OT: Bacon at North Quad Introducing showing of "Miracle"

Submitted by PeteM on

I'm not sure how well publicized this was, but John Bacon hosted a showing of the 2004 movie "Miracle" last night at North Quad.   Anyone who was sentient on Feb 22, 1980 knows where they were that night (I was 12 and when it ended I ran outside into the snowy cul-de-sac just to burn off energy at about 10 pm and at about 10 degrees -- before I knew it there 4-5 other kids doing the same thing, jumping up and down/high fiving).  The movie conveys the team and the era well.  I hadn't realized that Bacon was working on a project with the team's coach, Herb Brooks, when Brooks died in 2003 (I assume a bio but he didn't say).  Anyway, John came out in a nearly "full Herb" ensemble including a camel hair jacket (but no plaid pants), mentioned that he'd spoken to Brook's widow Patti on the way there, and told some interesting stories:

1. It's well-known that Brooks was the last player cut from the 1960 team, but I didn't know he was the captain in 1968. In Grenoble one day, Brooks claimed to be lost in the Olympic village, got a ride on the Russian hockey team's bus on its way to practice and then spent an hour in the rafters taking notes about their practice regimen.

2. John watched a tape of the game itself with Slava Fetisov and Mike Ramsey (who were on the Soviet and US teams).  At one point, Slava hit pause and rewound to point out that in the 3rd period you can see he was gassed at  a faceoff and the Americans weren't, which had never happened to the Soviet team before.

3.  The Russians didn't show a lot of reaction after the loss and seemed more suprised that angry in the handshake line.  Fetisov told John that winning has been become so routine for them that they were fascinated by the Americans unrestrained joy at victory.

4.  I had forgotten that the US was behind to Finland in the gold medal game in the 3rd period (the Soviet game was the semis).  Bacon said that, in some ways, getting the team on track to come back and win that game Sunday after the shocking upset on Friday was as impressive as beating the Russians.

One other aside, in the movie they play Jimmy Carter's "malaise" speech as Brooks leaves the team's Christmas party.  That talk is remembered as emblematic of a failed presidency, but it actually is a hell of speech (this is not a political statement -- the speech was not about policy and I can think of great speeches by politicians of all stripes.)

M Fanfare

November 14th, 2014 at 10:13 AM ^

IIRC the project Bacon was doing was a Herb Brooks version of "Bo's Lasting Lessons," so it would have been a bunch of anecdotes with the leadership lessons each anecdote demonstrated.

Roughneck

November 14th, 2014 at 10:13 AM ^

Great movie. Sports movies are hard to pull off in general but to attempt to recapture what is widely accepted as the greatest sports moment in history is beyond challenging. I was only a young child at the time so I have no recollection of the event but get goosebumps watching the film.

Shelton

November 14th, 2014 at 10:18 AM ^

Only one pedantic nitpick, but the game agaisnt the Soviets was not the semi-final.  The medal round was a four team round-robin among USA, USSR, Sweden, and Finland.  USA's result from the group stage against Sweden carried over (a 2-2 draw), and they played USSR and Finland.  The win over Finland did indeed earn them the gold medal (obviously), but if Finland had won, each would have finished tied with 3 points, and USSR would have won gold with 4 points.

 

Thanks for the recap.

mGrowOld

November 14th, 2014 at 10:49 AM ^

CLEARLY John U hosting "Miracle" is his subtle way of telling us that Hoke will be retained next year and for us to prepare for his return.  I think it's pretty damn obvious that John knows what's up (despite his radio appearance this morning) and is signalling us in code so as to not panic the masses.

I mean it's all so obvious - a child could see it.

goblueram

November 14th, 2014 at 11:57 AM ^

There is no sports moment I wish I could have been alive for more than the Miracle on Ice.  In fact, to go with the "which team do you most want to win a championship?" post, I have to amend my list to include USA Hockey.  2002 was a tough loss, 2010 was agonizing, and this year looked so promising after the group stage.  I know that gold medal will come soon enough though.