Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Tretiak the Legend by Vladislav Tretiak Reusse: How Did a Russian Sports Legend End up in Detroit Lakes? BUFFALO, MINN

Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Tretiak the Legend by Vladislav Tretiak Reusse: How Did a Russian Sports Legend End up in Detroit Lakes? BUFFALO, MINN

Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Tretiak The Legend by Vladislav Tretiak Reusse: How did a Russian sports legend end up in Detroit Lakes? BUFFALO, MINN. – The suggestion that everyone knows everyone in the world of hockey might be an exaggeration. Change that to everyone in the hockey world knows someone to put them in touch with everyone and you’re speaking the truth. This was particularly the case in 1988, when John and Lyn Erickson from Fargo purchased the International Hockey School in Detroit Lakes. A couple of years later, John used his friendship with Fargo’s Scott Bye, a financial adviser for NHLers, to meet Blackhawks goalie Ed Belfour, who had been working with Vladislav Tretiak, a part-time goalie coach in Chicago, and Belfour told Erickson that he might be able to hire the Russian legend as the star attraction for his goalie camp in Detroit Lakes. And in June 1991, Tretiak and his wife, Tatiana, were staying at the Fairyland Cottages (modeled after those seen in the film “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”) on the northern shore of Detroit Lake, and getting ready for his first day at the Minnesota camp. Bill Manuel, a former goalie at Wisconsin-Stout and Lyn Erickson’s brother, recalls the first meeting when Tretiak relayed his message through Anna Goruven, his business agent and interpreter, and then agreed to take questions from campers. “We had five or six goalie instructors and had been saying, ‘OK, who is going to be the first to ask?’?” Manuel said. “Meaning, who among us was going to be the first to ask Tretiak about getting pulled as the Soviet goalie in the loss to the U.S. at Lake Placid in 1980? “And then this small kid, had to be one of our 9-year-olds, raised a hand and asked the first question, which was: ‘What was it like getting pulled by your coach in the game against the U.S. in the 1980 Olympics?’ “The rest of us are going, ‘The kid wasn’t even alive then.’?” Goruven relayed the question and Tretiak gave his stock answer: He had given up a bad goal (tying the score at 2-2), and the coach made the decision, and Tretiak had apologized to his home country, and other Soviet championships had followed. A few years later, Erickson discovered another twist in coach Viktor Tikhonov’s decision to pull Tretiak after Mark Johnson’s long-range goal with one second left in the first period. “I was taking teams to Russia in the 1990s and Boris Mikhailov was coaching with the national team,” Erickson said. “I met him at an arena in St. Petersburg in 1995 and said, ‘You should come over to be an instructor at our shooting camp.’ I gave him the figure, a thousand something, and his eyes got big and he said, ‘A week?’ “He was a gregarious guy and excited to come to Minnesota. When I got back, I was talking to Anna [Goruven] and told her, ‘Boris is coming to the camp to be our shooting coach.’ “And she said, ‘Mikhailov? I wish you hadn’t done that.’?” Erickson paused and said: “I found out there’s a back story on Tretiak being pulled. There were three captains on that first line, but Mikhailov was ‘the man.’ And he went to the coaches after the 2-2 goal and said, ‘Vladislav isn’t on his game tonight. You should replace him.’?” According to this story line, Tretiak and Mikhailov spoke only when it was an absolute necessity for years after that. In Detroit Lakes, Erickson said the two Russian hockey stars were “professional, not social.” Manuel and other instructors were on a large boat on the night the camps had ended for another summer. “Vladislav was a great person and he didn’t drink that much,” Manuel said. “That night, he brought two big jugs of vodka, and a bunch of paper cups, and started doing toasts: “To hockey … drink a cup. To Minnesota … drink a cup. To Russia … drink a cup. By the time it was over, we were stumbling off the boat and he was looking at us like, ‘What’s wrong with these guys?’ “That was also the night he looked at all of us with 100 percent seriousness and said: ‘If they do not take me out against the U.S., Russia does not lose that game.’ And he was 100 percent serious at that moment.” There was a Twitter note on April 25 that it was Tretiak’s 68th birthday and there were a couple of responses from Minnesotans who had attended his goalie camp. Tretriak coaching goalies in Detroit Lakes? Really? Yes, and the Star Tribune was on top of it, with a long piece by Steve Aschburner that appeared on July 18, 1993. John and Lyn Erickson now live in Buffalo, Minn. John was a highly successful homebuilder in Fargo, allowing the Ericksons to own the hockey camp from 1988 to 2006, and to fulfill John’s dream since the fifth grade: To see and climb Mount Everest. “I’ve been four times and made it to Camp 2, at 21,000 feet,” he said. “Lyn was with me twice and was in on the long climb to 17,600 feet at base camp. You have to train for months ahead of time, and condition yourself to the altitude when you get there. The first time I went, I came back a month later and I’d lost 50 pounds.” The hockey adventures in Russia included taking two senior teams to the closed city of Saratov for the Kharlamov tournament. “It was near the space launches,” Erickson said. “We were the first Westerners there … ever, since it had been declared a closed city.” Knowing Tretiak so well ranks high on any hockey man’s list. “Vladislav is Russia’s Muhammad Ali,” Erickson said. “He is the country’s most famous athlete of all-time.” And then Lyn remembered this: “You know what Vladislav really loved? The demolition derby at the fairgrounds in Detroit Lakes on the Fourth of July. Smashing up those cars amazed him. He wouldn’t miss it.” Vladislav Tretiak, Signed. Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. Tight clean book, inscribed with a To xxx under which is signature of Tretiak. In glossy unclipped dust jacket. ; 8.7 X 6.2 X 1.1 inches; 262 pages; Signed by Author. Tretiak: the legend. Vladislav Tretiak. Published by Plains Pulbishing Inc., Edmonton, AB, 1987. Used - Hardcover Condition: Very Good. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Flat-signed by author on ffep. Dj is not price-clipped, but shows slight wrinkling along top and bottom edges, and some staining, from water damage. Signed by Author(s). Tretiak: The Legend. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Plains Publishing, 1987. Used - Hardcover Condition: Very Good. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. vi, 262 pp. Autobiography by the goaltender. 32 pages of colour and b&w photos. Inscribed "To: Peter" by Tretiak on the ffep. Red boards. DJ has some light shelf wear. Inscribed by Author(s). Tretiak - The Legend. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Plains Publishing, Edmonton, 1987. First Edition Signed. Used - Hardcover Condition: Very Good Plus. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Plus. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good Plus. Photographs (illustrator). First Edition. SIGNED and inscribed, "To Ken", to the ffep by the legend himself, Vladislav Tretiak. Like new, appears unread, unclipped. Interior is crisp, clean and solid. Bright gilt titles to spine. Dustjacket is lightly bumped to extremities with minor shelfwear to show,now protected in brodart jacket. Any Canadian worth his or her bacon knows where they were when Paul Henderson scored on the phenomenal Russian goalie to win the "Series" in 1972. Tretiak almost single handily defeated the Canadians at their own game and in the process earned the respect of an entire foreign nation with his skill and talent. Signed by Author(s). Tretiak: The Legend. Vladislav Tretiak. Published by Plains Pub, 1987. First Edition Signed. Used - Hardcover Condition: Fine. Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. Flat signed to ffep. Book is fine in near fine jacket, almost as new. 262 pages, octavo. Photos always available on request, Signed by Author(s). TRETIAK: THE LEGEND. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Plains Publishing Inc., Edmonton AB, 1987. Used - Hardcover Condition: VG+ Hard Cover. Condition: VG+. Dust Jacket Condition: VG+. Inscribed and SIGNED by the author on the ffep. Foreward by Wayne Gretsky. 262 pages in v/g condition, clean. Illustrated with color and b/w photographs. Red cloth, gilt title on spine. Bottom corners bumped. Grey dust jacket illustrated in colour on both covers. Very light wear on corners and edges. DJ not price clipped. VG+/VG+. Signed by Author. Tell us what you're looking for and once a match is found, we'll inform you by e-mail. Can't remember the title or the author of a book? Our BookSleuth is specially designed for you. 0140109188 - Tretiak : the Legend by Tretiak, Vladislav. Paperback. Condition: Good to Very Good. A good to very good paperback. 1st penguin 1988. Tretiak : The Legend. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Penguin Books Canada, Limited, 1988. Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Paperback. Condition: Good. Tretiak : The Legend. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Penguin Books Canada, Limited, 1988. Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Paperback. Condition: Good. Tretiak : The Legend. Tretiak, Vladislav. Published by Penguin Books Canada, Limited, 1987. Used - Softcover Condition: Good to Very Good. Paperback. Condition: Good to Very Good. A good to very good paperback.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    7 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us