MILAN — Of all the elite players making up the U.S. women's national team's roster, coach John Wroblewski insisted the one he couldn't do without at the 2026 Milan Cortina Games was Hayley Scamurra.
It's a decision Wroblewski made upon taking over the team four years ago. and one immediately validated in the Americans' 5-1 Olympic tournament-opening win over Czechia.
Scamurra — regarded as the team's 13th ''Jill-of-all-trades'' forward — scored twice while logging just 6:45 minutes of ice time over 11 shifts.
''I was adamant with it. We weren't going to Milan without her at the start of this quad. She carries so much spirit to your team,'' Wroblewski said. ''I'm not gonna speak for every other federation, but I just can't image there's anyone that works harder and wants it more than she does. It's inspiring, frankly.''
The 31-year-old from Buffalo, New York, is the daughter of former NHL defenseman Peter Scamurra. And though she built a reputation of being a top defensive forward during her four-year college career at Northeastern, Scamurra went mostly overlooked by USA Hockey until making the national team in 2019.
And now she's doubled her goal total in making her second Olympic appearance after winning silver in 2022.
''I just do my best to bring that energy in every shift that I have. It feels a little extra special to be able to help on the scoreboard and physically, too,'' Scamurra said before addressing her journey.
''Honestly I think it just shows it's never too late to keep chasing your dreams,'' she said. ''So I think, it just shows with hard work that anything is possible for sure.''