Tretiak retired in 1984, following a 2–0 victory over
Czechoslovakia. He was awarded
Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1984). In 1987 Tretiak wrote an autobiography,
Tretiak, The Legend. He was named to the
Hockey Hall of Fame in 1989, the first Soviet player to be honored. In 1990,
Mike Keenan hired Tretiak as a goaltender coach for the
Chicago Blackhawks, which allowed him to coach goaltenders including
Ed Belfour,
Dominik Hašek, and
Jocelyn Thibault. Under Tretiak's guidance, Belfour won two Vezina Trophies and two Jennings Trophies. Belfour and Hašek (serving as the backup in Chicago, who was later traded to the Buffalo Sabres and enjoyed his greatest success there) would eventually be named to the
Hockey Hall of Fame. Keenan was so impressed with Tretiak's abilities in practice that he suggested the 38-year-old might still be able to play in the NHL. Tretiak said that coaching was the next best thing to playing in the NHL. After leaving the Blackhawks, Belfour wore uniform number 20 as a tribute to Tretiak. Numerous other goalies, including
Evgeni Nabokov, also wore number 20 as a tribute to Tretiak. In 2000, he was voted 'Best Russian Hockey Player' of the 20th century. Tretiak was elected to the
State Duma as a member of the
United Russia party in December 2003, representing the
Saratov constituency. He is chairman of the State Duma Committee on Physical Culture, Sport, and Youth. He continued to work for the Chicago Blackhawks until the start of 2006–07 season. On 25 April 2006, his 54th birthday, Tretiak was elected head of the Russian Ice Hockey Federation. He obtained 93 out of the possible 96 votes, with the remaining three voters abstaining. A few days later, on 28 April, the
Governor General of Canada,
Michaëlle Jean, awarded Tretiak the
Meritorious Service Medal in a ceremony at
Rideau Hall. Tretiak earned the award for, among other things, his founding of the Friends of Canada organization to foster good relations between Canada and Russia. He was the first Russian to be conferred this honor. He also ran a goalie school at the Canlan Ice Sports in Toronto, Ontario. Called the Vladislav Tretiak Elite School of Goaltending, it was considered one of the most physically punishing goaltending schools in the world, and students could be refused admittance if not in top physical condition. He also ran a goalie school in Montreal during the 1990s where he trained many famous NHL goaltenders including Jose Theodore and Martin Brodeur. Tretiak also ran a goalie hockey camp in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota in the early 2000s. On 28 March 2007, Tretiak went to Ottawa to discuss with Canadian officials the possibilities of holding another
Summit Series during the summer of 2007, which would be 35 years after the initial event. Russian
Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov had also discussed with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper about the possibilities of holding another event. In the end,
a series was held in September 2007 between the national junior teams of
Canada and
Russia. On 21 December 2012, he voted in favor of the "
Dima Yakovlev Law" in the State Duma. This legislation bars the adoption of Russian children by U.S. citizens. The legislation was the response to the
Magnitsky bill, whose purpose was punishing Russian officials responsible for the death of Russian
tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in a
Moscow prison in 2009 and also to grant
permanent normal trade relations status to Russia. Tretiak was the final torchbearer in the
2014 Winter Olympics in
Sochi, Russia and lit the
Olympic Flame during the
opening ceremony along with
Irina Rodnina. ==Personal==