Jack Hughes scored twice and Connor Hellebuyck was untouchable in a 6-2 demolition of Slovakia on Friday. Meanwhile, Canada needed a late Nathan MacKinnon goal to escape Finland 3-2, doing it without Sidney Crosby, who sat out with a lower-body injury. Sunday’s gold medal game at Santagiulia Arena in Milan (8:10 a.m. ET, NBC/Peacock) is a collision of two programs that have never needed each other more. For the first time in a generation, it sets up in America’s favor.
Canada is 2-0 against the United States in Olympic gold medal meetings, winning 5-2 in Salt Lake City in 2002 and on a Crosby overtime goal in Vancouver in 2010. Those two results shaped a generation of hockey identity. Sunday could reshape it.
Why the Americans Are Different This Time
The version of Team USA that took the ice Friday doesn’t look like the program that’s spent 16 years chasing Canada’s blueprint. Hughes, 24, is no longer a prospect with upside. He’s the best player in this tournament. Two goals against Slovakia, including one that came as a power play expired and put the game out of reach, cemented what the first four rounds already showed. He’s playing with a clarity and purpose that looks a lot like someone who knows this is his moment.
Hellebuyck has been the steadiest goaltender in the tournament. The Vezina Trophy winner was efficient against Slovakia, turning aside all but two of the shots he faced in a game that was never close after the first period. For a U.S. team that has sometimes been undone in big games by goaltending inconsistency, having him locked in matters more than any other single variable entering Sunday.
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The depth is there too. Dylan Larkin opened the scoring against Slovakia in the first period, setting the tone before Hughes took over. Quinn Hughes has been a force on the blue line all tournament. Canada will have McDavid and MacKinnon; the Americans have enough to match that forward group piece for piece.
The Crosby Question Canada Can’t Escape
Crosby sustained a lower-body injury in Canada’s 4-3 overtime quarterfinal win over Czechia on Wednesday and did not return to that game. He missed Friday’s semifinal entirely, with Connor McDavid wearing the ‘C’ in his place. Canada’s coach Jon Cooper offered cautious optimism: “We have 48 hours to decide that, but I will tell you he’s got a better chance of playing in the gold medal game than he had playing in tonight’s game.”
Nathan MacKinnon sends Team Canada to the gold medal game! 🚨#TeamCanada | #MilanoCortina2026 | @CBCOlympics
pic.twitter.com/dlqIRm6XYm— Team Canada (@TeamCanada) February 20, 2026
McDavid, for his part, kept the focus where it belongs. “Just keeping the seat warm for Sid,” he said after Friday’s win. “Hopefully we can see him back here on Sunday.” MacKinnon’s late winner against Finland kept Canada alive. Their best player unable to suit up, active in the locker room between periods but not on the ice, wasn’t ideal preparation for the biggest game of the tournament.
The honest read is this: Canada can beat the United States with or without Crosby. McDavid is the best player on the ice in any building when he’s right. But a Crosby playing at less than full capacity, or not playing at all, removes the one card that has defined every Canada-USA heavyweight bout since 2010.
The Americans have been waiting for this version of the matchup. They have the goaltending, the forwards, and the momentum to take advantage of it. Sunday at 8:10 a.m. ET is their best shot at gold in a generation. Back the U.S.
