MILAN — Hilary Knight knew exactly what was coming.
She felt it after scoring with just over two minutes remaining in regulation, and she knew it again when Megan Keller carried the puck into overtime with only one defender in her path.
“We’re gonna win the game,” Knight said. “It was just that simple.”
And win they did. Team USA has reclaimed Olympic gold.
After an eight-year wait, after the heartbreak in Beijing, and following a steady climb over the past four years, Team USA finally reached the summit Thursday. Keller’s overtime goal, just 4:07 in, gave the Americans a thrilling 2-1 victory over Canada in a breathtaking Olympic final.
On February 19, 2026, USA’s Megan Keller (5) scored the overtime winner against Canada, securing the Olympic gold medal.
Hilary Knight — Team USA’s five-time Olympian and captain, playing her final Olympic game — delivered both on and off the ice to help seal the victory. At 57 minutes, Team USA was under pressure, facing a largely Canadian crowd pushing their team to hold a slim 1-0 lead.
With the Americans on a 6-on-5 advantage, Knight tipped in Laila Edwards’ shot from above the slot with just 2:04 remaining in regulation, giving the United States the crucial equalizer and setting the stage for Keller’s golden goal in overtime.
A GOLDEN GOAL FOR GOLD! pic.twitter.com/oLDfElGnI9
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026
In the locker room before overtime, Knight asked her teammates, “Who’s gonna be the hero?”
“We need the hero. The hero’s in this room,” Knight said afterward, gold medal around her neck. “There’s so much love and support in this room, we just want somebody to have it… Meg was our hero.”
Canada pressed hard in overtime, including a breakaway by Daryl Watts that Abbey Murphy chased down 150 feet to stop on the backcheck.
Then came the decisive play: Taylor Heise’s outlet pass found Keller with only one defender in her path. She deked around Claire Thompson and backhanded the puck past Ann-Renée Desbiens, clinching the win and sending the arena — and Team USA — into euphoric celebration.
USA’s Megan Keller (5) celebrated her overtime game-winning goal to clinch the Olympic gold medal, while Canada’s Claire Thompson (42) looked on in disbelief on February 19, 2026.
“Meg was flying up the ice,” Taylor Heise said. “She was calling for the puck, and I just chucked it to her. I didn’t even see what she did.”
Kendall Coyne Schofield turned to Heise afterward and asked who had made the pass.
“Me!” Heise replied, smiling.
Megan Keller (5) celebrated her overtime game-winning goal with her USA teammates after securing the Olympic gold medal against Canada on February 19, 2026.
“I just saw her get the puck, and she was gone,” Kendall Coyne Schofield said. “I didn’t see the end. It happened so fast.”
“I wasn’t really thinking or planning anything,” Keller added. “Just trying to take what was given.”
Team USA poured onto the ice in a massive group hug. Sticks, helmets, and gloves clattered to the ice as Keller was mobbed by her teammates. Coach John Wroblewski buried his face in his hands, overcome with emotion. American flags appeared seemingly everywhere — two, then three.
By the time Kelly Pannek reached the mixed zone, she had draped herself in a different flag, one that read: “In Keller We Trust.”
USA’s Hilary Knight (21) scored a late third-period goal to tie the Olympic gold-medal game against Canada on February 19, 2026.
But getting to that moment was a challenge like no other.
For the first 30 minutes, Team USA looked jittery, like Ilia Malinin on skates — nervous and outpaced by a more experienced Canadian squad. Kristen O’Neill’s shorthanded goal off a 2-on-1 rush just 54 seconds into the second period shattered the sense of inevitability the Americans had carried all tournament.
It was the first goal Team USA had allowed in 352:17 of game time, their first time trailing all tournament. Even as they began to find their rhythm and control the puck, scoring chances slipped by again and again.
USA’s Hilary Knight (21) was swarmed by teammates after scoring a late third-period tying goal against Canada in the Olympic gold-medal game on February 19, 2026.
Although Team USA had looked unstoppable throughout the tournament, it was fitting that their greatest challenge came in the final minutes — and that they overcame it in spectacular fashion makes the victory all the more memorable.
Canada has long dominated women’s hockey at the Olympics, winning six of eight gold medals since the sport debuted, with exceptions in 1998 and 2018. But on Thursday, the gold belongs to the United States, a young roster ready to shape the future of the sport.
“I feel like throughout the game,” Lee Stecklein said, “we remembered how much we believe in each other.
Canada’s Kristin O’Neill (43) scored on USA goalie Aerin Frankel (31) early in the second period, putting Team USA on the defensive.
But Hilary Knight transformed belief into reality, and Megan Keller turned that reality into jubilation.
“The bond we created as a group — we’re really a family,” Keller said. “I think that showed tonight. Makes it all the more special to go into this battle and come out champions with them.”





