Miracle Moments!

I pull up the video of broadcaster Al Michaels’ iconic description of the final seconds of the U.S. hockey team’s 4-3 upset over the Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics. I hear his “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!” and time seems to momentarily stop and start to go in reverse direction. At first, it starts slow. And then the calendar spins uncontrollably until I’m back in 1980.

It feels so familiar. And so new all at the same time.

With 10 minutes left in the third period, I see U.S. hockey player Mike Eruzione shoot and score, giving the U.S. the lead for the first time in the game. I feel the pins and needles that went through me as I watched nervously with my family as the more talented Soviet players attacked the American zone and seemed to be everywhere on the ice.

We knew little about the blue line or icing or really any hockey rules. Central Pennsylvania was not exactly a hockey hot bed. However, we knew it was a big thing for the Americans to stay close to the strong and mighty Soviets. And here the US team was in the lead.

And yes, when the final seconds finally ticked off the screen, I remember the U.S. players running onto the ice and celebrating together as a team. The game truly became a Miracle on Ice.

From the same games, I think too of Eric Heiden the ice skater bent over on his knees. In a span of nine days, Heiden won an unprecedented five gold medals, sweeping the entire men’s speed skating slate and setting Olympic records in every event, from the 500-meter sprint to the grueling 10,000-meter race. He set a world record in the 10,000 meter race by more than six seconds despite waking up late and hurrying to make the start of the race.

All these years later – forty-six years later to be exact — these are the images from the Lake Placid games that jump out at me. They’re iconic moments.

The 2026 Winter Olympics finishes up this weekend. I won’t be around in another forty-six years, but I wonder what images from these Winter Olympics will stick out. Will it be Speedskater Jordan Stolz and his two gold medals and two Olympic records? Will it be Figure Skater Ilia Malinin’s dramatic collapse, plummeting from an expected gold medal to eighth place? Will it be the touch-no touch cheating accusations coming after the Canadian curling team beat the Swedes. Or will it be 41-year-old Elana Meyers Taylor, who became the oldest athlete to win an individual gold in the Winter Olympics when she overtook Germany’s Laura Nolte by just 0.04 seconds on her final run in the Women’s Monobob?

There are certain “Where Were You” Moments” throughout history that stick out in our collective memory because they are transformative, shocking, and redefine the human experience. They’re also often “generation-defining” touchstones. The Miracle on Ice is one. I can’t imagine any of the moments from this Winter Olympics meeting that level.

But you never know.

Who knows what hits home with a 13-year-old boy skating on a pond in Minnesota. Or an adventurous female snowboarder in Alberta. Or a young skier in Austria. You never know.

What moments stick out to you?


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14 thoughts on “Miracle Moments!

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  1. How I love this. I am an Olympic junkie. I live for this. We watched the women’s hockey team win gold yesterday. I screeched like it was my daughter on the ice. I cry for the losing team too! It’s simply amazing. I’ve followed Jim Craig on Instagram from the 1980 team for years. The story of that team never gets old. ❤️

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    1. That 1980 team — It tells you that it’s such a great story that we still talk about it today. I can’t tell you much about the world events at the time, but boy do I remember the happiness that they brought.And yes, I’m with you on the following the olympics. I’m a sucker for it. I love the stories. I know it’s professional athletes now who make $$$ off endorsements, but I still love the people stories. Uplifting.

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  2. Wait I wasn’t done. Lol I should just blog about this. I discovered that I really love Curling. This really is a strategic game. This Olympics I discovered the cross country skiing Skiathalon both individual and team events. Man was that exciting!!!

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    1. Sounds like a blog coming. Ha, ha. Kiki goes curling. Ha, ha. I’m with you on the cross country skiing. I missed a lot of it this year, but a few years ago I was up late one night (probably with a crying baby) and I turned on the tv at the right moment. The next morning it was all I could talk about at work. My friend thought diaper duty had turned me into a crazy man, but it was so interesting. I was convinced that in another life (where I grew up in Norway or somewhere like that) I would’ve been a cross country skiing athlete. Ha, ha. IN my dreams.

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      1. I snorted (that’s the way you know you’ve got me laughing). I just am in awe of athletes – paid professionals or not. Training your body to perform amazes me. Watching a bunch of these athletes compete is just the best. Norway!! lol I’m part Norwegian so I love that choice.

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    1. I’m convinced that someone is going to make a fortune by opening up a chain of pickle-ball gyms/curling rinks/starbucks coffee shops across the country. Can’t you see it? Curling again is all the rage. There’s definitely an interest out there. Ha, ha.

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  3. Also, my wife isn’t a big fan of watching live sporting events but she LOVES sports movies – she’s a professional storyteller so a film with a compelling narrative is something she loves, and the film “Miracle” is one of her favorites!

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    1. My wife is similar. She says she doesn’t like sports, but when she knows the stories behind the players or teams, she’s all in. I think in some ways she’s a better “fan” than me. When my teams are out (like this year’s super bowl), I’m less interested. Meanwhile, she’s still following to see how the story plays out. Ha, ha. And Miracle really is a great film. I just watched it again. I thought they really nailed it. We all know how the story ends but it still had a lot of intensity. Great storytelling.

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  4. Being from Alberta, hockey is in my blood. Huge congratulations on the US team winning the women’s hockey gold! Well done. I was on the bus when the Canadian men’s team won gold in Vancouver in 2010. The bus broke out in singing O Canada, some in French. I cried happy tears all the way home. The clip you showed brought back those same feelings. I am not much of a sports fan but love the Olympics!

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    1. Oh my goodness Darlene, I couldn’t believe the ending to the women’s hockey game. Two great teams. They say football is a game of inches, but I felt yesterday like you could say that about hockey too. I just saw too that the Canadian men came back from being down 2-0 to beating Finland. If the US men win tonight, it will be another Canada-US game on Sunday. Wow. I love your bus scene. That had to be such a neat experience. Yes, happy tears.

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