Olympic Hockey Player Megan Keller on Scoring the Golden Goal Leave a comment


In the modern world, sports aren’t just about what happens on the court, field, or track. Much of the buzz around athletes actually takes place before their events—that is, when they arrive at their respective venues and showcase their latest fashion creations. In basketball, that’s referred to as a tunnel ‘fit; in Formula One, a paddock ‘fit; and so on. What athletes wear when they’re not in uniform matters, especially to fans who might never get to speak to their heroes. Clothes are the perfect form of communication—a window into who your favorite athlete is and what they stand for. That’s what Go Sports is all about. Yes, we care about box scores, the results of Free Practice 1 (even if it is at 3 a.m.), and RHOBH-level rivalries, but today, sports fashion matters too. We’re not ashamed to say so.

“We were down 1–0—the first time we were down all tournament—but the belief and trust in our locker room never left,” says Megan Keller, the Boston Fleet defender behind Team USA’s gold medal–winning goal during the 2026 Winter Olympics. “I think when Laila [Edwards] had that nice shot, and Hilary [Knight] tipped that puck in to tie the game in under two minutes—not to mention break the all-time American goals and points record—that’s the moment when our entire locker room really felt like, Oh, we’re gonna win this game,” Keller explains. “Taylor Heise made a pass that stretched three zones, and after that, I was just playing hockey,” she says. In that moment, the 29-year-old from Michigan entered a flow state, relying on the skills she’s spent her life honing on the ice. “I wasn’t really thinking at all looking back,” she says, reflecting on “the golden goal” as the media have pegged her series-winning shot 4:07 into overtime in the gold-medal game. “It went in.”

I was just playing hockey.

Megan Keller