WASHINGTON -- Matthew Miller had his back to the I-35W bridge the instant it buckled and collapsed into the Mississippi River bluff just yards behind him.
When the 21-year-old construction worker turned and saw what happened, he hardly had time to think -- other than to say a quick, silent prayer.
But over the next four hours, authorities say, he helped save at least eight survivors, including fellow workers and a Savage family of four that rode the bridge down in horror.
"I just followed the screams," Miller said. "I knew there were cars down at the bottom."
Miller's feat, although acknowledged by Minneapolis police, came to public light only last week, when the Congressional Medal of Honor Society announced that he is a finalist for its first Above & Beyond Citizen Honors for unsung heroes.
The award, to be presented by retired Gen. Colin Powell on March 25, would be the first national recognition for any rescuer in the Aug. 1 bridge collapse, which took the lives of 13 people. Among those who died: Miller's co-worker Greg Jolstad, who had been joking with him hours before.
"I'm not really a big hero. I don't need to have that label," said Miller, a senior at Bethel University in Arden Hills.
Plenty of the uninjured workers in Miller's crew jumped into the fray in the first chaotic moments after the bridge collapse. Miller, now 22, gives them as much credit as anyone. But he was singled out by Tom Sloan, a vice president at Progressive Contractors Inc., the company that had the resurfacing contract on the bridge.