San Diego Union-Tribune

Forty years later, the USA’S Olympic hockey ‘miracle’ against the Soviets still holds a special place.

- BY JOHN NIYO

Forty years later, they’ve still got stories to tell. But some are shared — like the one we all know by heart — and some are kept.

“And believe me when I tell you this,” says Mike Eruzione, one of the authors of the fabled “Miracle on Ice” that took place 40 years ago today, “when we get together, we very rarely talk about the Olympics.

“We don’t talk about what happened in Lake Placid. We talk about our lives today and what we’re doing and where we’re going.”

Yet as the members of the 1980 U.S. men’s hockey team arrive in Las Vegas this weekend for a 40th anniversar­y celebratio­n — of their stunning semifinal upset of the Soviet Union and the goldmedal triumph that followed — they understand the myth and the magic they created. The generation­s of players they’ve inspired and the doors they’ve opened.

And hardly a day goes by where they aren’t reminded why the memories still evoke such strong feelings all these years later, as Mark Johnson, the U.S. team MVP who now serves as Wisconsin’s men’s hockey coach, recalled with a laugh this week.

“People will tell you exactly what they were doing,” the 62-year-old Johnson said, “and the excitement and energy as they tell it to you is just priceless.”

More precious, too, because they hearken back to a time when Americans discovered “this impossible dream,” as broadcaste­r Al Michaels dubbed it, really was possible and everyone cheered. One nation, indivisibl­e.

Or so it seemed.

“I’ll think back upon it always as it galvanized the country,” Michaels said. “It was an event that brought people together. There are terrible events that bring the country together for short periods of time, obviously 9/ 11 being most significan­t. The country comes together and then (we) kind of splinter apart again. This brought the country together in a way that I’ve never seen.”

Before or since, which is part of the reason why Sports Illustrate­d declared the “Miracle on Ice” the greatest sports moment of the 20th century. And why it’s hard to imagine one in the 21st century might top it.

That was a different time, in so many ways. The Iran hostage crisis was only a few months old. Amid the Cold War, the Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n seemed a world away, but President Jimmy Carter was threatenin­g a boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics. Gas prices were soaring, and the U.S. economy had just entered another recession, with inflation reaching levels not seen since the end of World War II.

And yet here was a group of All-american college players — bonded by six months of training and led by a gruff taskmaster of a coach in Herb Brooks — facing off against what was arguably the greatest hockey team ever assembled.

The Americans reached the medal round after rallying for an opening tie against Sweden, then surprising medal favorite Czechoslov­akia

and rattling off three more wins in group play.

And after Johnson’s lastsecond goal in the first period against the Soviets knotted the game at 2-2, the script took another turn in the Americans’ favor, as Brooks’ counterpar­t, Viktor Tikhonov, benched his star goaltender Vladislav Tretiak. The Soviets dominated the second period, but led by only a goal entering the third.

“You gotta remember: This was a team that just didn’t lose, you know?” said Ken Morrow, a defenseman. “They didn’t find themselves behind in any games late in the third period.”

But they did in this one, and when Eruzione’s goal midway through third put the U.S. up, 4-3, the American dream — and the Soviet nightmare — “suddenly became a little bit more realistic,” Johnson said.

The last 10 minutes of the game felt “like an eternity,” Eruzione says. But the last 10 seconds were immortaliz­ed by Michaels’ call:

“Eleven seconds, you’ve got 10 seconds, the countdown going on right now! Morrow up to Silk. Five seconds left in the game. Do you believe in miracles? Yes!”

That night, Brooks refused to make the U.S. players available to the media. Instead, the lunch-pail gang headed up the hill to the Holiday Inn where their families were staying and settled into watch the tape-delayed broadcast. (The network had decided not to air the 5 p.m. ET game live.)

“We actually pinched ourselves because we won again,” Johnson said. “We didn’t know if we were dreaming the first time around.”

They weren’t, but after a sleepless night, their coach made sure they were awake with a spirited practice the next morning. The U.S. would face Finland for the gold, but due to the Olympic points system, a loss in the final would’ve sent the Americans home without a medal of any kind.

The U.S. team got off to another shaky start, trailing Finland, 2-1, after 40 minutes.

“Herb came into the locker room between the second and third period and said one thing twice,” Johnson said. “So it hit home real quickly: ‘If you lose this game, you’re gonna take it to your (expletive) graves.’ ”

Brooks took a couple of steps toward the door, turned and repeated the last three words, and then walked out of the room. The players followed soon after, then skated their best period of the tournament to complete another comeback win and secure the gold. Michaels again counted down the final seconds, bellowing at the end, “This impossible dream comes true!”

Forty years later, the dream lives on, the players forever linked by what they accomplish­ed. But while there have been several reunions in the past, “this one’s been much more reflective, looking back and thinking about things,” Morrow admits.

The team lost Brooks to a car accident in 2003. Bob Suter died of a heart attack in 2014. Mark Pavelich, who assisted on the winner against the Soviets, is currently in a treatment facility after being found mentally incompeten­t to stand trial on felony assault charges last year. (His family fears he’s suffering from CTE.)

Others have dealt with their share of hardships over the years, too.

But some things remain frozen in time. A hit Disney film in 2004 reintroduc­ed the story to a generation that wasn’t alive to experience it the first time around. A few months ago, Michaels found himself watching his 13-yearold grandson win a youth hockey tournament in Lake Placid, of all places. And now as these “Miracle“workers gather once more, they know theirs is a story that’ll live forever.

Niyo writes for the Detroit News.

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 ?? AP FILE ?? The U.S. hockey team pounces on goalie Jim Craig after its 4-3 upset win against the Soviet Union in a medal-round match at the the 1980 Winter Olympics.
AP FILE The U.S. hockey team pounces on goalie Jim Craig after its 4-3 upset win against the Soviet Union in a medal-round match at the the 1980 Winter Olympics.

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