The Palm Beach Post

U.S. team creates new ‘Miracle on Ice’

- By Paul Newberry

GANGNEUNG, SOUTH KOREA — Move over, Mike Eruzione. You’ve got company. John Shuster delivered another Miracle on Ice for the Americans, only this one came with brooms instead of hockey sticks. For one day, at least, the United States is a curling nation.

The team that became a cultural phenomenon back home — hey, even Mr. T is a fan — delivered the ultimate prize on the biggest stage, capturing the gold medal with a riveting upset of Sweden.

Enough with the jokes about sweeping and rocks and a bunch of beer-swilling guys playing a game better suited for a pub.

This sport is like any other at the Winter Olympics — played by highly trained athletes who care deeply about their craft, filled with stories of dreams and disappoint­ment and redemption.

Look no further than Shuster, who delivered the shot of a lifetime Saturday to essentiall­y clinch the title with two full ends — like innings, for those of us who need an explainer in baseball-like terms — still to go.

He glided along the ice on a knee, deftly let go of the rock, and watched it send two Swedish stones careening away from the target circle. The Americans wound up with the five closest rocks to the bulls-eye, a five-point round that is essentiall­y unheard of at this level of competitio­n.

Only one other team, perennial power Canada, has ever delivered a higher-scoring end in a goldmedal match at the Olympics.

But for the uninitiate­d — essentiall­y, all of us — Shuster said it was one of the easiest shots he’s ever had, thanks to the work of his three teammates and a high-risk attempt by the Swedes that missed the mark by about an inch.

“During the entire end, I felt it building,” Shuster said. “Their margin for error got incredibly small.”

When it came time for the American skip to deliver the last of eight rocks, he had no doubt what was going to happen. “I can’t tell you how un-nervous I was sitting in the hack to throw it,” Shuster said.

Just like that, the match went from a 5-5 tie to a 10-5 lead for the Americans. The Swedes knew they were done, spending the last two ends simply playing for pride and working off their frustratio­n. On the final throw, Niklas Edin did a little spin to entertain the crowd and concede the match. The final: United States 10, Sweden 7.

While nothing will ever compare to the real Miracle on Ice — a bunch of college kids beating the mighty Soviets in hockey at the 1980 Lake Placid Games, with Eruzione scoring the winning goal — this will rank right up there in the curling world.

The Americans had captured only one medal in Olympic competitio­n (a bronze in 2006) and they weren’t viewed as a medal contender at the Pyeongchan­g Games. Especially when they lost four of their first six matches in group play, putting the team on the brink of eliminatio­n.

It looked like another disappoint­ment for Shuster, who is competing in his fourth Olympics. Yeah, he was part of that bronze medal-winning squad in Turin, but he’d been dealt much heartache by the Winter Games. He skipped the 2010 team that lost seven of nine matches. He skipped again in 2014 when the U.S. posted the same dismal mark. His Olympic career appeared over when he didn’t even get picked for the U.S. high-performanc­e program, which was supposed to provide the next Olympic foursome.

Shuster kept going, joining up with Matt Hamilton, John Landsteine­r and Tyler George to form a team that still proved to be America’s best.

“Team Reject,” they called themselves.

“I think curling really has a chance of taking off in our country,” Shuster said. “It’s really just an incredible group of people.

“I’m really happy to share that with the world.”

 ?? AP ?? United States skip John Shuster reacts during the men’s final curling match against Sweden. The Americans pulled off a stunning 10-7 upset to win the gold medal.
AP United States skip John Shuster reacts during the men’s final curling match against Sweden. The Americans pulled off a stunning 10-7 upset to win the gold medal.

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