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The previos olympics, they lost to teh Czech B team 15-1. (The B Team are the alternate players who didn't make the Olympic team) SO they are the 20 back up players essentially.
Many years later, it was revealed that the CIA was funding Osama Bin Laden and the Taliban, as a way of fighting the Russians in Afghanistan. A case of 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend.' There's an A-list movie about the funding for that, called Charlie Wilson's War.
That Soviet team was not just NHL caliber but would have been a Stanley Cup contender. As a Canadian I loved those American college kids slaying Goliath
Not just a contender but a dominator. Remember they beat the NHL all stars 2 games to 1 the previous year. They would have been the Detroit RedWings before the Detroit Redwings. Then again they literally were the “Red Army”.
@@stickman1742 No I think the Isles/Habs/Flyers and Bruins would have all given them a good series. All Star teams are not as strong as a team that spends all their time together like the Soviets did
@@ronryan7398 the 87 team may have been the greatest pro team in any sport ever assembled and they still only beat the Soviets 2-1 in a 3 game series with all 3 games decided by 1 goal. Gretzky, Lemieux, Messier, Coffey etc all at their peak
I did better than that. As a kid I watched us beat Russia and Finland. This might be the longest shot in Sports History. $1,000.00 on USA to win at the beginning of the Olympics would have paid $1,000,000.00
Watching the Disney movie the first time back in the 2000s, I completely missed the point when they faded out Al Michaels' movie voice over for the original audio until I watched the BTS featurettes and they pointed that out. Michaels said there was no recapturing that level of hype and excitement in a mere voice over for the film so they cross-faded into the broadcast audio. Awesome sound mixing.
He did an amazing job when the Lomo Prieta earthquake hit minutes before Game 3 of the 1989 World Series. He became an impromptu news anchor in the immediate aftermath.
I am from Birmingham Alabama where the only game that matters is college football. Yet, on the night of the USA vs USSR Olympic Hockey game. THE only game in B'ham was a hockey game in Lake Placid. I was married and living in Detroit Michigan at that time... the home of the Detroit Red Wings of the NHL. We were watching the Olympic hockey game too. I was on the phone - long distance - with my family in Alabama as the countdown was called and bedlam erupted in Detroit all the way to B'ham...from Maine to Texas and from Washington DC to California. the whole nation was glued to their TVs and radios. Unforgettable moment.
When the sports writer said there would never be another miracle, I don’t think he was saying the Americans could never win another gold medal in hockey. Instead, I think he was saying there would never be such a confluence of sporting, cultural, geopolitical, and patriotic factors to make what The Miracle on Ice more than just an Olympic victory.
Along with that miraculous victory, the class of the Russian team should never be forgotten. Long after the miracle on ice, that Russian team of players had absolutely no animosity towards the US team, often looking back on the game with some affection. In those day, they had been winning so effortlessly for so long, that even though they were disappointed after losing, watching the Americans celebrate reminded them of what it was like to feel and express pure joy after a victory. It wasn't long after that Russian players started entering the NHL, many of whom were dominant at their positions and whose skills were exciting to watch.
As a Canadian, we watched this game with feelings of regret that we were not in the Gold Medal game. Every TV in Canada was tuned into this game. What the USA pulled off is amazing. It was a stupendous game of hockey!😀🇨🇦
Very few people know the sad story of Canada in the 1980 Olympics. Our "kids" first exposed the Soviets. We were beating them going into the third period and couldn't sustain it and lost. Mike Eruzione saw that game and knew, as he later put it, that Canada had them on the ropes. The hockey Gods blessed the US and cursed Canada in that tournament, it happens.
To this American, who watched the game when it broadcast on tape delay, the Soviet game is the single greatest sporting event of the 20th century. Al Michaels' call of "ERUZIONE SCORES!" brings tears to my eyes to this day.
I remember exactly where I was. 10 years old and fighting with the baby sitter about what we would watch on TV. I called my mom (on a rotary phone no less) and got her to let us kids watch. We almost tore the house down when we won. It's a major reason why I love the game. Miracles do happen!
@@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344 I was 9 and my mom watched it with me(my dad was out of town for work). We went crazy at the end. I never cared about hockey very much but this was more about pride.
One of the great memories of my childhood. Watched "Miracle" with my son when he was 16, he asked me if it was really as good as the movie. Truth is, I told him, "No. It was better." It's hard for anyone who didn't live in that time to know.
If you didn't grow up during the Cold War years, it's hard to fully appreciate how huge an upset, and how important an event, this was. I was watching in my college dorm room, and moments after the game ended the streets were FILLED with students celebrating.
I was going to say something very much like this. I was 14 at the time. As you said. People who didn't live in this time period simply cannot appreciate the magnitude of this event. I wish there was a way to truly project that.
The US coach, Herb Brooks, absolutely pushed the players to their limit in terms of physical conditioning... The players all hated it at the time but the results spoke for themselves... He made them resilent and relentless.
Herb Brooks is one of my heroes. He knew those kids were good, and wanted the best for them. He wanted them hate him, so they would bond with each other to show him up. Brilliant coaching on his part! (of course, they caught on and ended up respecting him)
@@amyblasingim2136When they filmed the movie they skated 3 days straight to recreate that key postgame and no one complained because the players had told them how important it was.
My son got to shake the hand of Buzz Schneider...!!!! My son played the position of goalie..meeting Buzz Schneider was a fulfillment of a dream for him... to meet one of the heroes of this Miracle team will always be one of his high points...my son told Mr. Schneider that the movie was our favorite and we always love watching it... Thank you Miracle team for giving us all these years later the pride in our country!!!!!!!
I know exactly where I was that day. 24 years old, sitting in my Motel 6 room making cable TV jumpers for the TV change out of said Motel 6 in Phoenix AZ. My self and 2 other guys watching the game while we worked. When the winning goal was scored we went crazy! Later that evening we decided to have a nice dinner at a steak house down the road to celebrate. After sitting down in our booth, I slid out and stood near the center of the dinning area and at the top of my lungs yelled out "lets hear it for our Russia beating Hockey Team"!! and a very big return from everyone having dinner, applause and USA! USA!!, I get chills every time I remember. Very special feeling.😂
I'm a 50 year old American. I have seen this entire game maybe a dozen times. I've seen the iconic Eruzione goal and the "Do you believe in miracles?! YES!" clip literally hundreds of times. And there hasn't been a single time that I haven't teared up watching it. Not once. This is the single greatest sports moment in American history.
I was 9 years old. My dad wouldn't let me hear it live on the radio. So, we watched it on delayed tv broadcast. We jumped and screamed throughout the house. We were in the street with neighbors, Hugging and celebrating. Neighbors shooting off fireworks. My dad and our neighbor across the street never got along. But that night, They instantly high fived, hugged it out, toasted beers. Whatever the issue was, it was done. They remained friends until neighbors passing. Gives me chills to this day.🇺🇸💪🏼👍🏼✌🏼
ESPN's 30 for 30 documentary series did a film on the Soviet team called "Of Miracles and Men." They talk to members of the Soviet team and get their perspective on that game. It also dives into the Soviet's history with the game of hockey, how they got so good at the game and how much of a shock it was for them to lose.
I remember reading Tretiak saying Tikhonov benched him too early for Myshkin, and that was largely the reason he quit the team shortly after Lake Placid.
And how many championships they won before and afterwards. To theim it was just an oops moment. But how the country treated them afterwards was surprising
This truly was the best sporting moment I’ve ever witnessed. The whole country watched this, and it was insane how huge it was for us. I’m so glad you watched this. The broadcaster is right, the USA chants didn’t happen before this event. 😊
I remember getting the morning paper the next day and I quickly looked through the sports section. It was on page 3 of THE SPORTS SECTION. The local news media had no idea what was going on in the country. When the USA beat the Czechs, we began to pay attention. When we played the Russians that Friday night, at work that was all anyone could talk about.
I was a freshman in college and one guy on my floor was from Philly and a huge hockey fan. He got the entire dorm floor to watch the Soviet Union game and we went crazy. Two days later, the entire country was entranced. It was like nothing I'd ever seen before or since. It was literally a seismic event.
To this day I remember this night. I was 14 years old. My dad was listening to the game on the radio live in the basement of our Minnesota home by himself. Meanwhile, upstairs the rest of the family carried on like it wasn't happening. I didn't think we had a shot in hell of beating the Soviets, so I didn't bother listening. Then my dad sprinted up the stairs yelling "We won!!" I was extatic. Needless to say we watched the tape delay of the game, and even though we knew the outcome, it was something that brought tears to my eyes and created a memory that will never fade.
One of the craziest things about this game is that only approximately 9% of the US got to see it live. Over 90% of the country saw it on tape delay at 8pm.
The beginning video clip was from the movie "Patton" about George S. Patton, a general in the United States Army who commanded the Seventh United States Army in the Mediterranean Theater of World War II, and the Third United States Army in France and Germany after the invasion of Normandy. Patton despised the Russions. The actor who portrayed Patton was George C. Scott
I remember jumping around like a crazy person with my family and friends at the end of this game. I can still feel the emotions today that I felt 43 years ago.
I was only 5 at the time, but I swear I have faint memories of actually watching this live, not just memories of having seen it dozens of times afterward.
Same. My dad was a high school hockey coach in Minnesota. We had a bunch of the team over watching. I was 11. It still is one of my happiest memories. I could barely speak the next day from shouting.
We'd been out driving around during the early evening and heard the game's final score on the car radio. But ABC-TV was keeping mum about the outcome so as not to mess up viewers planning to watch the prime time replay as if it were live. We didn't care if we knew the score -- hockey is hockey -- but it was actually kind of nice to watch a game without that twisting-gut sensation of fan stress. Anyway, nearing the end of the game there was a commercial break and our local 11PM news anchor appeared on the screen to tell us about some of the headlines they'd be covering. AND HE BLABBED THAT THE U.S. WON! We paused a couple of moments, there in the living room, contemplating "did he just do that???". Then we just laughed and laughed and laughed. All those folks sitting on the edges of their seats at home, watching the game on that station, sweating out every minute, so afraid the USA youngsters would end up being steamrolled by the USSR hockey machine, hoping the impossible might find a way to happen ... and then !POP! yeah they're gonna win.
As a Canadian the 1972 summit series against the Soviets will always be the greatest victory in hockey, four games in Canada followed by four games in the Soviet Union It did for Canada what Lake Placid did for the Americans. Down three games to one with a tie Canada was forced to win 3 games in a row in Moscow to secure the series and Paul Henderson's winning tally with 32 seconds left on the clock in game 8 will forever be the greatest goal ever scored to my mind.
The 1972 Basketball final between the US and the Soviets is actually a super interesting topic to examine. There's so much all around that was just insane from how the US team was put together, which didn't have all the best amateurs even, to the apparent officiating shenanigans late that gave the Soviets the opportunities for the win, to the fact that the US team was so frustrated by the officiating that they refused their silvers and, to this day, they will not accept them and some have written into their wills to never accept the silver medal.
That one is right up there with 88 Olympics and the robbery of Roy Jones Jr. After the 88 games, I stopped watching or caring for the Olympics. Haven't watched them since.
I've seen people mention it in other comments, but I'll reiterate - "Miracle" is a GREAT movie. Can't capture the spirit of the game 1 to 1, but it does a great job telling the story and gets you pumped up. Definitely worth a watch!
I was 13 years old, at that time, and didn't know anything about hockey. After the first two wins, and the hype going across the country, I became a temporary fan. I watched every game after that, and was glued to the tv every minute. It was an amazing time. Al Michaels call, "Do you believe in Miracles", is part of American lexicon.
Definitely need to watch that movie. It tells the story of the 80 team, and what Brooks did to prepare them, in much better detail. This spent too much time on the politics and disregards that, on a sporting level, this was pretty much akin to Manchester United during the days when SAF had them owning the Premier League, losing to a League 2 team. A very well-coached League 2 team, perhaps. But the magnitude of the accomplishment, and the mind games Brooks played to get the team to buy in and pull it off? Yeah, this doesn't do justice to that.
@@shawngillogly6873 Your soccer/football analogy is perfect. The Russia people could not believe their beloved Red Army team lost to a 'bunch of students".
its been 43 yrs. me and juniir high teammates watched together. and in a period where men didnt cry, there were tears of joy. the ultimate underdog. that tear still comes when i rewatch..remembering that day at 12 years old.
thanks guys really enjoyed you watching this biggest upset of all time - as CANADIANS we were ecstatic when the AMERKS shot down the dreaded red machine
Watched this 'live' (tape delayed) in Monterey, California with a buddy. The last 10 minutes of holding the lead were incredible. 99 out of 100 times the Soviets would win, but this why the play the game. At 62, this is the greatest sports moment I've experienced.
My not-yet husband was a 3rd year law student that year. I was in graduate school, coming into the law school building to meet him for lunch. I saw this usually restrained and serious young man taking the steps up from the ground floor (where the student lounge was located) to the first floor waving his arms and shouting with about three other guys, "WE DID IT! WE WON!" The grin was splitting his face & my befuddled reaction was "Won what?" I learned to follow hockey after that.
I remember that time. Those were dark days in America. The gas shortage and the American hostages, it was depressing. I was 23 years old and I always loved the Olympics. We were glued to the tv. What struck me was how the Soviets just stared almost in awe at the US team while they celebrated. It was just a job to them and they always won. I remember one of them mentioned the joy the US team exhibited at every goal and win was something the Soviet team hadn’t felt in a long time. When they won the gold you could hear in my apartment building and the neighborhood cheers everywhere. It was what America needed at that time. It made us proud.🇺🇸
Watching it now gave me a good feeling of excitement. It's like watching it for the first time or something. LOL I was happy back then of course. I just didn't realize all the circumstances involved. It was very important we won that game.
I watched this live on TV when I was a kid. My brother and I were jumping up and down, tears of joy and pride !!! Amazing. These kids had just beat the biggest juggernaut of a sports team that ever was. I still can remember Al Micheals "do you believe in miracles ?" then later I remember Craig looking around for his father after winning the gold ...super emotional even now thinking of it. One of those life defining olympic moments.
The Miracle on Ice wasn't the most amazing feat at the 1980 Olympics. The most amazing athletic feat was Eric Heiden winning the gold medal in EVERY SINGLE EVENT in speed skating. 500m, 1000m, 1500m, 5000m, 10000m. Insane. It's a record that is unlikely to ever be broken.
@@michaelsmith-iu1be Underdog teams win all the time. Bigger upsets happen (popularity wise) at every World Cup. It's been over 40 years and so far nobody has come close to winning gold in every speed skating event at a single Olympic Games.
@@michaelsmith-iu1be Heiden is a legend in Scandinavia. 90+% of people can't name a single player from that US Hockey team. It's all a matter of perspective. I'm valuing an athletic achievement higher, while you clearly care about a team sport.
@@MrVvulf Did they make a movie about eric heiden? Do people to this day watch old eric heiden you tube videos? I am American. I could care less what Scandinavia thinks. I guarantee if you did a poll on which is most historic/popular hockey team smashes eric heiden. Have a nice day.
I was a kid, helping set up a Purim carnival at synagogue. Someone brought in a little black and white tv and it was playing in a corner with rabbit ear antennas. People got more and more excited as more and more people watched on this little tv.
I remember watching this wonderful team as they moved on to the gold medal. Crying with joy was all I could do. We got to know all the players and just beamed with pride at their success. Love your reaction. 😊
Nothing can beat watching the actual game(s) or living through those times to put the story into real/accurate context ... BUT the movie "Miracle" did a surprisingly good job of coming in second. I recommend you watch the movie -- which also provides insight into the "back story," the heartbreaks, and the intense preparations that made the real "Miracle on Ice" possible in 1980.
Greatest sporting event of my lifetime by far. Al Michaels call at the end gives me chills. And to think the game was tape delayed. Spent the day trying not to hear the score. My younger brother kept acting like he was about to tell me without really ever doing it. I was about to kick his ass if he actually did say it. 😂
Historical fact: The USA vs USSR game was TAPE DELAYED for American audiences. I remember already knowing the result BEFORE the game aired. I was the only member of my family who viewed the result as it was displayed. When my family told me not to "spoil the game" by revealing the outcome, I just said, "Very close result".
Some great players went on to the NHL from that team. Neil Broten, Dave Christian, Kenny Morrow and a few others. Kenny Morrow went from winning a Olympic Gold to winning 4 straight Stanley Cups with the New York Islanders from 1980-1983.
I was a 14 year old hockey fan in 1980 and remember this well. I like the way Mike Eruzione speaks about what Herb Brooks says to the team about the Gold Medal game….which was simply “if you lose this game you will take it to your ‘effn grave” then starts to leave the room, turns back around to say “your ‘effn grave”
There was no gold medal game. It was a round robin medal round where top 4 teams played once against each other an team with most points gets gold. If USA lost to Finland on final day, they could have finished even without a medal.
@@RoyalMela maybe I wasn’t clear….when I mentioned what Herb Brooks said to the team, it was before the Gold Medal game against Finland….hence the “if you lose this game…to the grave”. They were coming off of the shocking upset of Russia…but they still had another game…for the Gold.
@@kevinmassey1164 You were clear. But there was no gold medal game. It was a game between A2 and B2. Teams from pool A and pool B, who finished second in their preliminary groups. Sweden and Soviets played later that day game A1 - B2 as they were pool winners and.
Thanks for showing such a memorable moment!! It’s really such a wonderful story overall given the way we were feeling regarding a lot of national setbacks prior to those games! It really was an amazing alignment of circumstances along with the crowd encouraging those players to win!! Great video!
I saw that game on tv with my Dad. I was 17. I didn't understand hockey at the time, but I could tell something amazing had happened because my Dad was unusually emotional. I became a hockey fan right then and there. Dad would take me to NJ Devil games with him all the time after that. I will cherish that moment forever!
not only were these all college players, but they had to overcome college rivalries to get together as a team. tons of players from Minnesota and Boston University (who had just played eachother for a national championship), Boston College (rival of BU), etc.
I was at the college UND in Grand Forks N.D along with all the hockey players. Most knew someone playing in the game. I lost a few years just watching the Russians keep blasting Jim Craig. What a goalie for sure. The place went crazy when we won. The whole town was in the streets shouting USA. What a rush.unforgettable
I remember this like yesterday…..I had graduated from high school that spring. Mom LOVED watching the Olympics so we watched it together. We didn’t know a single thing about hockey, but cheered for our boys the entire game. AWESOME memory!! Many blessings to you all & please God, please bless the USA!! 🇺🇸❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️🇺🇸
I was 19yrs old In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I remember watching this game on TV. Thank you for showing it. I was horse for 3 days from screaming U-S-A ! I got chills once again watching the video. We Believed in Miracles!
The Jimmy V story is similarly inspiring. He was basketball Head Coach at North Carolina St. and they won the NCAA tournament in a huge upset. But that’s only half of his story…
I watched every match the USA played. My mom made sure we watched the Olympics every year they were on. I'm crying now, watching this. You can watch this and see how great it was but if you lived in those days you feel more emotions about it because there was so many other things going on at the time.
Hoo boy do I have interesting memories of that. I was in a college sports bar, and in the most famous moment of that game had a crazed Red Sox fan grab my collector's edition white Mets Cap (the first of its kind that they gave out at a game) off my head and rip the clasp off the back, destroying the hat. He "apologized" but didn't mean it (and didn't even attempt to pay even a token payment for an irreplaceable hat... he just walked away).
I was a freshman at UC Berkeley and we would watch the olympics on the TV in the larger ground floor lobby. The crowd for the USA hockey games got larger and larger. For the Miracle it was packed. Yes, there were USA chants! It was tense the last minutes while USA held that lead. Great game, great memory.
The movie “Miracle” about this is really great. We watched that win play out in real time on a little black and white tv all smashed together in a tiny dorm room on campus. We were screaming so loud people must have thought we lost our dang minds, lol.
I saw an analysis video that showed how Herb Brooks came up with a strategy to interfere with the machine-like tactics of the Soviets. He risked defending the front of the goal by sending extra skaters into the neutral zone and harass the Soviet offense early. They were a little flustered and it worked for that game........also the movie is very good. And please react to the two Soviet - NHL series in the 70's.....really interesting as well. You guys rock!
In my opinion this moment in sports history became the true epitome of the underdog story and what can happen when you give your absolute best. I was born a year later but I can only imagine what it felt like (also that picture of the russian guy….he had some eyebrows 😂)
I was 7 years old when this game was played. I remember it like it was yesterday. I grew up in a hockey family, and one thing they didn't touch on in that video was that in 1980, most of the US didn't know or care one bit about hockey. The Miracle on Ice introduced a whole generation to this wonderful game and changed the national sports landscape forever.
Thanks for taking the time to watch this, guys. It can be a bit much to put up with American propaganda (I’m American so I can say this 😂). Truly a legendary moment with a great call from Al Michaels, “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!”
It is the greatest sports moment in American history that victory over a team that dominated the NHL All-Stars just before that.. It is also the greatest upset in sports history. It was a proud moment for a country that was not too proud of the time.
There is a dramatiization of this story, called Miracle on Ice. A classic Hollywood version, but faithful. Al Michaels, the sportscaster who called the game, cameback and recorded the whole game again. All except the final 5 seconds... - Do you believe in miracles? and if you listen carefully you can hear the switch
I was almost 9 when this game was played and growing up in the desert in New Mexico I knew nothing about hockey. I do remember watching this game, however, and the sense of pride at that time is just as amazing as the pride I feel now!! What an amazing game that was!!🥰🥰🥰🥰
Picking the greatest moment in sports will be very subjective depending on where you live but here goes. I'm Canadian and watched this with my Dad. Still get chills. The '72 Canada/Russia series is right up there...Paul Henderson scoring the winning goal. The Blue Jays winning their 1st World Series. My #1 would be Secretariat at the 1973 Belmont Stakes to take the Triple Crown. He broke the track records of the Derby and Preakness...then shattered it at the Belmont. Took over 2 seconds off the record and beat the rest of the field by 31 lengths. His records for all 3 still stand today. Also watched that with my Dad and we were speechless. Also Al Micheals is one of the best sportscasters out there.
No doubt the greatest upset of all time. Not only that, but unless you experienced it, you can't truly understand the psychological impact that team had on the country. As someone who did experience it, it's impossible to explain.
I watched those games, the grit and determination and all around team play was great. Our pee-wee hockey coach that year seemed to be inspired by it as well, our practices doubled in intensity after the Olympics. Another great hockey story along this same vein would be the story of the 72 Summit series, played between the Soviets and Canada, with the Canadian team made up of the best Canadian NHL players of the era.
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Hey guys, curious...What's considered the similar event for England? WC in 66?
2001 world series, all of it😊
The previos olympics, they lost to teh Czech B team 15-1. (The B Team are the alternate players who didn't make the Olympic team) SO they are the 20 back up players essentially.
Many years later, it was revealed that the CIA was funding Osama Bin Laden and the Taliban, as a way of fighting the Russians in Afghanistan. A case of 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend.' There's an A-list movie about the funding for that, called Charlie Wilson's War.
There's a hockey gane better than this one.. The Phi. FLYERS vs. USSR... The Broad st. Bullies vs the red army..
That Soviet team was not just NHL caliber but would have been a Stanley Cup contender. As a Canadian I loved those American college kids slaying Goliath
Not just a contender but a dominator. Remember they beat the NHL all stars 2 games to 1 the previous year. They would have been the Detroit RedWings before the Detroit Redwings. Then again they literally were the “Red Army”.
That Soviet team was just as good as the NHL All-Star team. It was far greater than any individual NHL team.
@@stickman1742 No I think the Isles/Habs/Flyers and Bruins would have all given them a good series. All Star teams are not as strong as a team that spends all their time together like the Soviets did
If the 20 best Canadian players at ANY time in history played as a team full time nobody, including the Russians, would have gotten within 10 goals.
@@ronryan7398 the 87 team may have been the greatest pro team in any sport ever assembled and they still only beat the Soviets 2-1 in a 3 game series with all 3 games decided by 1 goal. Gretzky, Lemieux, Messier, Coffey etc all at their peak
In my opinion, this was the greatest sporting moment in at least US history.
As an American who has never cared about hockey in my life. I’ve seen the movie for this multiple times and get chills every time I think about it.
I did better than that. As a kid I watched us beat Russia and Finland.
This might be the longest shot in Sports History. $1,000.00 on USA to win at the beginning of the Olympics would have paid $1,000,000.00
I saw that game it was great...a happy moment for those kids and great memories for Americans💖🇺🇸
I 100% agree with you haha
In those days there were NO professionals in any sports. But the Russians were amateurs in name only.
The American teams have been underdogs many times in the Olympics.
“do you believe in miracles? YES!!”
One of the best calls of all time. Absolutely beautiful
Watching the Disney movie the first time back in the 2000s, I completely missed the point when they faded out Al Michaels' movie voice over for the original audio until I watched the BTS featurettes and they pointed that out. Michaels said there was no recapturing that level of hype and excitement in a mere voice over for the film so they cross-faded into the broadcast audio. Awesome sound mixing.
He did an amazing job when the Lomo Prieta earthquake hit minutes before Game 3 of the 1989 World Series. He became an impromptu news anchor in the immediate aftermath.
Still gives me chills !!!!! 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼
I’m 56…a fan of the Cardinals, who’ve won plenty of WS. But NOTHING ELSE TOUCHES THIS. I was 12. I still get chills.
I always felt that was contrived, and he stepped over Ken Dydren's, "It's over."
I am from Birmingham Alabama where the only game that matters is college football. Yet, on the night of the USA vs USSR Olympic Hockey game. THE only game in B'ham was a hockey game in Lake Placid. I was married and living in Detroit Michigan at that time... the home of the Detroit Red Wings of the NHL. We were watching the Olympic hockey game too. I was on the phone - long distance - with my family in Alabama as the countdown was called and bedlam erupted in Detroit all the way to B'ham...from Maine to Texas and from Washington DC to California. the whole nation was glued to their TVs and radios. Unforgettable moment.
This game happened exactly 4 years before I was born, and my Mom remembered my Dad watching it- she doesn’t follow sports at all.
When the sports writer said there would never be another miracle, I don’t think he was saying the Americans could never win another gold medal in hockey. Instead, I think he was saying there would never be such a confluence of sporting, cultural, geopolitical, and patriotic factors to make what The Miracle on Ice more than just an Olympic victory.
Along with that miraculous victory, the class of the Russian team should never be forgotten. Long after the miracle on ice, that Russian team of players had absolutely no animosity towards the US team, often looking back on the game with some affection. In those day, they had been winning so effortlessly for so long, that even though they were disappointed after losing, watching the Americans celebrate reminded them of what it was like to feel and express pure joy after a victory. It wasn't long after that Russian players started entering the NHL, many of whom were dominant at their positions and whose skills were exciting to watch.
I forget what it was called, but I watched something on their journey after too, and the effort it took to get several major players into the NHL.
As a Canadian, we watched this game with feelings of regret that we were not in the Gold Medal game. Every TV in Canada was tuned into this game. What the USA pulled off is amazing. It was a stupendous game of hockey!😀🇨🇦
If I recall correctly, one of your coaches, Tom Watt, said that if anyone could beat the Russians, it would be the Americans.
This was not the gold medal game, neither was the game against Finland two days later. It was a four team round robin medal round. No semis, no final.
Very few people know the sad story of Canada in the 1980 Olympics. Our "kids" first exposed the Soviets. We were beating them going into the third period and couldn't sustain it and lost. Mike Eruzione saw that game and knew, as he later put it, that Canada had them on the ropes. The hockey Gods blessed the US and cursed Canada in that tournament, it happens.
@@RoyalMelaThey defeated Finland 2 days later for the gold medal.
To this American, who watched the game when it broadcast on tape delay, the Soviet game is the single greatest sporting event of the 20th century. Al Michaels' call of "ERUZIONE SCORES!" brings tears to my eyes to this day.
I remember exactly where I was. 10 years old and fighting with the baby sitter about what we would watch on TV. I called my mom (on a rotary phone no less) and got her to let us kids watch. We almost tore the house down when we won. It's a major reason why I love the game. Miracles do happen!
Love this Marshall 🔥🔥
I was about 10 years old also.
@@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344 I was 9 and my mom watched it with me(my dad was out of town for work). We went crazy at the end. I never cared about hockey very much but this was more about pride.
I was 11 and it made me love hockey.
I was babysitting a 10-year-old boy during this game! Luckily for him, I also was determined to watch the game. We went nuts!
One of the great memories of my childhood. Watched "Miracle" with my son when he was 16, he asked me if it was really as good as the movie. Truth is, I told him, "No. It was better." It's hard for anyone who didn't live in that time to know.
Right?
It was better. It's one of my happiest memories.
If you didn't grow up during the Cold War years, it's hard to fully appreciate how huge an upset, and how important an event, this was. I was watching in my college dorm room, and moments after the game ended the streets were FILLED with students celebrating.
I was going to say something very much like this. I was 14 at the time.
As you said. People who didn't live in this time period simply cannot appreciate the magnitude of this event.
I wish there was a way to truly project that.
I agree, this was HUGE at the time. The big bad Russian PROFESSIONAL team upset by a bunch of college kids! 🇺🇸 USA
The US coach, Herb Brooks, absolutely pushed the players to their limit in terms of physical conditioning... The players all hated it at the time but the results spoke for themselves... He made them resilent and relentless.
Herb Brooks is one of my heroes. He knew those kids were good, and wanted the best for them. He wanted them hate him, so they would bond with each other to show him up. Brilliant coaching on his part! (of course, they caught on and ended up respecting him)
@@patdonnelly9392Absolutely.
Their physical conditioning was so extreme that they were actually dropping, puking and getting back up to continue! But look at the result!!
@@amyblasingim2136When they filmed the movie they skated 3 days straight to recreate that key postgame and no one complained because the players had told them how important it was.
My son got to shake the hand of Buzz Schneider...!!!! My son played the position of goalie..meeting Buzz Schneider was a fulfillment of a dream for him... to meet one of the heroes of this Miracle team will always be one of his high points...my son told Mr. Schneider that the movie was our favorite and we always love watching it...
Thank you Miracle team for giving us all these years later the pride in our country!!!!!!!
I know exactly where I was that day. 24 years old, sitting in my Motel 6 room making cable TV jumpers for the TV change out of said Motel 6 in Phoenix AZ. My self and 2 other guys watching the game while we worked. When the winning goal was scored we went crazy! Later that evening we decided to have a nice dinner at a steak house down the road to celebrate. After sitting down in our booth, I slid out and stood near the center of the dinning area and at the top of my lungs yelled out "lets hear it for our Russia beating Hockey Team"!! and a very big return from everyone having dinner, applause and USA! USA!!, I get chills every time I remember. Very special feeling.😂
I'm a 50 year old American. I have seen this entire game maybe a dozen times. I've seen the iconic Eruzione goal and the "Do you believe in miracles?! YES!" clip literally hundreds of times.
And there hasn't been a single time that I haven't teared up watching it. Not once. This is the single greatest sports moment in American history.
I was 9 years old. My dad wouldn't let me hear it live on the radio. So, we watched it on delayed tv broadcast. We jumped and screamed throughout the house. We were in the street with neighbors, Hugging and celebrating. Neighbors shooting off fireworks. My dad and our neighbor across the street never got along. But that night, They instantly high fived, hugged it out, toasted beers. Whatever the issue was, it was done. They remained friends until neighbors passing. Gives me chills to this day.🇺🇸💪🏼👍🏼✌🏼
ESPN's 30 for 30 documentary series did a film on the Soviet team called "Of Miracles and Men." They talk to members of the Soviet team and get their perspective on that game. It also dives into the Soviet's history with the game of hockey, how they got so good at the game and how much of a shock it was for them to lose.
I remember reading Tretiak saying Tikhonov benched him too early for Myshkin, and that was largely the reason he quit the team shortly after Lake Placid.
And how many championships they won before and afterwards. To theim it was just an oops moment. But how the country treated them afterwards was surprising
That was a great episode, to be fair, almost any of the 30 for 30 series is good tv. You can't really go wrong with them.
Of Miracles and Men" is an outstanding 30 for 30 film. Benching Tretiak is still a huge mystery
This truly was the best sporting moment I’ve ever witnessed. The whole country watched this, and it was insane how huge it was for us. I’m so glad you watched this. The broadcaster is right, the USA chants didn’t happen before this event. 😊
You’re welcome Johanna, we loved this one! A truly incredible story 😀
I remember getting the morning paper the next day and I quickly looked through the sports section. It was on page 3 of THE SPORTS SECTION. The local news media had no idea what was going on in the country. When the USA beat the Czechs, we began to pay attention. When we played the Russians that Friday night, at work that was all anyone could talk about.
I was a freshman in college and one guy on my floor was from Philly and a huge hockey fan. He got the entire dorm floor to watch the Soviet Union game and we went crazy. Two days later, the entire country was entranced. It was like nothing I'd ever seen before or since. It was literally a seismic event.
I was 12 when this happened. It's one of the highlights of my childhood.
To this day I remember this night. I was 14 years old. My dad was listening to the game on the radio live in the basement of our Minnesota home by himself. Meanwhile, upstairs the rest of the family carried on like it wasn't happening. I didn't think we had a shot in hell of beating the Soviets, so I didn't bother listening. Then my dad sprinted up the stairs yelling "We won!!" I was extatic. Needless to say we watched the tape delay of the game, and even though we knew the outcome, it was something that brought tears to my eyes and created a memory that will never fade.
I’ll never forget this as a kid in Boston at the time. Mike Eruzione and Jimmy Craig visited our middle school and we were all overcome and in awe
That’s awesome! Love this. Thank you for the comment 🤝
One of the craziest things about this game is that only approximately 9% of the US got to see it live. Over 90% of the country saw it on tape delay at 8pm.
The beginning video clip was from the movie "Patton" about George S. Patton, a general in the United States Army who commanded the Seventh United States Army in the Mediterranean Theater of World War II, and the Third United States Army in France and Germany after the invasion of Normandy. Patton despised the Russions. The actor who portrayed Patton was George C. Scott
I remember jumping around like a crazy person with my family and friends at the end of this game. I can still feel the emotions today that I felt 43 years ago.
Love this, can imagine the celebrations, thanks for posting! 🔥🔥
I was only 5 at the time, but I swear I have faint memories of actually watching this live, not just memories of having seen it dozens of times afterward.
Same.
My dad was a high school hockey coach in Minnesota. We had a bunch of the team over watching. I was 11.
It still is one of my happiest memories.
I could barely speak the next day from shouting.
🤣👍❤️same
Watched it when it occured and still get chills watching the replays.
Amazing achievement!
Facts
Carefully worded. You seem to be saying something, without actually committed to be fact checked.
We'd been out driving around during the early evening and heard the game's final score on the car radio. But ABC-TV was keeping mum about the outcome so as not to mess up viewers planning to watch the prime time replay as if it were live. We didn't care if we knew the score -- hockey is hockey -- but it was actually kind of nice to watch a game without that twisting-gut sensation of fan stress. Anyway, nearing the end of the game there was a commercial break and our local 11PM news anchor appeared on the screen to tell us about some of the headlines they'd be covering. AND HE BLABBED THAT THE U.S. WON! We paused a couple of moments, there in the living room, contemplating "did he just do that???". Then we just laughed and laughed and laughed. All those folks sitting on the edges of their seats at home, watching the game on that station, sweating out every minute, so afraid the USA youngsters would end up being steamrolled by the USSR hockey machine, hoping the impossible might find a way to happen ... and then !POP! yeah they're gonna win.
@@Hexon66 How are you going to "fact check" something that happened before social media? Sheesh! It was on TV!
The Miracle on Ice speech is probably the best non-governmental speech in American history. Gives me chills every time
As a Canadian the 1972 summit series against the Soviets will always be the greatest victory in hockey, four games in Canada followed by four games in the Soviet Union It did for Canada what Lake Placid did for the Americans. Down three games to one with a tie Canada was forced to win 3 games in a row in Moscow to secure the series and Paul Henderson's winning tally with 32 seconds left on the clock in game 8 will forever be the greatest goal ever scored to my mind.
uhhh. what game?
@@trevorcorkery The greatest series in hockey
Al Michael's is hands down the greatest commentator in sports history. That line do you believe in miracles is timeless
I"ve already found five articles listing the greatest sports upsets and this is #1 on all of them.
The 1972 Basketball final between the US and the Soviets is actually a super interesting topic to examine. There's so much all around that was just insane from how the US team was put together, which didn't have all the best amateurs even, to the apparent officiating shenanigans late that gave the Soviets the opportunities for the win, to the fact that the US team was so frustrated by the officiating that they refused their silvers and, to this day, they will not accept them and some have written into their wills to never accept the silver medal.
Arguably one of the biggest fixes in sports history. Absolute sham.
That one stung me to see
That one is right up there with 88 Olympics and the robbery of Roy Jones Jr. After the 88 games, I stopped watching or caring for the Olympics. Haven't watched them since.
The film Miracle really captured what went into creating this team and that unforgettable moment.
Miracle on Ice is a testament to perseverance. Whatever your goals are, you can persevere.
I've seen people mention it in other comments, but I'll reiterate - "Miracle" is a GREAT movie. Can't capture the spirit of the game 1 to 1, but it does a great job telling the story and gets you pumped up. Definitely worth a watch!
It shows what a Great coach can do.
Fantastic Coach, how he got everyone up for this epic moment 🔥
I was 13 years old, at that time, and didn't know anything about hockey. After the first two wins, and the hype going across the country, I became a temporary fan. I watched every game after that, and was glued to the tv every minute. It was an amazing time. Al Michaels call, "Do you believe in Miracles", is part of American lexicon.
I love this so much. The move 'Miracle' is a classic.
Heard about this film, we’ll have to add that to our watch list. Appreciate the comment 🙏
Definitely need to watch that movie. It tells the story of the 80 team, and what Brooks did to prepare them, in much better detail. This spent too much time on the politics and disregards that, on a sporting level, this was pretty much akin to Manchester United during the days when SAF had them owning the Premier League, losing to a League 2 team. A very well-coached League 2 team, perhaps. But the magnitude of the accomplishment, and the mind games Brooks played to get the team to buy in and pull it off? Yeah, this doesn't do justice to that.
@@shawngillogly6873 Your soccer/football analogy is perfect. The Russia people could not believe their beloved Red Army team lost to a 'bunch of students".
its been 43 yrs. me and juniir high teammates watched together. and in a period where men didnt cry, there were tears of joy. the ultimate underdog. that tear still comes when i rewatch..remembering that day at 12 years old.
As a Minnesotan, this was so awesome! My family never sat down once! 🎉🎉 Love hockey, love our Dream Team!
Love this! Thank you for the comment 🤝
thanks guys really enjoyed you watching this biggest upset of all time - as CANADIANS we were ecstatic when the AMERKS shot down the dreaded red machine
Watched this 'live' (tape delayed) in Monterey, California with a buddy. The last 10 minutes of holding the lead were incredible. 99 out of 100 times the Soviets would win, but this why the play the game. At 62, this is the greatest sports moment I've experienced.
As a Minnesota Youth hockey player, I played against many of the USA players prior to this. It is something very special to us Minnesotans.
True
My not-yet husband was a 3rd year law student that year. I was in graduate school, coming into the law school building to meet him for lunch. I saw this usually restrained and serious young man taking the steps up from the ground floor (where the student lounge was located) to the first floor waving his arms and shouting with about three other guys, "WE DID IT! WE WON!" The grin was splitting his face & my befuddled reaction was "Won what?" I learned to follow hockey after that.
I remember that time. Those were dark days in America. The gas shortage and the American hostages, it was depressing. I was 23 years old and I always loved the Olympics. We were glued to the tv. What struck me was how the Soviets just stared almost in awe at the US team while they celebrated. It was just a job to them and they always won. I remember one of them mentioned the joy the US team exhibited at every goal and win was something the Soviet team hadn’t felt in a long time. When they won the gold you could hear in my apartment building and the neighborhood cheers everywhere. It was what America needed at that time. It made us proud.🇺🇸
1st Hockey game that I watched from beginning to end.
Love this!
I still get CHILLS watching those two great wins as the time runs off the clock.😊
Watching it now gave me a good feeling of excitement. It's like watching it for the first time or something. LOL I was happy back then of course. I just didn't realize all the circumstances involved. It was very important we won that game.
Really glad you enjoyed watching, appreciate the comment 🤝
@@DNReacts you're very welcome. I subscribed to your channel and I always give a thumbs up.
I watched this live on TV when I was a kid. My brother and I were jumping up and down, tears of joy and pride !!!
Amazing. These kids had just beat the biggest juggernaut of a sports team that ever was.
I still can remember Al Micheals "do you believe in miracles ?" then later
I remember Craig looking around for his father after winning the gold ...super emotional even now thinking of it.
One of those life defining olympic moments.
Al Michaels is absolutely amazing on the call.
Incredible!
It always makes me cringe, reminds me of something Trump would say while he’s on stage dancing to YMCA like a dork.
@@tedbenveniste412You respectfully have the right to stop talking
The Miracle on Ice wasn't the most amazing feat at the 1980 Olympics.
The most amazing athletic feat was Eric Heiden winning the gold medal in EVERY SINGLE EVENT in speed skating.
500m, 1000m, 1500m, 5000m, 10000m. Insane.
It's a record that is unlikely to ever be broken.
Eric Heiden was the favorite though. What he did was amazing, but it didn't come close to the hockey team.
@@michaelsmith-iu1be Underdog teams win all the time. Bigger upsets happen (popularity wise) at every World Cup.
It's been over 40 years and so far nobody has come close to winning gold in every speed skating event at a single Olympic Games.
@@MrVvulf At the end of the day it's just speed skating.
@@michaelsmith-iu1be Heiden is a legend in Scandinavia. 90+% of people can't name a single player from that US Hockey team. It's all a matter of perspective. I'm valuing an athletic achievement higher, while you clearly care about a team sport.
@@MrVvulf Did they make a movie about eric heiden? Do people to this day watch old eric heiden you tube videos? I am American. I could care less what Scandinavia thinks. I guarantee if you did a poll on which is most historic/popular hockey team smashes eric heiden. Have a nice day.
That was my first time to feel proud to be an American. I was 7. It also got me off the pond and into the rink. 😊
I was a kid, helping set up a Purim carnival at synagogue. Someone brought in a little black and white tv and it was playing in a corner with rabbit ear antennas. People got more and more excited as more and more people watched on this little tv.
I remember watching this wonderful team as they moved on to the gold medal. Crying with joy was all I could do. We got to know all the players and just beamed with pride at their success. Love your reaction. 😊
Thank you so much, we really appreciate this 🙏
Proud to say that Jack O’Callahan is from my hometown, Charlestown, MA. 🇺🇸🇮🇪☘️
That was my first time to feel proud to be an American. It also got me off the pond and into the rink. 😊
Nothing can beat watching the actual game(s) or living through those times to put the story into real/accurate context ... BUT the movie "Miracle" did a surprisingly good job of coming in second. I recommend you watch the movie -- which also provides insight into the "back story," the heartbreaks, and the intense preparations that made the real "Miracle on Ice" possible in 1980.
Greatest sporting event of my lifetime by far. Al Michaels call at the end gives me chills. And to think the game was tape delayed. Spent the day trying not to hear the score. My younger brother kept acting like he was about to tell me without really ever doing it. I was about to kick his ass if he actually did say it. 😂
Historical fact: The USA vs USSR game was TAPE DELAYED for American audiences. I remember already knowing the result BEFORE the game aired. I was the only member of my family who viewed the result as it was displayed. When my family told me not to "spoil the game" by revealing the outcome, I just said, "Very close result".
Some great players went on to the NHL from that team. Neil Broten, Dave Christian, Kenny Morrow and a few others. Kenny Morrow went from winning a Olympic Gold to winning 4 straight Stanley Cups with the New York Islanders from 1980-1983.
I was a 14 year old hockey fan in 1980 and remember this well.
I like the way Mike Eruzione speaks about what Herb Brooks says to the team about the Gold Medal game….which was simply “if you lose this game you will take it to your ‘effn grave” then starts to leave the room, turns back around to say “your ‘effn grave”
There was no gold medal game. It was a round robin medal round where top 4 teams played once against each other an team with most points gets gold. If USA lost to Finland on final day, they could have finished even without a medal.
@@RoyalMela maybe I wasn’t clear….when I mentioned what Herb Brooks said to the team, it was before the Gold Medal game against Finland….hence the “if you lose this game…to the grave”. They were coming off of the shocking upset of Russia…but they still had another game…for the Gold.
@@kevinmassey1164 You were clear. But there was no gold medal game. It was a game between A2 and B2. Teams from pool A and pool B, who finished second in their preliminary groups. Sweden and Soviets played later that day game A1 - B2 as they were pool winners and.
Pulling Tretiak after 2 goals was absolutely ridiculous.
Everytime I watch anything miracle related I can’t help but cry. Such a beautiful thing that happed in Lake Placid
Thanks for showing such a memorable moment!! It’s really such a wonderful story overall given the way we were feeling regarding a lot of national setbacks prior to those games! It really was an amazing alignment of circumstances along with the crowd encouraging those players to win!! Great video!
Our pleasure Sarah, this really was an enjoyable watch and thank you, really appreciate it 🙏
I saw that game on tv with my Dad. I was 17. I didn't understand hockey at the time, but I could tell something amazing had happened because my Dad was unusually emotional. I became a hockey fan right then and there. Dad would take me to NJ Devil games with him all the time after that. I will cherish that moment forever!
not only were these all college players, but they had to overcome college rivalries to get together as a team. tons of players from Minnesota and Boston University (who had just played eachother for a national championship), Boston College (rival of BU), etc.
I was at the college UND in Grand Forks N.D along with all the hockey players. Most knew someone playing in the game. I lost a few years just watching the Russians keep blasting Jim Craig. What a goalie for sure. The place went crazy when we won. The whole town was in the streets shouting USA. What a rush.unforgettable
I remember this like yesterday…..I had graduated from high school that spring. Mom LOVED watching the Olympics so we watched it together. We didn’t know a single thing about hockey, but cheered for our boys the entire game. AWESOME memory!! Many blessings to you all & please God, please bless the USA!! 🇺🇸❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️🇺🇸
I was 19yrs old In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I remember watching this game on TV. Thank you for showing it. I was horse for 3 days from screaming
U-S-A ! I got chills once again watching the video. We Believed in Miracles!
I watched the entire game on AFN in Germany. No commercial breaks blocking plays. We were jumping up and down on the sofa!
Not even a sports guy, I was 12 when this happened, and I remember this, and watching this video has made me weep a little, and I'm 54.
Watched it live and will never forget this as long as I live
The Jimmy V story is similarly inspiring. He was basketball Head Coach at North Carolina St. and they won the NCAA tournament in a huge upset. But that’s only half of his story…
I remember this. I was 16 years old and it was the most amazing feeling at the time.
I watched every match the USA played. My mom made sure we watched the Olympics every year they were on. I'm crying now, watching this. You can watch this and see how great it was but if you lived in those days you feel more emotions about it because there was so many other things going on at the time.
You guys should do Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. widely regarded as one of the greatest and most memorable baseball games of all time.
Hoo boy do I have interesting memories of that. I was in a college sports bar, and in the most famous moment of that game had a crazed Red Sox fan grab my collector's edition white Mets Cap (the first of its kind that they gave out at a game) off my head and rip the clasp off the back, destroying the hat. He "apologized" but didn't mean it (and didn't even attempt to pay even a token payment for an irreplaceable hat... he just walked away).
Yes, this!
Game 7 1991 needs that kind of love as well.
I vote for game 1 of the 1988 World Series. Or just simply Gibson’s walk-off HR.
As a lifelong Red Sox fan, I’d rather they did the final four games of the 2004 ALCS.
I watched this whole Olympics live and it was indeed an amazing and exciting thing. It was really emotional.
Not a fan of any sports. Don't regularly watch the Olympics, but I and almost every American was watching this moment!!! SOOO unbelievable!!
I was a freshman at UC Berkeley and we would watch the olympics on the TV in the larger ground floor lobby. The crowd for the USA hockey games got larger and larger. For the Miracle it was packed. Yes, there were USA chants! It was tense the last minutes while USA held that lead. Great game, great memory.
The movie “Miracle” about this is really great. We watched that win play out in real time on a little black and white tv all smashed together in a tiny dorm room on campus. We were screaming so loud people must have thought we lost our dang minds, lol.
I saw an analysis video that showed how Herb Brooks came up with a strategy to interfere with the machine-like tactics of the Soviets. He risked defending the front of the goal by sending extra skaters into the neutral zone and harass the Soviet offense early. They were a little flustered and it worked for that game........also the movie is very good. And please react to the two Soviet - NHL series in the 70's.....really interesting as well. You guys rock!
Yes! Especially 72, which really started the concept of best-on-best international play (before that, it was pretty much all strictly amateur).
In my opinion this moment in sports history became the true epitome of the underdog story and what can happen when you give your absolute best. I was born a year later but I can only imagine what it felt like (also that picture of the russian guy….he had some eyebrows 😂)
I was 7 years old when this game was played. I remember it like it was yesterday. I grew up in a hockey family, and one thing they didn't touch on in that video was that in 1980, most of the US didn't know or care one bit about hockey. The Miracle on Ice introduced a whole generation to this wonderful game and changed the national sports landscape forever.
Brought tears to my eyes out here in California -- just like it did 43 years ago.
Greatest underdog story in sports history for me.
Love this!
This was like a pee wee hockey team beating an nfl championship team. If you haven't seen the movie Miracle it's a great movie.
ace love
Thanks for taking the time to watch this, guys. It can be a bit much to put up with American propaganda (I’m American so I can say this 😂). Truly a legendary moment with a great call from Al Michaels, “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!”
It is the greatest sports moment in American history that victory over a team that dominated the NHL All-Stars just before that.. It is also the greatest upset in sports history. It was a proud moment for a country that was not too proud of the time.
The second Miracle on Ice was the 2018 USA Men's Curling team winning the gold medal.
The choice to play “Run Free” from Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron over the ending of the game gave me chills
There is a dramatiization of this story, called Miracle on Ice. A classic Hollywood version, but faithful. Al Michaels, the sportscaster who called the game, cameback and recorded the whole game again. All except the final 5 seconds... - Do you believe in miracles? and if you listen carefully you can hear the switch
I was almost 9 when this game was played and growing up in the desert in New Mexico I knew nothing about hockey. I do remember watching this game, however, and the sense of pride at that time is just as amazing as the pride I feel now!! What an amazing game that was!!🥰🥰🥰🥰
Picking the greatest moment in sports will be very subjective depending on where you live but here goes. I'm Canadian and watched this with my Dad. Still get chills. The '72 Canada/Russia series is right up there...Paul Henderson scoring the winning goal. The Blue Jays winning their 1st World Series. My #1 would be Secretariat at the 1973 Belmont Stakes to take the Triple Crown. He broke the track records of the Derby and Preakness...then shattered it at the Belmont. Took over 2 seconds off the record and beat the rest of the field by 31 lengths. His records for all 3 still stand today. Also watched that with my Dad and we were speechless. Also Al Micheals is one of the best sportscasters out there.
The Disney movie Miracle is a great sports film. Hockey is such a difficult sport to film and they did an admirable job.
That basketball game in 1972 is a whole other story yall ought to look into.
I think the Russian Coach Tikhonov benching the best goalkeeper in the world was a brave move. He was never heard from again.
No doubt the greatest upset of all time. Not only that, but unless you experienced it, you can't truly understand the psychological impact that team had on the country. As someone who did experience it, it's impossible to explain.
I watched those games, the grit and determination and all around team play was great. Our pee-wee hockey coach that year seemed to be inspired by it as well, our practices doubled in intensity after the Olympics. Another great hockey story along this same vein would be the story of the 72 Summit series, played between the Soviets and Canada, with the Canadian team made up of the best Canadian NHL players of the era.
there are some incredicle docs on youtube about the 72 Summit Series.
Hello from Minnesota in the USA we have great hockey players here you can tell by watching the video