Nathan Mackinnon
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Nathan MacKinnon delivered the moment Canada needed in the 2026 Winter Olympics semi-final, scoring a game-winning goal in the final minute against Finland to send his country into the gold-medal match. The finish pushed the Colorado Avalanche star closer to a defining international medal, with at least silver now guaranteed.

As Canada turns quickly towards Sunday's final against the United States, however, questions are growing about whether MacKinnon has been playing through an injury—and what that could mean once NHL play resumes on 26 February.

MacKinnon's Olympic Heroics Come With Injury Questions

On Friday, MacKinnon logged 21:51 of ice time, the third-highest total on Team Canada behind Connor McDavid and Macklin Celebrini. Taken alone, that workload does not look like a player in serious trouble, especially given how visible and effective he remained in key situations.

Concern sharpened after MacKinnon missed practice last Thursday. Coach Jon Cooper downplayed it, saying it was not serious and there should be 'no panic'. Players do occasionally skip sessions in short tournaments, but the timing has kept the topic alive as the stakes rise.

The Hit, The Third-Period Absence, and What It Suggests

A TSN report added fuel by noting MacKinnon missed most of the third period of Canada's 10–2 win over France last Sunday. The account highlighted a heavy hit from Pierre Crinon that left him shaken on the ice, an incident that later prompted Tom Wilson to respond physically.

Wilson's response escalated into the first fight in Olympic hockey involving NHL players. MacKinnon said after the game that he was fine, despite being involved in a 'knee-on-knee' collision late on, yet a post-game panel still raised the possibility that he could be pushing through something rather than fully healthy.

Closed Practice Before USA Final Keeps Details Tight

Canada's Saturday practice is scheduled to be closed to the media, limiting what can be confirmed before the gold-medal game. That decision fits the usual rhythm of major tournament finals, where teams narrow their focus and reduce distractions in the final hours of preparation.

Barring a dramatic setback, MacKinnon is expected to remain in the line-up on Sunday. The more consequential questions sit beyond the Olympics, when the adrenaline fades and medical evaluations become more complete.

Why Colorado Avalanche Shutdown Speculation Is Growing

NHL players returning from the Milano-Cortina Games are expected to have roughly three or four days before they are back on the ice for regular-season action. If MacKinnon is managing a lingering issue, Colorado may choose caution, with playoff ambitions and cap-weighted franchise value making it risky to let a minor problem grow.

A short absence would be manageable if the underlying issue proves minor. A more significant problem, though, could push the Avalanche towards a longer-term plan. That is where Avalanche shutdown talk has gathered pace: not because there is confirmed evidence of a serious injury, but because the mix of a missed practice, in-game disruption, and a tight turnaround back to the NHL introduces real downside.

For now, there is still no public indication that the issue is major. If it were, it would be hard to imagine MacKinnon continuing to log such prominent minutes in high-leverage Olympic situations, especially with Canada chasing gold.