This is because of an amazingly topsey turvey game between Japan and China which Japan somehow won in OT (reported below) and Kazakhstan beating Japan in a penalty shoot out after a 2-2 draw after OT. So the Big Three had all been involved in tied games so far....and Japan, as expected beat North Korea in the morning game to put themselves top with just Kaz v China to play.
Look, if I'm losing you, this is what all this meant going into that final game....
If Kazakhstan beat China they would win Gold.
If China beat Kazakhstan, they would win Gold, but only if they won in regulation time.
If It was a 0-0, 1-1 or 2-2 draw...Japan could still win Gold...if China won in OT.
If it was a 3-3 draw or more, the winner of OT or Penalty Shots won Gold.....
So I went up the spiral stairs in the corner of the rink, edging past fans because there are no walkways in the Baluan Sholak, and got ready for the final game of the AWG.
Full House - Thursday Afternoon in Almaty |
The Crosse - Chiplen - Love Line |
Kazakhstan d-man Yelena Shtelmaister shot in the first goal in the 12th minute and a brilliantly finished breakaway by the speedy Zarina Tukhtiyeva, her second such goal in the competition, made it 2-0 after two periods. China were impressive though and every time the Zhang-Sun-Jin line were out they looked threatening. But the killer third goal came in the third period as Shtelmaister, powering in from the left wing, scored from close in. This we thought should settle it, but China came back so strongly you just felt there might still be a game on. China pulled their netminder on the powerplay and went 6 on 4, getting a goal back through extra forward Rui Ma and had chances to make it 3-2 before an empty netter from Lyubov Ibragimova in the last minute finally secured the win for Kazakhstan. China were my tip for Gold, their first line would beat anyone, but Kazakhstan had greater depth, a real finisher in Tukhtiyeva and great netminding from Darya Obydennova. And the 4-1 home win put everyone in a good mood.
And the result meant Kazakhstan won Gold, Japan Silver, China Bronze
Kaz celebrate |
More |
Kaz get their Gold Medals |
Silver for Japan. Fast and skilled with the best passing game, and a Canadian Asst Coach - Andrew Allen - who is a great guy, always good for a chat and a useful source of research |
Gold Winners |
Tomoe Yamane with her Silver |
The Kazaki netminder. A real bad-ass. Neck tattoo and all. |
China. Should Do Better. Bronze |
And totally unofficial and my opinion only: The All Star Teams.
First All Star Team:
N/M: Obydennova - KAZ
D: Qi - CHINA
D: Shtelmaister - KAZ
F: Sun - CHINA
F: Tukhtiyeva - KAZ
F: Jin - CHINA
Second All Star Team:
N/M: Takahashi - JPN
D: Fujimoto - JPN
D: Aoki - JPN
F: Yoneyama - JPN
F: Yakovchuk - KAZ
F: Hirano - JPN
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