Members of the 1980 "Miracle on Ice" U.S. Olympic ice hockey team are under fire for sporting "Keep America Great" hats at a recent rally for President Trump Donald John TrumpUS reimposes UN sanctions on Iran amid increasing tensions Jeff Flake: Republicans 'should hold the same position' on SCOTUS vacancy as 2016 Trump supporters chant 'Fill that seat' at North Carolina rally MORE in Las Vegas.

The team initially was invited to be in a separate photo line with the president at last week's rally, but they later appeared onstage, according to The Washington Post, with many wearing the hats.

Trump had invited team captain Mike Eruzione, 65, along with other players to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the "Miracle on Ice" game in which they beat the four-time defending gold medalist Soviet Union team and later won the gold medal for the U.S.

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Eruzione said he didn't know he would be introduced onstage or offered one of the Trump hats. Four former team members did not wear the hats, while 10 others did, according to the Post.

Eruzione, who is director of special outreach at his alma mater, Boston University, said he has received angry calls and messages on social media about wearing the hat.

"If we knew we were going to piss off this many people, we probably would not have put the hats on," said Eruzione. "That's the big question here. A lot of the stuff I got was, 'You guys said it's not political, but when you put the hats on, you made it political.' "

I didn’t think it was possible to tarnish the reputation of the 1980 Olympic hockey team. Until today.



WTF Mike Eruzione? https://t.co/4Gsa68ZapH — GovProf (@ProfJeffrey) February 22, 2020

Eruzione and his former teammates are not the first to spark controversy over wearing Trump-related hats. Last year, Kanye West Kanye Omari WestCourt keeps Kanye West off Virginia ballot Twitter removes Kanye West tweet suggesting followers harass journalist Kanye West reportedly asked campaign staff to avoid 'fornicating' MORE came under criticism from his fans after he said wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat is "not about politics" but about stopping the stigma surrounding expressing support for Trump.