Mitch Marner: Mitch Marner’s Olympic OT winner sparks ‘Toronto bias’ controversy as Canada storms into semifinals | NHL News
Mitch Marner came through in the clutch, scoring the overtime winner to propel Team Canada to a thrilling 4-3 victory over Team Czechia in the Olympic quarterfinals. The high-pressure finish not only propelled Canada into the semifinals but also sparked renewed talk about Mitch Marner’s big-game reputation and whether he is still living under the shadow of criticism related to his NHL market.As for the game itself, it was a roller coaster ride. Macklin Celebrini started off the scoring with a setup from Connor McDavid, but Czechia quickly responded with a goal from Lukas Sedlak. A power-play goal from David Pastrnak put Canada on its heels before Nathan MacKinnon tied the game in the second period. Czechia struck again in the third with a goal from Ondrej Palat, setting up a wild finish. With minutes left, Nick Suzuki sent the game to overtime, setting up Marner’s heroics.
Mitch Marner’s clutch goal against Czechia sparks redemption story, teammates defend star before Finland game
Canada entered the game as heavy favorites following a dominant performance in the preliminary round. When Mitch Marner scored just over a minute into overtime, the goal was an instant classic and one of the most memorable moments of the tournament to date.Following the game, teammate Mark Stone suggested that lingering criticism of Marner is due to his NHL market, suggesting that there is a “Toronto thing” at play. After the game, he said, “As a teammate, I haven’t experienced that. 4Nations, gets a huge OT goal for us, makes an incredible play for the winner. Then tonight, when we need him the most, he makes the play. So, um … I think it’s a Toronto thing.” The comment went viral.Marner has consistently delivered in elimination games, including overtime winners in previous international competitions. Teammate Brandon Hagel supported this view, praising Marner for proving his doubters wrong on the international stage. “I thought he wasn’t a big-game player? He just showed the world,” he said.Marner himself has accepted the importance of this goal, saying that it is probably the biggest one that he has scored so far in his career and that his team is still on the path to win the ultimate prize of gold. “Yeah, probably; it’s hard not to say it isn’t,” he said. “Obviously, it’s a do-or-die game and one of the biggest tournaments of your life. So, yeah, it’d be cool to, you know, after this tournament, look back on something like that, but we got some work still to do.”The Canadian team is ready to face Team Finland in the semifinals on Friday, February 20, with all eyes on Marner. If he continues to perform this well under the pressure of the Olympics, then the discussion about his legacy will finally change from one of uncertainty to one of dominance.