One of the more interested people in Minnesota watching Sunday's Olympic gold medal men's hockey game was Shattuck-St. Mary's High School coach Tom Ward. Five players in the game played for the Faribault, Minn., prep school, including Penguins captain Sidney Crosby, who scored the winning goal in the 3-2 Canadian victory, and Devils forward Zach Parise, who tied the score for Team USA in the final minute of regulation.
Team USA's Ryan Malone (Lightning) and Jack Johnson (Kings) and Canada's Jonathan Toews (Blackhawks) also played at the school. Three of the five goals in the championship game in Vancouver were scored by former Shattuck players, with Toews' goal giving Canada a 1-0 lead in the first period.
"I mean obviously being from the U.S., I felt bad for those guys, but like I said it was exciting to see the guys from Shattuck score, Toews getting the first one and Zach tying it up and Sidney getting the other one, so it was a good day for Shattuck hockey," said Ward, who is in his 11th year at Shattuck.
Ward recalls Crosby enrolling at Shattuck when he was 15, and even then, the hockey geniuses were touting him as the next big Canadian prodigy, matching Mario Lemieux. And he has done just what they expected -- with Lemieux's team -- leading Pittsburgh to the Stanley Cup last season at age 21.
Ward said the strength of all five players was their passion for the game, and that they were all hard-working kids who were cut from the same cloth.
Malone, 30, is the oldest of the group and was at the school in 1997-98, before Ward's arrival in 1999. Ward said he believes Malone, a Pittsburgh-area native, was "kind of one of the pioneers" of the Shattuck program. He went on to star at St. Cloud State for four seasons.
Of the five players in Sunday's game, Johnson and Crosby were the only ones who were teammates at Shattuck, in 2002-03, and they made quite a pair for one of Ward's best teams. That year, Crosby's only one at Shattuck, the Canadian star had 72 goals in 52 games.
Crosby had four goals and three assists in the Olympics, while Parise had four goals and four assists and Toews had a goal and seven assists.