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Welcome to the Theory to Action Podcast, where we examine the timeless treasures of wisdom from the great books in less time to help you take action immediately and ultimately to create and lead a flourishing life.
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Now, here's your host, David Kaiser.
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Hello, I am David, and welcome back to another Mojo Minute.
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Every so often, something happens in sports that reaches way beyond the field, the rank, or the court.
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It stops being about who won or lost and starts being about who we are as a country.
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In 1980, that moment was the miracle on ice.
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In 2026, it was a dramatic overtime win for the gold for both women's hockey and most especially men's hockey.
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They both felt like it shook the country awake again.
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But the real story underneath both moments is bigger than hockey.
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And today I want to talk about how sports in general have this strange, almost sacred ability to revive American patriotism when we need it most.
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It's not fake or forced patriotism, but that genuine gut level sense of, yeah, I'm proud to be an American.
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Think about 1980 for a second.
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For some of you, you might not even have been alive or even born yet.
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But stay with me here.
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When people remember the miracle on ice, they remember the goal, the celebration, Al Michael's call.
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But if you zoom out, what really mattered was when it happened and what it did to the national mood.
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Throughout the 1970s, America was frustrated.
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We had deep economic problems, foreign policy headaches, and a deep sense of uncertainty about ourselves and about the future.
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Poor leadership contributed to that uncertainty, and it felt like the country had lost some of its swagger, its confidence.
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And then, in an arena in Lake Placid, a group of uh very young Americans beat a Soviet pro team that was supposed to be unbeatable.
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Hockey was their sport.
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They dominated it.
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The scoreboard said four to three, but emotionally it felt like something much bigger.
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A statement that the United States could still surprise the world.
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Still rise to the moment.
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That's the power of sport.
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One game one night, and suddenly people were waving flags, hugging strangers, remembering that there was more to be an American that united a country than what divides our country.
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Now, fast forward to our own time, and we have been living through years of political tension, deep cultural fights, the pandemic fallout, constant outrage.
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It's easy to feel like the country is permanently split into teams that they don't even like being in the same room together.
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And then out of nowhere, a big American sports moment cuts through all of that.
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Maybe it's a hockey team winning Olympic gold in overtime.
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Maybe it's a woman's team taking down a powerhouse rival on the world stage.
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Maybe it's a World Cup run or a track star blowing past the field.
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Or maybe an American gymnast sticking a routine that nobody thought was possible, even when she was injured.
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In that moment, the details of the sport almost don't matter.
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What matters is the uniform, the three letters across the chest.
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U S A.
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For a night or even just for a few minutes, people who can't agree on anything suddenly agree on this.
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That's our team.
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Those are our people.
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That's our flag.
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That's why sports have this unique power.
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Politics divides by design.
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It's about choices, sides, arguments, winners and losers, often inside our own borders.
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But sports, especially international sports, and more especially our USA Olympic teams flip that script.
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They take all of us with all of our differences and put us on the same side automatically.
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When an American athlete stands on a podium and the anthem plays, nobody stops to ask how they voted.
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When a US team pulls off a massive upset, nobody checks the crowd for party labels before they celebrate.
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Sports gives us something very simple and very rare.
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That special, special moment to say, I love this country without having to attach a policy platform to it.
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It's pure, it's raw, it's emotional, and most importantly, it's shared.
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Patriotism is indeed a virtue.
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We should always remember that.
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Love of one's own homeland and where they came from is a universal good.
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A universal good that we should all embrace.
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That's the same energy people felt in 1980.
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And again, it's the energy a lot of people felt again with this latest generation of US teams winning on the biggest stages.
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So why do these sports moments land so deeply, especially when the country feels frayed?
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Well, a few things are happening at once.
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It's a perfect storm of sorts.
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They're simple.
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The rules of the game might be complex, but the story is easy.
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Our team versus their team.
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That clarity is certainly refreshing.
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These are unscripted.
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You can't pull test an overtime goal.
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You can't focus group a record-breaking race.
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It just happens.
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You see the emotion, the tension, the drama you feel for the athletes, their dreams on the line in front of us.
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Everything is visible.
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The flag is literally on their jerseys.
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The national anthem is literally part of the ceremony.
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The symbolism is built in, and everything is shared in real time.
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Millions of people watch the same play at the same moment and feel the same surge of adrenaline.
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In a very, very fractured media world, that's extremely rare.
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And underneath all of that is something even deeper.
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Sports are one of the last places where excellence still feels universally admirable.
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In fact, that's why we love sports.
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It's based on merit.
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We can see it.
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When an American athlete lays it all on the line, plays her, gets his teeth almost knocked out, plays with blood on the face, or dies for a loose ball, blocks a shot, nails a routine while she is hobbling from an injury, the pain, the excruciation on her face.
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There's part of us that says that's what we want to be like as our country.
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Resilient, fearless, gutsy, clutch when it counts.
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And that's just not about patriotism, that's about identity, and that's about us at our core, our very souls.
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Like proud parents, proud neighbors, and proud countrymen.
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Patriotism in the 1980s was displayed and projected.
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There was no second guessing that.
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But it just needed to burn a little brighter.
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Today, sadly, patriotism is more complicated and often quieter.
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People are more cautious, more skeptical, more aware of our flaws and failures.
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They seem to always want to second guess the United States.
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Sometimes it feels like being openly proud of your country is something you have to defend or explain.
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That shouldn't be the case.
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But when a USA USA team wins big on the world stage, thankfully those walls are dropped for the moment.
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The same people who roll their eyes at political speeches will stand up without thinking when they hear the national anthem after a gold medal win.
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Or at least they should.
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The same people who argue all day online will share the same clip of a game winning goal with a last second shot and type the same three letters USA proudly.
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Or at least they should.
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When America came roaring back under new leadership.
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No longer should we now be living in the permission granted world.
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Permission to be proud, permission to cheer, permission to say this is my country.
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No, no, no.
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Let's take away the footnote, let's take away the asterisk.
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Be proud.
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Cheer loudly.
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And certainly be proud to say this is the USA.
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The greatest country in the history of the world.
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There's no argument.
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We can be humble and proud at the same time.
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So now the question is, what do we do with this?
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It's patriotism.
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A game by itself doesn't fix higher prices on some items or heal political divides or solve cultural issues.
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The miracle on ice certainly didn't single-handedly change the 1980s.
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And this latest wave of USA victories won't magically transform our next four years.
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But they do give us something incredibly valuable.
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A shared story.
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A shared memory.
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Remember where you are when they won.
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Remember how loud that bar got.
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Remember when everyone was rooting for the same thing.
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A USA victory.
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Those shared memories are the glue.
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They're the little anchors of unity we can go back to when everything else feels fragmented.
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And I think it's poignant that we reach back in our history for some of the most tension-filled times.
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Right at the onset of our civil war.
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And we had the greatest president to ever have served, Abraham Lincoln.
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And in his first inaugural address, he said these words We are not enemies but friends.
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We must not be enemies.
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Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection.
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And then he pivots to the national memory.
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The mystic cords of memory stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land will yet swell the chorus of the Union when touched by the better angels of our nature.
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In a sense, that's what sports keeps offering us that same invitation.
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To see each other as teammates, as countrymen instead of enemies, especially on the biggest stages like the Olympics, or when our Americans are wearing the great red, white, and blue of the USA, to remember that we can still rally around something bigger than our arguments, and to feel, even briefly, that there is still a we and we the people.
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Every time an American breaks through on the world stage from Lake Placid to Milano to Milano and beyond, they're not just chasing medals.
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They're giving the country a chance to feel like itself again, to feel proud again.
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So in today's Mojo Minute, when we think about the iconic sports moments from the Miracle on Ice to the recent gold medal wins, to a dream team basketball run in 1992 to a comeback nobody saw coming.
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Don't just think about the scorecard, appreciate the sport.
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Appreciate the biggest stage of sports, the Olympics.
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Think about what it did to the atmosphere and living rooms and bars and watch parties all across the country.
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Think about how for a little while the noise died down and the flags came out.
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Think about how it felt to cheer with people you might have disagreed with on everything else.
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That's the magic.
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That's the magic of sports in America.
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America has many sports that help us get away from the day-to-day arguments and the stresses of life.
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When the timing is right, they don't just entertain us.
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They remind us of who we are.
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And I would dare say who we still want to be.
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Let's close with what I think is one of the best sign-offs from a US Olympics hosting in decades.
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Came from Mike Tariko, the great NBC host.
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And I will give you a little aside.
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Mike Tarico lives in the state up north of Ohio, and he lives in a town called Ann Arbor.
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So I shouldn't celebrate anything the man does.
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But he's so good at what he does, I have to appreciate greatness on display.
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He went from calling a Super Bowl game and then got on a flight to Italy to host the U.S.
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Olympic coverage.
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So in two and a half weeks, Mike Tarico nailed the top two spots, coveted roles, in sports broadcasting.
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Mike Tarico's final send-off at the end of the NBC Milan Cortina 2026 coverage centered on three big ideas.
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The historical context of the games inspiring the next generation.
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And sports as the unifying voice.
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And I dare say he was the inspiration for this mojo minute.
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Listen closely and appreciate the greatness.
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We say Grazzi to the Italian people, their third time hosting the Winter Games, now a part of Olympic history.
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First time was 70 years ago when the quaint and quintessential European mountain ski town of Cortina was big enough to host the entire Winter Games, all 24 events.
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These games had five times as many events, 2,000 more athletes than that 1956 edition.
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So the Olympics, the growing games, took a cue from the spirit of the athletes.
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Try something daring and different, something never done before.
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The first Olympics with dual host cities spread out all across northern Italy.
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And despite being separated by hundreds of miles and mountains, it worked.
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The games delivered and brought our fragmented, chaotic world a few weeks of diversionary joy.
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The Olympics once again pulled us together and pulled us in.
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Why sports?
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Why do we get emotionally entangled in caring for people most of us have never met?
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It's watching the human spirit thrive.
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Consider the winter games, every sport played out on snow or ice.
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Stuff most of us avoid in winter.
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Instead, this group of determined daring athletes attach their bodies to anything that will make them go faster.
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And they take us to the rock.
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No matter how we get attached because they are chasing their dreams in front of us.
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One last tip of greatness.
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With a surgically repaired body.
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We come for the dominance to Marvel at the man who won more gold medals here than almost every country that came to these games.
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It's one of the best in the world asked to be back on this stage.
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And played with a passion that touched us all.
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So many of these athletes grind in anonymity.
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Sports few play on global circuits, many don't follow.
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When they come together inside of the Olympic rings, they captivate us.
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They take our breath away.
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Yet while we watch them by the millions, many of them feel alone.
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An Olympic spotlight really does bring a different heat.
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And no two words were paired together more over the last two and a half weeks than Olympic pressure.
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No two athletes have the same relationship with it.
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The best figure skater in the world today, seeing those Olympic rings made the moment different.
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The truth is, it made the best in the world for four years.
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Over 1,400 days.
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That's why the Olympics.
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Today, it was them.
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Someday, it can be you.
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And now the biggest opportunity in generations for that future of American Olympians.
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The next time the world gathers in the name of sport, it's our home games.
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The Olympics returning to U.S.
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soil for the first time in 26 years.
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LA 28 will be our first summer games in 32 years.
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It will be our chance to show the world why sports mean so much in America and how they're one of the few things that can still truly pull us together.
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Thank you, Mike.
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Well done, sir.
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You dig good.
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So, folks, appreciate the power of sport, at least for some time.
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And as always, keep fighting the good fight.
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Thank you for joining us.
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We hope you enjoyed this theory to action podcast.
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Be sure to check out our show page at TeamMojoAcademy.com, where we have everything we discussed in this podcast as well as other great resources.
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Until next time, keep getting your mojo up.