Years before I ever heard of Lake Placid or the Olympics, before
I knew the name of a single Russian hockey player, I was
a kid in Massachusetts who wanted to be the next Bobby Orr.
I grew up skating on Holmes’s Pond, which took its name
from our next-door neighbor, Mrs. Holmes, who owned it. A
man named Phil Thompson, our postman, was the person
who told me I should try organized hockey in the Easton Junior
Hockey League. He had already been working on it with
my mother. He was a fine postman and an even better salesman.
The game we played against the Russians in Lake Placid
twenty-five years ago has been acclaimed and saluted in
every way possible, but for me, it has always felt like a passage
on ice, the attainment of a dream that started on Mrs.
Holmes’s pond.
It’s impossible for me to separate the miracle
that we achieved as a team with the memories and gratitude
I have for all the people who helped me get there, from my
mother and father, my sisters and brothers, to ten years’
worth of coaches and friends and teammates. You don’t
make a journey like that alone. You make it with a lot of love
and sacrifice. That’s probably why I was searching the stands
for my father after we won the gold medal against Finland. It
was a moment that was begging to be shared.
I don’t believe those Winter Games in Lake Placid will
ever be duplicated. I don’t say that because we beat maybe
the greatest Soviet hockey team ever assembled, or even because
Eric Heiden won five gold medals, a performance that
I honestly think dwarfs what we did. I say it because there
weren’t doping scandals or judging scandals or an Olympic
Village that was overrun with millionaires and professionals
in Lake Placid. Herb Brooks, God rest his soul, wasn’t coaching
a Dream Team. He was coaching a team full of dreamers.
There is a big difference. In Lake Placid, it didn’t feel as
if the Games were being run by corporations. It felt as if at
the heart of them was a brotherhood of athletes, the best in
the world, deep in the Adirondack Mountains.
I’ve visited quite a few places that have hosted the
Olympics in the past, and you almost can’t tell that the
Games were ever there. You aren’t in Lake Placid for more
than a minute before you are flooded with Olympic memories,
whether it’s from seeing the Olympic Arena at the top of
the hill, or the oval next door where Heiden skated into immortality.
Whenever I’m in town, I like to go out at night
when it’s dark and quiet and the shops are closed, and stand
in the middle of Main Street. I close my eyes and in an instant
it takes me back to that magical Friday night of February
22, 1980, to the memory of walking down that same
Main Street with Mike Eruzione and our fathers and other
family members, and ABC’s Jim Lampley interviewing us as
we went. Snow was falling, and everywhere you looked people
were waving flags and chanting, “U-S-A, U-S-A.” We
were in our primes, athletically and physically. We were surrounded
by people we loved, getting loved some more by
people we didn’t even know. We had just done the impossible,
and we were happy to be alive and thrilled to be Americans
and thrilled to think that Herb was right: maybe we were
meant to be here. It’s a feeling you wish everybody could
have at one point in their lives.
Being in that goal on that Friday night was the pinnacle of
my athletic life, the greatest joy I have ever known as a hockey
player. It was the culmination of a journey, and then other
journeys followed, for all of us; that is what this book is really
all about—the journeys that brought us to that semifinal
game against the Soviet Union, and those we’ve taken since.
Sometimes people ask me if I wish I could go back and do it
again, if some part of me is sad that I will never experience
that pinnacle again. You can’t look back. You can’t dial up
euphoria on demand, or try to re-create what happened a
quarter century ago. You move forward and you live your life
and try to be a better person every day than you were the day
before. You take each day as a new journey, even as you are
grateful for the ones you have already had.
Jim Craig
North Easton, Massachusetts
From the book:THE BOYS OF WINTER by Wayne Coffey. Foreword copyright © 2005 by Jim Craig. Published by Crown, a division of Random House, Inc.
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