
Sarah Parsons (l) and Natalie Darwitz celebrate Team USA's Gold Medal
Parsons, Team USA Win Gold
HANOVER, N.H. -- Sophomore forward Sarah
Parsons (Dover, Mass.) and Team USA earned the gold medal at the
International Ice Hockey Federation World Women's Championship
after surviving a late comeback by Canada to hold on for a 4-3
win.
Parsons finished the event with a goal and three assists. Former
standout Cherie
Piper '06 was fifth in scoring with two goals and six assists for
Canada, while Katie
Weatherston '06 had two goals and Gillian
Apps '06 finished with with one score.
The last time the Americans won the event was in 2005. Before the
2005 championship, Canada had won every world women's title.
Team USA beat the Canadians twice during the event and went 4-1
during the week in Harbin, China. The lone loss by the Americans
came against Finland in a 1-0 loss.
In the gold medal game, Canada got out to a quick start when Gina
Kingsbury fed Sarah Vaillancourt the puck in the slot for the
four-on-four goal just 1:57 into the game. The Americans countered
with a power-play goal six minutes later to even things up at
one.
Natalie Darwitz scored as Canadian goaltender Kim St-Pierre was
screened on the play to give the U.S. the 2-1 advantage with just
over two minutes left in the first period. The teams were evenly
matched through the first period as one shot separated the two
squads.
It was much of same in the second period, which was highlighted by
back-and-forth action. But penalty problems popped up for Canada
midway through the period and American defenseman Angela Ruggiero
took full advantage, scoring the five-on-three goal to make it a
two-goal lead.
The Americans took a commanding 4-1 lead late in the second period
when Darwitz struck with her second goal of the game. It was solid
shot, in fact perhaps a little too solid as it went through the
back of the net and was only ruled a goal after a video review. The
goal even caught the players on the ice off guard.
But the U.S. comfort didn't last long as Canada's offense sprang
back into action, mounting a third-period comeback after nearly 50
minutes of silence. Katie
Weatherston sparked the Canadians with another four-on-four goal
8:38 into the period. Just 1:10 later, it became a one-goal game as
Jennifer Botterill struck with a power-play goal.
Canada put heavy pressure on the net after the goal, but the
Americans settled down and focused on defense after the mid-period
lapse, including killing off a five-on-three with less than five
minutes left in the game. While there were many tense moments, the
U.S. ultimately thwarted the comeback and held on for their second
World Championship crown.
Darwitz was named the Directorate's Best Forward, while Ruggiero
was dubbed the Best Defenseman. Finland's Noora Raty rounded out
the awards taking home Best Goaltender and MVP honors.















