2026 Winter Olympics Ice Hockey Arena: 2026 winter olympics ice hockey arena Sees U.S. OT Gold vs Canada
2026 winter olympics ice hockey arena in Milan hosted an overtime classic on Feb. 19, 2026 (ET), when Megan Keller scored 4 minutes, 7 seconds into overtime to give the United States a 2-1 victory over Canada and the women's Olympic gold medal. The comeback capped a late surge that began after captain Hilary Knight pulled the U. S. goalkeeper and deflected a tying shot with roughly 2 minutes, 30 seconds left in regulation.
Game recap at 2026 winter olympics ice hockey arena
The Americans began the second period on a power play that carried over from a late penalty in the first, but Canada opened the scoring with a shorthanded goal — the first goal the U. S. had conceded in the tournament, ending a shutout stretch of three hours, 52 minutes and seven seconds. The match remained 1-0 until the closing minutes of the third.
With about 2: 30 remaining, the U. S. pulled its goalie in search of the equalizer. Captain Hilary Knight redirected a wrister from the top of the zone to tie the game and force overtime. Regulation shots on goal were essentially even, 29-28 in favor of Canada.
Overtime lasted only four minutes and seven seconds before Megan Keller executed a play that threaded the puck past the Canadian goaltender, securing the 2-1 final and returning the gold medal to the United States.
Milano Santagiulia: 2026 Winter Olympics Ice Hockey Arena
The title match took place at the Milano Santagiulia venue in Milan, on day 13 of the tournament. Late in the third, Canada earned a power play that the U. S. successfully killed with just over four minutes remaining — a sequence that set the stage for the U. S. to pull its goalie and eventually force overtime.
The sequence of penalty, shorthanded scoring, power-play kill and pulled-goalie equalizer created a tense finish that the overtime period resolved in the U. S. favor within the first five minutes.
Key moments, stats and what follows
- Final score: United States 2, Canada 1 (overtime).
- Overtime winner: Megan Keller at 4: 07 of OT.
- Tie goal: Hilary Knight deflected a wrister after the U. S. pulled its goalie with ~2: 30 left.
- Shots after regulation: Canada 29, United States 28; shutout streak ended at 3: 52: 07 for the U. S.
Analysis: the U. S. defense had carried a lengthy shutout run earlier in the tournament, and the late-game strategy of pulling the goalie produced the equalizer that changed the match's momentum. The penalty sequences — a carryover power play to open the second, a subsequent shorthanded goal by Canada, and a late Canadian power play that was killed — defined the game's flow and left the outcome hinging on special-teams play and late offensive urgency.
Forward look: with the gold decided in sudden death overtime, primary indicators to watch in future international fixtures are special-teams efficiency and late-game goaltending performance. If the U. S. maintains tight penalty killing and the ability to convert with an extra attacker in critical moments, similar close wins remain possible in comparable tournaments. Any further roster or schedule developments tied to this team were not detailed in available accounts and remain unclear at this time.
The match closed a tightly contested rivalry chapter at the Milano Santagiulia arena and will be referenced for its late drama and a game-winning overtime finish.