The U.S. similarly has rolled through the 2019 tournament to earn the No. 1 seed, but knows there is a big challenge ahead.
“I’m really excited,” said U.S. head coach Kelly Amonte Hiller. “That’s what you want, you want the best challenge that you can get. We know that they’re going to be hungry. We beat them not long ago and they’re going to come in all guns blazing. They have a lot of weapons. We have to play our best.”
In an event where the U.S. has outscored its six opponents by a combined score of 115-17, Canada gave the Americans their sternest test.
With Maddie Jenner and Greta Stahl in the draw circle and Bri Gross gobbeling up seemingly every ball those two don’t corral, the U.S. is winning nearly 75 percent of the draws in the tournament. That will be a critical component in the championship game.
In the pool play game, Canada won the first three draws of the game and controlled possession for much of the opening quarter. The score was tied 1-1 through over 14 minutes of play until Izzy Scane gave the U.S. a 2-1 lead with just 18 seconds left in the first period.
From there, Jenner took over. The 6-foot-2 attacker from Duke helped the U.S. win the next seven draws to ignite a U.S. rally that eventually reached eight straight goals. The 7-0 scoring advantage in the second quarter gave the U.S. a 9-1 halftime lead.
The teams played even in the second half, both squads scored four goals, but the damage had been done. The U.S. ended up winning 15 of 22 draws in the game, a 13-5 U.S. victory.