisbriand, Que., native who guided ֱ to a CIS national title last month and is a finalist for the BLG Award as the top athlete in the CIS, made 25 saves, many of them key ones, in what was her first start in a world championship final. She received the IIHF Directorate Award as the tourney’s top netminder, posting a 2-1 record in three starts, with a 1.68 goals-against average and a .912 save percentage.

GAME NOTES: ֱ teammate Catherine Ward, from Town of Mt. Royal, Que., finished fourth among all rearguards in points during her first-ever appearance at the Worlds. The 22-year-old management major – who earned tournament MVP honours at the CIS Nationals last month – registered four assists in five games. She also logged significant ice time and was third among Team Canada blueliners in the plus-minus statistics with a plus-6 rating… Kim St-Pierre, the ֱ grad from Chateauguay, Que., posted a pair of shutouts in her two starts, turning aside all 33 shots faced... The Canadian coaching staff, which includes ֱ head coach Peter Smith, has their work cut out for them as the focus will now shift to the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver, B.C... Smith is scheduled to return to Montreal Monday on Air Canada (AC875) at 12:25 pm, along with Ward, Labonté and St-Pierre, plus Caroline Ouellette and Marie-Philip Poulin.

IIHF Directorate Awards:
Best Goaltender: Charline Labonté (CAN)
Best Defenceman: Jenni Hiirikoski (FIN)
Best Forward: Hayley Wickenheiser (CAN)

Media All-Star Team
Goal: Jessie Vetter (USA)
Defence: Carla Mac Leod (CAN); Angela Ruggiero (USA)
Forward: Michelle Karvinen (FIN); Julie Chu (USA); Natalie Darwitz (USA)
Tournament MVP: Carla Mac Leod (CAN)

SOURCE: Earl Zukerman Communications Officer Athletics & Recreation ֱ 475 Pine Avenue W., Montreal, QC H2W 1S4 CANADA 514-398-7012 (Tel.) 514-398-1956 (Fax) www.mcgill.ca/athletics

Game Information/Reseignements sur le match
Գ/ÉéԱ𳾱Գ 2009 World Women's Champ. Location/Emplacement Hameenlinna, FIN
Date Sun. Apr. 12, 2009 Բ/éԲ Arena 1
Time/Heure 12:00 pm ET Attendance/Assistance -,---
Round/Ronde Gold Medal Game # 20

Box Score/Compte 1 2 3 Final
USA 1 1 2 4
CAN 0 1 0 1

Goals/Penalties
First Period/Première période

Goals/Buts :
00:24 USA Caitlin Cahow (Hilary Knight, Jenny Potter)

Penalties/Pénalités :
10:57 CAN Becky Kellar (Roughing/Rudesse)

Second Period/Deuxième période

Goals/Buts :
05:11 CAN Jennifer Botterill (Caroline Ouellette, Jayna Hefford)
10:10 USA Meghan Duggan (Jocelyne Lamoureux)

Penalties/Pénalités :
NONE / AUCUN

Third Period/Troisième période

Goals/Buts :
07:09 USA Caitlin Cahow (Natalie Darwitz, Gigi Marvin) PP/AN
19:51 USA Hilary Knight (Julie Chu) EN/FD

Penalties/Pénalités :
06:24 CAN Sarah Vaillancourt (Slashing/Coup de baton)


Goaltenders USA Jessie Vetter
Gardiens de but CAN Charline Labonté

Shots on Goal Team 1 p 2 p 3 p Ttl
Shots on Goal USA 10 12 7 29
Tirs au but CAN 14 12 14 40

Referee/Arbitre Aina Hove (NOR)
Linesmen/Juges des lignes Anne Sophie Boniface (FRA), Malene Skovbakke (DEN)

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