Mark Pavelich grappled with mental illness in the final years of his life, long after playing a big role in the ''Miracle on Ice'' in 1980. He was charged in 2019 with a felony for assaulting a neighbor he thought had spiked his beer, and experts diagnosed him with a mild neurocognitive disorder due to a traumatic brain injury that was likely related to repeated head injuries.
''I'm convinced it happened because of the number of hits he took, and also he had some real personal trauma in his life,'' lifelong friend Ronn Tomassoni said. ''It all caught up to him at the end.''
Going to the Eagle's Healing Nest in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, seemed to help. Sister Jean Pavelich Gevik felt she had her brother back. Neal Broten said he and other U.S. Olympic teammates didn't realize how much pain Pavelich was feeling.
"He sounded fine. Everything was great,'' 1980 U.S. captain Mike Eruzione recalled. ''I thought he was very comfortable and in a great spot, in a great place. But when you have that kind of illness or sickness, you never know. And I don't think anybody knew.''
Pavelich died by suicide on March 4, 2021, his death one of several linked to hits to the head from playing hockey, and his sister suggested CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, may have been a factor. Before taking his life, he wrote her a sizeable check to keep efforts going at The Ranch — Teammates for Life for athletes, veterans and first responders suffering from PTSD, substance abuse or mental distress associated with traumatic brain injury.
The Ranch had become a source of purpose for Pavelich, and the members of the country's last gold-medal winning men's hockey team have made it a point to raise money and awareness for it in his memory.
''He's part of our family,'' said Rob McClanahan, who also played with Pavelich in the NHL with the New York Rangers and roomed with him on the road. ''It's really important to know that we all struggle. I don't want to get hugely philosophical, but life is hard and things like this bring it to the forefront.''
Who Mark Pavelich was