Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more
Episode description
# The Miracle on Ice Begins: January 18, 1980
On January 18, 1980, something special started brewing in Lake Placid, New York, though nobody quite realized it yet. This was the day that would mark an early step in what became one of the greatest underdog stories in sports history: the U.S. Olympic hockey team's journey toward the "Miracle on Ice."
While the actual miracle game against the Soviet Union wouldn't happen until February 22, January 18 was significant as it fell during the critical final preparation period before the XIII Winter Olympics officially opened on February 13. The young American team, with an average age of just 21, was in the midst of intense training and exhibition matches that would forge them into the cohesive unit that shocked the world.
Head coach Herb Brooks had been putting his squad through absolutely grueling practices at this point in the preparation. Brooks, known for his demanding and sometimes harsh coaching style, was implementing a hybrid hockey system that combined the best elements of North American physicality with European finesse and skating. This was revolutionary for American hockey at the time.
The roster was filled with college players—many from Brooks's own University of Minnesota—who were about to face the seemingly impossible task of competing against the Soviet juggernaut. The Soviet team had won gold in five of the last six Olympic tournaments and had demolished the NHL All-Stars 6-0 just a year earlier in the Challenge Cup. They were professionals in everything but name, training together year-round, while the American kids were still wet behind the ears.
What made this team special wasn't evident on January 18—it was brewing beneath the surface. Players like Mike Eruzione (the future captain), goalie Jim Craig, and young phenom Mark Johnson were being molded by Brooks's iron will. The coach famously made the team skate brutal "Herbies" (end-to-end sprints) after a lackluster exhibition performance, skating them to exhaustion to prove a point about effort and unity.
This date represents the calm before the storm, the preparation before the miracle. In just over a month, this ragtag group of American college kids would defeat the mighty Soviets 4-3 in what ABC sportscaster Al Michaels would immortalize with his call: "Do you believe in miracles? YES!"
The significance of mid-January 1980 in Lake Placid was that it represented pure potential—the moment before everything changed for American hockey and Olympic sports forever.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Transcript
Speaker 1
Welcome to This Moment in Sports History. Podcast number The Miracle on Ice begins January eighteenth, nineteen eighty. On January eighteenth, nineteen eighty, something special started brewing in Lake Placid, New York. Though nobody quite realized it yet, this was the day that would mark an early step in what became one of the greatest underdog stories in sports history, the US
Olympic Hockey team's journey toward the Miracle on Ice. While the actual miracle game against the Soviet Union wouldn't happen until February twenty second, January eighteenth was significant as it fell during the critical final preparation period before the thirteenth
Winter Olympics officially opened on February thirteenth. The young American teen with an average age of just twenty one, was in the midst of intense training and exhibition matches that would forge them into the cohesive unit that shocked the world. Head coach Herb Brooks had been putting his squad through
absolutely grueling practices at this point in the preparation. Brooks, known for his demanding and sometimes harsh coaching style, was implementing a hybrid hockey system that combined the best elements of North American physicality with European finesse and skating. This was revolutionary for American hockey at the time. The roster was filled with college players, many from Brooks's own University of Minnesota, who were about to face the seemingly impossible
task of competing against the Soviet juggernaut. The Soviet team had won gold in five of the last six Olympic tournaments and had demolished the NHL All Stars six to zero just a year earlier in the Challenge Cup. They were professionals in everything but name, training together year round, while the American kids were still wet behind the years. What made this team special wasn't evident in January eighteenth.
It was brewing beneath the surface. Players like Mike Eruzioni, the future captain, goalie Jim Craid, and young fenem Mark Johnson were being muled did by Brooks's iron will. The coach famously made the team skate brutal herbies end to end sprints after a lackluster exhibition performance, skating them to exhaustion to prove a point about effort and unity. This date represents the calm before the storm, the preparation before
the miracle. In just over a month, this ragtag group of American college kids would defeat the mighty Soviets four to three in what ABC sportscaster Al Michaels would immoralize with his call, do you believe in miracles? Yes? The significance of Mid January nineteen eighty and Lake Placid was that it represented pure potential, the moment before everything changed for American hockey and Olympic sports forever. And that wraps
it up. Join us tomorrow and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you never miss a daily slice of sports history. This has been a Quiet Police Studio's production. For more, check out Quietly dot A. I thank you for listening. What