From the coffee shops and bars to the local grocery stores, the neighbors know all about Mike Eruzione, Buzz Schneider and John Harrington for their roles in one of the greatest upsets in the history of sports.
They are long since retired, now more focused on their golf games than their legacies. But with the Americans among the favorites to win gold for the first time since 1980, they and their teammates know they will the subject of beloved remembrances across the country even if the young men on the ice know more about the ''Miracle on Ice'' from a movie than real life.
''It's been a great run,'' Eruzione said. ''And it's going to continue.''
Eruzione and other members of the gold-medal-winning 1980 U.S. Olympic team recently received Congressional Gold Medals, and their legend only grows with time. They are in their 60s and 70s now, long removed from beating the Soviet Union and then gold in Lake Placid, New York, 46 years ago and yet their names are still spoken with reverence because the accomplishment in the middle of the Cold War transcended hockey.
''What's amazing to me is we still carry this aura,'' Rob McClanahan said. ''It blows me away what continues to exist."
Remembering 1980 — or not
When Eruzione, McClanahan and the other surviving players get together at an event, a wedding or when their group chat lights up, the conversation is rarely, if ever, about the tournament that made them famous.
''We talk about whose golf game sucks, who's a sandbagger, who's fat, who s bald, who's divorced: stupid, immature stuff,'' Eruzione said. ''Forty-five years seems like a long time ago, but when we're together, sometimes it seems like it was yesterday.''