NHL ON NBC - MIRACLE ON ICE 40th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

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  • Опубліковано 6 жов 2020

КОМЕНТАРІ • 238

  • @joelleson3313
    @joelleson3313 2 роки тому +220

    The country could use a boost in spirit like this today.

    • @scottaznavourian3720
      @scottaznavourian3720 2 роки тому +1

      Well I don't know if wil have the impact but it seems another bunch of mostly college kids could make a run at the gold...in the midst of another Russian invasion threat

    • @fitzgerald1337x
      @fitzgerald1337x 2 роки тому +7

      Hockey's always here for you man 😎

    • @susanbernstein8337
      @susanbernstein8337 2 роки тому +2

      We sure could.

    • @jamesmolinaro4461
      @jamesmolinaro4461 2 роки тому +3

      World Cup 👀

    • @marilyncoyne4034
      @marilyncoyne4034 2 роки тому +10

      Same inept party of stooges in power

  • @axlejohnson9156
    @axlejohnson9156 2 роки тому +110

    In 1980, I was seven years out of high school here in Minnesota. I began playing hockey when I was ten. When I was 17, I began
    played men's league hockey twice a week. Hockey was a huge part of my life. I remember watching these Olympics and I remember
    sitting in front of my television all alone following my divorce. Then suddenly everything in the world was all right and I would be
    just fine. Every single time I see these films, it chokes me up.

    • @balls433
      @balls433 2 роки тому +2

      Respect

    • @d.chiasson3307
      @d.chiasson3307 Рік тому +2

      Keep skatin.....Massachusetts born hockey player here. There ain't no other game like it. I wore the colors, the next day at practice. . If I never pick up a stick again, I can say that I witnessed the greatest hockey game in the history of the sport. And just like a bike, the skates never leave you......"the legs feed the wolf, gentlemen....goal line, ....go!"

  • @MaryOpel
    @MaryOpel 2 місяці тому +4

    I remember watching this with my family in the living room. We went crazy and celebrated with our USA Hockey Team in spirit. It was a wonderful time.

  • @csea__go
    @csea__go 2 роки тому +31

    Al Michaels is a freakin National Treasure I swear!!! and I’m typing this on the 42nd Anniversary of the game. USA!!! USA!!! 🇺🇸

  • @AlexZ-lc6nl
    @AlexZ-lc6nl 2 роки тому +16

    I miss this kind of patriotism. We need it.

  • @efamily2377
    @efamily2377 6 місяців тому +7

    I’m a Canadian and I get emotional when I think back about this team. Watched the game staying in a hotel while at a hockey tournament in Montreal as a 13 year old kid. Wonderful memory.

  • @brmillgr
    @brmillgr Рік тому +29

    Legendary hockey team
    Legendary hockey coach
    Legendary game
    Legendary call by a legendary commentator
    The stars lined up and gave us an incredible story, awesome

  • @joeyboedeker7205
    @joeyboedeker7205 2 роки тому +104

    Greatest moment in sports history!!!

    • @softhotty
      @softhotty 2 роки тому +9

      No doubt about it.

    • @vilituomainen
      @vilituomainen 2 роки тому +1

      Definitely not!

    • @codywalter7811
      @codywalter7811 2 роки тому +6

      @@vilituomainen - You gonna find something better?

    • @bjc12566
      @bjc12566 2 роки тому +9

      @@vilituomainen maybe you are too young to remember what was happening in the US during this time in history . On top of that, you might not be old enough to know how dominant the Soviet team was then. They even beat the best of the NHL players month before. Lastly, the Russians were pros and US were just college kids coming together as team and a country to do the unthinkable. Unfortunately, this generation will never understand the impact this game made in the course of our country.

    • @jamessollazzo4860
      @jamessollazzo4860 Рік тому

      @@vilituomainen your a fin, maybe a 90m ski jump win was your cup of tea

  • @lizhasbrouck1376
    @lizhasbrouck1376 2 роки тому +17

    I was living in Boston as a college student. A bunch of "our guys" were on the team. I watched the (delayed) game and people on my street streamed out of their apartments and houses in celebration of the win over the Soviets.

  • @mikehannon4097
    @mikehannon4097 9 місяців тому +5

    My daughter was born at 6:30am on this day and I watched the game that afternoon so I experienced 2 miracles.

  • @rodroller6634
    @rodroller6634 2 роки тому +17

    My brother and I were playing pee wee hockey in 1980 and I vividly remember my father sitting us down in front of the TV with a bowl of popcorn and a couple of cokes telling us that we’d remember this game the rest of our lives. And damn if he wasn’t right. I miss being that proud of my country.

    • @rego642
      @rego642 7 місяців тому +2

      My dad found out that the US had won. He ordered pizza and we watched the game while he explained how big the game was. I was 6 😊

    • @LongbowAdam
      @LongbowAdam 5 місяців тому +1

      I’m not even American. I’m a new dad and just reading your comment brought tears to my eyes. I can’t wait to make memories with my son.

  • @bjc12566
    @bjc12566 2 роки тому +18

    Al Michaels says it best. We always think of where we were during tragic events, think of where you were during one of the most emotional and memorable events in our country

  • @MMAALL
    @MMAALL 2 роки тому +33

    Not just the best moment in US sports history, one of the most joyous moments in American history. If you didn’t live and understand that time period, it’s hard to comprehend. But it was that big a deal back then.
    Only thing that might compete with this is if the US men ever win a World Cup in soccer.

    • @shawnyoung8752
      @shawnyoung8752 Рік тому

      Well put. I was a Sr. In High School. A couple of games were tape delayed. The sporstcasters in Chicago said. We are going to put the score on screen. It you dont want to know look away. The whole newscrews from reporters,weatherman were stonefaced. Of the 3 networks in chicago plus WGN. I think half of every station personel didnt know the score cause they knew they couldnt hide their emotions. Since i was ignorant of money i was more pissed that Carter had Boycotted to 80 summer olympics in Moscow and was critized. Almost have of countries also did same. Russians invaded Afgahnastan. Watch Charlie Wilsons War in you are under 40. Basics are there. So everyone thought Russians. Or. CCCP Would pull out with all there puppet states. No they came in and wanted to show that communism was the best. Well in Hockey. Yes. Europeans were the skier on slopes. Russia fins norway cross country. America had only Womens Freestyle Skating. 68 1 medal. Peggy Flemming. 72 in Japan ? 1 or 3 medals. 76 Dorothy Hamill was gold. And maybe a speedskati g bronze. Anyway the russians and co. Had no threat from USA in any events. In a crazy way i think only Brooks was the one who was aware the trap was set. He put them up against good teams not patsies. Having them play the Russians a week before in Madison Sq. Was genuis. He knew the kids were flat. It that Stadium. Then he knew the russians would show no mercey. The kids knew that they can and have to play harder. The russians let their guard down. They took the kids for granted. Of all olympics since 68 that i recall. Eric Heiden was the most impressive ever. 500 1500 3k 5k 10 k set olympic records in 3 WR in other 2. His last skate in 10k he went to Hockey teams game. Went out drinking with them. Woke up 45 minutes before race. Set WR inhis 5th gold race. They bonded with him. A wisconson kid. About half of them were woke up by people who knew Heiden was hanging with them hours before. You guys take him out drinking when he has to skate 10,000 meters at 9am. I bet Brooks was parts of that.

  • @lotharvonrichthofen4474
    @lotharvonrichthofen4474 2 роки тому +33

    Dryden and Michaels’ comments during the game were authentic, spontaneous, emotional, perfect

  • @seanbrowning616
    @seanbrowning616 2 роки тому +17

    Greatest moments and greatest sports call in sports history

  • @michaeldolan4163
    @michaeldolan4163 2 місяці тому +1

    I still have my tickets from Germany game. I was in Wilmington, N.Y. I'm from Boston, and have all the autographed tickets. 9 years old and thanks guys for taking the time to sign them. Rest in peace coach

  • @toddsturga2143
    @toddsturga2143 Рік тому +6

    It is simply the greatest sports moment of all time. Never on the field of battle has a team been 'outmatched', and through incredible coaching, heart and respect for each other, pulled off the most amazing upset possible. College guys versus the best hockey team ever assembled. They showed that dreams and miracles are real. #1 moment that will never have a peer.

  • @lydiamiddlekauff2604
    @lydiamiddlekauff2604 2 місяці тому +1

    We need this today! It feels like we are back in the 1970s again.

  • @hrshy491777
    @hrshy491777 2 роки тому +20

    Herb Brooks is the real Minnesota Miracle Man

    • @Surfer041
      @Surfer041 2 роки тому +4

      Gordon Bombay's character was based on Herb Brooks. The Ducks=The United States. The Hawks= The Soviet Union.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      Sure Xurfer, I can just see Brooks
      in between P2\3 of the USSR Game.
      "OK guys, quack, quack, quack."
      GTFO of here with this Bombay shit.

    • @prometheusvenom7189
      @prometheusvenom7189 4 місяці тому

      @@KMK7355It’s just a movie calm down.

  • @norascott2565
    @norascott2565 Рік тому +7

    I was 12 years old in 1980, this was my introduction to hockey!! ❤❤❤ Miracles happen!!

  • @banff9858
    @banff9858 2 роки тому +11

    Yup...no simulcast, no internet. The TV broadcast was played to the viewing audience after it was over. My father had listened to the play-by-play on the radio while coming back from a business trip to NYC. He comes into the house trying to feign ignorance as to the result of the game...but we could see it all over his face. We watched in true bliss. I'm wearing a "Lake Placid USA" hoodie as I type this.

    • @jamessollazzo4860
      @jamessollazzo4860 Рік тому

      i tried to hold out until 8pm, then abc comes on with people in a celebratory mode behind mckay and i had a feeling they won. so, i call sportsphone in ny and got the score!

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      If you lived in Metro Detroit or
      Buffalo, Burlington, VT you could get the CBC feed live.

  • @joemeehan9329
    @joemeehan9329 Рік тому +6

    I was10 years old and at a high school basketball game in Pennsylvania. I knew we were playing the Soviets, but not on live TV. There was a murmur in the crowd, as if someone had heard something. I ran home in time for the 3rd period. What a night. Two days later, across the street from our church, my dad and I watched the gold medal game at my grandmother's house. No internet back then, and the stories are so sweet.

  • @1949LA-ARCH
    @1949LA-ARCH 4 дні тому

    Thanks for showing this historic tribute to USA 🇺🇸 ice hockey ❤

  • @kizunadragon9
    @kizunadragon9 Рік тому +8

    they don't make coaches like Herb Brooks anymore, the real Minnesota Miracle man.

  • @KennethBarr1957
    @KennethBarr1957 2 роки тому +9

    Back then I was in the Army stationed in Baumholder, Germany. The good news was the game was on live at 23:00. The bad news was it was on German TV & not AFN. The barracks TV room was filled with people “who didn’t know a blue line from a clothes line.” At the end our CO broke out a keg. Thank God that game was on a Friday so we had no duty in the morning.

  • @davidclark442
    @davidclark442 2 роки тому +9

    Al Michaels call is so iconic and gives me goosebumps

  • @TigerRick4u
    @TigerRick4u 2 роки тому +7

    Greatest upset in sports history!!

  • @harleyadam4813
    @harleyadam4813 2 роки тому +25

    This story was not passed down to me. I watched this event on television. USA defeating the USSR was an early present, 4 days before my 7th birthday. I have been a Boston Bruins fan since 1979, the first year of Ray Bourque's career. Watching this just before my 7th birthday, even on tape delay, helped to shape my patriotism as a proud American. Mike Eruzione will forever be one of the towering figures of American Patriotism in my eyes.

    • @itinerantpatriot1196
      @itinerantpatriot1196 2 роки тому +2

      Very well put. As an immigrant who came here almost 60 years ago I felt the same way. When Rizzo scored that goal an entire nation gave a standing ovation. Kicking Russia's ass at that time meant so much. The gold medal was just s cherry on top after that. But a sweet cherry indeed. BTW, Ray Bourque was one helluva player but I never saw anyone better than Bobby Orr. And I'm a Wings fan.

    • @jeffmccoy1700
      @jeffmccoy1700 2 роки тому +2

      The USA's victory over the USSR in that 1980 winter Olympics was certainly unforgettable. An amazing and thrilling 60 minutes of hockey with an outcome of fiction come to life.
      This was the same Soviet team that just one year earlier had thumped the NHL All-Stars 6-0 in the deciding game of the 3 game Challenge Cup.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      The. USSR beat that US Team 10-3
      three weeks earlier.
      They were much better than the US, but Craig was great, the USSR
      not dialed in and the crowd gave the US energy.

  • @erichonecker1010
    @erichonecker1010 2 роки тому +7

    Best sports moment in my lifetime

  • @andrewroling8111
    @andrewroling8111 2 роки тому +10

    The country needs something like this today. I want the U.S to be unified more than ever.

    • @bjc12566
      @bjc12566 2 роки тому +1

      I remember living this back then. Yep. We need a miracle

    • @shawnyoung8752
      @shawnyoung8752 Рік тому

      So lets have the 20 best college players and invite the russian team to play a 7 game series. We could have Trump promote it.

    • @LoudounDemocrat
      @LoudounDemocrat Рік тому

      @@shawnyoung8752 Everything Trump touches turns to shit.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      Have Trump promote it? LOL, yeah lets have a insurrectionist host it. You're a clown Young.

    • @mikebunting7262
      @mikebunting7262 3 місяці тому

      FDJT

  • @petenrita
    @petenrita 2 роки тому +7

    I listened to the game on radio while playing basketball in the driveway. I remember the typing and winning goals. I remember the tie vs Sweden and the the lob-sided win against Czechoslovakia. as huge. I knew all their names. And I remember rather incredulously that all could be for naught without a win versus Finland.A special time. The USA chant was so authentic. Never the same after that.

  • @jogglethattoggle4232
    @jogglethattoggle4232 2 роки тому +11

    I truly believe that it's moments like these that define us not only as Americans, but as human beings. Great rivals but the reapect was there in the end. American citizens coming together to overcome what seems to be insurmountable odds. These moments occur so very little in a countries history, that it's often easy to forget what it's like to come together as one nation. It's important to remember these times. Especially in a time like now when it seems like we couldn't be more divided.

  • @sergeant_salty
    @sergeant_salty Рік тому +2

    i was born over a decade after this game was played and it's still my favorite hockey moment in history. God Bless America🇺🇸

  • @winkysmom1
    @winkysmom1 Рік тому +3

    On the anniversary today of the Miracle On Ice watching the replay still makes me proud. Thank you team for those great memories!

  • @michaelscott7930
    @michaelscott7930 2 роки тому +7

    1980, I was serving in the Army in Germany listening to the game on AFN Radio. The 4 to 3 win had giving me a big rush! I have this game on DVD ; And the movie : MIRACLE !
    Michael Scott

    • @mikefay11
      @mikefay11 Рік тому

      Thank you, very much, for your Service, sir! We remain the home of the free because of our most brave - our tremendous United States Of America, Military Heroes!

  • @hoosierboy43
    @hoosierboy43 Місяць тому +1

    greatest sports moment in USA history.......loved Micheals comment.."most people didn't know the blue line from a clothes line"....lol

  • @timothyflanigan1777
    @timothyflanigan1777 Рік тому +6

    I am 55, I still get emotional about this team.

    • @efamily2377
      @efamily2377 6 місяців тому +1

      I’m a Canadian and I get emotional about this team!

  • @zg1000dru1
    @zg1000dru1 2 роки тому +6

    For those who didn't live it, it really is almost impossible to describe. It's like the old saying..."If you know, I don't have to tell you, and if you don't, there's no way for me to really explain it." This country at the time, plain and simple, was in the shitter. Interest rates were through the roof, inflation was running around 13%, unemployment was high, the hostages were in Iran with no sign of an end to that mess in sight, the Russian's were on the move in Afghanistan and seemed strong. There was nothing to cheer about. Politically, we were still reeling from the sad mess of Watergate. The nation believed in NOTHING...least of all itself. And then, as God is my judge, this game happened and it ALL began to change. You may think it exaggeration when people say it, but it is not. Everything just seemed to turn. We started to believe that we could again, and so we began anew. It was amazing. I was 14 when this aired. I honestly can still not watch this game when Eruzione scores and not get choked up nearly to tears. Ran around my block screaming "WE BEAT THE RUSSIANS" at the top of my lungs after the game.

    • @hotrod7938
      @hotrod7938 Рік тому +1

      It was a good opening to Reagan and the next 8 years. Time was the high watermark of the United States.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      Carter was President not Reagan.
      Bet you kiss Trump ass.

    • @literallyshaking8019
      @literallyshaking8019 2 місяці тому

      My aunt had front row, blue line tickets to this game (she bought them before the Olympics even kicked off as just the “bronze medal hockey match” and had no clue how special that match would be). Anyways, she was offered $1000 per ticket outside the arena, (in 1980s money) and turned it down. She doesn’t regret it.

  • @jimmeasel1712
    @jimmeasel1712 9 місяців тому +2

    wow, that sign on the New York fire house across from the Soviet Mission on 67th Street in Manhattan...talk about shade

  • @timutter4546
    @timutter4546 2 роки тому +10

    I was 31 at the time. The game on TV was a delayed telecast. Living in Minnesota, however, I was able to pick up a live radio broadcast out of Canada. When I tuned in, the US was behind 3-2. I was THRILLED … to be that close of a score to the Soviet Union! Then, we TIED the game! I was in disbelief. And when we took the lead, I suddenly got real nervous. I thought: We have woken up the Russian Bear, and he’s going to come storming back. I got on my living room floor with my ear to one of the two speakers. The remaining tense minutes were excruciating. The crowd was so loud, it was difficult to know what exactly was happening! When the game ended, I just broke down and sobbed.

    • @jamessollazzo4860
      @jamessollazzo4860 Рік тому

      cbc tv aired it live, if you could bring in the signal

    • @GeoJetson
      @GeoJetson Рік тому

      Amazing memory. Thanks for sharing it.

  • @stephendacey8761
    @stephendacey8761 2 роки тому +11

    I was 17 at the time, senior in high school, and I was upset the game wasn't on T.V., and I heard they beat the Russians on the car radio. I remember every car that day was honking their horn, just after they won. That went on all night.

  • @johnm8096
    @johnm8096 2 роки тому +5

    I was 15 years old and watching the WPIX News (Channel 11) sports report with Jerry Girard. He announced that the game was now a final and he would hold up the final score and to look away if you didn’t want to know. Remember the game was being shown later that evening. Of course I looked to see thinking the US had no chance. When I saw final 4-3, unbelievable. Didn’t diminish my excitement watching the game later.

    • @paulsonj72
      @paulsonj72 Місяць тому

      I heard it at the end of the sports on WCCO in Minneapolis about 6:30 PM CT

  • @dcseward02474
    @dcseward02474 Рік тому +3

    At the time, the USSR was stacking the deck in the Olympics. While the US was working very hard to maintain amateur status, the Soviets "amateur" players were soldiers who spent all their time playing hockey. We all knew it was fixed. We did not expect to beat the USSR. This was their dream team, and the US was facing them with a group of college players.

  • @thabeaststl3703
    @thabeaststl3703 2 роки тому +8

    If I was Mike Eruzione I would buy a bunch of TVs, put them all over my house and that goal would play on a loop on all of them all the time....just saying!!

  • @molengat1
    @molengat1 Рік тому +1

    With all the stuff happening in our country and around the world - we should all hope for another magical event like this to bring us all together again. I was a kid waiting in line at Space Mountain Disneyland when they announced on the speakers "Ladies and gentlemen, the United States National hockey team has just defeated the Soviet Union." Everyone in the ride erupted in celebration. And eto this day, every time I go on that ride, I think of that day and that game.

  • @JSZ0729
    @JSZ0729 4 місяці тому +1

    Al Michaels being the commentator was legendary

  • @mattsmith1479
    @mattsmith1479 Рік тому +2

    Al Michaels deserves to be in all sports hof

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 2 дні тому

    ❤ Nobody expected this for the winter Olympics. Ice hockey Team USA 🇺🇸. Al Michaels got his start in Hawai'i.

  • @jamesfrancismchalejr7944
    @jamesfrancismchalejr7944 3 місяці тому

    Al Michaels will be remembered for being the announcer at the 1980 USA Olympic Hockey Team in Lake Placid , New York! " he will definitely take it to his grave " ❤

  • @TheRedsfan1962
    @TheRedsfan1962 4 місяці тому

    Lived this miracle. What a proud moment for all of us. We need this back today.

  • @itinerantpatriot1196
    @itinerantpatriot1196 2 роки тому +18

    The greatest sports moment in my lifetime. The country was in such a bad place, spiritually, mentally, just deflated across the board. I remember a Time Magazine cover from that time showing cartoon Carter dressed as a sheriff, standing alone on main street like Gary Cooper in High Noon only he had scared eyes while every western nation hid behind the locked doors, peeking out the window's as he faced off against the Eastern Bloc. That was the mood of the country as 1980 rolled around.
    Then these kids started winning hockey games at Lake Placid. And with each win the nation's collective chest puffed out a bit and our back stood a bit straighter. The fact that it was tape delayed didn't matter to me and my friends. We knew ahead of time that we had won and we were still riveted to our seats, cheering each goal like it was happening live. I remember the street filling up as the final horn sounded and all the neighbors coming out and drinking toasts. It was like our hometown team had just won the Cup. The game against Finland was a bit anti-climatic. Yeah, they trailed after two periods but you just knew they were gonna win. I think even if they had lost that game it still would have been okay. We beat the f**kin Soviet SOB's and that was what mattered. For me, it was like landing on the Moon. We were back on top! It may sound hyperbolic but if you were there you know what I'm talking about.
    Sometimes a thing happens at just the right time and if it happened at any other time it might just be a nice thing and you know when it happens is just as important and you know it makes that thing historic. A lot of time has passed since then and I've seen some great sporting moments but nothing that topped this game and at this point in my life I doubt anything ever will. U-S-A, U-S-A, U-S-A!

    • @thachester
      @thachester 2 роки тому +2

      " It may sound hyperbolic but if you were there you know what I'm talking about."
      I'm a bit to young to have seen this live but still watching it today the energy in that hockey rink is absolutley incredible. Those kids didn't do the impossible. They didn't win a hockey game. They changed the world.

  • @derekdalton1539
    @derekdalton1539 2 роки тому +3

    That's awesome!! It was before my time, but I've always loved this story! Also nice to see Finland get their first gold the other day!

  • @proudamerican3651
    @proudamerican3651 2 місяці тому +1

    Mark Johnson's Goal didn't come out of nowhere. That Goal had been in the making since "Day One". God said, to the Soviets ... 'Im the Boss""""...

  • @streetcarjay
    @streetcarjay Рік тому +2

    Ken Dryden was also the goaltender for Canada's hockey team of the 20th century. Team Canada 1972, and the team that defeated the Soviet Union in the Summit Series.

  • @Hihohiho56
    @Hihohiho56 Рік тому +1

    I remember this well!! So proud!!

  • @gezzarandom
    @gezzarandom 5 місяців тому +1

    My favourite sports quotes:
    1) Do you believe in miracles? YES!”
    2) LOOK AT MILLS, LOOK AT MILLS! (Tokyo 1964, US runner Billy Mills sprinted past the favourites to win the 10 000m gold medal)
    3) Bernard is losing some ground, HERE COMES LEZAK, HE’S DONE IT, THE US HAVE WON IT! (Beijing 2008 4x100 freestyle relay USA upset the heavy favourites France)

  • @jeangrey6833
    @jeangrey6833 Рік тому +1

    How about legendary quote to end the 40th Anniversary Special! Always be prepared, like Al Michaels.

  • @robertosso5210
    @robertosso5210 2 роки тому +6

    after this happened! there was no more rivalry between the university of boston and the university of minnesota they united

  • @pkmaster562
    @pkmaster562 2 роки тому +3

    the fact that i have skated on the very same ice that the USA team beat the Soviets really hits me. I wasn't even alive when this game was out, but my dad knew every detail down to the marks on the boards. such an experience, and an excellent game

    • @jeffs6907
      @jeffs6907 9 місяців тому

      i did as well...herb could motivate

  • @SlyFox4569
    @SlyFox4569 2 роки тому +4

    11:40 Goosebumps

  • @solitarybeag
    @solitarybeag 2 роки тому +3

    I watched on TV at home. Not normally a hockey fan. I was that year. Skipped church Sunday to watch them win the gold. The making of a true team from disparate and opposing collegiates was Brooks’s own miracle. I remember him leaving the arena because it wasn’t him, it was “the boys.” Uff da.

  • @oakroyal
    @oakroyal 4 місяці тому

    Was at Couzens Hall at University of Michigan (52-53). We were listening to the game from a radio station out of Up State New York. So we knew it as it happened.

  • @anilvrao2
    @anilvrao2 4 місяці тому

    The greatest story in the history of sports! ❤ But it transcended sports because it lifted this country at a time when we really needed it!
    Do you believe in miracles?!
    The country desperately needs something like this today!

  • @HockeyMetalRPG
    @HockeyMetalRPG Рік тому

    I was one of the few lucky Americans that watched the Soviet game live on TV. It was LIVE on CTV and living so close to the border I could pick up the game. I wish someone would post THAT broadcast.

  • @blader45bc
    @blader45bc 2 роки тому +9

    Greatest upset in sport history. I was a bit miffed because I'm Canadian and I thought the US and Russia would come to dominate hockey. But that didn't happen. Russia, America, Sweden, Finland, Canada, and many other countries produce fantastic players for the best spectator sport in the world.

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 2 роки тому +2

      Even though the US won this groundbreaking and history making event, it was the sport of hockey that benefited the most Worldwide Martin. This Miracle on Ice almost single handily exposed to the rest of the planet the beauty and greatness of hockey. Before 1980, hockey was basically a regional sport with interest only in say mainly Canada, the now former USSR and a few European/Scandinavian countries.

    • @raygordonteacheschess5501
      @raygordonteacheschess5501 2 роки тому +2

      While impressive, the US was only a 7-1 underdog in the betting. They were young, at home, fired up, against a complacent squad that hadn't been looked in the eye in years. Sixteen players went into the NHL off that team.

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 2 роки тому

      @@raygordonteacheschess5501 You make a good point. Matter of fact, (someone can correct me) I think the Writers at SI actually predicted the US to win “Bronze” at those same ‘80 Olympics. I bet the rest of the American media especially those Commentators that had regularly covered the NHL/International hockey thought SI was drunk with that prediction. 😯

    • @zacharyscott6779
      @zacharyscott6779 2 роки тому +2

      @@americangiant1003 part of the 7-1 betting odds were simply because of Americans betting on pride so the number tightened up. Pre-games, I remember hearing/reading they were selected to be the 7th best team.

    • @jamessollazzo4860
      @jamessollazzo4860 Рік тому +1

      thats right!
      is that sister bertrile?

  • @kurtpunchesthings2411
    @kurtpunchesthings2411 2 роки тому +4

    To this day I still say this is the biggest upset in sports history

    • @shawnyoung8752
      @shawnyoung8752 Рік тому +1

      Upset? Yes. The job Brooks did picking the kids and pushing them to better them and them not knowing. Great motivator. It is not hard to piss off blue collar irish or italian hockey players from mass.

  • @reesewahl5488
    @reesewahl5488 4 місяці тому

    Thank you!! Im 46 or 47 leep Year? 😊 i try not too miss a shift!! Im a Devils fan living in Minnesota !! Great midwest !!

  • @jeffdavis4473
    @jeffdavis4473 2 роки тому +3

    LOVE IT

  • @raydunlap1654
    @raydunlap1654 2 роки тому +4

    wonderful.....

  • @traceywoodward1354
    @traceywoodward1354 Рік тому +1

    1 thing that is forgotten is the Eric Heiden also kicked ass in speed skating that year

  • @joycepiantes8383
    @joycepiantes8383 Рік тому

    I remember it so well.

  • @justingorton9596
    @justingorton9596 Рік тому

    Amazon Prime is glad to have you!

  • @chipmarks5247
    @chipmarks5247 2 роки тому +4

    Not very much has changed in lake placid, it's beautiful!

    • @lydialacey
      @lydialacey 2 роки тому

      i am in lake placid right now to watch the ice knights play in the frozen 4 and i agree

  • @henrivanbemmel
    @henrivanbemmel 2 роки тому +3

    Someone said that this was the Bobby Orr Olympics. Apparently prior to 1965 Boston had only a couple of public arenas and with the incredible work of Orr and the others on the Boston Bruins, got lots of kids into hockey instead of something else. This made them the right age for 1980 and it also made for deep waters in the selection of the team. Now, obviously, there are other factors, but it shows the effect of a special athlete.

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 2 роки тому +2

      Can't discount the impact that Orr and the 2x Cup Champion Bruins from both '70 and '72 had on getting many of the New England born Miracle on Ice to become hockey players. Great point Henri.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      Eruzione was already playing hockey when Orr came to Boston
      and the other 16 Midwesterners
      (12 Minnesotans, 2 Michiganders
      and 2 Wisconsin natives) weren't
      motivated at all by #4.
      So Craig was probably the only
      one truly impacted by Orr.
      I'd all ah an grew up in an already
      hockey mad section of Boston and Silk came from another traditional
      hockey 'burb.
      There were more than 2 MDC rinks
      in Greater Boston and BU,BC,Harvard had rinks and there were rinks in Lynn, Walpole and Framingham.
      There was an outdoor rink my brother played on in a AAA Select League run out of Belmont Hill
      3 years before Orr came to Boston.

    • @KMK7355
      @KMK7355 5 місяців тому

      Also the 1996 US victory in the World Cup of Hockey was actually the most influenced by Orr.
      There were a bunch of Mass\New Englabd players on that team including.
      Keith Tkachuk, Tony Amonte, Scott Youg, Bill Guerin, Shawn McEachern from Massachusetts
      and John Leclair, Brian Leech and
      Eric Weinrich from Vermont, Conn. and Maine respectively. They were born in the 1967-72 range, which has them in youth hockey before Orr left Boston in 1976.
      Certainly Leetch, Young, Amonte Guerin, McEachern, and Wienrich.

  • @goldeneve
    @goldeneve 2 місяці тому +1

    3:32 now why I thought as a kid jim lampley was with Al in the miracle on ice I had no idea it’s was Ken Dryden.
    Legends has it that game trigger the ripple effect of the end of the Cold War. Yes regan pope and the Berlin Wall help but the ripple effect started with team usa hockey team win in 80.

  • @davidgabrielsen2139
    @davidgabrielsen2139 4 місяці тому

    It's 1980 and the game was on delay, no internet, no cell phones, no Fax machines, just the game feed. They show Jim McKay and the Lake Placid crowd in the background. People are jumping up and down, waving flags and we just looked at each other. Could we have won? Iranian hostages, gas lines, 12% interest rates. What a boost.

    • @danieljackett4193
      @danieljackett4193 Місяць тому

      I remember Jim McKay framing those live shots of the victory celebration as a pre game tailgate, lol

  • @p-mashack
    @p-mashack Рік тому +1

    If I had access to DeLorium with enough plutonium to relive any event in history, no question my choice. I would be in attendance here: Lake Placid, NY. February 22, 1980.

    • @pdoylemi
      @pdoylemi Рік тому +1

      Make sure to make a stop in Vegas first!

  • @alexhidel3732
    @alexhidel3732 Рік тому

    I am lucky, I love hockey, I love lake placid. I live 20 miles away. I walk around inside the arena couple times a year

  • @kja9881
    @kja9881 Рік тому

    12 years old at the time I heard a radio dj say USA 3 USSR 3 in the third period BEFORE the game on tape delay. Was very excited but not knowing what happened till later! Michael's call is the greatest sports call ever! 🇺🇸

  • @toddm9501
    @toddm9501 Рік тому

    Al Michaels, Great American! Ken Dryden. Best Hockey player. My favorite player.

  • @andre1987eph
    @andre1987eph 2 роки тому

    I was a freshman at CBA Albany High in Jan 1980. I remember this USA 1980 Olympic Team Hockey miracle well. We had our own miracle when we beat Sam Perkins undefeated Latham high basketball team in March the same year.

  • @joshuadarichuk7334
    @joshuadarichuk7334 Рік тому

    Still shivers

  • @cubswin3838
    @cubswin3838 Рік тому

    July 20 1969. One GREAT ON THE MOON!

  • @vuville514
    @vuville514 4 місяці тому

    One shot. One goal...literally changed a man's life and his legacy. Eruzione misses and most likely they lose, they don't get Gold. Never made it in the NHL. No more interviews. No more TV. No more movies about him. No books. No inspirational tours. The internet would have been an empty place for the name. Nothing. He would have had a nice banking/finance career and would have told his grandkids about the time they played the Soviets and lost. That goal changed his life. One goal.

  • @greghaynes537
    @greghaynes537 4 місяці тому

    Somebody forgot to tell the Americans they were playing Soviet professionals and they were supposed to lose. One of the most incredible upsets in modern sports.

  • @seanbrowning616
    @seanbrowning616 2 роки тому

    Hope win Gold in hockey in China this year

  • @thomasryan5736
    @thomasryan5736 2 роки тому +2

    Good on the 1980 US Olympic hockey team winning gold. But the 1960 US Olympic hockey team also won gold and beat the USSR in the process.

  • @rentslave
    @rentslave 2 роки тому +4

    Sportscaster Warner Wolf,leading off the news on NYC's ABC affiliate Ch.7,started his report proclaiming:"It was as if God was the 7th man on the ice."
    After this happened,Carter should have lifted the boycott on the Summer Games.

    • @americangiant1003
      @americangiant1003 2 роки тому +1

      Yup. I think that clip of that newscast on WABC-TV with Warner Wolf is still up on UA-cam.

  • @lincolnmaceachern2410
    @lincolnmaceachern2410 2 роки тому

    The night of the game, it was on TV ( even though I'm a Canadian and we didn't have cable ). I recall Canada giving the USSR a good game, but I thought the USA didn't have much of a chance, so I went to the movies ( Steve Martin's "The Jerk", "the story of a poor Black sharecropper's son who never dreamed he was adopted." )

  • @EmilyJones-ey3df
    @EmilyJones-ey3df 2 роки тому +1

    "You score on Tretiak, keep the puck"

  • @sescuba6405
    @sescuba6405 Рік тому

    US vs Russia - the greatest sporting event EVER!!!!!!!

  • @rodneywaugh8535
    @rodneywaugh8535 4 місяці тому

    As i heard it said before.....
    This was and most watched event that was seen live by the least..
    As it was shown tape delay later that evening.

  • @Defossion1
    @Defossion1 Рік тому

    I believe!

  • @KevinGonzalez-vz7rz
    @KevinGonzalez-vz7rz 2 роки тому +3

    Had the USA lost to Finland, not only would they have not won Gold, there was a chance they would not have won any medal because of the “round robin” format of the medal round which combined standings from the preliminary round against the common opponent (in the case of the USA: Sweden)

  • @Weebs82589
    @Weebs82589 2 роки тому

    42 years ago today 🇺🇸!

  • @vincegarcia8761
    @vincegarcia8761 Рік тому

    absolutely. Was only 9. Remember it clearly today

  • @shouldhavedonebetter
    @shouldhavedonebetter 7 місяців тому

    At the time, we all called it a miracle, but it wasn't close to a miracle. They just needed time to gel together. Herb Brooks had a great eye for exceptional talent. Look at the team and what they did in the NHL later. Neal Broten - only player ever to win the NCAA Championship, an Olympic Gold, and a Stanley Cup, 17 seasons in the NHL - 923 career points. Ken Morrow to the Islanders - the Mike Bossy, Bryan Trottier Islanders - he's the final piece of the puzzle and wins the Gold and the Stanley Cup in the same year, and helps win 4 Cups in a row. Mike Ramsey - 1,070 games over 18 years in the NHL, leaves the Sabres - goes to the Red Wings and plays in the Cup but loses to the Devils - and Neal Broten. Dave Christian -14 years in the NHL, 340 goals, a Stanley Cup appearance with the Bruins and an All Star appearance. Mark Johnson - 11 years in the NHL - team captain for the Hartford Whalers. Jack O'Callahan, Mark Pavelich, and Dave Silk were all solid NHL players with 23 combined years and 903 NHL game appearances. Two more years together and they would beat any team, any time. Underdogs in 1980 for sure - but no miracle - it was a great team with tremendous talent.

  • @jimbachman3344
    @jimbachman3344 Рік тому

    I knew the game was being shown on tape delay. I was watching the 6:00 p.m News and I live in central time. When the sports came on someone handed the announcer a note. He said the game was over and if you do not want to know, turn the sound down. I did not need to because his smile gave it away. After the game was finished, my phone rang. It was my father. He did not know the game was delayed and was ecstatic. He said: We beat the Russians. We beat the Russians. When I told him the game was taped and I knew the outcome, he really got mad because he was on pins and needles the whole time.

  • @johnbrowne2170
    @johnbrowne2170 4 місяці тому

    As a Canadian I still don't believe it happened.

  • @reesewahl5488
    @reesewahl5488 4 місяці тому

    My dad was 22 years old first year teaching!! 2nd grade he brought me to school only radio !! I dont remeber that !! But i rember fox and the Hound do u believe saving america