Canada's women's hockey reinvents itself after Olympic loss
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The Canadians just finished making brisk work of Sweden in the quarterfinal round of the women’s Olympic hockey tournament, and yet coach Troy Ryan wasn’t prepared to assess just how dominant his team can be.
A better time to ask might be Thursday, when the gold medal is awarded.
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The Canadians are now considered the favorites, having raised the bar of the women's game with a dynamic and relentless, four-line transition attack that has outscored opponents by a combined 44-5 at the Beijing Games.
It’ll take a little more to impress Ryan.
"Honestly, we keep things pretty simple in our minds," said Ryan on Friday, following an 11-0 win over Sweden in which Canada scored five times on six shots during a second-period span of 7:25. "I don’t think we’re reinventing the wheel at all."
Perhaps not.
But the Canadians, in three-plus years under Ryan, are reinventing themselves following the lowest points in their proud history.
The downturn began with a gold-medal loss to arch-rival United States at the 2018 Winter Games, which ended Canada’s run of four Olympic championships. The following year, the Canadians settled for bronze in failing to reach the world championship final for the first time in tournament history.
The losses led to Ryan and his staff transforming what had been both a stale team culture and style of play.
Canada's players huddle prior a women's quarterfinal hockey game between Canada and Sweden at the 2022 Winter Olympics, Friday, Feb. 11, 2022, in Beijing. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
They made the game fun again by placing a focus on speed and transition to increase offense and


