Scane earned Player of the Match honors for the second time at the event, scoring three of the first five U.S. goals of the game, including a huge momentum-swinging goal in transition after Canada had scored back-to-back goals early in the second quarter to pull within a goal of the U.S.
“A dream come true,” Scane said. “If you asked me a year ago today if I’d be here winning a gold medal, I would not say that would be happening after getting cut to getting back on the team to competing against a really, really hard good team.”
Canada provided a quality measuring stick for a U.S. team that was dominant in the tournament. More than eight minutes into the game, neither team had scored with Canada content to sit back in its zone defense.
“Before the game we said we’re going come in and play our normal offense,” Scane said. “It doesn’t matter what their zone is doing. We’re just going to play it how we usually play it and look for the backside. We just tried to stay calm and when the ball got toward the middle we were finishing our shots.”
Leah Holmes, one of the youngest players on the U.S. roster, was the first to break through. The lefthander buried a free position shot from the right wing with 6:12 remaining in the opening quarter.
Scane added another barely over a minute later and Elle Hansen converted a free position opportunity with just 35 seconds left in the opening period.
“We knew we needed to stay calm and we needed to do what our offense allowed,” Hansen said. “We just kept doing what we know best.”