Ice hockey at the 2010 Winter Olympics – Women's tournament

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Contents

Women's ice hockey
at the XXI Olympic Winter Games
WomenHockey2010WinterOlympicsvictory.jpg
Medal ceremony
Venues General Motors Place (renamed Canada Hockey Place during the game due to the no-commercial policy)
UBC Thunderbird Arena
Dates13–25 February 2010
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svgFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada (3rd title)
Silver medal icon.svgFlag of the United States.svg  United States
Bronze medal icon.svgFlag of Finland.svg  Finland
  2006
2014  

The women's tournament in ice hockey at the 2010 Winter Olympics was held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada from February 13 to 25. Eight teams competed, seeded into two groups. Canada won the final by a score of 2–0 over the United States, who were awarded silver. The bronze medal game was won by Finland with a 3–2 victory over Sweden in overtime.

The tournament consisted of 20 games: 12 in the preliminary round (teams play the other teams in their own group); 4 final classification games; 2 semifinal games; 1 bronze medal game; and 1 final. [1]

The tournament had a total attendance of 162,419, an average of 8,120 spectators per game, making it the most attended IIHF-run women's hockey tournament of all-time. [2]

Qualification

Rosters

Group A
Group B

First round

Group A

TeamPldWOTWOTLLGFGAGDPtsQualification
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 33000412+399 Semifinals
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 32001101556
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland 3100261593 5–8th classification
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 30003429250
Source: [ citation needed ]

All times are local (UTC−8).

13 February 2010
12:00
Sweden  Flag of Sweden.svg3–0
(1–0, 1–0, 1–0)
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,222
Game reference
Kim Martin Goalies Florence Schelling Referee:
Leah Wrazidlo (United States)
Rundqvist (Udén Johansson, Svedin Thunström) – 12:311–0
Enström (Östberg, Myrén) – 31:352–0
Udén Johansson (Nevalainen) – 41:503–0
14 minPenalties6 min
34Shots16

13 February 2010
17:00
Canada  Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg18–0
(7–0, 6–0, 5–0)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver
Attendance: 16,496
Game reference
Kim St-Pierre Goalies Zuzana Tomčíková Referee:
Joy Tottman (Great Britain)
Irwin (Vaillancourt, Johnston) – 1:391–0
Bonhomme (Hefford, MacLeod) – 3:062–0
Agosta (Ouellette, Wickenheiser) (PP) – 5:383–0
MacLeod (Bonhomme, Ouellette) – 8:214–0
Agosta (Kellar, Sostorics) – 11:345–0
Kingsbury (Piper, Apps) – 15:096–0
Sostorics (Hefford, Agosta) – 16:207–0
Vaillancourt (Johnston) – 23:428–0
Poulin (PP) – 27:219–0
Agosta (Hefford, Ouellette) – 30:1910–0
Hefford (Wickenheiser) (SH) – 32:0011–0
Ouellette (Apps, Sostorics) (SH) – 32:4412–0
MacLeod (Poulin, Sostorics) – 36:4213–0
Hefford (Agosta, MacLeod) – 44:2314–0
Irwin (Vaillancourt, Ward) – 44:3715–0
Piper (Wickenheiser) – 46:5416–0
Hefford (Ouellette, Kellar) – 51:0317–0
Kingsbury (Botterill) – 52:5218–0
10 minPenalties12 min
67Shots9

15 February 2010
14:30
Switzerland  Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg1–10
(0–2, 1–3, 0–5)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,413
Game reference
Florence Schelling (out 51:55)
Dominique Slongo (in 51:55)
Goalies Shannon Szabados Referee:
Nicole Hertrich (Germany)
0–16:27 – Apps (Kingsbury, Piper) (PP)
0–214:25 – Vaillancourt (Johnston)
0–322:19 – Piper (Wickenheiser)
0–428:08 – Agosta (Ward, Ouellette)
0–531:15 – Agosta (Ouellette, Hefford)
Leimgruber (Lehmann, S. Marty) – 39:461–5
1–640:54 – Hefford (Wickenheiser) (SH)
1–749:08 – Ward
1–849:27 – Poulin
1–950:43 – Johnston (Vaillancourt, Kellar)
1–1051:55 – Wickenheiser (Piper, Apps)
8 minPenalties10 min
12Shots62

15 February 2010
19:00
Sweden  Flag of Sweden.svg6–2
(3–2, 1–0, 2–0)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,323
Game reference
Sara Grahn Goalies Zuzana Tomčíková Referee:
Aina Høve (Norway)
Winberg (Holmlöv, Holst) (PP) – 5:011–0
1–19:52 – Džurňáková (Babonyová, Herichová)
Winberg (Eliasson, Holmlöv) (PP) – 12:112–1
2–213:29 – Čupková (Čulíková, Kapustová)
Asserholt (Myrén, Östberg) – 16:073–2
Winberg (E. Andersson) – 29:074–2
Holmlöv (Holst, G. Andersson) (PP) – 46:085–2
Winberg (Nordin) – 53:206–2
10 minPenalties16 min
48Shots16

17 February 2010
14:30
Canada  Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg13–1
(5–0, 7–0, 1–1)
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,483
Game reference
Kim St-Pierre (out 40:00) / Charline Labonté (in 40:00)Goalies Kim Martin (out 28:47) / Sara Grahn (in 28:47)Referee:
Leah Wrazidlo (United States)
Agosta (Piper, Ouellette) – 06:581–0
Poulin (Agosta, Wickenheiser) – 09:162–0
Piper (Wickenheiser, Sostorics) – 13:003–0
Vaillancourt (Johnston, Sostorics) – 15:274–0
Bonhomme (Agosta) – 15:575–0
Agosta (Hefford) – 21:066–0
Hefford (Ouellette, Kellar) – 25:367–0
Wickenheiser (Apps) – 25:148–0
Apps (Irwin, Piper) – 26:139–0
Agosta (Ouellette) (PP) – 27:5910–0
Piper (Wickenheiser) – 29:1711–0
Irwin (Vaillancourt, Ward) (PP) – 31:4312–0
Apps (MacLeod, Wickenheiser) – 47:4313–0
13–152:16 – Timglas (Jordansson, Rooth) (PP)
8 minPenalties16 min
52Shots13

17 February 2010
19:00
Slovakia  Flag of Slovakia.svg2–5
(1–0, 0–1, 1–4)
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,272
Game reference
Zuzana Tomčíková Goalies Florence Schelling Referee:
Ulla Sipilä (Finland)
Čulíková (Čupková) – 7:101–0
1–135:39 – S. Marty
Čulíková (Kapustová, Čupková) – 40:192–1
2–250:35 – S. Marty (Nussbaum)
2–351:18 – Benz (Meier, Schelling)
2–456:28 – Lehmann (Leimgruber) (SH)
2–558:25 – S. Marty (Hafliger, Benz)
12 minPenalties12 min
33Shots45

Group B

TeamPldWOTWOTLLGFGAGDPtsQualification
Flag of the United States.svg  United States 33000311+309 Semifinals
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 320017816
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 31002319163 5–8th classification
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 30003316130
Source: [ citation needed ]

All times are local (UTC−8).

14 February 2010
12:00
United States  Flag of the United States.svg12–1
(5–0, 3–0, 4–1)
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,278
Game reference
Molly Schaus (out 52:00) / Brianne McLaughlin (in 52:00)Goalies Shi Yao Referee:
Ulla Sipilä (Finland)
Ruggiero – 2:501–0
Stack (Chu) – 9:562–0
Potter (M. Lamoureux) – 14:223–0
Duggan (Stack, Darwitz) (PP) – 17:404–0
Potter (Knight, M. Lamoureux) – 18:015–0
Potter (Engstrom, Chesson) (PP) – 21:186–0
Chesson (Marvin, Chu) – 23:467–0
J. Lamoureux (Thatcher) – 39:398–0
Duggan (Marvin, Potter) – 43:599–0
Engstrom (Potter, M. Lamoureux) – 50:4310–0
Darwitz (M. Lamoureux, Weiland) – 54:4311–0
11–157:39 – Jin (Ma, Sun) (PP)
Chu (Darwitz) – 59:2112–1
8 minPenalties12 min
61Shots7

14 February 2010
16:30
Finland  Flag of Finland.svg5–1
(1–1, 2–0, 2–0)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,275
Game reference
Noora Räty Goalies Irina Gashennikova Referee:
Mary Anne Gage (Canada)
Linesmen:
Heather Richardson (Canada)
Kerry Rumble (Canada)
0–16:11 – Vafina (Burina) (PP)
Sirviö (Saarinen, Välimäki) (PP2) – 9:301–1
Voutilainen (Rantamäki) – 23:592–1
Hovi (Hiirikoski) – 37:363–1
Tikkinen (S. Tuominen, Karvinen) – 42:254–1
Tikkinen (Pelttari, Karvinen) (PP) – 49:325–1
14 minPenalties12 min
34Shots14

16 February 2010
14:30
Russia  Flag of Russia.svg0–13
(0–5, 0–7, 0–1)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,365
Game reference
Anna Prugova (out 31:00)
Mariya Onolbayeva (in 31:00)
Goalies Jessie Vetter Referee:
Nicole Hertrich (Germany)
Linesmen:
Annica Flöden (Sweden)
Heather Richardson (Canada)
0–12:19 – M. Lamoureux (J. Lamoureux, Stack)
0–25:48 – Potter (Knight) (SH)
0–39:54 – Thatcher (Potter, Knight)
0–412:57 – Cahow (Stack, Darwitz) (PP)
0–515:56 – Potter (Knight) (PP)
0–620:34 – Ruggiero (Chu, Darwitz) (PP)
0–723:16 – Stack (M. Lamoureux) (PP)
0–826:01 – J. Lamoureux (Darwitz)
0–927:50 – Darwitz (Cahow) (PP)
0–1031:00 – Darwitz (Knight) (SH)
0–1131:46 – Potter (Thatcher, Bellamy)
0–1233:32 – Engstrom (Chesson) (PP)
0–1341:05 – Chesson (Stack) (PP)
16 minPenalties10 min
7Shots34

16 February 2010
19:00
Finland  Flag of Finland.svg2–1
(0–1, 2–0, 0–0)
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,317
Game reference
Noora Räty Goalies Shi Yao Referee:
Joy Tottman (Great Britain)
0–118:10 – Wang L. (SH)
Rantamäki (Pelttari, Lindstedt) (PP) – 29:131–1
Hovi – 34:022–1
10 minPenalties20 min
43Shots5

18 February 2010
14:30
United States  Flag of the United States.svg6–0
(4–0, 1–0, 1–0)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,398
Game reference
Jessie Vetter Goalies Noora Räty Referee:
Aina Høve (Norway)
Chu (Ruggiero) – 8:081–0
Engstrom (M. Lamoureux) (PP) – 10:472–0
Duggan (Darwitz, Marvin) – 11:293–0
Darwitz (Engstrom, Chesson) – 18:034–0
Knight (Darwitz) – 31:485–0
Thatcher (J. Lamoureux, Ruggiero) – 58:226–0
12 minPenalties6 min
42Shots23

18 February 2010
19:00
China  Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg1–2
(0–0, 1–2, 0–0)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,391
Game reference
Shi Yao Goalies Irina Gashennikova Referee:
Mary Anne Gage (Canada)
Linesmen:
Meghan Margaret Hishmeh (United States)
Anna Majapuro (Finland)
0–124:23 – Smolentseva (Kapustina, Khomich)
0–236:02 – Sergina (Burina, Permyakova) (PP)
Jin (Sun) – 37:381–2
4 minPenalties12 min
22Shots39

Classification round

5th place semifinals 5th place game
      
A3 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland 6
B4 Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 0
A3 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland 2
B3 Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 1
B3 Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 4
A4 Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 2 7th place game
B4 Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 3
A4 Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 1

Fifth place semifinal

All times are local (UTC−8).

20 February 2010
14:30
Switzerland  Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg6–0
(2–0, 2–0, 2–0)
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,454
Game reference
Florence Schelling Goalies Shi Yao (out 7:53)
Jia Dandan (in 7:53)
Referee:
Leah Wrazidlo (United States)
Lehmann (S. Marty) – 7:021–0
S. Marty – 7:532–0
Nussbaum (J. Marty, Lehmann) (PP) – 37:123–0
S. Marty (Lehmann, Leimgruber) – 39:444–0
S. Marty (Lehmann, Meier) – 54:545–0
S. Marty (Leimgruber, Benz) – 58:486–0
16 minPenalties6 min
49Shots21

20 February 2010
19:00
Russia  Flag of Russia.svg4–2
(2–0, 1–1, 1–1)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,488
Game reference
Irina Gashennikova Goalies Zuzana Tomčíková Referee:
Aina Høve (Norway)
Linesmen:
Annica Flöden (Sweden)
Kerry Rumble (Canada)
Sotnikova (Lebedeva) – 7:341–0
Gavrilova (Sergina, Smolentseva) (PP) – 18:162–0
2–123:24 – Pravlíková (Veličková) (PP)
Terentieva (Kapustina, Dyubanok) (SH) – 33:453–1
3–240:31 – Kapustová (Veličková)
Gavrilova (PP) – 50:264–2
8 minPenalties8 min
43Shots19

Seventh place game

All times are local (UTC−8).

22 February 2010
14:00
China  Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg3–1
(0–1, 1–0, 2–0)
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,284
Game reference
Shi Yao Goalies Zuzana Tomčíková Referee:
Joy Tottman (Great Britain)
0–110:37 – Pravlíková (Jurčová, Veličková)
Wang L. (Yu, Jiang) – 37:151–1
Sun (Zhang S., Jin) – 45:042–1
Wang L. (Zhang B.) – 51:443–1
4 minPenalties6 min
32Shots21

Fifth place game

All times are local (UTC−8).

22 February 2010
19:00
Switzerland  Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg2–1 GWS
(0–1, 1–0, 0–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–0)
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia UBC Winter Sports Centre, Vancouver
Attendance: 5,412
Game reference
Florence Schelling Goalies Irina Gashennikova Referee:
Ulla Sipilä (Finland)
Linesmen:
Zuzana Arazimová (Czech Republic)
Kerry Rumble (Canada)
0–19:05 – Burina (Sergina, Permyakova) (PP)
S. Marty (Nussbaum, Meier) (PP) – 34:121–1
Lehmann Ice hockey puck cross.svg
Bullo Ice hockey puck.svg
S. Marty Ice hockey puck.svg
Shootout Ice hockey puck.svg Sosina
Ice hockey puck cross.svg Gavrilova
Ice hockey puck cross.svg Deulina
10 minPenalties16 min
27Shots33

Final round

Semifinals Finals
      
A1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 5
B2 Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 0
A1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 2
B1 Flag of the United States.svg  United States 0
B1 Flag of the United States.svg  United States 9
A2 Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 1 Third place
B2 Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 3
A2 Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 2

Semifinals

All times are local (UTC−8).

22 February 2010
12:00
Sweden  Flag of Sweden.svg1–9
(0–2, 1–3, 0–4)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver
Attendance: 16,021
Game reference
Kim Martin Goalies Jessie Vetter Referee:
Mary Anne Gage (Canada)
0–17:14 – M. Lamoureux (Potter, Knight)
0–28:23 – Duggan (Cahow, Stack) (PP)
0–323:22 – Ruggiero (J. Lamoureux)
0–425:58 – Cahow (Thatcher)
Winberg (Jordansson) (PP) – 29:341–4
1–533:35 – Thatcher (J. Lamoureux, Lawler)
1–645:59 – M. Lamoureux (Potter, Engstrom) (PP)
1–747:15 – Weiland (Lawler)
1–855:20 – Stack (Chu, Engstrom)
1–957:19 – M. Lamoureux (Knight) (PP)
10 minPenalties8 min
12Shots46
22 February 2010
17:00
Finland  Flag of Finland.svg0–5
(0–2, 0–1, 0–2)
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver
Attendance: 16,324
Game reference
Noora Räty Goalies Shannon Szabados Referee:
Nicole Hertrich (Canada)
0–15:22 – Piper (Agosta, Hefford)
0–214:36 – Irwin
0–336:21 – Agosta (Bonhomme, Hefford)
0–444:23 – Irwin (Johnston, Vaillancourt)
0–558:57 – Ouellette (Poulin) (SH)
12 minPenalties10 min
11Shots50

[3]

Bronze medal game

All times are local (UTC−8).

25 February 2010
11:00
Sweden  Flag of Sweden.svg2–3 (OT)
(0–0, 1–2, 1–0, 0–1)
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland Bronze medal icon.svg Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver
Attendance: 16,398
Game reference
Sara Grahn Goalies Noora Räty Referee:
Nicole Hertrich (Germany)
0–124:24 – Pelttari
Rooth (Jordansson, Eliasson) (PP) – 32:241–1
1–236:02 – Karvinen (Välimäki)
Rundqvist (G. Andersson, Holmlöv) (PP) – 45:092–2
2–362:33 – Rantamäki (Tuominen, Hiirikoski)
12 minPenalties14 min
18Shots24

Final

All times are local (UTC−8).

25 February 2010
15:30
Gold medal icon.svg Canada  Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg2–0
(2–0, 0–0, 0–0)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Silver medal icon.svg Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver
Attendance: 16,805
Game reference
Shannon Szabados Goalies Jessie Vetter Referee:
Aina Høve (Norway)
Poulin (Botterill) – 13:551–0
Poulin (Agosta) – 16:502–0
12 minPenalties10 min
18Shots21

Final rankings

The final rankings of the 2010 Winter Olympics Women's Ice Hockey Tournament are as follows:

RankTeam
Gold medal icon.svgFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
Silver medal icon.svgFlag of the United States.svg  United States
Bronze medal icon.svgFlag of Finland.svg  Finland
4thFlag of Sweden.svg  Sweden
5thFlag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland
6thFlag of Russia.svg  Russia
7thFlag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China
8thFlag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia

Statistics

Leading scorers

RankPlayerGames played Goals Assists Pts PIM +/-
1Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Meghan Agosta  (CAN)596152+14
2Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Jayna Hefford  (CAN)557128+15
3Flag of Switzerland.svg  Stefanie Marty  (SUI)592116+4
4Flag of the United States.svg  Jenny Potter  (USA)565110+8
5Flag of the United States.svg  Natalie Darwitz  (USA)547110+6
6Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Caroline Ouellette  (CAN)529112+12
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Hayley Wickenheiser  (CAN)529110+14
8Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Cherie Piper  (CAN)555100+12
9Flag of the United States.svg  Monique Lamoureux  (USA)546102+7
10Flag of the United States.svg  Kelli Stack  (USA)53582+4
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Sarah Vaillancourt  (CAN)53586+7

Hat-trick scorers

Leading goaltenders

Goalies with 40% or more of their team's total minutes

RankGoalieGPMinutesGA GAA SV% Saves
1Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Shannon Szabados  (CAN)3180:0010.3398.0450
2Flag of the United States.svg  Jessie Vetter  (USA)4239:5030.7595.7768
3Flag of Switzerland.svg  Florence Schelling  (SUI)5301:55163.1890.91160
4Flag of Russia.svg  Irina Gashennikova  (RUS)4250:00102.4090.2092
5Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  Shi Yao  (CHN)5247:53194.6088.82151

Shutout posters

Awards

Canada's Meghan Agosta was named the most valuable player and received the Directorate Award for best forward of the tournament. Directorate Awards also went to Molly Engstrom (United States) for best defenceman, and to Shannon Szabados (Canada) for best goaltender.

The tournament all-star team was voted on by the international media at the conclusion of the event. The following players were named:

PositionPlayerTeam
G Shannon Szabados Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
D Angela Ruggiero Flag of the United States.svg  United States
D Molly Engstrom Flag of the United States.svg  United States
F Meghan Agosta Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
F Jenny Potter Flag of the United States.svg  United States
F Marie-Philip Poulin Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada

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The men's tournament in ice hockey at the 2010 Winter Olympics was held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, from February 16–28, 2010. Games were hosted at two venues – Canada Hockey Place and UBC Thunderbird Arena. These Olympics were the first to take place in a city with a National Hockey League team since the NHL players were introduced in 1998, which meant players on the Vancouver Canucks who were competing in the Olympics were playing in their home arena: Roberto Luongo for Canada, Ryan Kesler for the United States, Pavol Demitra for Slovakia, Sami Salo for Finland, Christian Ehrhoff for Germany, and Daniel and Henrik Sedin for Sweden.

The 2007–08 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey team represented Mercyhurst College in the 2007–08 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Lakers were coached by Michael Sisti and had a 9-2-1 conference record. Assisting Sisti was Paul Colontino and Louis Goulet. Mike Folga was the Head Equipment Manager. Mercyhurst featured eight newcomers in 2007-2008 as the Lakers lost 10 players from the 2006–2007, 32-win team. Seven of those players were lost to graduation.

The 2006–07 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey team represented Mercyhurst College in the 2006–07 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Lakers were coached by Michael Sisti and went 11-0-1 in their conference. Mercyhurst had the second-best scoring defense in Division I in 2006-2007. It would be the rookie season of Meghan Agosta. She was the first freshman ever to be in the Final 3 for the Patty Kazmaier Award. No other freshman had made it that far in voting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey</span> American college ice hockey program of Mercyhurst University

The Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey team is a college ice hockey program representing Mercyhurst University in NCAA Division I competition as a member of the Atlantic Hockey America (AHA) conference. They play in Erie, Pennsylvania at the Mercyhurst Ice Center, located on the Mercyhurst campus.

The 2009–10 women's national hockey team represented Canada at the 2010 Winter Olympic Games. Prior to the games, the national team participated in several tournaments during the 2009–10 season. The team won the gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. The head coach was Melody Davidson, and she was assisted by Peter Smith and former Vancouver Canucks player Doug Lidster.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Meghan Duggan</span> American ice hockey player (born 1987)

Meghan Duggan is an American former ice hockey forward and director of player development for the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League. She played for the United States at the 2010 Winter Olympics and 2014 Winter Olympics, winning two silver medals; she was the captain of the U.S. team at the 2018 Winter Olympics, where she won a gold medal. She also represented the United States at eight Women's World Championships, capturing seven gold medals and one silver medal. Duggan played collegiate hockey with the Wisconsin Badgers between 2006 and 2011. After her senior season (2010–11), Duggan was named the winner of the Patty Kazmaier Award, presented annually to the top women's ice hockey player in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). After her career at Wisconsin, Duggan was the team's all-time leading scorer. She was drafted 8th overall by the Boston Blades in the 2011 CWHL Draft.

The Canada men's national ice hockey team will participate in various events during the 2009–10 ice hockey season.

The following are the women's ice hockey events of the year 2010 throughout the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 IIHF Women's World Championship</span> International ice hockey tournament

The 2012 IIHF World Women's Championships was the 14th such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation and took place in Vermont, United States, at the Gutterson Fieldhouse in Burlington, and the Cairns Arena in South Burlington. The competition also served as qualifications for the 2013 competition, and the 2014 Olympics. The Top Division was contested between eight teams from April 7 to April 14, 2012, in Burlington and was hosted by USA Hockey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 IIHF Women's World Championship</span>

The 2013 IIHF Women's World Championship was the 15th world championship sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and was the last world championship before the 2014 Winter Olympics. The tournament was hosted in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and was primarily played in small community arenas, including the Nepean Sportsplex, but most games were held in Scotiabank Place arena.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ice hockey at the 2014 Winter Olympics – Women's tournament</span>

The women's tournament in ice hockey at the 2014 Winter Olympics was held in Sochi, Russia.

The women's tournament in ice hockey at the 2002 Winter Olympics was held in Provo and West Valley City, United States, from 11 to 21 February. Eight teams competed, seeded into two groups. Canada won the final by a score of 3–2 over the United States, who were awarded silver. The bronze medal game was won by Sweden with a 2–1 victory over Finland.

The women's tournament in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics was held in Gangneung, South Korea between 10 and 22 February 2018. Eight countries qualified for the tournament; five of them did so automatically by virtue of their ranking by the International Ice Hockey Federation, one, South Korea, automatically qualified as hosts, while the two others took part in a qualification tournament. Under a special agreement with the IOC and the IIHF, twelve North Korean players joined the host team to form a united team. They were allowed to have an expanded roster of 35 where 22 players dress for each game. Three North Korean players were selected for each game by coach Sarah Murray.

References

  1. "2010 OWG Women's Tournament Playing Format". International Ice Hockey Federation . Retrieved 18 February 2010.
  2. "Statistics". Iihf.com. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  3. "Olympics Women". Iihf.com. Retrieved 2016-10-19.