After an even first half, Canada scored three of four goals in the third quarter, and then made it 6-3 on Joel Tinney’s man-up score with 14:25 to go. All the while, the Canadians kept pressure on the United States, both with their offense and the running clock that forced the Americans to be especially precise.
Kelly and Manny scored in the fourth to slice the deficit to 6-5, but the Canadians were positioned to close things out after United States was called for a trip with 2:28 left. But the defense held despite playing a man down, and Concannon stuffed Andrew Kew with 1:31 left, only for Canada to corral the rebound and call timeout.
The U.S. applied heavy pressure out of the timeout and Canada turned it over.
“As soon as the roster came out and I saw our defense, I played against those guys all summer long and they’re incredible, both on and off ball,” Manny said. “They’re huge, they’re long, they’re rangy, they’re tough, they run transition. Credit to those guys. Then Phipps and Concannon, those guys make doorstep saves like it’s their job. Quote unquote it is, but they’re fun to watch.”
The Americans cleared and used their final timeout, setting up Manny’s goal off a Kelly feed with 37 seconds left to tie it. It was a crisply executed late-game sequence, an impressive display for a team that had not played much together of late.
“There was a man-down, we had to double the ball, we had to win a faceoff, you’re behind by three,” Danowski said. “The 15-minute quarters shortens the game, so you have to talk a little bit more about game management. Defensively, maybe you have to be more aggressive. We fouled, but we had to be aggressive.”
Instead of settling for overtime, the Americans pounced on a miscue off the ensuing faceoff. Nardella, who split the workload of the game’s 15 draws evenly with Trevor Baptiste and Greg Gurenlian, noticed the Canadian faceoff man subbed off. With the U.S. wings occupying their Canadian counterparts, Nardella opted to remain on the field.
“I kind of faked like I was cutting left and saw my boy Manny with the ball,” Nardella said. “Will and I have spent a couple seasons playing together, so I knew he’d be looking for me. I flashed to him and sure enough he hit me right in the stick. I didn’t even have to move it.”
That gave the United States its first lead since it was 1-0 early in the second quarter, and Danowski’s team ran out the clock to secure the come-from-behind triumph.
“I think it’s just a huge character win,” Nardella said. “It shows the culture of the team. Even though we haven’t played together a lot, there’s guys who have been in and out of this roster over the course of the last couple years. It just shows we stuck together and everybody cares about only one thing, and that’s winning.”