Blk Bar Events
 Figure Skating:
  Women's Final

 Olympic Roundup:
  the first 10 days

 Women's Hockey
 Snowboarding:
  before

 Snowboarding:
  after

 Freestyle Skiing
 Olympic Insider
 The Opening
  Ceremonies

Athletes
Viewers Guide
Olympic Web
Nagano: the city

Home

rings

CAPTAIN MY CAPTAIN: Cammi Granato holds that title for the team


Brian Bahr-- Allsport for TIME

The skaters loosened up against Finland, a team that, though lacking the depth of the U.S. or Canada, has enough talent to pull off an upset on any given night. With the U.S. up 2-1 in the second period, the fast Finnish forward Hanna-Riikka Nieminen tied the score with an unassisted shorthanded goal. But defenseman Tara Mounsey responded with a goal less than two minutes later, and the defense held on for a 4-2 win. Game 4 was a blowout--10-0 against Japan--as King (who had four goals last week) pulled a hat trick.

All that set up the perpetual clash: the U.S. vs. Canada, which is not only the No. 1 seed in the tournament, but also has won all four women's world championships dating back to 1990. America has always been runner-up. In their 32-game pre-Olympic tour, the U.S. women faced Canada 13 times and won six. By the time the Olympics are over, the two teams will have played twice in physical matchups with both sides skating aggressively, as in all their games. In the last game of the preliminary round (a supposedly "meaningless" warm-up to the gold-medal match), the U.S. rebounded from a 4-1 deficit early in the third period to defeat Canada 7-4. Granato and forward Laurie Baker each scored twice. Emotions ran high throughout, and a total of 20 penalties was assessed. The rivalry will continue beyond this week's final and the awarding of the gold medal. Says U.S. coach Smith: "We see them in our sleep."

The team worked hard at enjoying the Olympic experience as well. In Osaka, where nearly all the 196 U.S. Olympians were "processed" before heading off to Nagano, the 20-woman team went on a free shopping spree. Armed with a checklist and a grocery cart and assisted by former Olympians like five-time gold-medal speed skater Bonnie Blair and two-time weight-lifting gold-medalist Tommy Kono, the hockey players wheeled around the ballroom of an Osaka hotel grabbing clothing, including uniforms, jackets, hats and awards-ceremony outfits worth about $4,000. At the opening ceremonies, they learned from the veteran Olympic bobsledders that the best place to be seen as the U.S. delegation enters the stadium is either at the front or the rear. The women decided they wanted to be at the back. But so did the snowboarders. "It was a friendly battle of the new sports," says Sandra Whyte, a five-time national team member from Saugus, Mass. At the end, the boarders let them slide.

Touring together for the five months before the Olympics has blended the team into a communal whole. Says Granato: "We're a bunch of sisters now. We're each other's family." But at the Games they also kept in constant touch with older friends and family, often tapping out E-mail at the cyber-Surf Shack set up by IBM in the Olympic Village. On the morning of the day she had dreamed about since she was a young girl, Granato read a poem given to her by her brother Robby. The words brought back memories of their hockey-playing childhood. She has an impeccable pedigree: four hockey-playing brothers, including Tony, a 1988 Olympian who skates for the NHL's San Jose Sharks. The six Granato kids spent just about every minute of their free time on the ice. Mostly they skated on the pond near their home in Downers Grove, Ill. Sometimes it was in the basement, where they used balled-up tissue as a puck. "It was perfect," Granato says of the poem. "He said that our family would be watching, and it gave me this confidence that I'm going to play my heart out. It's easier to play hard because your adrenaline is flowing."

Page 1 | Page 2