The 1980 Winter Olympics could not have been more historic for the US hockey team thanks to its upset victory over the Soviets (the heavy favorites). Famously known as the “Miracle on Ice,” Sports Illustrated named this medal-round game “the greatest sports moment of the 20th century.”
Prior to this spectacular achievement, there had been quite a few memorable sporting thrills. For example, Bill Mazeroski’s striking walk-off homer against the Yankees in the 1960 World Series; Bob Beamon’s incredible long jump in the 1968 Olympics; and the New York Jets’ NFL-revolutionizing win over the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III. But, none of them created anything approaching the overwhelming emotion of the Miracle on Ice.
Why? The Miracle on Ice outmatched all other remarkable sports moments because it was about more than just sports. It was about America and the country’s most nurtured values, a big part of which involved standing against the Soviet Union, atheism, and oppression. To Americans, this game was a good-versus-evil event.