GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Over the past four years, Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson had practiced the move thousands of times. And she had failed thousands of times. It was so intricate, sort of a triple maneuver: a forehand fake, a backhand fake and then a quick transition back to the forehand to shoot the puck, all while selling each herky-jerky con with deft skating.

Today, it will be recognized, perhaps for eternity, as the greatest goal in United States women’s hockey history, the shot that ended a 20-year Olympic gold-medal drought and lifted the Americans over their tormenting rival, Canada, 3-2, in a shootout. But the triumph was the culmination of too many yesterdays to count, when Lamoureux-Davidson “butchered” her instantly iconic move, when Team USA worked to overcome disappointment and doubt, when it fought for equality and took shelter together during a hurricane. Those moments created The Moment. It felt so good because – for a long time, for four Olympic tournaments, for three gold-medal game losses to Canada – it hurt so bad.

“A lifetime of work,” forward Amanda Kessel said. “So this means everything.”

On Thursday afternoon at the Gangneung Hockey Centre, the pain and strain of yesterday produced the most glorious thing to happen to the United States at the PyeongChang Games. Lamoureux-Davidson executed her in-out-in dance to perfection and made Canada’s Shannon Szabados, who was selected justly as the best goaltender of this tournament, fall on her back. Then U.S. goalie Maddie Rooney, the unflappable 20-year-old, stopped Meghan Agosta, and finally, silver became gold again.

It was the 38th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice, but the latest unforgettable classic won’t be remembered as another tale of a plucky underdog. This was about the two giants of the women’s game facing off yet again and pushing each other as only they can. It was a duel that completed regulation tied at 2 and then needed a 20-minute overtime period and a six-round shootout to declare a winner. It was more than 80 minutes of drama that tested how long and fast the heart could thump without bursting.

When it ended, it was sad. It could have lasted another hour without losing interest and tension. Participants on both sides agreed that a shootout was a crummy way to conclude. But it had to end at some point, and one team had to win.

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This time, the great rivalry added U.S. redemption to its saga. The work Lamoureux-Davidson put into that shot mirrored the struggle for Team USA. In private, she labored session after session with one of her old college coaches, Peter Elander. Her hands needed to be just right. She needed to be patient before exploding. She needed to be in control.

“I worked on it thousands of times on tires,” Lamoureux-Davidson said. “I butchered it hundreds of times and shot pucks at tires, and I mishandled pucks thousands of times doing that, just working on hands. And I’m just glad it worked out today.”

Elander, the former associate head coach at North Dakota and now an assistant at Ohio State, nicknamed the move “Oops! . . . I did it again.” Yes, after the Britney Spears song. Lamoureux-Davidson made it seem like it should be called “Oops! . . . I did it at last.” There might be some coy behavior at play.

“I have to give credit to Peter,” she said. “With him, working on his list of moves, it’s a treat.”

Leave it to her teammates to rave.

“So sick,” forward Gigi Marvin said of the goal.

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For most of regulation, it seemed like the U.S. was the better team, but Canada stuck to a methodical game plan and played an efficient game. The Americans scored early when Hilary Knight tipped in a puck in the first period. Then the Canadians responded by scoring two goals within five minutes in the second period to take a 2-1 advantage. The lead remained, and the tension grew, until Canada made one mistake in the third. As both teams changed lines with less than seven minutes remaining, Canada let the puck slide into danger, and Monique Lamoureux-Morando – Jocelyne’s twin sister – picked it up and skated free. Only Szabados could stop her. Szabados didn’t. Lamoureux-Morando tied the game.

It was a relief, but not a surprise.

“Monique, as soon as she got that puck going down there, I knew she was scoring,” Kessel said. “I’ve played with her since 14 years ago. I know her.”

Team USA, a blend of experience and youth, has become a close team. The women emphasized togetherness and belief throughout this journey. Eleven months ago, their bond led to an extraordinary act when they threatened to boycott the world championships because they were upset about their wages and resources. Their deal used to include only $6,000 during Olympic years and no pay during the off years. Their protest led to a new agreement just three days before the world championships.

Now, most of the Team USA players earn $70,000 per year before bonuses. USA Hockey also agreed to additional bonuses for Olympic performance: $15,000 for a silver medal, $20,000 for gold. The gold medals around their necks are priceless, but go ahead and authorize those direct deposits, too.

“We weren’t receiving the support of a gold medal-winning team, and this is what a gold medal-winning team looks like with the right support,” Knight said. “We’re taking steps in the direction, but there’s still a long ways to go.”

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The hockey players were at the forefront of what has become a large and multifaceted push for gender equality. By using their collective voice, they probably did more to enhance the future of U.S. women’s hockey than they did by beating Canada on Thursday. But they’ll take this victory, too. On the road to gold, they had to wait out Hurricane Irma while training in Florida. Their journey has been incredible. That’s why they wear keys with “FEARLESS” inscribed on them.

It took a while to become fearless. They worked with a sports psychologist to become a tighter team and learn how to compartmentalize past disappointment.

“Our opponent is never the other team we’re facing,” Marvin said. “It’s the doubt. It’s always the doubt.”

Lamoureux-Davidson used a gift to expunge her doubt. She had received flags from a North Dakota senator before the Olympics. For the past seven months, she has kept them with her, folded and wrapped neatly.

After she juked Szabados, after she performed the hockey version of an ankle-breaking crossover dribble and laced a goal that will outlive even her abundant joy, after she emerged from a pile with her teammates, she raced for the bench – as did her sister, the one with which she has shared an identical hockey dream for a lifetime. And she found that flag, unfolded it and wrapped herself in it. Her twin did, too.

“Born In The U.S.A.” blared over the sound system. Then came “Don’t Stop Believin’.” Ten yards away, the valiant Canadians, seemingly frozen in agony, cried the silver tears that the Americans know too well.

“There’s just been no doubt,” Lamoureux-Davidson said. “We knew we were going to proudly wave these flags.”

They were going to win, even if it required her nailing a Britney-inspired move she had butchered for the better part of four years. “Oops! . . . I did it again” doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, but who cares? Bet you won’t have trouble remembering it.


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