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Ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Women's tournament

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2018 Winter Olympics
Tournament details
Host country Südkorea
Venue(s)2 (in 1 host city)
Dates10–22 February
Teams8
Final positions
Champions  Vereinigte Staaten (2nd title)
Runner-up  Kanada
Third place  Finnland
Fourth place Olympic Athletes from Russia
Tournament statistics
Games played22
Goals scored109 (4.95 per game)
Attendance85,565 (3,889 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Schweiz Alina Müller (10 points)
MVPKanada Mélodie Daoust
← 2014
2022 →

The women's tournament in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics was held in Gangneung, South Korea between 10 and 22 February 2018.[1] Eight countries qualified for the tournament; five of them did so automatically by virtue of their ranking by the International Ice Hockey Federation, one, South Korea, automatically qualified as hosts, while the two others took part in a qualification tournament.[2] Under a special agreement with the IOC and the IIHF, twelve North Korean players joined the host team to form a united team.[3] They were allowed to have an expanded roster of 35 where 22 players dress for each game. Three North Korean players were selected for each game by coach Sarah Murray.[4]

The United States winning the gold medal game against Canada marks the first time in 20 years that the United States took home a gold medal in women's hockey. They previously won in 1998 in Nagano, Japan, which was also against Canada.[5] Canada's loss ended their winning streak of four consecutive winter games, having won since 2002.[6]

Qualification[edit]

Canada and the United States assured themselves of top four ranking after the 2016 Women's Ice Hockey World Championships by the end of the 2015 Championships and qualified for the A group.

Finland, Russia, and Sweden qualified by their ranking after the 2016 Championships.

South Korea qualified as the host team. The remaining two teams qualified from qualification tournaments.

Qualified teams[edit]

Event Date Standort Vacancies Qualified
Hosts 19 September 2014[7] Spanien Tenerife 1  Südkorea[a]
2016 IIHF World Ranking[b] 7 December 2012 –
10 April 2016
Kanada Kamloops[c] 5  Vereinigte Staaten
 Kanada
 Finnland
 Russland[d]
 Schweden
Final qualification tournament 9–12 February 2017 Schweiz Arosa 1   Schweiz
Final qualification tournament 9–12 February 2017 Japan Tomakomai 1  Japan
TOTAL 8
Notes
  1. a A unified Korean team consisting of players from both North Korea and South Korea will compete, after talks in Panmunjom on 17 January 2018.[8]
  2. c Kamloops was the site for 2016 IIHF Women's World Championship; at the conclusion of the tournament the ranking was finalized with regard to the qualification slots.
  3. d In December 2017, the IOC suspended Russia from competing at the Winter Olympics as part of its sanctions following state-sponsored doping scandal. Russian athletes deemed clean were permitted to compete as Olympic Athletes from Russia.[9]

Format[edit]

The top four teams based on the 2016 IIHF World Ranking, the United States, Canada, Finland and Olympic Athletes from Russia, compete in Group A, while the remaining four teams compete in Group B. The top two teams in Group A received a bye to the semifinals. In the quarterfinals, the third placed team in Group A played the second place team in Group B, while the fourth placed team in Group A played the first place team in Group B. The winners advanced to the semifinals, while the two losers, and the third and fourth placed teams in Group B, competed in a classification bracket for places five through eight.

Rosters[edit]

Match officials[edit]

10 referees and 9 linesmen were selected for the tournament.[10]

Preliminary round[edit]

All times are local (UTC+9).

Group A[edit]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Kanada 3 3 0 0 0 11 2 +9 9 Semifinals
2  Vereinigte Staaten 3 2 0 0 1 9 3 +6 6
3  Finnland 3 1 0 0 2 7 8 −1 3 Quarterfinals
4 Olympic Athletes from Russia 3 0 0 0 3 1 15 −14 0
Source: IIHF
11 February 2018
16:40
Finnland 1–3
(1–0, 0–2, 0–1)
 Vereinigte StaatenKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,032
Game reference
Noora RätyGoaliesMaddie RooneyReferees:
Deutschland Nicole Hertrich
Norwegen Aina Hove
Linesmen:
Frankreich Charlotte Girard-Fabre
Schweden Veronica Johansson
Hovi (Nieminen, Välimäki) – 19:541–0
1–128:58 – Lamoureux-Morando
1–231:29 – Coyne (Knight, Decker)
1–359:47 – Cameranesi (Keller) (ENG)
8 minPenalties4 min
24Shots42
11 February 2018
21:10
Kanada 5–0
(0–0, 3–0, 2–0)
Olympic Athletes from RussiaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,912
Game reference
Ann-Renée DesbiensGoaliesNadezhda Morozova
Nadezhda Aleksandrova
Referees:
Slowakei Nikoleta Celárová
Schweden Katarina Timglas
Linesmen:
Finnland Jenni Heikkinen
Deutschland Lisa Linnek
Johnston (Jenner, Saulnier) – 21:551–0
Irwin (Johnston) (PP) – 24:132–0
Daoust (Agosta, Poulin) – 35:583–0
Johnston (Lacquette, Poulin) (PP2) – 48:414–0
Daoust (Poulin) – 50:445–0
4 minPenalties14 min
48Shots18

13 February 2018
16:40
Kanada 4–1
(2–0, 2–0, 0–1)
 FinnlandKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,879
Game reference
Shannon SzabadosGoaliesNoora RätyReferees:
Vereinigte Staaten Dina Allena
Vereinigte Staaten Melissa Szkola
Linesmen:
Schweden Veronica Johansson
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Agosta (Daoust) – 00:351–0
Poulin – 17:112–0
Daoust (Fortino, Agosta) – 28:193–0
Saulnier (Johnston) – 38:264–0
4–147:17 – Välilä (Tapani, Karvinen)
8 minPenalties10 min
32Shots23
13 February 2018
21:10
Vereinigte Staaten 5–0
(1–0, 3–0, 1–0)
Olympic Athletes from RussiaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,797
Game reference
Nicole HensleyGoaliesValeria Tarakanova
Nadezhda Morozova
Referees:
Kanada Gabrielle Ariano-Lortie
Schweden Gabriella Gran
Linesmen:
Tschechische Republik Zuzana Svobodová
Finnland Johanna Tauriainen
Bellamy (Lamoureux-Davidson, Marvin) – 08:021–0
Lamoureux-Davidson (Lamoureux-Morando) – 31:462–0
Lamoureux-Davidson – 31:523–0
Marvin (Pelkey, Duggan) – 34:384–0
Brandt (Cameranesi, Keller) – 58:235–0
2 minPenalties6 min
50Shots13

15 February 2018
12:10
Vereinigte Staaten 1–2
(0–0, 0–2, 1–0)
 KanadaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,885
Game reference
Maddie RooneyGoaliesGeneviève LacasseReferees:
Norwegen Aina Hove
Schweden Katarina Timglas
Linesmen:
Finnland Jenni Heikkinen
Schweden Veronica Johansson
0–127:18 – Agosta (Spooner, Jenner) (PP)
0–234:56 – Nurse (Larocque)
Coyne (Decker) – 40:231–2
12 minPenalties8 min
45Shots23
15 February 2018
16:40
Olympic Athletes from Russia 1–5
(0–1, 0–2, 1–2)
 FinnlandKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,353
Game reference
Nadezhda MorozovaGoaliesNoora RätyReferees:
Deutschland Nicole Hertrich
Vereinigte Staaten Melissa Szkola
Linesmen:
Deutschland Lisa Linnek
Kanada Justine Todd
0–117:47 – Karvinen (Hiirikoski) (PP)
0–220:20 – Karvinen (Nuutinen, Välilä)
0–339:08 – Välilä
Shokhina (Belyakova) – 44:501–3
1–452:49 – Tuominen (Hiirikoski, Nieminen) (PP)
1–555:33 – Nieminen
8 minPenalties4 min
25Shots37

Group B[edit]

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Schweiz 3 3 0 0 0 13 2 +11 9 Quarterfinals
2  Schweden 3 2 0 0 1 11 3 +8 6
3  Japan 3 1 0 0 2 6 6 0 3 Classification
4  Korea (H) 3 0 0 0 3 1 20 −19 0
Source: IIHF
(H) Host
10 February 2018
16:40
Japan 1–2
(0–1, 1–0, 0–1)
 SchwedenKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,762
Game reference
Nana FujimotoGoaliesSara GrahnReferees:
Vereinigte Staaten Katie Guay
Vereinigte Staaten Melissa Szkola
Linesmen:
Slowenien Nataša Pagon
Tschechische Republik Zuzana Svobodová
0–102:21 – Rask (Küller, Carlsson)
Ukita (Kubo) – 36:521–1
1–241:53 – Hjalmarsson (Grahm)
2 minPenalties8 min
31Shots26
10 February 2018
21:10
Schweiz 8–0
(3–0, 3–0, 2–0)
 KoreaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,606
Game reference
Florence SchellingGoaliesShin So-jungReferees:
Vereinigte Staaten Dina Allen
Kanada Gabrielle Ariano-Lortie
Linesmen:
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Kanada Justine Todd
Müller (S. Benz) (SH) – 10:231–0
Müller (S. Benz, Stalder) – 11:242–0
Müller (S. Benz, Meier) – 19:493–0
Müller – 21:264–0
Stänz (Raselli) – 22:215–0
Stänz (Raselli) – 37:196–0
Stalder (Meier, Müller) (PP) – 49:427–0
Stalder (Müller) – 51:488–0
12 minPenalties6 min
52Shots8

12 February 2018
16:40
Schweiz 3–1
(0–0, 2–0, 1–1)
 JapanKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,033
Game reference
Florence SchellingGoaliesNana FujimotoReferees:
Schweden Gabriella Gran
Norwegen Aina Hove
Linesmen:
Finnland Jenni Heikkinen
Slowenien Natasa Pagon
S. Benz (Rüegg, L. Benz) (PP) – 30:191–0
S. Benz (Meier) (PP) – 33:102–0
Müller – 44:273–0
3–147:33 – Kubo (Hori, H. Toko)
10 minPenalties8 min
18Shots38
12 February 2018
21:10
Schweden 8–0
(4–0, 1–0, 3–0)
 KoreaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,244
Game reference
Sara GrahnGoaliesShin So-jungReferees:
Kanada Gabrielle Ariano-Lortie
Schweiz Drahomira Fialova
Linesmen:
Finnland Johanna Tauriainen
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Nylén Persson (Alasalmi) (PP) – 04:001–0
Lundberg (Rask, Grahm) – 09:472–0
Fällman (Rask, Küller) – 10:173–0
Udén Johansson (Johansson) – 17:044–0
Winberg (Lundberg, Alasalmi) – 24:085-0
Nordin (Winberg) – 41:096–0
Winberg (Grahm, Nordin) – 41:457–0
Stenberg (Winberg) – 45:348–0
8 minPenalties6 min
50Shots19

14 February 2018
12:10
Schweden 1–2
(0–0, 0–1, 1–1)
  SchweizKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,545
Game reference
Sara GrahnGoaliesFlorence SchellingReferees:
Slowakei Nikoleta Celárová
Vereinigte Staaten Katie Guay
Linesmen:
Frankreich Charlotte Girard-Fabre
Deutschland Lisa Linnek
0–133:51 – Müller (Meier, Stalder) (PP)
Borgqvist (Olsson, Nyhlén Persson) (PP) – 47:351–1
1–251:28 – Stänz (Meier, Müller) (PP)
12 minPenalties8 min
34Shots47
14 February 2018
16:40
Korea 1–4
(0–2, 1–0, 0–2)
 JapanKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,110
Game reference
Shin So-jungGoaliesAkane KonishiReferees:
Schweiz Drahomira Fialova
Deutschland Nicole Hertrich
Linesmen:
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Tschechische Republik Zuzana Svobodová
0–101:07 – Kubo (H. Toko, Ukita)
0–203:58 – Ono (Koike, Yoneyama) (PP)
Griffin (Park Yo.) – 29:311–2
1–351:42 – Koike (Hosoyamada, Yoneyama) (PP)
1–458:33 – Ukita (ENG)
6 minPenalties4 min
13Shots44

Playoff round[edit]

Bracket[edit]

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
 
          
 
 
 
 
19 February
 
 
 Kanada5
 
17 February
 
Olympic Athletes from Russia0
 
Olympic Athletes from Russia6
 
22 February
 
  Schweiz2
 
 Kanada2
 
 
 Vereinigte Staaten (GWS)3
 
 
19 February
 
 
 Vereinigte Staaten5
 
17 February
 
 Finnland0 Bronze medal game
 
 Finnland7
 
21 February
 
 Schweden2
 
 Finnland3
 
 
Olympic Athletes from Russia2
 
Fifth place bracket
 
5–8th place semifinalsFifth place game
 
      
 
18 February
 
 
  Schweiz2
 
20 February
 
 Korea0
 
  Schweiz1
 
18 February
 
 Japan0
 
 Schweden1
 
 
 Japan (OT)2
 
Seventh place game
 
 
20 February
 
 
 Schweden6
 
 
 Korea1

Quarterfinals[edit]

The top two teams in Group A received byes and were deemed the home team in the semifinals as they were seeded to advance.

17 February 2018
12:10
Olympic Athletes from Russia 6–2
(1–0, 2–2, 3–0)
  SchweizKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,903
Game reference
Nadezhda MorozovaGoaliesFlorence SchellingReferees:
Slowakei Nikoleta Celárová
Schweden Gabriella Gran
Linesmen:
Frankreich Charlotte Girard-Fabre
Finnland Johanna Tauriainen
Shokhina (SH2) – 07:221–0
1–120:48 – Müller (Meier)
1–231:47 – Stalder (Stänz, Meier) (PP)
Kulishova (Smolina) – 33:532–2
Ganeyeva (Shokhina) (PP) – 38:533–2
Dergachyova (Shokhina) – 47:364–2
Shokhina (Dergachyova) (PP) – 53:255–2
Sosina (SH, ENG) – 59:086–2
12 minPenalties8 min
21Shots19
17 February 2018
16:40
Finnland 7–2
(3–0, 2–2, 2–0)
 SchwedenKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,803
Game reference
Noora RätyGoaliesSara Grahn
Sarah Berglind
Referees:
Schweiz Drahomira Fialova
Vereinigte Staaten Katie Guay
Linesmen:
Slowenien Natasa Pagon
Tschechische Republik Zuzana Svobodová
Nieminen (Hovi) – 06:121–0
Välilä (Rahunen) – 15:322–0
Tapani (Tulus, Välimäki) (PP) – 17:443–0
Karvinen (Tuominen, Savolainen) – 27:144–0
4–128:53 – Nordin (Grahm, Svedin)
Välilä (Karvinen, Tapani) – 29:295–1
5–239:12 – Stenberg (Nyhlén-Persson) (SH)
Nuutinen (Tulus, Rahunen) - 44:356–2
Hakala (Rajahuhta) - 57:477–2
4 minPenalties12 min
31Shots21

5–8th place semifinals[edit]

18 February 2018
12:10
Schweiz 2–0
(1–0, 1–0, 0–0)
 KoreaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,811
Game reference
Janine AlderGoaliesShin So-jungReferees:
Kanada Gabrielle Ariano-Lortie
Schweden Katarina Timglas
Linesmen:
Finnland Jenni Heikkinen
Schweden Veronica Johansson
Zollinger (Bullo, L. Benz) (PP) – 16:351–0
Raselli (Rüegg, Altmann) – 38:522–0
2 minPenalties8 min
53Shots19
18 February 2018
16:40
Schweden 1–2 OT
(0–0, 1–1, 0–0)
(OT: 0–1)
 JapanKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,554
Game reference
Sara GrahnGoaliesNana FujimotoReferees:
Vereinigte Staaten Dina Allen
Norwegen Aina Hove
Linesmen:
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Kanada Justine Todd
0–121:43 – Koike (Yoneyama, Ono)
Johansson (SH) – 26:251–1
1–263:16 – A. Toko (Osawa)
8 minPenalties8 min
29Shots37

Semifinals[edit]

19 February 2018
13:10
Vereinigte Staaten 5−0
(2−0, 2−0, 1−0)
 FinnlandGangneung Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 5,173
Game reference
Maddie RooneyGoaliesNoora RätyReferees:
Slowakei Nikoleta Celárová
Deutschland Nicole Hertrich
Linesmen:
Slowenien Nataša Pagon
Kanada Justine Todd
Marvin (Duggan, Pelkey) − 02:251−0
Cameranesi − 18:382−0
Lamoureux-Davidson (Pannek, Cameranesi) (PP2) – 33:213−0
Knight (Morin, Coyne) (PP) − 33:554−0
Cameranesi (Brandt, Kessel) (PP) – 40:455–0
6 minPenalties12 min
38Shots14
19 February 2018
21:10
Kanada 5–0
(1–0, 1–0, 3–0)
Olympic Athletes from RussiaGangneung Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,396
Game reference
Shannon SzabadosGoaliesValeria Tarakanova
Nadezhda Alexandrova
Referees:
Vereinigte Staaten Katie Guay
Vereinigte Staaten Melissa Szkola
Linesmen:
Deutschland Lisa Linnek
Finnland Johanna Tauriainen
Wakefield (Spooner, Turnbull) – 01:501–0
Poulin (Daoust) – 23:102–0
Wakefield (Fortino, Turnbull) – 41:593–0
Clark (Stacey, Mikkelson) – 42:304–0
Johnston (Daoust, Irwin) (PP) – 54:085–0
4 minPenalties16 min
47Shots14

Seventh place game[edit]

20 February 2018
12:10
Schweden 6–1
(2–1, 1–0, 3–0)
 KoreaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,125
Game reference
Minatsu Murase
Sarah Berglind
GoaliesShin So-jung
Han Do-hee
Referees:
Schweiz Drahomira Fialova
Norwegen Aina Hove
Linesmen:
Finnland Jenni Heikkinen
Slowenien Nataša Pagon
Küller (Rask, Udén Johansson) – 05:501–0
1–106:21 – Han S. (Park J.) (PP)
Alasalmi (Nylén Persson, Borgqvist) (PP) – 19:372–1
Grahm (Rask, Nordin) – 36:273–1
Svedin (Johansson, Hjalmarsson) – 43:054–1
Rask (Lindh) – 49:315–1
Johansson (Borgqvist, Hjalmarsson) – 57:196–1
6 minPenalties4 min
40Shots16

Fifth place game[edit]

20 February 2018
16:40
Schweiz 1–0
(1–0, 0–0, 0–0)
 JapanKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,958
Game reference
Florence SchellingGoaliesNana FujimotoReferees:
Schweden Gabriella Gran
Schweden Katarina Timglas
Linesmen:
Frankreich Charlotte Girard-Fabre
Schweden Veronica Johansson
Raselli – 03:191–0
6 minPenalties4 min
14Shots20

Bronze medal game[edit]

21 February 2018
16:40
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Finnland 3–2
(1–0, 2–1, 0–1)
Olympic Athletes from RussiaKwandong Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 3,217
Game reference
Noora RätyGoaliesNadezhda MorozovaReferees:
Vereinigte Staaten Dina Allen
Kanada Gabrielle Ariano-Lortie
Linesmen:
Vereinigte Staaten Jessica Leclerc
Kanada Justine Todd
Nieminen (Tuominen, Tapani) (PP) – 02:231–0
Tapani (Karvinen) – 20:102–0
2–122:40 – Sosina (Belyakova)
Välimäki (Hovi) – 32:183–1
3–246:03 – Belyakova (Batalova, Shtaryova) (PP)
8 minPenalties35 min
22Shots22

Gold medal game[edit]

22 February 2018
13:10
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kanada 2–3 GWS
(0–1, 2–0, 0–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
 Vereinigte Staaten 1st place, gold medalist(s)Gangneung Hockey Centre, Gangneung
Attendance: 4,467
Game reference
Shannon SzabadosGoaliesMaddie RooneyReferees:
Deutschland Nicole Hertrich
Schweden Katarina Timglas
Linesmen:
Deutschland Lisa Linnek
Finnland Johanna Tauriainen
0–119:34 – Knight (Morin, Decker) (PP)
Irwin (Turnbull) – 22:001–1
Poulin (Agosta, Daoust) – 26:552–1
2–253:39 – Lamoureux-Morando (Pannek)
Spooner MISS
Agosta GOAL
Poulin MISS
Daoust GOAL
Jenner MISS
Agosta MISS
ShootoutGOAL Marvin
MISS Brandt
MISS Pfalzer
GOAL Kessel
MISS Knight
GOAL Lamoureux-Davidson
12 minPenalties6 min
31Shots42

Medalists[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Women's tournament  Vereinigte Staaten
Lee Stecklein
Cayla Barnes
Megan Keller
Kali Flanagan
Monique Lamoureux-Morando
Emily Pfalzer
Meghan Duggan (C)
Haley Skarupa
Kelly Pannek
Brianna Decker (A)
Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson
Gigi Marvin
Hannah Brandt
Hilary Knight
Kacey Bellamy (A)
Sidney Morin
Dani Cameranesi
Kendall Coyne
Amanda Kessel
Nicole Hensley (G)
Alex Rigsby (G)
Maddie Rooney (G)
Amanda Pelkey

Head coach: Robb Stauber
 Kanada
Shannon Szabados (G)
Meghan Agosta (A)
Jocelyne Larocque (A)
Brigette Lacquette
Lauriane Rougeau
Rebecca Johnston
Laura Stacey
Laura Fortino
Jenn Wakefield
Jill Saulnier
Meaghan Mikkelson
Renata Fast
Mélodie Daoust
Bailey Bram
Brianne Jenner (A)
Sarah Nurse
Haley Irwin
Natalie Spooner
Emily Clark
Marie-Philip Poulin (C)
Geneviève Lacasse (G)
Ann-Renée Desbiens (G)
Blayre Turnbull

Head coach: Laura Schuler
 Finnland
Eveliina Suonpää (G)
Isa Rahunen
Rosa Lindstedt
Jenni Hiirikoski (C)
Mira Jalosuo
Ella Viitasuo
Venla Hovi
Linda Välimäki
Annina Rajahuhta
Riikka Välilä (A)
Minttu Tuominen
Meeri Räisänen (G)
Petra Nieminen
Emma Nuutinen
Sanni Hakala
Noora Tulus
Sara Säkkinen
Saila Saari
Michelle Karvinen (A)
Noora Räty (G)
Tanja Niskanen
Susanna Tapani
Ronja Savolainen

Head coach: Pasi Mustonen

Final ranking[edit]

Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts
1st place, gold medalist(s) A  Vereinigte Staaten 5 3 1 0 1 17 5 +12 11
2nd place, silver medalist(s) A  Kanada 5 4 0 1 0 18 5 +13 13
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) A  Finnland 6 3 0 0 3 17 17 0 9
4 A Olympic Athletes from Russia 6 1 0 0 5 9 25 −16 3
5 B   Schweiz 6 5 0 0 1 18 8 +10 15
6 B  Japan 5 1 1 0 3 8 8 0 5
7 B  Schweden 6 3 0 1 2 20 13 +7 10
8 B  Korea (H) 5 0 0 0 5 2 28 −26 0
Source: IIHF.com
(H) Host

Statistics[edit]

Scoring leaders[edit]

List shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
Schweiz Alina Müller 6 7 3 10 +5 4 F
Schweiz Christine Meier 6 0 8 8 +4 0 D
Kanada Mélodie Daoust 5 3 4 7 +7 2 F
Kanada Marie-Philip Poulin 5 3 3 6 +5 8 F
Schweiz Lara Stalder 6 3 3 6 +3 4 F
Finnland Michelle Karvinen 6 3 3 6 –1 2 F
Schweden Fanny Rask 6 2 4 6 +4 0 F
Vereinigte Staaten Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson 5 4 1 5 +3 0 F
Finnland Riikka Välilä 6 4 1 5 –2 0 F
Kanada Rebecca Johnston 5 3 2 5 +2 2 F
Vereinigte Staaten Dani Cameranesi 5 3 2 5 +1 0 F

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalties in minutes; POS = Position
Source: IIHF.com

Leading goaltenders[edit]

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.

Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
Kanada Shannon Szabados 200:00 4 1.20 79 94.94 1
Vereinigte Staaten Maddie Rooney 258:56 5 1.16 92 94.57 1
Schweden Sara Grahn 262:14 8 1.83 145 94.48 1
Schweiz Florence Schelling 298:19 7 1.41 120 94.17 2
Japan Nana Fujimoto 236:30 7 1.78 87 91.95 0

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

Awards[edit]

Source: IIHF.com

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pyeongchang 2018 schedule". Pyeongchang2018.com. Archived from the original on 5 November 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  2. ^ "2018 Olympic qualification format set". IIHF. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  3. ^ "Unity deal brings together North and South Korea in Pyeongchang". CBC.ca. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Together on the ice". IIHF.com. Archived from the original on 21 January 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  5. ^ Rodus, Karyn (22 February 2018). "US women's hockey team finally gets gold in dramatic final against rival Canada". ABC News. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
  6. ^ "U.S. women end Canada's streak to win hockey gold in shootout at 2018 Winter Olympics". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
  7. ^ "Korea headed to the Olympics". IIHF. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  8. ^ "Koreas to march under single 'united' flag in Olympic Games". BBC News. 17 January 2018.
  9. ^ "IOC suspends Russian NOC and creates a path for clean individual athletes to compete in Pyeongchang 2018 under the Olympic Flag" (Press release). International Olympic Committee. 5 December 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  10. ^ "On-Ice Officials". Archived from the original on 2018-02-12. Retrieved 2018-02-09.
  11. ^ "Daoust named MVP". IIHF. 22 February 2018.

External links[edit]