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Previewing the U.S.-Canada gold-medal men’s hockey game

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When Team Canada faltered in the first round of the Olympic hockey tournament, the nation that prides itself on having invented the game held its collective breath. Not to worry: A romp over Germany in a qualifying game and a rout of Russia put this star-laden team back on track.

Or did it?

Canada barely hung on to defeat fast-closing Slovakia in the semifinals and secure its place in Sunday’s gold-medal game at Canada Hockey Place. Adversity could bring the Canadians closer -- or exhaust them.

The U.S. has run the table, relying on perseverance to subdue the stubborn Swiss in the quarterfinals and using physicality and speed to embarrass Finland in a 6-1 blowout. They have no game breakers -- the closest to that is Chicago winger Patrick Kane -- but their teamwork and energy have fueled their success.

Canada last won gold in 2002, defeating the U.S. at Salt Lake City. The U.S. men have won hockey gold twice: at Squaw Valley in 1960 and at Lake Placid in 1980. Today is the 50th anniversary of the Squaw Valley triumph.

Here are the key matchups. The U.S. is designated the home team because of its superior seeding and will have the last line change.

Goal

Roberto Luongo truly has home-ice advantage playing in the arena where he tends goal for the Vancouver Canucks. He took over from Martin Brodeur after Canada’s loss to the U.S. and has played well under duress. He has a .919 save percentage and 1.75 goals-against average.

Ryan Miller of the U.S. and the Buffalo Sabres tops all goalies with a .954 save percentage and 1.04 goals-against average. He stopped 42 shots by Canada in Team USA’s 5-3 preliminary-round victory last Sunday. He blanked Switzerland in the quarterfinals and shut out Finland for 48 minutes 29 seconds until he was given the rest of the semifinal off. His calmness and firm focus have given stability to a largely young team.

Defense

Scott Niedermayer hasn’t lifted his game as much as might have been expected and Chris Pronger has looked slow at times, reasons why Canada Coach Mike Babcock didn’t have either one on the ice while protecting a one-goal lead over Slovakia and went with the far more effective pair of Duncan Keith and Drew Doughty. Shea Weber has had an exceptional tournament at both ends of the ice.

Brian Rafalski, Team USA’s senior citizen at 36, leads the tournament with four goals and eight points. He’s part of a defense that has become more than the sum of its parts: Ryan Suter is a healthy +8 and Jack Johnson, Erik Johnson and Tim Gleason have provided puck movement and muscle.

Forwards

Dany Heatley and his San Jose linemates, Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau, remain Canada’s most effective trio because of their size, skill and familiarity. Chicago’s Jonathan Toews has been the top two-way player; he’s a tournament-best +9 defensively and has earned seven assists in six games, most recently on a line with Mike Richards and Rick Nash. Sidney Crosby (three goals, six points) has yet to dominate. The line of Dallas’ Brenden Morrow and Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry of the Ducks has been Canada’s best the last two games. They’re big and rugged and tough to stop.

For the U.S., New Jersey’s Zach Parise has blossomed here, collecting three goals and seven points. Kane has game-breaking speed and skill. But this team does its best work down low and by banging and crashing to win the puck and barging to the net for screens and tips. David Backes of St. Louis uses his size well, and Chris Drury has justified his selection with his penalty killing and leadership.

This one is too close to call. The U.S. can win, but Canada should draw energy from the crowd and a nation of hockey-crazed fans.

-- Helene Elliott

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