
Kings Honor U.S. Hockey Legend
October 27, 2003 - Central Hockey League (CHL)
Lubbock Cotton Kings News Release
LUBBOCK â The Lubbock Cotton Kings hockey team will wear H.B. stickers to honor the passing of Herb Brooks.
The Cotton Kings have two players from the United States â Joe Blaznek and Mike Brusseau. The Kings front office and hockey department are almost all from the U.S.
"When I was growing up, everyone had that poster," said Kings forward Joe Blaznek referring to the 1980 U.S.A. hockey team poster. "It was a moment that was big for hockey in America and we are not known for hockey. Everybody knew who Herb Brooks was."
Brooks coached the U.S. ice hockey team twice in the Olympics. His squad upset U.S.S.R and Finland to win the gold medal in 1980. He also lost to Canada in 2002 in the gold medal game.
"I decided to put the patch on the jerseys to honor the best coach in U.S.A. hockey," said equipment manager Tom Carlson. "He helped put hockey back on the map after the win in 1980. It will be hard for someone to step in and replace Herb Brooks."
Brooks died in a car accident in early August. See attached picture of Blaznek's locker and the article from the Associated Press on Brooks.
Season tickets for the coveted gold level are still available by calling 747-PUCK(7825). Single game seats are also on sale.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Herb Brooks, who coached the United States hockey team to the "Miracle on Ice" victory over the Soviet Union at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics, died Monday in a car wreck. He was 66.
The Hall of Famer was killed when his minivan rolled over at a highway intersection north of the Twin Cities and he was ejected, police said.
Brooks attended a Hall of Fame celebrity golf event and was on his way to the Minneapolis airport to catch a flight to Chicago when the accident occurred.
Brooks was behind the bench when the Americans pulled off one of the biggest upsets in sports history, beating the mighty Soviets with a squad of mostly college players.
That shocking victory, plus beating Finland for the gold medal, assured the team a place in sports immortality and gave the nation a reason to celebrate at a bleak time in its history.
The hostage-taking in Iran, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the energy crisis had cast a pall over the United States.
The young U.S. team was given no chance against a veteran Soviet squad that had dominated international hockey for years and had routed the Americans 10-3 in an exhibition game at Madison Square Garden the week before the Olympics.
On Feb. 22, 1980, the U.S. team scored with 10 minutes to play to take a 4-3 lead against the Soviets and then held on. As the final seconds ticked away, announcer Al Michaels exclaimed, "Do you believe in miracles? Yes!"
It remains one of the most famous calls in sports broadcasting history.
Brooks' leadership helped turn a ragtag team into champions. He had hand-picked each player.
"You're looking for players whose name on the front of the sweater is more important than the one on the back," Brooks once said. "I look for these players to play hard, to play smart and to represent their country."
Players kept a notebook of "Brooksisms," sayings the coach used for motivation, such as: "You're playing worse and worse every day and right now you're playing like it's next month."
said making one of Brooks' teams was an "extraordinary accomplishment."
"It is devastating to all of us in the hockey world that his passion for the game, his insight, his foresight, have been taken away," NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said.
Brooks returned to lead the 2002 U.S. Olympic hockey team to a silver medal finish. Players from the 1980 team, led by Mike Eruzione, lit the Olympic cauldron at the opening ceremony in Salt Lake City.
When he decided to coach the U.S. team again, Brooks was asked why he would return after writing the most improbable story in hockey.
"Maybe I'm sort of like the players -- there's still a lot of little boy in me," Brooks said. "And maybe I'm a little smarter now than I was before for all the stupid things I've done."
After the Lake Placid Games, Brooks coached the New York Rangers (1981-85), where he reached the 100-victory mark faster than any other coach in franchise history. He coached the Minnesota North Stars (1987-88), the New Jersey Devils (1992-93) and the Pittsburgh Penguins (1999-00). He also led the French Olympic team at the 1998 Nagano Games.
Born in St. Paul, Brooks played hockey at the University of Minnesota, where he later coached from 1972-79, winning three national titles.
"My gut reaction is Minnesota lost its head coach today. Herb Brooks was a Minnesota legend, a Minnesota treasure," said Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a hockey fanatic.
Brooks was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 1990.
"He truly was part of our American hockey heritage," said Tom Sersha, executive director at the Hall of Fame.
Brooks could always get players motivated for a game, firing them up to overcome huge odds. Before playing the Soviets, he told them: "You're meant to be here. This moment is yours. You're meant to be here at this time."
Right after the victory, the coach headed to the locker room, leaving the ice to his players.
"It was not my spot," he said years later. "I always say sort of flippantly, 'I had to go to the bathroom. Or, 'If I'd have went on the ice when this thing happened, someone would have speared me or something.' It's a great feeling of accomplishment and pride. They had to do it; it was their moment."
Brooks never had his own moment as a player. He was the last player cut from the 1960 U.S. gold-medal team, and he played in the 1964 and 1968 Olympics without winning a medal.
Brooks is survived by wife Patti, son Dan, and daughter Kelly.
Central Hockey League Stories from October 27, 2003
- Scorpions Drop Pair of Tight Games - New Mexico Scorpions
- Mudbugs Week in Review - Bossier-Shreveport Mudbugs
- CHL Names Week's Best - CHL
- Amarillo Falls to Wichita Despite Best Effort of Season - Amarillo Gorillas
- Marcellus Earns Player of the Week Honors - Tulsa Oilers
- Kings Honor U.S. Hockey Legend - Lubbock Cotton Kings
- Shorthanded Thunder Take Weekend Sweep - Wichita Thunder
- Saints Week in Review - San Angelo Saints
- Oilers Take 2 of 3, Back in First Place - Tulsa Oilers
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