AP fileTwenty-five years. Was it really that long ago? Not to Mike Eruzione.
He closes his eyes and feels the sensation of his game-winning goal. He hears the roar inside that jam-packed arena in Lake Placid, N.Y. He sees a countdown - always interminably slow - of the last 10 minutes. He summons the final emotional rush.
Do you believe in miracles? Eruzione does. Every single day.
``I'm still living it,'' said Eruzione, captain of the 1980 U.S. Olympic gold medal-winning hockey team. ``Our story keeps going. For me, it comes up every single day.''
Every single day.
Twenty-five years ago, American hostages were being held in Iran. The Soviet Union had invaded Afghanistan. The nation needed to feel good about something, amid a worldwide climate ofuncertainty and fear.
Then came a golden afternoon.
Today is the silver anniversary.
The moment still resonates. When the U.S. stunned the supposedly unbeatable Soviet Union 4-3, setting the stage for a gold-medal victory two days later, American citizens were united in cheers and tears. A Communist juggernaut had been toppled.
Sports Illustrated, for the only time in the magazine's history, used no headlines or word captions on its cover. It simply presented a photograph of the on-ice celebration. The U.S. team hassince been immortalized through books, a documentary and a feature film (``Miracle'') that was released last winter.
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AP The U.S. hockey team pounces on goalie Jim Craig after beating the Soviet Union 4-3 in the Olympic hockey semifinals in 1980. |
Eruzione, who makes approximately 100 motivational speeches to corporations each year, is touched by the tales he hears about fathers and sons, about the shared moment.
``They say it was one of their cherished times spent together as a family,'' Eruzione said. ``I've had guys say to me, `I watched that with my dad. I was 15 years old. My dad sat in the chair. He was crying and crying. I couldn't figure out what it was all about then, but now I realize it.' ''
So what was it all about?
``To so many people,'' said Jim Craig, the goalie whose enduring image is being wrapped in an American flag as he searched the stands for his father, ``it was about so much more than a hockeygame. And that's why it continues to captivate everyone.''
Ryan Callahan scored for the fifth time in four days and defenseman Ryan McDonagh snapped a second-period tie to lift the New York Rangers to a 3-2 victory over the Washington Capitals on Sunday.
Check out highlights from the Rangers 3-2 win over the Capitals.
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