Hockey, for the
casual fan – the guy who catches the highlights while at the bowling alley bar
or tunes in for a period when the local team hits the playoffs – can be defined
by one all-encompassing element of play: the fight.
That diehard
fan? Fighting, save for the occasional benches-clearing melee that lasts the
entire third period (like that unforgettable Flyers/Senators brawl from 2004),
is passé and even a time waster. For the diehard, it’s all about the speed, the
slapshot, the butterfly save, the hat trick. The play and the score is what
truly matters. And Ken Dryden, former Montreal Canadiens goalie and Maple Leafs
president, now author, would agree. With his latest, Game Change,
Dryden skates deep into another issue: concussions that come as a result of
body checking, and yes, fighting.
Game Change is an
entertaining, enlightening read. The book is also an important one, and
topically so. In Game Change, Dryden explores the life and career
of Steve Montador, an everyman defenseman who played for six NHL teams and
whose career ended as a result of multiple concussions. Montador died in
2015 after suffering from the effects of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a
degenerative brain disease commonly known as CTE, an acronym anyone who saw the
Will Smith movie Concussion should recall.
Dryden cleverly disguises his treatise with an enjoyable look
into hockey history, how the game started, and how it has evolved. Within is
also Montador’s story: how he played, how he trained, and most importantly, how
he loved the game. Yet, similar to the fighters and goons of the game, Dryden
does not pull any punches as he throws down his gloves to present his call to
arms: no hits to the head. No excuses.
Dryden writes
like a hockey player. His sentences are short and clipped, he often repeats
highlights he finds important to ensure the reader takes notice. He is also
passionate, writing from the heart, even when he is taking about the mind. To
do so, he presents interviews not only from scientists and doctors who share
his philosophy of changing – and only slightly at that – the game of hockey to
preserve the quality of life for the player, but also talks to players. Former
Bruin Marc Savard, Flyers captain Keith Primeau, and someone named Sidney
Crosby all share their stories and fears and recovery from post-concussion
syndrome, how it has changed their play, and their lives.
Game Change is written for the casual fan, but the diehard will
enjoy the deep cuts. More importantly, and even more important than hockey, the
respect for life offered within is shown as a universal constant. That players,
with their athleticism, their passion, their talent, are much more than just a
product. Theirs is a life that should be cherished and celebrated. Dryden
believes that is a constant on which everyone can agree. Unless, of course, you
are NHL commissioner Gary Bettman.
As Always,
theJOE
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