Unblinded with Sean Callagy - Mike Eruzione: The Miracle on Ice & Team USA Winning Olympic Gold
Episode Date: March 3, 2026Sean Callagy is with “Miracle on Ice” captain Mike Eruzione to talk about what leadership looks like under impossible pressure, why Olympic moments still unify a divided country, and how belief be...comes a standard that future generations can build on. The conversation also reflects on Team USA winning the men’s hockey gold medal this year (as referenced in the episode’s opening), and how that moment echoes the legacy of 1980.Beyond the story, Mike breaks down the leadership principles that actually win: staying present, managing emotion, and refusing to carry yesterday into today—whether that’s a mistake, a bad shift, or even a big win. He talks about locker-room leadership and the “quiet decisions” behind legendary outcomes: preparation, discipline, trust, role clarity, and the ability to keep the team steady when pressure spikes. The through-line is simple and hard: belief isn’t hype—it’s earned through habits, composure, and commitment to the next play, and that same mental framework applies far beyond hockey to business, family, and life.Key Themes- Leadership doesn’t announce itself. It shows up in moments. - Why wearing “USA” hits differently than any pro jersey. - The Miracle on Ice as a blueprint for belief, composure, and team identity. - Passing the torch: letting new heroes become the standard. - Giving back: Mike’s charity, scholarships, and the real meaning of legacy. Episode Highlights- Mike shares what it’s been like after Milan and why demand for his message surged. - Sean frames Mike as a rare “unifying” figure in American culture—and Mike responds with humility. - The behind-the-scenes impact of the Netflix documentary and how it landed emotionally for the team and families. - Mike breaks down exactly what he told Team USA before gold-medal moments: “the past is over—- this is the game that counts.” - Mike explains Winthrop Charities, how he funded scholarships, and why giving back is “fun.” Notable Quotes “There’s no greater feeling than putting a USA jersey on.” “Those games are over and those games don’t mean a damn thing. Now you’re playing for the Olympic gold medal.” “It’s more important to be a good person, be a good neighbor, be a good friend…”Timestamps 00:00 – The Miracle on Ice legacy and why it still matters02:45 – Sean’s intro: Milan, gold medals, and why Mike’s message is needed now04:06 – Mike reacts to the post-Milan surge in attention and speaking requests07:19 – “USA jersey” pride and what Olympic competition represents08:45 – The Netflix documentary: what surprised Mike and why it hit so hard10:46 – Winthrop Charities: why Mike started it and how it gives back11:48 – Selling memorabilia, funding scholarships, and building a family legacy12:53 – Sean offers a donation to support Mike’s foundation14:01 – What Mike told the women’s team before playing for gold14:53 – What Mike told the men’s team: “this is your time”16:02 – The gold-winning moment and the “hockey family” behind it17:38 – Final message: belief, hard work, and being a good personIf you’ve ever needed proof that belief can outlast noise, pressure, and doubt—this interview is it. Mike Eruzione’s legacy isn’t only what happened in 1980. It’s the standard of leadership, humility, and character that keeps getting passed forward.
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In a time of great divide, few people can truly be called unanimously an American hero.
Imagine mess.
It's 1980.
The Cold War is frozen solid.
The world is divided by ideology, fear, and nuclear tension.
On one side stands the Soviet machine.
Seasoned, professional, unstoppable.
On the other side, a group of American college kids.
No NHAL contracts, no guarantees, just the least.
And one captain.
Michael Ruzioni wasn't supposed to change history.
He wasn't drafted into hockey royalty.
He wasn't the biggest, the fastest, or the most type.
But leadership doesn't announce itself with hype.
It revealed itself in moments.
And in a moment that felt larger than sport,
larger than politics,
larger even than the game itself,
He did something that still echoes 46 years later, with one goal, one swing of destiny.
He didn't just score against the Soviets. He ignited a country.
But here's what makes it even more extraordinary.
The golden ended in 1980. It became a standard.
It became the blueprint for what American Olympic hockey could be.
Because just last week, 46 years later, when the United States once again stood across from Canada with Olympic gold on the line,
When a new generation carried the crest, when overtime tension filled the world,
and America won gold again.
That moment in Milan didn't start there.
It traced this lineage back to Lake Placid.
Back to a captain who showed the world that belief could defeat inevitability.
Back to Mike Arruzioni.
Every American player who laced up for that gold medal game was skating in a reality that did not exist before 1980.
Before you, before that goal.
that's legacy. That miracle wasn't just the win, that miracle was leadership under impossible pressure.
The miracle was composure when the world expected collapse. The miracle was a young captain who carried
not just a team, but a nation's hope and delivered. In 46 years later, another generation proved
that what you built was not a moment, it was a foundation. But today we don't just welcome an Olympic gold medalist.
We welcome the man whose leadership created a ripple, powerful enough to reach across nearly half a century.
The standard bearer, the original captain, the living proof that miracles don't fade, they multiply.
Ladies and gentlemen, the heart of the Maricon Ice, Mike Perusian.
46 years later, no gold medal since 1980, who was going to speak to the men's team before they take the ice against Canada?
the most decorated gold medal winning team in U.S. men's Olympic hockey history,
and who's going to speak to the women's team before they take the ice seeking gold?
And of course, both the United States men's Olympic hockey team in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan
and the women's Olympic hockey team, the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, both win gold medals over Canada,
both in overtime, both by a score of 2 to 1, Mr. Mike Arruzioni.
Mike, I'd love to just kick this thing off with saying thank you so much for being here today.
And just to ask you, what's this been like since being in Milan, first Olympic gold medal for U.S. men's hockey?
Yeah, please.
It's been absolutely incredible.
I told my wife, I didn't play in this team, but if you saw the phone messages, emails, the request for me to speak at sales meetings.
I mean, I think I probably in the last four days had 15.
to 20 request for sales weings.
It's been crazy.
You know, and I didn't know.
I was surprised by it all, but, you know, it was a great moment.
You know, hockey wise.
It was a great moment for men and women's hockey.
And all these, you know, like I said, corporations.
I think I got a span in at one point in the next few weeks,
that of the sudden days of the week, four of them are going to be flying from Vegas,
for Dallas to Scottsdale and then to Orlando.
So, you know, it's been, it's been incredible.
Well, congratulations.
I don't hear you.
Oh, thanks.
Okay, I got you again.
Yeah.
And so, Mike, what I said, yeah.
I mean, you know, I didn't expect any of this.
We, you know, we were rooting for the team.
I had, like I said, I had nothing to do with what they did,
although I did get a chance to speak to the men's team before the game
and the night before.
and then I did speak to the women's team the night before their game.
So it was nice, you know, that they talked to me and I had a chance to talk to them.
But, you know, the games ended and we won, and I get on a plane and blew home.
And then my phone just blew up.
I think I had, I think I had 100 or something text messages from people all across the country.
And then all of a sudden the other request came in to, you know, speak at that sales meeting.
So I don't know.
We'll see how long it left.
Yeah. Well, here's what I'd say. So again, this is Sean Caligy and Mike Arruzioni was the first guest on our Unblinded Podcast, which is now moved to number one on Apple Business Podcasts. And we've had incredible people on there, Mike Tyson, Magic Johnson, Tom Brady and others. But I'll say this, Mike. I think it's exactly what should be happening is you should be this much in demand. But I think regardless of what this incredible team did, I think you should be in that level of demand.
And regardless of the fact that we just won this gold medal, because what you did is heroic.
You are an American hero.
Mike Rizzini is.
And think of this, Mike, and for everybody who's watching this conversation we're having later,
who else could you truly label that's alive today in 2026 as an American hero?
All these incredible athletes we talk about, some people root for them, some people root against them.
But in America, Mike's the face of the miracle on ice, the greatest sports upset in
history and he's an American hero. And he, and you deflect Mike a lot. You're like, I'm just the
lunch pal guy. True, right? But really think about it. Who else is there in this divided country
to stand in such a unifying force? And when we last met, Mike, you said, hey, you know what?
I really think that this country could use a miracle now. And maybe what happened in Milan wasn't a
miracle. But what if it could be a unifying moment? And I think a lot of the outreach for you is because
you're the face of unification of America.
Like, what do you think of that when I say that, please?
Well, I'm obviously very, very nice to say that, and I appreciate that.
Look, John, you know, I've said this, and I said this throughout the Olympic Games,
other than being a police officer, a firefighter,
or somebody in the military who protects and serves our country,
there's no greater feeling than putting a USA jersey on.
And I think when we see our athletes,
because they're not competing for Boston, or Chicago or L.A.,
You're competing for your country.
You're not playing for a Super Bowl or a Stanley Cup or a World Series.
You're playing for an opportunity to win an Olympic gold medal.
And I think our team did it in 1980 and brought great joy to a country at a time
when we were looking for something to feel good about.
And I think our Olympic athletes that were in Milan, our men's team, our women's team,
and the other Olympians who won medals, the pride that they showed, the pride that they displayed,
just proves why we live in the greatest country in the world.
and, you know, I'm fortunate to be a part of a moment that touch the lives of so many people,
but so are the rest of my teammates.
And I guess because I've been a little more visible because of, you know,
I think being the captain in the last 40 years still traveling around the country doing different things like this.
I'm probably the faith of our team.
But I never looked at it that way.
I just looked at it as I was given an opportunity to play in the Olympic Games
and look what it turned out to be.
Amen to that.
And for anybody who hasn't seen the Netflix documentary,
you want to talk about serendipity, synergy.
So right before the Olympics, Mike Arruzioni and the Miracle Nice teammates,
and Mike is a teammate of teammates.
This brother wants unification.
He always amplifies and edifies the entire miracle-niquized team,
Herbrooks, all of it.
They had this incredible documentary.
They're all honored so beautifully in it.
Mike has such an incredible job.
If you haven't seen it, you have to see it.
And then right after this, U.S. wins the gold medal, brother.
Like, how is it easy as this is.
Yeah. The Netflix special was absolutely spectacular.
You know, when I watched it, you know, and Sean, you know, you've been around a lot of people.
You know, they interview you and you never know how it's going to end up, right?
They talk to you for an hour, two hours, or two days or whatever.
And then they're going to put it in a can and they're going to decide what they show and what they don't show and going to put it together.
and we didn't know how it was going to end up,
but when we saw it, actually, I had,
I think about 50, 50 to 60 people
in a little nine hole golf course
where I'm a member at in my hometown
and the people are all my cousins
who were up in the house I grew up in,
and we all sat and watched it.
And there were some stories in there that I didn't know about.
I mean, Kenny Morrow talking about his dad
and what his dad meant to him.
And if the guy's telling their story
about Netflix did a sensational
job of showing
not only what our team did, but even the political aspect of what was going on in our country.
And they brought it together.
People at Netflix have told me it might have been the best one they've ever done.
And Netflix has done a lot of great specials.
Tears come in my eyes, heartful.
I have a few minutes left.
You're so in demand right now, Mike.
Everybody goes check out that Netflix documentary.
If you don't cry during it, then I think you need to get a little bit of a checkup from the heart.
you know, the heart fund.
But Mike, I know you have a charity, a foundation that you help kids with.
Is that true, Mike?
Yeah, I started a foundation.
It's funny.
I did, who wants to be a millionaire a long time ago?
And I got $150,000 on the show.
And I thought of the charity, you know, I decided to start a charity.
And they called Winford Charities.
I kind of named it after my mother and father.
And it's great.
And you do more than anybody with a charitable organization.
So it was fun to do it.
It's fun to play Santa Claus.
It's funded at Christmas time by gifts for kids who can't afford them.
It's funded Thanksgiving to buy meals and turkeys for families who can't afford it.
You know, we probably didn't like parties to charity.
You know, I haven't raised that ridiculous amount of money.
wife and I were talking about yesterday because I just did something in a donation
back to my hometown. But we probably raised around $350,000 to $400,000 over the years.
And quite a few years ago, I sold almost all my memorabilia.
I have my skates left, my stick from the Finland game and actually my gold medal,
which I in the process of probably selling at some point.
But I got like $1.6 million for all my stuff.
and I endowed a scholarship
and my mother and father's name at Boston University
I put the rest of the money
some of the money into my charitable foundation
and then my three kids bought houses
with the money that was left over
and now that I have the medal of bill
and other items that I'm in the process
of deciding when I'm going to sell
I can take that money and endow some
futures from my grandkids
I have seven grandkids and an eighth
little girl coming shortly
so that's all part of a charitable organization
and, you know, it's fun to help.
It's fun to, you know, give back.
And, you know, like I said, it's fun to play Santa Claus.
And, you know, these things that my parents taught me is to give back
and never imagined I could give back what I've been able to.
But that's pretty special.
Well, Mike, you have given to this country so much.
And if you permit me, I'd love to do a small thing from my Caligee Christian Foundation
relative to the impact you create and to donate 50,000,
to your wind for all,
charitable foundation,
and I'd love to have that taken care of immediately.
So I just want you to know that that's the gratitude
for everything you've done for our country
to inspire me and to be the first guest ever
on the Unblinded Apple Business Podcast
that we've been number one and number two
at bouncing back and forth.
And you kick that thing off so powerfully,
and we're so grateful, Mike.
So if you permit me to do that,
make care of that revenue.
Yeah, that's more than charity was going.
And I know I had the pleasure, you know, when we were together to meet and chat and meet all the people that you are involved with.
And, you know, I think the things that you do and the people that you represent and the people that support you is a pretty special bond of people as well.
And it's nice when you can incorporate yourself or sit here yourself, you know, part of the family in some ways.
And, you know, clearly that's a very generous donation.
And thank you.
No, thank you, Mike.
And if I can ask this, you know, as we round the bend home.
when you were speaking to the team,
if you don't mind,
what did you share with the men's team,
the women's team before the game?
Well, I told both teams,
and I believe that the women's team
was the best women's team
we ever put on the ice,
and our men's team
was the best men's team
we ever put on the ice.
And I just told the ladies,
the thing I carked the ladies about
was they had played Canada six times
already during the year
and pretty well dominated them.
And I just try to tell them
that those games are over
and those games don't meet a damn thing.
Now you're playing for the Olympic gold medal.
This is the game that means something.
Does it mean anything prior to this,
the games that you won?
So I kind of stress that point to them
of letting them realize that what happened in the past is over.
This is the game that counts.
And don't walk off that ice,
skate off that ice,
wondering, you know, what could have been.
And then the men, you know,
the thing I told the men was,
it's trying to move on with us.
You know, 1980 was 1980.
What we did is what we did.
What you do is what you do,
is what you do. And, you know, I need, you know, we need this country, young little hockey players,
young men and women, young boy to look at your team and you are the heroes. The other ones
that will be the idols and not the 1980 team. It's ended is over. It's not going to change. What we did in
1980 is not going to change anything. This is your opportunity to go out there and show the world
where the best hockey player in this, in the world's come from. And this is your time to do that
and show that. So basically, you know, kind of things like that. You don't take a bad,
back sheet to anybody. You know, you are the best. And just, just to be positive to the team.
And but the big thing with stress, what we get is what we did. And this is, this is their time
for them to enjoy the moment. And my grandkids now know, you know, who Jack Eichel is, who Jack Kelly,
you know, Jack Hughes is, who Charlie McAvoy is. And they don't need to know who Michael
Rizzioni is anymore. These are the guys that are carrying the torch.
Yeah. Amazing. And I love the fact being a Jersey guy myself.
We had a New Jersey devil scoring that game-winning goal.
That was special, too, right?
But Mike.
Yeah, so happy for him.
And showing he's a class act.
As the whole family, you know, the other two brothers who play in the National Hockey League.
The mom was involved with our women's team.
She was, I think, the director of player personnel for the women's team.
I don't know if people knew that.
And, you know, their hockey family, and it was,
Dee Jack scored the goal in the way he did it, you know, with no teeth in his head.
It was pretty ironic for a hockey player to score to goal with no teeth.
I love that, Mike.
Thank you.
And, of course, Mike Rousione, not only the captain, the miracle on ice,
but a person delivering message carrying through the energy of these gold medals for the men's,
men's Olympic team, hockey team and the women's Olympic hockey team.
Mike, and final final, anyone who ever wants to have somebody speak who is a true
demonstration of miraculous leadership and teamwork. Michael Ruzioni did not go to the NHL after his career.
He was not the most hyped. He was not the biggest. He was not the strongest. He was none of those
things, except he was the leader and the person that scored the game-winning goal against
the Soviets 46 years ago. And to this minute, this day, he embodies, in my humble opinion,
and the opinion of some others, the greatest example of sports leadership that has ever occurred.
and it just happened to be for our country.
So Mr. Mike Ruzioni, we are so grateful to you and for you,
and anything else you'd like to share in final final today, Mike,
and we thank you so much for your time today.
No, John, just thank you for sending, continue to send the message that you do
about believing, working hard, being a good person.
You know, I'm a believer in that.
You know, just because you want an Olympic gold medal doesn't mean you're a good person.
It's more important to be a good person, be a good neighbor, be a good friend.
have those qualities because those are far more important than sports.
It's important in life.
And I think what you do are those are the messages that you send.
And those are the messages that I tell people all the time about being a good friend,
being a good person, being a good American.
You know, we live in the greatest country in the world and let's take advantage of the opportunities we have.
Amen, brother.
Mike, we wish all the blessings.
If anybody has the privilege of having Mike Arruzioni come to their company to speak
can be in a position of leadership.
This is the number one person, in my opinion, in the world that you want to come speak to
your people.
It's Mike Arizioni.
Nothing could more incredibly embody possibility than Mr. Ruzioni, what the Miracle
and Ice team did led by him, Hurrooks, and so many other extraordinary American heroes.
Mike, have a blessed day, and we thank you so much.
John, thank you for reaching out and hope we get the chance to see each other again down the road somewhere.
We will.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you so much.
All right.
Take care.
Take care.
