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Minnesota Wild Influence Fuels Team USA’s Olympic Gold Run
Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Team USA’s path to the gold medal game was exhilarating, and Minnesota Wild fans can rest proud tonight knowing that their stars were instrumental in bringing the U.S. Men’s Hockey team its first Olympic gold medal since 1980.

The run began when the quarterfinal against Sweden went down to the wire and into overtime. Just when it felt like the game might stretch on forever, Minnesota Wild defenseman Quinn Hughes stepped up and ended it. His extra-time winner sent the Americans pouring off the bench and kept their Olympic dream alive in heart-pounding fashion.

It was the kind of moment hockey fans live for: sudden, loud, unforgettable. It gave the U.S. all the momentum it needed heading into the semis.

Statement Win Sets Up Gold Medal Showdown

That energy carried straight into the semifinal, where the Americans took care of business with a commanding 6–2 win over Slovakia. This game carried a different feel. It was not adrenaline-inducing gameplay, but it was a statement performance. The U.S. rolled four lines, moved the puck with confidence, and looked every bit like a team on a mission. Now, with rival Canada waiting and gold on the line, Team USA went into the final riding confidence, chemistry, and a little bit of overtime magic.

History, Stage and Stakes Align on Olympic Final Day

The gold medal hockey game was the last contest before the Olympic flame gets extinguished. The significance extends beyond the matchup itself. Feb. 22 marks the anniversary of the “Miracle on Ice” at the 1980 Winter Olympics, an enduring benchmark in American hockey history. Now, 46 years later, a new generation took the ice with a championship at stake.

The final also carries significance, as it is the first Winter Olympics since 2014 to feature active NHL players, restoring the tournament to its highest level of competition. With history as the backdrop and the Games concluding on this very stage, the setting could hardly be more fitting.

Championship Game Delivers Edge-of-Your-Seat Hockey

The U.S. gold medal run had all the drama of a championship game that people will be talking about for years.

The pandemonium began when Minnesota Wild left-wing Matt Boldy gave the Americans the early lead, snapping a shot past the Canadian goaltender to give the U.S. a quick jolt of momentum. What followed was fast, wide-open hockey, with both teams trading chances like neither side wanted to blink first.

The game settled into a 1–1 tie after the first period, and the tension only grew as the crowd watched every rush up the ice. The Americans survived a huge Canadian 5-on-3 advantage thanks in part to Wild defenseman Brock Faber, who helped keep the puck out of dangerous space and nearly scored himself when his shot rang off both goalposts just before the second period ended.

The championship battle stayed locked at 1–1 through the third period, with both teams throwing everything they had at breaking the deadlock. Overtime turned, the arena turned into pure electricity, the kind of moment where one shot would decide everything.

That shot came from 24-year-old Jack Hughes, brother of Quinn Hughes, who buried the gold medal winner to finish the tournament with four goals and deliver the championship for the United States.

The play capped a standout international run for Hughes and sent the American bench pouring onto the ice in celebration. Goaltender Connor Hellebuyck was just as critical, standing on his head in net and turning away 41 of 42 shots on goal.

Wild Representation Leaves Its Mark on Olympic Hockey History

The contributions from Minnesota Wild players were woven throughout the United States’ gold medal run in Milan. From scoring and playmaking to critical defensive stands, the Minnesota Wild representation on Team USA helped shape the tournament’s biggest moments.

Now, the Wild’s U.S. Olympic contingent is bringing home gold to the hockey state, a fitting conclusion for a program rooted in Minnesota’s deep hockey culture. For a state often called the heart of American hockey, seeing its professional players help deliver Olympic gold carries a natural sense of symmetry as the Winter Games come to a close.

This article first appeared on The Lead and was syndicated with permission.

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