It was around 4:40 in the afternoon on Wednesday, February 24th. The third period of the quarterfinal game between the United States men’s hockey team and the countering team from Switzerland was just beginning. It was also the defining moment for Ron Wilson and his US team in the 2010 Olympics.
The first two periods were played to a 0-0 deadlock. Swiss goalie Jonas Hiller had turned aside 32 American shots and was single-handedly responsible for his team being remotely close to being competitive. The Americans had thrown everything at Hiller and the Swiss net with nothing to show for it.
This would be frustrating for any team, but the way the second period ended could have broken the backs of a team that no one expected to be playing in the top position.
In the waning moments of the middle period, USA’s Ryan Kesler threw the puck on goal in a desperate attempt to find some offense. For the next two seconds the entire arena seemed to hold it’s breathe as the puck fluttered into the air. Hiller tried to swat the puck out of harms way to let the period expire, but instead the shaft of his stick nicked the edge of the puck, causing it to tumble towards the open Swiss net. The pucks path included a bounce off of Hiller’s shoulder as it careened backward.
As the puck crossed the goal line and nestled into the back of the net, the Americans celebrated and the arena’s goal horn sounded, seemingly ending the long search for offense on the United States’ bench. There was just one problem; there was no time left on the clock.
As the referees conferred and the benches pleaded their cases, videos were shown in the arena and on network television. As the arena crowd watched the video and corresponding clock, both cheers and jeers were loudly heard. The puck sat directly on the thin red line as the clock ticked down to 0.0 seconds. Evidence showed that the puck was around one tenth of a second away from crossing the goal line in time to count, marking another disappointing result for Team USA.
This is where the game could have turned.
The United States could have traveled down two different roads. They could have been deflated, feeling that there was just nothing they could do to score a goal that would actually count. However, they chose a different road, a road that included a never say die attitude implemented by Wilson and carried out by top-line forward Zach Parise.
Parise scored two third period goals to give the United States a less than comfortable win and a birth into the semifinals to face the winner of the game between Finland and the Czech Republic.
With the US on an early third period power play, the Americans showed their resolve and stuck with their game plan of simply continuing to try to crack the armor Hiller seemed to be hiding under his chest protector. Brain Rafalski, whose two goals helped the US defeat Canada earlier this week, fired a wrist shot from just inside the blueline. His shot was strategically tipped on goal by Parise, up and over Hiller for the first goal of the game and the first sigh of relief for the US players. The puck barely avoided being cleared away by Switzerland’s Thierry Paterlini as it slowly trickled into the goal past an outstretched Hiller.
Perhaps both teams seemed to relax a bit too much as the game really seemed to open up from there.
Just over a minute after the US took it’s much-deserved lead, Sandy Jeannin of the Swiss team took a pretty pass into the US zone and out waited a challenging Ryan Miller. He slid the puck past Miller’s pad and appeared to have tied the game. However, the puck grazed off the post and Kesler was there to save the day, sweeping the puck off the vacant goal line.
A mere 29 seconds after the Swiss scoring scare, the Americans came blasting into the Swiss zone. Patrick Kane grabbed the puck from a hustling Kesler and fed it back to defenseman Ryan Suter. Suter fired a snap shot which found the side of the net off to Hiller’s stick side. The horn again sounded, but referee Paul Devorski immediately waved the goal off saying Kesler, who just played hero at one side of the rink, interfered with Mathias Seger in front of the net. Instead of the 2-0 lead, the Americans were forced to kill a penalty.
They killed that penalty and held off any other Swiss attack that was formulated, resulting in Hiller having to be pulled for an extra attacker in the final seconds. Parise poked the puck off a Swiss stick and hurried to wrist a shot into a wide open net for his second goal of the period and an insurmountable 2-0 lead.
Ryan Miller recorded a 19-save shutout, the first since Mike Richter did it against Germany in 2002.
The Americans celebrated as if the gold medal was theirs after the game, but in order to capture something the US hasn’t claimed in 30 years they will need to continue their strong effort into the next game, staying focused and maintaining their hungry attitude as the hopes of a nation rest on their starred shoulders.
