I just finished watching the Netflix documentary. A couple 'notes' that came to mind:
- Only the rare glimpse of defenseman Bobby Suter (the 'other player' from Madison and UW). He must have been doing his job well. LOL
- The segments interviewing Mark Johnson at the LaBahn Arena in Madison were recorded across from the main/only concession window, and there are a couple screens mounted to the wall above it, so people waiting in line during a game can keep an eye on what's happening behind them on the ice. MJ is looking up at those screens while watching game footage and commenting on it.
- I was about a year out from graduating from UW, and was in my first year (of only two) teaching high school math in a town called Hortonville, WI. The documentary seems to imply that the Russian game was televised live; at least it seemed to me they were doing that when they were showing the Eruzione family watching in Boston. Maybe it was somehow shown live in Boston, because there were so many players from there playing; but in most of the country, it was definitely not shown live. I remember being in the teachers' lounge between classes while one of the earlier games was being played mid-week, and hearing the score on the radio, then seeing only part of that game on ABC that night. The thing about it that "kids" these days would have trouble believing is that the TV coverage we got during the Olympics was a maybe four-hour broadcast that night, on only one channel. And they had to fit everything from that day into that four hours. So, maddeningly, you might get ten minutes of hockey, then they'd show some figure skating, and then bobsled, and skiing, before going back to hockey for another chunk of the game. The Russian game was played in the later afternoon on a Friday, but not broadcast until that night. Maybe they showed it in full, but I'm not 100% of even that. And I don't recall for certain, but I think I knew the outcome already by the time the delayed broadcast got to "Do you believe in miracles?"
- I also remember being out at bar with my brother and a couple of his friends the next night, Saturday, explaining to them that they still needed to beat Finland the next day to win the gold, and that was no sure thing. In the documentary, when they start showing that Finnish game, on the shot of the TV broadcast they used, you can see that it says "LIVE", because that was unusual, and so needed to be noted on-screen. I expect that that game was shown live in full during the day on that Sunday