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Newfoundland's Shailynn Snow part of Canada's gold-medal winners at world U18 hockey championship

They claim their first title at the event since 2014 with an overtime win over the Americans in Japan

Team Canada, including Newfoundland and Labrador's Shailynn Snow (far left, second row) celebrate after defeating the United States 3-2 in overtime in the final of the world under-18 women's hockey championship Sunday in Obihiro, Japan. — Steve Kingsman/HHOF/IIHF Images
Team Canada, including Newfoundland and Labrador's Shailynn Snow of Clarke's Beach (far left, second row) celebrate after defeating the United States 3-2 in overtime in the final of the world under-18 women's hockey championship Sunday in Obihiro, Japan. — Steve Kingsman/HHOF/IIHF Images - Contributed

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ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Newfoundlander Shailynn Snow is a world champion.

Canada, with the 17-year-old Snow in the lineup, defeated the United States 3-2 in overtime early Sunday morning (NT) to capture the world under-18 women’s hockey championship in Obihiro, Japan.

It was a second straight overtime win for the Canadians, who had edged Russia 4-3 in extra time in a semifinal matchup earlier on the weekend.
Sunday's result gave Canada its first gold at the event since 2014. The Americans had captured four straight titles before this year.

Maddi Wheeler scored the game-winner 1:34 into OT. It came on the power-play, one of four tallies in the game that came with a team enjoying a player advantage.

Canadian goalie Raygan Kirk was named MVP of the tourney, which saw Canada win four games and lose one. Four of those five games were decided by one goal, including a preliminary-round match that saw the Americans down Canada 3-2.

Snow, who is from Clarke’s Beach, is in her last year at Ridley College, an Ontario prep school, and in her first with the national team program.

She competed for Newfoundland and Labrador as a 13-year-old at the 2015 Canada Winter Games and for Team Atlantic at the 2017 national U18 championship, where her performance helped earn her an invitation to the  national U18 selection camp last year.

After playing two seasons with the male-dominated Tri-Pen Osprey, bantam AAA team — including 2015-16, when she was the team’s second leading scorer after QMJHL first-round draft pick Dawson Mercer — Snow began the first of her three years in school in Ontario.

The captain of the Ridley Tigers women’s hockey team, she is headed for the American college ranks later this year on an NCAA Division 1 athletic scholarship to St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y.

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