|
To ABC's Al Michaels, his Miracle on Ice call was a miracle in
itself.
Michaels' famous "Do you believe in Miracles?" line, ending the
USA's stunning 4-3 upset of the Soviet Union hockey team at the
1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, NY, wasn't planned.
It just happened.
"In the last 90 seconds, I was trying to get it right," Michaels
recalls. "If the Soviets had scored to tie it, I wanted to make
sure who was on the ice.
"But with five or six seconds left, the puck went out to center
ice and I knew the U.S. was going to win. The only word that came
to mind was 'miraculous.' I turned it into a question, 'Do you
believe in miracles?'
"I answered it myself with, 'Yes!'"
A U. S. miracle hardly was expected as Michaels and analyst Ken
Dryden walked to the arena for the 5 p.m. ET game that was shown
on tape-delay at 8 by ABC.
"The Soviets had beaten the U.S. 10-3 three days before the Olympics,"
Michaels says. "I told Ken the best we could hope for was for
the U.S. to be down 3-1 in the second period.
"But everything the U.S. needed to go its way occurred. The U.S.
trailed only 3-2 starting the third. When Mike Eruzione scored
for a 4-3 lead with 10 minutes left, I remember the Soviets being
confused. They changed lines at warp speed.
"In the last 90 seconds the Soviets didn't pull their goalie.
Incredible. I figured that it had been so long since they'd been
behind, they never practiced it."
Dennis Lewin, now NFL senior vice president, was ABC's coordinating
producer for the tape-delayed telecast that ran shortly after
the game's finish.
"By the time we came on the air, Lake Placid had exploded," he
says. "People were waving flags and singing God Bless America
in the streets. That made for a special scene."
Says Michaels: "Twenty years later people still come up to me
and say, 'Do you believe in miracles?' I'm delighted to have an
attachment to an event that brought so much joy to so many.
"But the players gave me a pretty good script."
|