Canadian women's hockey team keeps rolling with 11 goals in blowout of Finland
Nurse, Jenner earn hat tricks; Olympic rookie Fillier doubles Beijing total with 2 more
In her first Olympics, Canada's Sarah Fillier is quickly proving she belongs.
The 21-year-old Georgetown, Ont., native scored twice, Sarah Nurse and Brianne Jenner each recorded hat tricks and the Canadian women's hockey team stormed past Finland with an 11-1 victory on Saturday at the Wukesong Sports Centre in Beijing.
"It speaks to the depth on our team," Fillier said. "We have a ton of skill and a ton of talent and we're willing to score any way we can. ... It's really from everywhere on the ice and everyone on our team and it just speaks to our chemistry."
Canada improved to 2-0 with the win, while Finland fell to 0-2.
For the second straight game, Fillier got the scoring started for the Canadians as part of a two-goal performance.
Just 61 seconds in, she picked the glove-side corner against Finnish goaltender Meeri Raisanen following a feed into the slot from linemate Natalie Spooner, who recorded four assists to reach nine total points through just two games. Fillier struck 64 seconds into Canada's 12-1 win over Switzerland two days ago.
SARAH FILLIER! What a shot 🚨🔥<br><br>The Canadian forward continues to impress in her first Olympic Games making it 1-0 early <a href="https://t.co/9e9q5hdQvs">pic.twitter.com/9e9q5hdQvs</a>
—@CBCOlympics
"I think when you score early it just deflates a team and when we just keep attacking it's really hard to get one back on us and we can really play with them on their heels," Fillier said.
Captain Marie-Philip Poulin was held without a goal for the second straight game, but did add three helpers. She appeared impressed by Fillier's fast start to these Olympics.
"To see her score that first goal, it just makes us smile. It's amazing to see her grow and every game she's stepping up," Poulin said.
Nurse, of Burlington, Ont., doubled Canada's lead later in the first period, capitalizing on a Finnish turnover and firing a slap shot into the back of the net.
Finland answered near the end of the frame when defender Minnamari Tuominen sent a wrist shot from the blue-line past Canadian goalie Ann-Renée Desbiens.
But Fillier, Nurse and Jenner made sure it never got closer than that.
Fillier added her second of the game in the middle frame, taking a pass from defender Renata Fast and tapping a backhand over Raisanen's shoulder with her back turned toward the net.
The 27-year-old Nurse quickly followed suit with her second, finding herself open in the slot and firing a wrister home to extend Canada's lead to 4-1.
Another beauty for Sarah Nurse and another assist for Spooner who now has 8 points 🔥<br><br>The pass, the touch and the finish 🙌 🇨🇦 4-1 🇫🇮<br><br>WATCH: <a href="https://t.co/SOBX6Tlrpt">https://t.co/SOBX6Tlrpt</a> <a href="https://t.co/Khji9k9X1m">pic.twitter.com/Khji9k9X1m</a>
—@CBCOlympics
Jenner, 30, then put the game out of hand with two of her own. First, she snuck a shot just underneath Raisanen's pads. Then, the Toronto native piled on wduring a seemingly innocuous play where her backhand bounced off a Finnish player and into the net.
She later wired a wrister past Finnish backup goalie Anni Keisala, who replaced Raisanen in the third period, to complete the hat trick.
Nurse also converted her hat trick in the third period after depositing a beautiful cross-crease feed from defender Erin Ambrose.
WATCH | Hat tricks galore for Team Canada:
The offensive explosion may have lifted some weight off Nurse's back after she was held to just two assists in her Olympic tournament debut four years ago.
"A bunch of us looked up at one point and we saw that we had 10 goals. We didn't even realize we had that many because we're so focused on that next shift and being impactful and generating offence," Nurse said.
Raisanen made 28 saves through two periods, while Keisala added nine in the final frame.
Desbiens replied with 28 stops of her own for Canada.
Forward Jamie Lee Rattray also added the first goal of her Olympic career, while Laura Stacey put together her second consecutive two-goal game.
"It was a great team effort. Everyone's just showing up shift after shift. We just keep putting it in and I think it's a lot of pressure — we're enjoying it, we just gotta keep going," Poulin said
Daoust misses game, listed as day-to-day
Still, it was Fillier stealing headlines for her remarkable start to the biggest tournament of her life.
Not to worry — Jenner sees more in Fillier's future.
"Filly's stick is hot and she keeps scoring on her first shift. She's going to do it again in the next game, I'm predicting it right now. She's a firecracker for us and it's fun to see," Jenner said.
Fillier's performance was made all the more impressive given the absence of her linemate Mélodie Daoust, who led the world championships in both goals and points last August.
Daoust, 30, of Valleyfield, Que., was held out of the lineup after suffering an injury in the second period of Canada's win over Switzerland.
WATCH | Daoust exits Switzerland game following 2nd period hit:
"Mélodie continues to be assessed by our medical team and will be evaluated on a day-to-day basis before determining a timetable for her return," director of hockey operations Gina Kingsbury said. "We anticipate she will be able to return to compete at some point during the Olympic tournament."
Other than the U.S., Finland represents Canada's toughest competition in Beijing. The Finns are the reigning bronze medallists, and knocked Canada off in the semifinals of the 2019 world championships. However, Canada is now 7-0 all-time in Olympic play against Finland.
Finland also experienced some turmoil behind the bench after head coach Pasi Mustonen left China yesterday to return home and attend to a family emergency. Assistant coach Juuso Toivola took over against Canada.
Finland dropped its tournament opener 5-2 against the Americans, who breezed past the Russian Olympic Committee 5-0 on Saturday. In other results, the Czech Republic defeated Sweden 3-1 and Japan downed Denmark 6-2.
Canada wraps up round-robin play with games on Sunday against the Russians and Monday against the U.S. at 11:10 p.m. ET on CBC. All five teams in Group A automatically advance to the knockout rounds.