The nickname for Cortina d’Ampezzo is “Queen of the Dolomites,” which is a sellable title for a winter paradise in the mountains of northern Italy. Cortina was the home of the 1956 Winter Olympics, when there were far fewer events and demands for venue excellence were minimal.
The hockey competition was conducted outdoors, inside a wooden stadium that was also the site for the Opening Ceremony.
Cortina has a permanent population of 6,000 that soars during the long winter season for skiing and other activities. The Olympics are returning for the first time in 70 years in February — although only for a few events, with the hockey (now for men and women) hours away in modern arenas in Milan.
This does not change my opinion on a first choice if allowed to go back in time to cover a sporting event:
It would be early in the morning of Feb. 1, 1956, and I would have sent by telegraph a gamer, a column and a sidebar on the United States’ 4-1 victory over Canada, and now I’d be following in the path of Yanks coach John Mariucci as he celebrated in quaint bistros the win over his main rivals.
“Maroosh,” as coach of the Gophers, had been waging his battle against teams built on Canadian juniors taking over U.S. college hockey — to the point he had Minnesota boycotting games vs. Denver, even with the two teams being in the WCHA.
The politics would have mattered not to me … it would have been hanging out with Maroosh, belting down a few, watching the legend of Eveleth enjoy this moment in his gregarious style.
These Cortina tales have been relayed to me through the decades by two witnesses who were star players and also Eveleth legends: Top scorer John Mayasich, still with us but now retired from curling, and the recently departed Willard Ikola, named the top goalie in Cortina.