(25. - 996.) Everyday Hockey Heroes by Bob McKenzie
and Jim Lang - Adjusting a maxim, the book explores how “hockey doesn’t build
character, it reveals it”. In the introduction McKenzie considers the impact of
a double tragedy on April 6, 2018.
In the morning Jonathan
Pitre, a 14 year old Ottawa boy who loved hockey, died. He had bravely born the
pain of the “genetic skin condition known as epidermolysis bullosa (EB)”. Known
as butterfly boy for the fragility of his skin he was “cheerful and optimistic”
and “dedicated to a greater cause - raising awareness and funds for EB”.
That evening the
Humboldt Bronco bus crash took place 65 km from Melfort with 16 killed and 13
injured. Every sports team has ridden a bus. Canada and far beyond our borders
mourned the loss.
When I think of passion
for the game I usually think of elite players working hard to reach the NHL or
enthusiastic fans devoting time and energy to support their team. The stories
of individual “hockey heroes” range far and wide over the Canadian (and one
American story) hockey experience. The stories are connected with hockey in so
many different ways.
Craig Cunningham is a
young minor professional hockey player whose heart inexplicably stopped during
a game. While emergency surgery saved him his left leg had to be subsequently
amputated. After learning to walk again with a prosthetic leg he put on his
skates:
Stepping onto the rink
and hearing the sound of my skates on the ice
beneath me was the best
healing I could have asked for.
He went on to be a
sledge hockey star.
With his heart surgeon
he has created the All Heart Foundation “aimed at preventing sudden cardiac
arrests by promoting regular screenings to diagnose those at risk. We are
currently working with engineers to use the heart monitor app on smartwatches
as an early detection system for abnormalities”.
With the difficulties of
vision in our family I was deeply moved by the story of Wayne St. Denis.
Legally blind, with 5% vision or less, he plays hockey with the Toronto Ice
Owls. This team of legally blind players (forwards 10% or less, defence 5% or
less and goalies less yet) plays hockey with an oversize puck - “a plastic wheel
you would find on a kid’s wagon and we fill it with piano pins”. As long as the
puck is moving they can hear the puck.
He writes that the best
part of hockey for him are “the sounds of hockey”:
There’s the crisp swishing of the skates, the tapping of
sticks, and the
clanking of the puck as
it glides across the ice, but perhaps the most
important sound is that
of the team. When I break away with the puck and
head for the net, the
cheers from my teammates are the loudest thing in
the entire arena. There’s
nothing like those yells.
Two stories involved
sports media members whose utter dedication to the game led them to the NHL.
Harnarayan Singh grew up
in Brooks, Alberta and was one of the original members of Hockey Night
Punjabi broadcasting NHL games in Punjabi. Working in Calgary but
broadcasting games from Eastern Canada he used virtually every spare dollar
from his income for two seasons to pay his own way to Toronto every weekend
during the season to broadcast games.
Andi Petrillo found a
job in T.V. production but left the security of that position for a contract at
Leafs TV where she could appear on air. She gradually moved through different
broadcast opportunities until she became the host of Leafs Lunch. She
was the “first woman to have her own daily talk show on sports radio in
Canada”.
Dr. Charles Tator, a
neurosurgeon, has worked for decades to make hockey safer by reducing violent
hits and emphasizing the need for proper treatment of concussions. He worked
with other doctors to show the dangers of hitting from behind near the boards.
It brought to mind a presentation I made over 30 years to a government
sponsored study on hockey. I advised that I expected there to be a murder
charge some day from a player being cross-checked from behind into the boards
and dying from the injury. Fortunately, it has not happened. More recently Dr.
Taylor studied the cost of head injuries to the NHL from 1995 to 2015. He
“discovered the total cost to teams and insurers for career-ending concussions
during that period was USD $135,476,777”.
I wish the authors had
not sought to re-create dialogue between the subject of a chapter and those
around him or her. It did not sound real. In non-fiction let the subjects tell
their stories as narrative and in their own way but not with attempts at
dialogue. I found those conversations distracting.
The book was inspiring
and a reminder of how Canadians love hockey. I am glad my sons gave it to me as
a Christmas present.
It does sound like a very uplifting look at the power of the human spirit, as well as the love of hockey that's such a part of so many people's lives, Bill, I can see how you were drawn into those stories. I know what you mean about the dialogue; I'd rather read authentic dialogue, too. But overall, this does sound like an absorbing book.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I was deeply drawn into the stories. They were powerful positive stories.
DeleteIt sounds like a perfect gift for you from your sons, Bill.
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. You are absolutely correct. The book was perfect. My sons sometimes struggle to find books they are sure I have not read but would be interested in reading.
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