
United States forward Hannah Bilka celebrates with teammates during the team's 5-0 victory over Canada in a women's hockey preliminary round Group A game at the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics on Tuesday.
Canada’s women’s hockey team endured a difficult night as the United States delivered a commanding 5–0 win in Olympic seeding play.
The loss exposed ongoing offensive struggles for Canada and underlined the growing momentum of their longtime rivals.
The game marked another tense chapter in the Canada-U.S. women’s hockey rivalry, one that increasingly favours the Americans.
Canada entered the matchup short-handed.
Captain Marie-Philip Poulin was sidelined with a lower-body injury suffered the previous night.
Brianne Jenner stepped into the captain’s role, but Canada struggled to find rhythm early.
The United States, meanwhile, looked sharp and structured from the opening faceoff.
They controlled puck possession and dictated pace throughout the contest.
Americans Set the Tone Early
The U.S. wasted little time asserting control.
Defender Caroline Harvey opened the scoring midway through the first period with a wrist shot through traffic.
The goal came on only the Americans’ second shot of the game.
Late in the period, the pressure continued to mount.
Abbey Murphy threaded a blind backhand pass from behind the Canadian net.
Hannah Bilka finished cleanly from the slot, doubling the lead.
At the first intermission, the U.S. led 2–0 and held an 11–4 edge in shots.
Canada appeared overwhelmed by the speed of the American forecheck.
Momentum Shifts Further in Second Period
Any hope of a Canadian response faded early in the second period.
Kristen Simms scored on a rebound following a video review.
Canada unsuccessfully challenged the play for goalie interference.
Moments later, Bilka struck again.
She buried a one-timer from close range after another feed from Murphy.
The goal extended the U.S. lead to 4–0 and quieted the arena.
Canada’s power play offered little relief.
The team managed just two shots across two opportunities.
A promising four-on-two rush even ended in an offside error.
Defensive Pressure Breaks Canada Down
The United States dominated possession through structured defensive play.
Canadian puck carriers were quickly closed down by one or two defenders.
Zone entries were forced wide, limiting dangerous chances.
Shots from the perimeter were blocked consistently.
The Americans gave Canada little space near the crease.
By the second intermission, the U.S. led 22–10 in shots.
Late in the second period, the gap widened further.
Laila Edwards intercepted a clearing attempt in the neutral zone.
She skated in alone and beat Ann-Renée Desbiens cleanly.
That goal ended Desbiens’ night.
Emerance Maschmeyer replaced her for the third period.
Shutout Seals U.S. Group Win
Goaltender Aerin Frankel remained calm under limited Canadian pressure.
She stopped all 20 shots she faced to earn the shutout.
The U.S. finished the game with 27 shots overall.
The Americans topped Group A with a perfect 4–0 record.
Bilka led the way with two goals.
Harvey added a goal and two assists in a standout performance.
The result continued a worrying trend for Canada.
The U.S. has now outscored Canada 24–7 since December.
That includes a four-game Rivalry Series sweep earlier this season.
What Comes Next for Canada
Despite the loss, Canada remains safely through to the quarterfinals.
All Group A teams advance, along with the top three from Group B.
Canada will face Germany in Saturday’s quarterfinal matchup.
A postponed game against Finland remains on the schedule.
The delay followed multiple norovirus cases among Finnish players.
Regardless of that result, Canada will finish second in Group A.
Canada’s coaching staff now faces difficult questions.
Offensive production has stalled against elite competition.
The absence of Poulin highlighted how much leadership and scoring she provides.
The Canada U.S. women’s hockey rivalry will continue.
For now, momentum clearly belongs to the Americans.

