MILAN — Alina Muller instantly understood the significance her bronze medal-clinching overtime goal in a 2-1 win over Sweden meant not only to girls back home in Switzerland, but in the bigger picture of women's hockey.
Muller has spent the past 12 years experiencing the ups and downs, fitful starts and stops her sport has endured since first splashing on the Swiss hockey scene as a 15-year-old by scoring her nation's first bronze-medal clinching goal at the 2014 Sochi Games.
These Milan Cortina Games, however, were different for Muller and the rest of the competitors. They represent the first Olympics since the Professional Women's Hockey League was launched in the summer of 2023.
''Just a few years ago there would have been a hundred people in the stands, and now it's crazy to see,'' said Muller, the former college star at Northeastern and now in her third season with the Boston Fleet.
''Every year, it's getting more exciting. We're getting more physical, more athletic, faster, faster game,'' she added. ''And the stadiums are filling up.''
For a sport and league banking on enjoying a post-Olympic boost, the tournament delivered on many fronts.
U.S. captain Hilary Knight is heading home with a gold medal in closing her Olympic career. The tournament featured two thrilling medal finals, both ending in overtime, with the Americans beating Canada 2-1. And the competitive gap the U.S. and Canada have long enjoyed appears to be closing ever so slightly.
''This is just the new normal,'' Canada coach Troy Ryan said following the loss Thursday.