SOCHI, RUSSIA – T.J. Oshie kept jumping over the boards, hoping he had a few tricks left in his bag that might fool his worthy opponent. Should he deke, or go backhand, or perhaps lift one top shelf?
Oshie had studied Russian goalie Sergei Bobrovsky on video and figured a few of his favorite moves wouldn't work against him in a shootout. Oshie eventually ran out of fresh ideas, but he kept hearing his name called and the pressure kept building and the crowd grew louder and the moment kept forcing him to improvise.
"I had to go back to the same moves a couple of times," he said. "I was running out of moves."
Finally, on his sixth shootout attempt, the kid from tiny Warroad, Hockeytown USA, chose the perfect move and buried the puck in the net.
Oshie's goal in the eighth round of the shootout gave Team USA a 3-2 victory against Russia in an Olympic game that felt as if it would never end yet somehow left you craving more.
"It was amazing," Team USA's Patrick Kane said. "I don't think anyone could ask for a better game. Just a fun game to be a part of, a great atmosphere and great finish."
Unlike in 1980, this one didn't produce a miracle finish, just an epic one, the kind that won't fade in our memory over time. How often does a game that's smothered in hype actually exceed our expectations? This one did.
Russia was ready for this stage and did itself proud. Fans crammed inside Bolshoy Ice Dome and created the kind of noise that made your head pound and heart race. The place swelled with a roar every time Russia zoomed the puck up the ice.