Canada overwhelms China in world championship opener
HÄMEENLINNA, Finland Ìý– McGill goaltender Charline Labonte
of Boisbriand, Que., earned her easiest victory ever with a
four-save effort and Martlets teammate Catherine Ward of Mt. Royal,
Que., was credited with one assist in her official IIHF debut as
Canada opened the 2009 women's world hockey championship with a
lopsided 13-1 win against overmatched China on Saturday.
Canada, which led 5-1 after one period and 9-1 after two, got goals
from nine diferent players. Rebecca Johnston, Hayley Wickenheiser,
Gillian Apps and Sarah Vaillancourt paced the Canadian squad with
two goals apiece. Single markers were tallied by Carla MacLeod,
Caroline Ouellette, Marie-Philip Poulin, Meghan Agosta and Haley
Irwin.
Poulin is the youngest player on the squad, having just turned 18 in late March. Her goal came on the power play, with Canada going a modest 2-for-5 with the advantage in the contest.
Wickenheiser and Vaillancourt had five-point games with three
assists each to go with their two goals. Irwin had a four-point
performance in her world championship debut as she also had three
assists in addition to her goal.
Canada, which outshot China 75-5, pelted netminder Yao Shi with 40
shots and seven goals before she was replaced late in the second
period by Dandan Jia, who faced 35 shots in the final 23 minutes
and 36 seconds.
Canada meets Sweden on Monday in Pool B play of the preliminary
round. The Swedes beat Canada for the first time at the Four
Nations Cup in November with a 3-2 overtime win.
The nine-time champion Canadians are attempting to reclaim the
world title they lost to the U.S. last year in Harbin, China.
Canada set team records Saturday for the fastest two and three
goals scored in history. MacLeod and then Ouellette struck within
10 seconds of each other starting at 3:53 of the first period to
better the previous record of 11 seconds. Vaillancourt made it
three goals in a span of 46 seconds to beat the previous top time
of 55 seconds.
Sun Rui scored China's first goal against Canada in nine years at
14:05 of the first period. She knocked down a floating pass from
Jin Fengling to beat Labonte on China's second shot of the game for
a power-play goal.
China has less than 200 female players compared to over 77,000 in
Canada. While Chinese government began putting more resources into
its women's hockey team to qualify for the 2010 Olympics in
Vancouver, China head coach Paul Strople of Halifax said his team's
goal at these world championships is simply to avoid being one of
two teams relegated to the world 'B' championship in 2011.
In other action, Julie Chu and Hilary Knight each had a hat trick as the U.S. routed Japan 8-0. The U.S. outshot their foes 74-8.
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