Sunday, February 16, 2014

Russia Feels Compelled to Win the Gold Medal in Hockey....Sochi 2014...to Make Up for 1980 Defeat


Mike Eruzione (C) holds the Olympic torch shortly before he and the rest of the gold medal winning U.S. hockey team of 1980 lit the Olympic flame, in Salt Lake City as the Winter Olympics opened February 8, 2002. The U.S. team defeated Finland to win gold in Lake Placid in 1980.  REUTERS/Sue Ogrocki

Mike Eruzione (c.) and his 1980 Team USA teammates help light the Olympic flame to open the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. Mike Eruzione’s sensational winning goal against the Soviet hockey team at the 1980 Winter Olympics will forever be remembered as the “Miracle On Ice” — perhaps the greatest sporting moment of the 20th century.


If you have never been a fan of ice hockey before, watch Saturday's game between Russia and the United States. This may only be a semi-final game but the clash encapsulates one of the most important stories of Sochi 2014, and of Winter Olympic sport.
For Canada, the United States and above all Russia, this year's Olympics are not complete - never mind the nation's success elsewhere - without men's ice hockey gold.
"This is very important for all of us," Russia coach Zinetula Bilyaletdinov said . "We've been waiting for it for many years. Everybody is expecting a big result from us."
Not least President Vladimir Putin, for whom the Sochi Games are not just a source of national pride - they are a personal project.
But Russian fervour for Olympic hockey glory extends far beyond Putin's glare. No Russian team has won the title since the break-up of the Soviet Union (though some Russians took part in the "Unified Team", representing six former Soviet republics, which won gold in 1992).
Players used to the domination of Soviet times are fed up with this lack of success, embodied in a quarter-final defeat by Canada at Vancouver 2010, games in which the whole Russian Olympic team finished a miserable 11th in the medals table.


Ice hockey


The United States hockey team celebrate their famous victory over the Soviet Union in 1980


"The entire country will be looking at you," read a recent open letter from those Soviet heroes, aimed at today's squad. " In our time, we did everything for victory. We glorified the USSR, our people and our sports. Don't let Russia down."
Sweden, and to an extent Finland and Slovakia, are medal threats at Sochi 2014, but the Olympic hockey tournament has long been sold as a tale of Russia versus North America.
This harks back to the famed "miracle on ice" of 1980,  in which an amateur US team defeated the Soviet Union against the odds on the way to gold.
"Do you believe in miracles?" Intoned broadcaster Al Michaels as the clock ran out, the US having come from behind to win 4-3. The clip is among the most cherished sporting moments in American history.
Vladislav Tretiak, former Soviet goaltender and legend of the sport, played in that game. Earlier this month, he told reporters: "It was a miracle. It was a good lesson the Americans taught us."
"All the Americans are reminding us about 1980," chuckled Bilyaletdinov as his team trained before the Sochi Games. "But we've forgotten about it. This is a new time, new teams, and a new game."
Bilyaletdinov is right: hockey at the Olympics is now unrecognizable in comparison. No longer an amateur's domain, the tournament is packed with National Hockey League (NHL) stars on every roster (Sweden, for example, has only one non-NHL player here) while Russia also calls on leading lights from its own KHL (Kontinental Hockey League).  Games from both leagues are shown around the globe.
Back in 1980, the 'miracle on ice' was a sensation partly because the game represented a clash of ideologies where your opponents were enigmatic enemies from a foreign land. Today, they probably play alongside you back home.
Alex Ovechkin is a prime example of a Russian with whom fans across the globe will be familiar. Ovechkin is captain of the Washington Capitals in the NHL and is one of the league's leading lights.
Players like Ovechkin hold Russian hopes in their hands. He called Vancouver 2010 "a failure" but here, four years later, he is playing it cool.
"I'll be honest with you, I don't feel the pressure right now," he said earlier in the week. "But a bit later, I'm going to feel it. We just have to play great."
According to the Associated Press, one Russian reporter told coach Bilyaletdinov it would be a "death sentence"  if he stuck with the same goalkeeper for Saturday's clash with the US.
Feelings run high because, for all the warmth breathed into world sport since the Cold War ended, ice hockey remains one the greatest fundamental tests of strength between the superpowers of yesteryear.
At home, no Russian wants to lose a test of strength.
"This is the ultimate in the world of hockey," US coach, Dan Bylsma said. "This is the prize possession.
"Evgeni stopped talking to me a few days ago," joked Bylsma, referring to Evgeni Malkin, the top Russian player he coaches with NHL Pittsburgh Penguins.
"It's like playing your brother. You battle with some of these guys on the same side of the ice, now you're playing against them.
"This place is going to be absolutely off the charts," he added, gesturing to the ice inside Sochi's Bolshoy Ice Dome. "It's going to be rocking here."

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