The inaugural World Cup of Hockey began with the expectation of yet another
Canadian triumph by a collection of some of the greatest players ever to take
the ice and ended with an unexpected celebration by a band of upstart young
Americans that included a dislocated jaw for future Hall of Famer Mike Modano
and a raucous celebration at a Greek restaurant in Montreal while the host
nation mourned.
Buccaneers Jerseys Sale .Twenty years later,
Team USA -- victors in that unforgettable 1996 tournament -- will be enshrined
in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in November as part of its 2016 class. So with a
new, revamped World Cup of Hockey set to unfold Sept. 17 to Oct. 1 in Toronto,
we revisited one of the seminal moments in American hockey history.The World Cup
was a direct descendant of the wildly successful Canada Cup -- an international
hockey tournament in which the best players from all nations, pro and amateur
alike, could compete against one another -- which had been the brainchild of
former players union head Alan Eagleson. The first Canada Cup, held in 1976, was
notable for Bobby Orrs gritty performance for Team Canada as his NHL career
neared its premature conclusion. Subsequent tournaments took place in 1981,
1984, 1987 and 1991.In 1998, less than two years after the first World Cup, the
NHL would send players to the Olympics for the first time, and the face of
best-on-best hockey would change forever. But until that point, the Canada Cups
represented the grandest stage for the sport. Those tournaments had produced
some of the greatest hockey ever, but through its five incarnations no American
team had ever managed to break through against Canada and come home a
winner.Until 1996. This is the story of the memorable first World Cup of Hockey,
as told by people influential in the hockey world.Joe Pelletier, co-author of
The World Cup of Hockey: A History of Hockeys Greatest Tournament:?The Canada
Cup was always kind of haphazardly scheduled. You never quite knew when the next
one was going to be. There was a lack of international hockey at the time, with
the Canada Cups demise and the Olympics not quite there yet. So this was a great
way of quenching that [thirst] here in Canada. Everybody loves best-on-best
hockey, whether its in September or in February or on the moon.Lou Lamoriello
was the general manager of a New Jersey Devils team that won a Stanley Cup in
the spring of 1995. After being selected as Team USAs GM, Lamoriello chose an
old pal from his days at Providence College to coach -- Ron Wilson.Ron Wilson,
head?coach, Team USA:?I had coached the world championships the year before, and
we did pretty well. So Louie flew me out to New Jersey, and by the end of that
day I knew I was going to be the coach. Its Lou Lamoriello. Hes my college
coach. Hes not flying me out there for nothing. I didnt expect us to win or
anything like that. But I was certainly thrilled to be the coach.Phil Housley,
Team USA: [Wilson] was a great technician. He understood the game, as far as
systems and what worked. And then he had to orchestrate the players to get them
into that system. Canada always had a pretty physical team, starting with the
back end and some agitating forwards. So we had the Hatchers [Derian and Kevin]
and?John LeClair?and Joel Otto and Keith Tkachuk and?Bill Guerin?and players
like that who could match up physically to them. That was one of the things
[Wilson] looked at: not only having the skill set, but having the physical part
of the game as well.Brett Hull, Team USA:?Ron was the best coach for us. He was
funny. He was sarcastic. He knew that all he had to do was, I guess you could
use the word motivate. He talked about how nobody respected us and how we needed
to go out and earn that respect. That was kind of the credo of the team: Yeah,
lets go and earn some respect. Lets not have them just hand it to us. Lets go
and get it ourselves.Doug Weight, Team USA:?I knew we could have a good team,
but I was like, Oh this is going to be a crazy tournament. From the minute we
got there it was, Nothings acceptable except winning. It was unbelievable. I
thought it was going to be loose, like, Hey, weve got something to prove. But it
was adamant to the point of anger, almost, in the first 10 minutes. It was,
Jokes over. Were going to be treated like kings, but were going to expect this,
this and this. We need everybody to come together. No selfishness, and we will
win this thing. And Ron was paramount in that -- not only in his confidence, but
in his demanding message.Brett Hull: You just looked at that team. It was like
that group of guys finally had matured enough, not only as people but as
players, and were at the real peak of their careers. They were young, but they
were unbelievably good players and they had grown up playing with each other. It
was kind of like they were family. You had a few interlopers come in there, like
me. But it was such a close-knit group. Wed go out after practice for lunch or
beer or whatever and everybody came. Everybody had a good time, and when it was
time to put the work boots on, wed go out and play hard. It was a real fun
summer.Mathieu Schneider, Team USA: I remember how fast the pace was from Day 1.
It was just incredible. Every single pass was on, and it was the highest level
of hockey I had ever played. When I went back to training camp after the
tournament was over, I was three steps ahead of everyone else. It was really
after we played the first couple of exhibition games that we realized how high
of a level we were playing.Doug Weight: I roomed with Hull. I still summer with
Brett now. And he hasnt changed. People think he was all, Oh, lets go score a
goal. But he said, Dougie, were winning this thing, and were going to be the
best line on the ice every night. And if you dont do it, Im going to get
somebody else to play with. But he was also awesome with me. Just a great guy.
Everybody thinks hes out having dinner every night. But every minute we were in
the room we were either doing a New York Times crossword puzzle or talking about
how were doing this play. Hey, you see how they played us on that? I couldnt
believe how focused he was.Brett Hull:?It may have not gone exactly that way,
but I [told Weight], With your ability and the way you can move the puck and
score as well, if we do it the right way, theres no question we could be one of
the best lines -- if not the best line -- in the tournament. I was expecting to
get the biggest goals. Lets go out when the chips are down. Lets have our line
get those big goals and show everybody else that we have a full complement of
players on this team and that were going to be a force to be reckoned with.Doug
Weight:?Right after the doors closed and [Wilson] was done bitching, [the
players] got up. It was like, If youre not going to fight tooth-and-nail and
give every single thing you have -- whether its five minutes or 30 minutes. ...
I dont care if you play 30 minutes on your [NHL] team and youre playing six here
and youre blocking shots here and youre not there, if youre on the power play.
[Chris Chelios] was like, You better give everything or Im going to be f---ing
waiting for you after the game. Excuse my language.Joe Pelletier:?I think there
was great respect for the U.S. team [heading into the World Cup]. You always
kind of have Canada as the so-called favorite. But I think the U.S. team was
right there, a co-favorite.Brett Hull:?It was realistic [that the U.S. could
win] because in the years before there were good [American] players, but it
wasnt a full complement of real good players. It wasnt really a team. And all of
a sudden these guys like [Tony] Amonte, Weight, Guerin and Tkachuk all just came
up at the same time and were all really great players. So you finally got the
sense that this is a really good team. There just wasnt enough depth of quality
[on the past teams that U.S. put together] and then all of a sudden there was
tons of it.Bill Guerin, Team USA:?I remember wanting to play Canada and being
prepared for those types of games. We definitely had a swagger about us and a
chip on our shoulder. We were maybe a little cocky. And we didnt care. Thats why
we wanted to play Canada.While Team USA worked out at Providence College, Team
Canada gathered in the picturesque ski town of Whistler, British Columbia, in
preparation for the start of the tournament.Andy Murray, associate coach, Team
Canada:?I can remember the rink being packed with fans in Whistler for the first
practice, and watching [the players] walk in one at a time. It was a pretty
special group, thats for sure. We got right to work. Everybody was pretty
committed, pretty focused. I dont think theres ever been a Canadian who went
into an international competition with the mindset of, We dont want to dictate
how the game is played. That just sort of goes with the territory. We had
skilled players. We were going to play a puck-possession kind of game. We were
going to emphasize our skill and size and speed. The one thing we looked at was,
How are you going to divide ice time? Whos going to be a healthy scratch for the
games?Wayne Gretzky, Team Canada:?Obviously, we were really excited about our
team. We had some really good players and really good chemistry coming out of
camp. It was a fun camp up in Whistler, and the Canadian guys always work hard,
so it was a really strong, solid, hard-working camp. Everybody was really
positive about it. But we knew, coming out of camp, that the dynamics of the
tournament had changed. It wasnt so much going to be the Russians as our sort of
nemesis. We knew the Swedes were going to be better. We knew the Czechs were
going to be better. We knew the Americans were going to be way better. So we
knew we were in for a tough tournament.Rod BrindAmour, Team Canada:?Gretzky was
my hero as a kid. Then to get to play with him? I cant even really put it into
words. I got to play with him in the Olympics as well, and that was something
special, too. But I think for young players its all about what you take away,
and the guy who helped me the most [at the World Cup] was Steve Yzerman. I was
on his line. It was me and him and Theo Fleury. I kind of piggy-backed [on
Yzerman], what he was doing, his habits. Just the little things in the training
room. I realized, Wow, theres a reason this guys so good. I remember following
his routine as much as I could. And then he let me play center on that line.
Heres Steve Yzerman. He should be the guy saying, Ill play center. But he was
like, Rod, you take it. Ill play the wing. Stuff like is what sticks in my mind.
We all know hes a great player, but theres much more to him than that.If Team
USA represented a collective coming of age for a generation of young stars, the
96 tournament would represent a shifting of the guard?for Team Canada,?as
Gretzky, Mark Messier, Paul Coffey and other future Hall of Famers slowly edged
toward the end of their careers.Wayne Gretzky:?We sort of knew we were getting,
not to the end, but we knew changes were going to be made -- especially from
that 91 [Canada Cup] team and of course from the 87 team. So we knew there was
going to be new energy, new blood, new excitement. And that was a positive. We
looked at that as, OK, this is a good measure for Canadian hockey. Weve got new
blood and new energy and new players with great skills who are hard-working. So
it was all positive. Everyone was genuinely excited about it.Mark Messier, Team
Canada:?Canada had always been so focused on Russia. Even some of the teams like
Sweden had been very strong in international play for so long. But in that 91
[Canada Cup, when Canada beat the U.S. in the final], we noticed how the U.S.
was getting much stronger and presenting a bigger challenge for us. Fast-forward
to the tournament in 96, and now theyve got some players in the NHL who are
pretty much superstars. They put a team together that we knew was going to be a
formidable foe in that tournament, even before it started. You just looked at
their lineup and the accomplishments that their players already had in the NHL.
So we knew at some point that the United States would be a force to be reckoned
with.Keith Tkachuk, Team USA:?There were so many great teams. Canada always won.
And they deserved to win. And so I think everybody was under the assumption it
was just going to be a Canadian tournament win again. But we looked around that
[U.S.] dressing room. How many Hall of Famers were in there? You had?Chris
Chelios, Brian Leetch, Mike Modano, Brett Hull. It was so deep. And you had Mike
Richter in net. I think it was important that we believed in ourselves and in
Ronnie and Cunny [assistant coach John Cunniff] and Paul Holmgren. I mean, we
probably had one of the toughest coaching staffs around, minus Ronnie.Joe
Pelletier: The teams were so big and heavy. It was 1990s hockey. [Canada
had]?Eric Lindros, of course. Swedens [Mats] Sundin was impressive, too. I think
[Canada] was really trying to force this into being Eric Lindros coming out.
They named him the captain. [GM] Bobby Clarke was highly involved, and there was
some controversy back behind the scenes -- the old guard, the new guard.Marc
Crawford, associate coach, Team Canada:?What I really remember was the first
game against the Americans. It was a war. I had just come off the Stanley Cup
final [as coach of the?Colorado Avalanche].?Wed won the Stanley Cup that year.
That game, Canada-U.S. in the preliminary round, was so intense. I was so
worried that people were going to get hurt.Ron Wilson:?The one thing Canadian
guys had was that they were mentally willing to do anything to [an NHL]
teammate. If it was an American, they didnt care, theyd just run them over. I
made sure our guys had the mentality to do whatever it took to win the games. I
had no problem with the Hatchers. Derian Hatcher was scary. Hes so big. So mean
and tough. I had no problem with Chris Chelios. I knew Chelly would do anything,
but I needed to get the other guys -- the Brian Leetches and so on -- to be as
aggressive as they were. But really, once the tournament got going, I didnt have
to say anything to the players. They were unbelievable.One of the early
challenges for Team USA was in getting Chelios into the fold. He was coming off
a groin injury suffered during the Stanley Cup playoffs, and his sister was
getting married in the middle of the tournament. In the days leading up to
training camp, Chelios?often heard from his World Cup teammates, who cajoled him
to get to Providence.Chris Chelios, Team USA: I got calls at 2 or 3 in the
morning -- at bar time -- from the guys during the two weeks prior.The wedding
proved a bit of a sticking point, though, as Chelios sister was scheduled to get
married on the same day the U.S. was to play Canada in Philadelphia in
round-robin play. Chelios didnt want to miss the wedding, but GM Lou Lamoriello
wanted his players committed to the process from the get-go.Ron Wilson:?If you
know Lou, you know he doesnt make exceptions for anybody. He initially said,
Then [Chelios] cant be on the team. I remember thinking, This is the best player
in America. Finally, Lou agreed to let him go to the wedding.Lou Lamoriello:?I
can recall that game in Philly vividly. We had a plane get [Chelios after the
wedding], then we picked him up at the airport. He missed warm-up, but he got
there just in time for the game. He was one of the best players on the ice. What
more can you say. You know that story? Chris told you that story? I had a lot of
conversations with Chris and his dad. We all talked. A fathers conversation.
Chris was an integral part of that.Chris Chelios:?As soon as my brother-in-law
and sister kissed, I was out the door and on the way to the airport. I took a
lot of heat from my parents for that one.Team USA knocked off Canada 3-1 in the
round-robin game and would go 3-0 in preliminary play before facing Russia in
the one-game semifinal. Led by?Pat LaFontaines?short-handed goal and two
assists, the?Americans beat the Russians 5-2 in a game played in Ottawa.
Meanwhile, Canada had its hands full with Sweden in the other semifinal, where
it was taken to double-overtime before Fleury delivered the winner with 12.5
seconds left in the second OT to set up the best-of-three final with the
U.S.Wayne Gretzky: You know what? The amazing thing about Team Canada -- and it
goes all the way back to probably 72, and then 76, with Orr and Bobby Hull --
its a generation that just keeps passing the torch down all the way to when we
played 87. You never think, Oh my gosh, we might not win. We never thought that
way. Our mindset was always, Hey, were playing good teams here. They want to win
as bad as we do, but were really comfortable heading into a tight game, were
really comfortable heading into overtime. This is where were going to shine. So
there was never any negativity in a Team Canada locker room. We knew the Swedes
were going to be tough, and we knew they were a good team. We were genuinely
happy [after the game] because we knew we beat a good team.The best-of-three
finale between Canada and the U.S. began in Philadelphia on Sept. 10, with Games
2 and 3 (if necessary) set for Montreal and the new Molson Centre (now the Bell
Centre).Wayne Gretzky: Ill give you a little bit of trivia as to why its
two-out-of-three. Because in 1981 we had a really strong tournament in the
Canada Cup. When we played the Russians in the final and got beat 8-1, it was
Alan Eagleson who said, OK, this isnt right. You have a great tournament and you
lose one game and its over. What were going to do is make 84 a two-out-of-three.
So they highly anticipated a Canada-Russia final [in 84], and we had a horrible
tournament. There was a sort of Oilers-Islanders thing, and the team didnt
really come together until the end. Lo and behold, we finished fourth and the
Russians were first, so we had to play them in the elimination game. We beat
them in overtime, so that set the stage for 87, when we did two-out-of-three
[against Russia in the final]. Then 91 was two-out-of-three against the
Americans and of course 96. So thats why the two-out-of-three series was
originally set up. It was because we got beat 8-1 by the Russians. You know its
called the Canada Cup, so we make the rules, right?The Canadians took Game 1 of
the 1996 World Cup final 4-3, but the Americans served notice they were not
going to be cannon fodder for their neighbors to the north. Team USA tied the
game with 6.3 seconds left in regulation after Otto won a key offensive zone
faceoff. But Yzerman put the Canadians one win away from a championship with a
goal midway through the first overtime period.Mike Modano, Team USA:?They were
stacked. They couldnt have any more legends and superstars on that team. I think
after we beat the Russians, we knew Canada was going to be tough because we only
had one game in the U.S. and two in the Forum. Even Yzermans goal was
controversial. He was a couple of feet offside, but no one said anything about
that.Ron Wilson: The play was like 10 feet offside. Im not kidding. Right after
the game, I didnt know it was as offside as it was. Burkie [Brian Burke] was
working with the league. He came running down and said he wanted to see me.?I
said, Whats up, Burkie? He goes, Dont you f---ing dare say a word. The last goal
was offside. Its at least 10 feet offside. I said, What are you talking about? I
had no idea. He didnt want me to say anything, like I was known to do, or
complain about the referees. When they asked me after the game, I just said, We
got beat. I thought it was a good goal. I understand it might have been offside.
It wasnt the linesmans fault. It was just a play that happened, bang-bang.
Anybody can make that mistake. Stevie Y beat Mike Richter, simple as that. We
didnt use it as an excuse. We didnt play the game we needed to play to beat
Canada. The speech I made after that game was the best one I gave to the team. I
said, Were not making excuses. We can play better than this. Now we have to.Bill
Guerin:?Ill tell you what, we just thought we had such a great opportunity. Even
though we lost the game, we kind of accomplished what we wanted to accomplish
because during the first shift of the game, there were fights breaking out all
over the place. And that was the stand that we had to make. Win, lose or draw,
were not going to f---ing get pushed around. And that, to me, was a pivotal
part. It was dirty, mean hockey. It really was. It wasnt for everybody.Mike
Richter, Team USA:?We never got too far ahead of ourselves, where we felt, Oh,
geez, were behind a goal, or We have to win two in Montreal. We were just
worried about the next game, the next shift, the next moment that we could
control. Thats when you have to have patience mentally, knowing that when the
puck is dropped, well do what we have to do to give us the best chance to win. I
didnt feel like there was ever a point in that tournament when there was any
panic or any concern we werent going to figure out a way to get it done.Doug
Weight:?We were positive. Ill never forget how positive we were when we lost the
first game in the finals. It was like, Ah, were a better team. Were going to
beat em. I swear to God. I was young, I was like, Oh man, how are we going to
beat these guys twice? Seriously. We were so close. Why couldnt we win that
game? We came in with a purpose the next day. I give a lot of credit to Ronnie
and our leadership.Mathieu Schneider:?[Going to Montreal for Games 2 and 3] was
an incredible uphill battle. The tournament is so intense, so short. It wasnt
like youre playing a seven-game series and you have time to think about it.
Every single game that we played, the intensity level was through the roof.
After losing in Philadelphia, and knowing we had to play in Canada for the next
few games, in Montreal in particular, it was daunting -- no question -- but I
dont think there was ever a thought that we wouldnt be able to overcome it.Marc
Crawford:?Id played in the Quebec league, lived on the Quebec border. And in 96
it wasnt really that long past the referendum [to determine Quebecs sovereignty
and possible separation from Canada] and all of those things. I was so
enthralled with how unified Quebec was with the rest of Canada at that time. I
remember thinking that it would be really good when we won it in Montreal.Two
nights later, with the balance of the series shifted to Montreal, Team USA
bounced back with a solid 5-2 victory in Game 2. Richter foreshadowed his
series-changing play in Game 3 with a 35-save performance in Game 2, including
17 saves in the third period as Canada tried desperately to rally and prevent a
third game. The Americans scored twice into an empty net to produce a score that
was no way indicative of the closeness of the match. Mike Modano:?When we went
to Montreal after being down a game, Ron was great, too. He was like, What
better opportunity to do this, win two games in a row in Montreal against Team
Canada?Two nights later, the entire hockey world held its collective breath as
Canada and the U.S. met in a winner-take-all finale.Keith Tkachuk:?Me, Billy and
Dougie almost got in a couple of scraps [with fans] on the way from the hotel to
the rink before the game. I mean, these people were nuts. They were crazy.
Yelling at us, throwing stuff at us. All these people with the flags and their
faces painted.Bill Guerin:?Keith, Dougie and I were walking to the rink and
there were truckloads or vans of people just driving by and screaming at us,
just giving it to us. It was a riot-type atmosphere, it really was. It was
amazing. There was a lot of tension.Ron Wilson:?When we were having the pregame
skate, I said to Tony Amonte. Are you ready to be our Mike Eruzione? Youre both
Italian. Youre both full of s---. You both went to BU. I said, I have a feeling
youre going to be our Mike Eruzione.Mike Modano:?Because of the circumstances, I
think your focus and your commitment to detail is always much better when youre
on the road, even in playoff series. You really become tuned into what you have
to do. And in that sense, we really were. Because youre on the road, youre in a
tough rink to play in, the fans, the buzz around town, the whole thing. All
those things forced us to focus and think about what we were doing even more
than we would have at home in a more comfortable situation.The Americans opened
the scoring in Game 3 and held a 1-0 lead late in the second period. Richter was
sensational again, stopping 23 shots in the second period alone as he cemented
his place as tournament MVP.Mike Richter:?[Vincent] Damphousse had a breakaway
on me in the second period. He made about 14 moves -- and I was going about 15
different ways -- but I was able to get my stick back on the puck toward the
end. There were other ones when youre in position and youre able to make a save
and then control the rebound because youre not behind the play; youre
anticipating and youre in front of it. I felt somewhat sluggish in the first
period, but I got better as the game went on. Sometimes its easy when you get a
lot of work because you get into a rhythm, and that was the case [in that
game].Mark Messier: Richter kept them in the game, and [to] win championships,
thats exactly what needs to happen. They got the goaltending that they needed.
They found themselves in a game that they could win -- basically, a
next-goal-wins type of scenario. And they had some guys who could score goals
and take advantage of mistakes. We made some mistakes, and they took advantage
of it. Thats all they needed to tip the scale in their favor.Wayne Gretzky:?We
did have a great second period. Richter was real good. I remember sitting beside
Mess, who had played with Richter in New York. Being in the [Western
Conference], you dont see a guy as much as you do in the East. Mess was just
going on and on about how if this guy gets on, hes one of the greatest goalies
who ever played. And Richter had a second period like you dream about. I always
say its like in 98 [at the Olympics]. We dominated the Czechs but [Dominik]
Hasek stood on his head. We were 1-1 going to overtime and we got beat. In 04
[at the World Cup]?Marty Brodeur?got hurt and Roberto Luongo went in net. The
Czechs dominated us but somehow we got into overtime and won it in overtime. So
you just never know. Goaltending is part of it, and thats part of what makes the
game so sensational.Mike Modano:?[Richter] was getting peppered. He was
phenomenal. He was just in such a zone. He had some of the best scorers in the
history of the game on him, one after another, and he was just kicking and
making saves. At a whole different level. Everybody was just ranting and raving
on the bench. Ron was losing it. He was like, Come on, Mikes keeping us in it
and weve got to do something. But I think that, save after save, [Richter] just
gave us much more confidence. It was like, Hey, were still alive here.Andy
Murray:?Ive never seen a goaltending display like the one that Richter put on in
the second period of the final game in Montreal. That may have been as good a
20-minute period that any Canadian team has ever played.Brett Hull:?We knew we
were going to have to weather a storm at some point. You can say the game should
have been over. Well, guess what? You can have all the best players in the
world, but if your goalie sucks, youre not going to win. So an integral part of
our team was Mike Richter, who was spectacular in the whole tournament.Rod
BrindAmour:?I thought we dominated, but when I watched it again it was like, We
should have won that. Mike Richter kind of stood on his head, and the Americans
capitalized when they had to.Brett Hull:?You didnt have to say anything. Its
pretty blatantly obvious that wed better get our s--- together here because if
were going to win, we need to start turning the tables the other way and start
tilting the ice toward their end.Team Canada finally tied the game at 1-1 late
in the second period and then took the lead on an Adam Foote goal with less than
eight minutes to go in regulation. For legions of Canadian fans -- and maybe the
players themselves -- this seemed to be the break they were waiting for, a
foreshadowing of a dam about to burst.?Ron Wilson:?As the game was going on I
remember thinking, Its going to come down to the last minute. We started the
third period in a 1-1 tie. When they took a 2-1 lead, I said, Theres no way
Canada is going to beat us on a goal like that from Adam Foote. He wasnt an
offensive player at all.Brett Hull:?Its crazy. Its back and forth. Its just
nail-biting. Were feeling the same things on the bench that the fans are
feeling. Youre just looking for something to turn the tide. Maybe the best thing
that happened was that Foote goal that put them ahead. Because maybe you get
that first goal and you relax and let your guard down. And all of a sudden they
come back kind of like we did.Frank Brown, current NHL VP and former hockey
journalist:?Footes goal was a shot from the top of the right-wing circle. I
think it was actually Hatcher who was in front of Richter. Richter never saw it.
It whizzed past his ear, and that was it, and it was 2-1. Youre playing in
Montreal and you know the noise there is unlike anyplace else. The other thing
that [Doc] Emrick says, again an impeccable truism, The expectation of a nation
was on Canada -- and, well, that can be pretty heavy.Instead, it was the
Americans who responded and put the game away with four goals in the final 3:18
of play, beginning with Hulls controversial deflection goal that tied the game
at 2-2 and set the stage for the American victory. Amonte netted the go-ahead
goal just 43 seconds later.Doug Weight: [Richter] got us through that 10-minute
period, when it literally could have been 6-1. We were just going, Oh my god.
Hes giving us a chance. Chelly was like, Wake the f--- up and play our game. Hes
kept us in it and now theyre deflated. We take it over. And [the Canadians] are
saying, Oh my god, we didnt take advantage of the empty nets and those saves.
And then it was all about taking that will away from them. As a player or a
coach, its taking that will and capturing those big plays and riding that wave
-- and we did. We came at them and came at them and came at them and got two,
three big goals ... and the rest is history.Ron Wilson:?Brett Hull scored the
first goal to tie it up with about five minutes to go. They thought it was a
high stick. It was the first time they ever used video review, too. Were
cheering, and I said, Guys, just relax. That goal is going to be good. Were
going to be able to cheer twice for this goal. Of course, we did. The goal
counted. Within a minute, Tony Amonte scored the next goal, but it looked like
he kicked it in. He got it on his stick. We had another video review. We had to
wait five minutes and then we get to cheer again. We were going nuts.Brett
Hull:?Not until we got up by two and there were a few minutes left [did the
Americans think victory was assured]. Canada was just too good. If you think
youve got them, then youre crazy. But it kind of turned into a blur. You have to
do your job. You cant make mistakes. You have to have your guy covered. And you
get so focused that, all of a sudden, you look up and realize theres a minute
left and youre up by two. You take a deep breath, and thats when you go, Holy
cow, we really could win this thing.Mike Modano:?I was with Keith and Billy and
Dougie and those guys on the bench. I screamed so loud that I dislocated my jaw.
It was locked. So I ducked back down on the bench and had to pop it back into
place. I just screamed so loud that I cracked my jaw. I couldnt believe it.
Because I had gotten hit by Ulf Samuelsson years ago and my jaw hurt for six or
seven years after that hit. And sure enough I screamed so damn loud it popped
right out.Brett Hull: I was just kind of dumbfounded. Id really never won
before. So Im on the ice and I look at Chelly and I go, What do I do now? He
goes, Well, drop your gloves and stick and start hugging people. I was like, Oh,
OK.Frank Brown: That team was created to answer every challenge. Every time youd
say, Yeah, but its in Canada and Canadas going to be better at this or at that
... Then you saw a Joel Otto, you saw a Derian Hatcher, you said, Wait a minute,
Canada isnt bigger than the U.S. anymore. And you saw a [Bryan] Smolinski out to
win faceoffs or when you saw the American defense as active as it was in the
offense. When you saw Richter staring down [Curtis] Joseph and everything that
Canada could muster -- including a Mount Rushmore of Gretzky, Lindros, Messier,
Sakic and Yzerman -- how in the world do you sit there as a coach and go, Yeah,
we can take them? And not only can we take them, but we can take them in their
country with -- what was it? -- four goals in what the last five minutes?Doug
Weight:?If we had played 10 games we might have lost the next six. We battled
and we won two straight in a place where no one in the world probably would
have, and it just made for such a great story.Frank Brown:?There was just a
defiance to [the Americans] throughout. And it wasnt like, We hope we can. It
was, We know. Were not taking a backward step. There was an answer for every
challenge. It reflected a change from hope to determination.David Ogrean,
executive director, USA Hockey:?Heres the spicy story: Game 3. [Longtime USA
Hockey executive] Art Berglund and I are in a suite. Lou Lamoriello is very much
a guy who doesnt like distractions, so I intentionally kept Art and myself away
from the locker room prior to the games. We didnt go down there and say, Hey,
good luck guys. We just stayed the heck out of the way. We didnt go down until
after wed won the final thing. We were in a suite with Bob Goodenow [head of the
NHLPA] and Dick Pound [a top International Olympic Committee member and a
Canadian]. I think there were only six or eight of us in there. With about five
or six minutes to go, I swear that Dick said something like, Geez, you guys
played well, because Canada was up by a goal. And after the final buzzer goes
off, I turn around. Theres no one in the suite, just Art and I. Theyve left. But
it was an interesting vantage point from which to watch the game.When it was
over and the final score of 5-2 had been recorded, the teams met for the
traditional handshake line, and then the victorious Americans would find the
streets of Montreal almost deserted as they made their way to a local Greek
restaurant for a celebration organized by Chelios. In time, players on both
sides of this epic series would come to consider it among the most important
hockey played in their careers. For the Americans, the win would stand as one of
the seminal moments in the history of the U.S. game.Mark Messier:?We saw it
coming in 91 [during the Canada Cup]. When we got to 96, we knew we couldnt just
go out and intimidate them. They had a big, strong, physical team, and they
could answer us in every way. So it became a real evenly matched game in every
way. And in that particular tournament, they got the best of us.Andy Murray:
That feeling in the dressing room after [the 96 final] was pretty tough. Its
like any loss, but its even more. I lost in the finals with the North Stars [in
1991], but I dont know if anything is as emotional as when it involves
country.Frank Brown: I have say to that [NHL commissioner Gary Bettman] greeting
12 U.S.-born players on the stage in Buffalo last June [at the NHL draft] --
including one of them named Tkachuk -- is telling and compelling. Because just
as the 80 team was the real launch pad, in my view, for the generation of
players that became the focal points in the 96 victory, this 96 victory
really?established USA Hockey. That applies to the entity as well as the macro
of hockey in the United States as credible, as serious, as a factor in the
hockey landscape. There would be no going back from that moment. One of the
truly wonderful Mike Emrick comments after the Americans had scored that cluster
of goals in the last few minutes of the third period, was when he said, This is
no miracle. This is a reward for building excellence. Thats really the summary
that stands through the ages.Brett Hull:?Like I said, Id never won before, and
it taught me what it was like to win and how awesome it was to feel that bond
and the effort that it took to do it. So from that point forward in my career it
was like, OK, I want to do this again. Sometimes its out of your hands. It
depends on your team and your organization, if they have the ability to put a
team together that has a chance to win. And, fortunately for me, I got to go to
Dallas and Detroit, where they did. I think it was really a game-changer for me
in terms of my mental awareness of what it took and how awesome the feeling was
to win.Frank Brown:?If Richter had been one molecule lesser than he was, we
wouldnt be having this conversation. Its really very, very simple.?Bill Guerin:
All Canadian teams, when theyre playing at home, just have such immense pressure
on them. And you could just see that, for some of the [Canadian] guys who had
the weight of the world on their shoulders, that it was such a downer. Things
like arent supposed to happen.Rod BrindAmour:?I can tell you its not so much for
me, because I was just one of the young guys. No one talked about me. I wasnt
counted on like a Gretzky. But Gretzky didnt play that much either. [Coach Glen
Sather] used Mess and Lindros line a lot. But I think that the weight of it all
was on Gretz. He took a lot of the brunt of [the loss], whether it was right or
wrong. I roomed with him at the Olympics. This guy cared so much about Canada
and how it was perceived. He was Hockey Canada. I know it was devastating to
everybody, but I think to him especially -- just because of who he was and what
he meant to the game of hockey, especially in Canada -- that he felt like he was
letting people down. And it wasnt his fault. Thats another takeaway I had from
it: just how much this guy cared about the game. I was so impressed.Wayne
Gretzky:?You know what? Therell never be a team thats as important [in the U.S.]
as 1980. Its kind of like theres only one 72 team [for Canada]. Nothing will
ever be that, but 87 was as close as therell ever be for Canada and that 96
American team will be as close to the 1980 team as therell ever be. And those
guys had charisma too, guys like Chelios and Leetch and Hull and Tkachuk and
Modano. They had a swagger about them, and that helped to popularize the sport
of hockey in the U.S.Bill Guerin:?That team was a groundbreaker. It wasnt just a
fluke. We werent just a one-trick pony. We changed the way people look at USA
Hockey because it wasnt a one-and-done. It was a series. And we did it in the
toughest environment in the toughest way against the toughest team. It was
big.Doug Weight:?Youre shaking hands and you go by Mess, and you go by [Paul
Coffey] and you go by Gretz and you go by Shanny [Brendan Shanahan] and you go
by Joe [Sakic]. I was like, We just won? Its amazing. Playing on North American
ice, it was the perfect storm. Its probably the best hockey weve ever been a
part of.Chris Chelios:?I know it still bugs Canada. They claim it to be their
sport. We claim its their only sport. Talking about that makes them sick to
their stomach. Winning it on their ice, it was a big step for all of us, that
group of guys.Brett Hull:?We had a fun time in Montreal. And it was funny
walking down the streets. It was almost like someone had died. [The Canadian
fans] were like zombies walking down the street, like, Oh my god, we lost.Doug
Weight:?Ill never forget walking to the restaurant afterward. It was
tumbleweeds. It was like Utica, New York. It was people with painted faces just
walking by us with their flags over their shoulders, no talking. It was quiet.
Ive never seen anything more surreal. My father and my in-laws were there. They
were like, I cant believe this place. Its like a religion. I said, Their
countrys going to be on shutdown for a week, you watch. Then we went to Chellys
Greek place and started breaking plates and had a great time.Bill Guerin:?We all
ended up going to this Greek place that would stay open for us and, next thing
you know, plates are flying, smashing. I remember one of the guys on top of a
cab jumping up and down. I wont say who. We had to watch each others backs that
night because we were out and there were some people who were not happy about
their team losing and wanted to try their luck with some of us.Mike Modano:?I
think its like winning a Cup with a guy. When you see him [later on], all of a
sudden you go back to that point. Its the same with Chris, every time I see him,
or Billy or Keith or those guys. We all won something together, so theres always
that instant flashback to those experiences and that time. Its still there and
will probably be until the day we die. Its the same with the Stanley Cup guys.
As soon as you see them or talk about them, its instant.Bill Guerin:?We couldnt
believe it. But we were also like, We did what we had to do to win. We finally
kind of confronted our demons. And we won. It was unreal. It was unbelievable.
It really was.--with files from Scott Burnside, Craig Custance, Pierre LeBrun
and Joe McDonald
Buccaneers Jerseys Hoodies . -- Team after
team passed on Andre Ellington in the draft.
Buccaneers T-shirts . A knee to the thigh
might have stung him the most, but his sixth straight double-double made up for
the brief burst of pain.
http://www.cheaptampabaybuccaneersjerseys.com/
. Peter Gammons, an analyst for Major League Baseballs network and website, drew
the ire of hockey fans on Sunday when he criticized the two NHL teams on Twitter
for their physical game the night before. What do you need to know about last
nights big stories? Pierre LeBrun gives us his take on the biggest and
best.Stars struck: Could this be a turning point for the Dallas Stars? The gutsy
decision by coach Lindy Ruff to scratch top defenseman John Klingberg on Monday
after the Swedish star was late for a team meeting seemed to send a message
through the entire Stars lineup. They looked energized and on a mission in a 3-2
OT win against the visiting Minnesota Wild on Monday night, captain Jamie Benn
wiring one top shelf for the winner, their first OT win this season. The Stars
have been hit hard by injuries since Day 1 of camp but that doesnt excuse the
poor play by healthy players, and Klingberg is among those who needs to be
better. I suspect he will be, after he gets back in the lineup. But the message
from Ruff was crystal clear: enough already. This is a team thats better than
this. We might look back later in the season and point to Nov. 21 being a moment
to remember for the Stars.Rangers rally: Talk about a statement game by the New
York Rangers on Monday night. The Blueshirts fell behind 2-0 on a pair of goals
from Pittsburgh Penguins rookie call-up Jake Guentzel (loved his familys
reaction to Jakes first goal on his first NHL shot). But, in their second game
in two nights, the Rangers stormed back with three second-period goals en route
to a 5-2 win in front of backup goalie Antti Raanta, with New York playing on
back-to-back nights. The guy at the heart of it all was captain Ryan McDonagh,
who was an absolute beast at both ends, his presence hovering during the entire
game. He had two assists and was plus-5. You knoow, I didnt think McDonagh had
the best of seasons last year, but just like his team this season, he has come
back and played some of the best hockey of his career.
Buccaneers Jerseys Store. Be excited if youre
a Rangers fan. The Rangers and Penguins meet again Wednesday night at Madison
Square Garden.Crease conundrum for Calgary: Safe to bet well see Chad Johnson in
goal for the Calgary Flames when they face the Columbus Blue Jackets in Columbus
on Wednesday. Playing on back-to-back nights, I dont blame Flames head coach
Glen Gulutzan for starting Brian Elliott in Buffalo on Monday night,?but the 4-2
loss wont help the former St. Louis Blues No. 1 find his way back into the good
graces of his bench boss. The Flames, one of the leagues bigger disappointments,
found a bit of mojo with Johnson in net last week, including Sundays win against
the Detroit Red Wings. So, Id be shocked if Gulutzan didnt go back to Johnson as
the Flames try to navigate their way through this six-game road trip and not
find themselves in too deep a hole when they return home. Trading for Elliott in
June was one of my favorite moves because I thought it was just what Calgary
needed. Who knows, the season is still young for Elliott. But hes got three wins
in 12 starts this season -- thats the bottom line. Makes you wonder if Calgary
shouldnt have given in to Ben Bishops contract demands on an extension and
instead made that trade with the Tampa Bay Lightning?at the draft. Easy to play
armchair quarterback now, but it does make you think.
Cheap NFL Jerseys Cheap NFL Jerseys China Cheap Jerseys From China Cheap NFL Jerseys Authentic Wholesale Jerseys China Cheap NFL Jerseys China NFL Cheap Jerseys ' ' '