FOLLOW ALONG HERE FOR LIVE UPDATES FROM TEAM USA VS. CANADA IN THE WOMEN'S HOCKEY GOLD MEDAL GAME AT THE 2026 MILAN CORTINA OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES.

Alina Muller scored in overtime to secure bronze for Switzerland with a 2-1 victory over Sweden in Olympic women's hockey at Santagiulia Arena on Thursday, firing a laser shot in with just 50 seconds left in the extra session of three-on-three play.

This is Switzerland's second Olympic women's hockey medal, having also beaten Sweden in 2014 to win bronze, when the then 15-year-old Muller also scored the game-winning goal. She became the hero again, converting Ivana Wey's pass in front of the Swedish net before wheeling away to celebrate, launching her gloves and helmet in the air before being submerged by her teammates.

Mira Jungaker had put Sweden ahead in the 12th minute of the second period, and the Swiss, who had earlier failed to score on a penalty shot, responded four minutes later through Sinja Leemann.

Overtime brought sweet redemption for many on this Swiss team who had missed out on the bronze four years ago, losing to Finland.

Hilda Svensson created Sweden's opener, taking the puck behind the goal and swinging around to the other wing before her precise pass found Jungaker, who had time and space to pick her spot, sending her shot through traffic off the post and into the net.

Switzerland drew level with Leemann converting Alina Marti's pass from behind the goal to set up an enthralling final period.

The Swiss looked the more dangerous side in overtime and were rewarded for an overall dogged defensive display, having been outshot 31-17 over the 60 minutes of regulation play.

Defending champions Canada face the United States in the gold medal game later on Thursday.

The win caps a remarkable tournament turnaround for Switzerland, which lost all but one of their Group A games.

Muller sent them past Finland and into the final four with her second-period kill shot in the quarterfinals, marking a stunning return to form.

They were unable to get past the impenetrable Canadian force in their semi-final — with Canada having never missed the Olympic championship game — but the joy of bronze was nearly as good as gold on Thursday, as the Swiss erupted for Muller's overtime heroics.