'Miracle on Ice' star Mark Pavelich killed himself, examiner rules

Last month’s death of “Miracle on Ice” Olympic hockey player Mark Pavelich was ruled a suicide a Minnesota medical examiner said on Monday.

The Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office in Anoka county announced the ruling in a news release that Pavelich died of asphyxia. His body was found on 3 March at the Eagle’s Healing Nest in Sauk Centre, Minnesota. He was 63.

Pavelich was undergoing treatment at the home as part of a civil commitment for assaulting his neighbor in August 2019. Pavelich thought the man had spiked his beer.

He was charged with felony assault, but a judge found he was incompetent to stand trial because psychologists found that Pavelich was suffering from delusions and paranoia. Experts also diagnosed him with a mild neurocognitive disorder due to traumatic brain injury, likely related to repeated head injuries.

Jack O’Callahan, left, and Mark Pavelich
Jack O’Callahan, left, and Mark Pavelich of the 1980 US ice hockey team talk during a ‘Relive the Miracle’ reunion in 2015 at Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, New York. Photograph: Mike Groll/AP

Pavelich assisted on Mike Eruzione’s winning goal against the heavily favored Soviet Union in the 1980 Olympics. That US team went on to win the gold medal. Pavelich sold his gold medal for more than $250,000 in 2014, two years after his wife, Kara, died in an accidental fall.

Pavelich starred at Eveleth High School and was an All-America selection at the University of Minnesota Duluth before earning a spot on the Olympic team.

The 5ft 8in, 170lb forward spent five seasons with the New York Rangers and played briefly for the Minnesota North Stars and San Jose Sharks, finishing with 137 goals and 192 assists in 355 NHL regular-season games. He had a five-goal game for the Rangers in 1983.

“As a kid growing up in Hibbing I used to go to the arena and hang out with gear in hand waiting to see if I could skate with the teams that rented the ice,” former Minnesota and NHL player Pat Micheletti tweeted after Pavelich died. “Mark Pavelich always let me join with the Eveleth guys. He taught me so much about the game.”

source: theguardian.com