March 24, 2013

Brent Peterson: My Toughest Faceoff


That photo is of Brent Peterson winning a faceoff against Wayne Gretzky. There was a time when Peterson was a faceoff specialist and defensive center for over 600 NHL games. He went on to become a valuable coach. But it his battle with Parkinson's Disease that may be his most inspiring story.

It is a story Peterson shares in his newly released e-book, My Toughest Faceoff: Kindle Edition

Here's the official press release.

After being a first-round draft pick of the Detroit Red Wings in 1974, Brent Peterson embarked on a successful National Hockey League playing career that lasted 11 seasons. During his career, he played for Detroit, the Buffalo Sabres, Vancouver Canucks, and Hartford Whalers. 

When he retired as a player, Brent immediately became an assistant coach with the Whalers before moving back to Portland, Oregon to become the head coach of the Portland Winter Hawks of the Western Hockey League. 

After leading Portland to the Memorial Cup championship in 1998, Brent wanted to pursue his dream of becoming a head coach in the NHL, so he left Portland and took an assistant coaching position with the expansion Nashville Predators. Brent was later promoted to the position of associate head coach. 

Soon after that promotion, things took a turn when Brent was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a degenerative neurological disorder for which there is no known cure. 

For a year Brent and his wife Tami kept Brent’s diagnosis a secret, even going so far as to borrow the money needed for medications so that they did not have to use Brent’s insurance out of fear that the Predators would find out about his condition. 

When Brent’s symptoms became more obvious to the people who were around him every day, he and Tami made the decision to go public with the information that would likely end any chances of a team hiring him to be their head coach. 

Brent made the news public first by telling the Predators following their elimination from the playoffs in 2004. The team rallied around the affable coach they call Petey. 

In addition to keeping his position as Nashville’s associate head coach, Brent established the Peterson for Parkinson’s Foundation in hopes of raising awareness and funding for research. 

Away from the ice, Brent received some counseling from Michael J. Fox, one of Parkinson’s most visible faces. It was that same advice that Brent turned around and gave to former NBA star Brian Grant after he too was diagnosed with the same disease. Like Brent, Grant struggled with the emotional trauma of having been diagnosed with Parkinson’s at such a young age. At Brent’s urging, Grant established a foundation of his own. 

Early in the 2010-11 NHL season, Brent’s symptoms became more and more difficult to manage. His balance was affected, making it dangerous for both him and the players to be out on the ice together. 

Following Nashville’s elimination from the 2011 playoffs, Poile announced that the team had made the decision that Brent would no longer be a coach. The Predators kept Brent on staff though, creating the position of hockey operations advisor to tap into Brent’s years of experience in working with the players. 

Those same symptoms that made Brent step away from behind the bench were also affecting his quality of life, and the decision was made to undergo the radical medical procedure called Deep Brain Stimulation. 

DBS is a series of four medical procedures that involve wires being surgically implanted into the brain and then connected to a device inside of the patient’s chest. That device sends signals to the brain, and those signals mimic the effects of the chemical dopamine. 

The results were nearly instantaneous. The morning prior to the system being turned on, Brent needed assistance getting his shoes and socks on before traveling to the hospital. The next day, he was running on a treadmill at the Predators’ practice facility. 

DBS is not a cure for Parkinson’s, but it does replicate the effects that medication has on a patient. Brent still has Parkinson’s and probably always will. The symptoms will reappear at some point and his condition will likely worsen again, but now he has a renewed outlook on life and a renewed ability to do the things that drive him; being a good husband, father, hockey man, and advocate for Parkinson’s patients everywhere.

Buy the e-book: My Toughest Faceoff: Kindle Edition

February 21, 2013

Captain James T. Sutherland: The Battle For The Original Hockey Hall of Fame

This is Captain James T. Sutherland. He was a shoe salesman by trade and a veteran of the First World War. But he would best define himself in the world of hockey - as a notable referee, a long time member of the Ontario Hockey Association's executive committee, and perhaps most famously as the creator of the Hockey Hall of Fame.

In 1938 Major League Baseball created the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Sutherland almost immediately began his campaign to see hockey get it's own Hall of Fame.

By 1943 Sutherland's unrelenting drive succeeded. The National Hockey League and the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association created the International Hockey Hall of Fame.

Two years later, the inaugural class was inducted (Hobey Baker, Charlie Gardiner, Eddie Gerard, Frank McGee, Howie Morenz, Tommy Phillips, Harvey Pulford, Hod Stuart and Georges Vezina, along with builders Lord Stanley and Sir Montagu Allan.)

However the Hall had no physical location. Sutherland devoted his life to getting a proper Hall of Fame built in Kingston, Ontario. Kingston was his hometown, and, he believed, the birthplace of hockey.

The National Hockey League would withdraw it's support of the IHHOF in 1958 and would begin creating it's own Hockey Hall of Fame, the one we all think of to this day, in Toronto.

Despite this major setback Sutherland continued with his dream, and by 1965 the IHHOF moved into its home on 277 York Street in Kingston. You can still go and visit two floors worth of exhibits. Many other exhibits are in storage as they seek a new home.

You can read all about the history of the IHHOF/HHOF in the new book Captain James Sutherland and the Battle for the Original Hockey Hall of Fame by Bill Fitsell. You can also visit the Original Hockey Hall of Fame's website.

January 31, 2013

2012 Hockey Books



A look at the upcoming 2012 hockey book releases:

1972 Summit Series: The Untold Story
Angela James: First Superstar of Women's Hockey
A Season In Time by Todd Denault
A Wild Stab For It by Dave Bidini
Barry Melrose: Dropping The Gloves
Battle On The Hudson
Bernie Parent: Unmasked
The Best Of Down Goes Brown
Best Seat In The House by Jamie McLennan
Brass Bonanza Plays Again
Breakaway: Untold Stories of Hockey's Great Escapes
Captain James T. Sutherland: Battle for HHOF
Chicken Soup For The Soul: Hooked On Hockey
Coach: The Pat Burns Story
Concussed! - Keith Primeau and Kerry Goulet
Crosby's Golden Goal by Mike Leonetti
Derek Sanderson: Crossing The Line with Kevin Shea
Dit: Dit Clapper and the Rise of the Boston Bruins
Empire Of Ice: Rise and Fall of PCHA
Flyers Lives by Jakki Clarke
The Goal That United Canada: 72 Amazing Stories
Gold Mine To Gold Medal by Ivan McLelland
Hockey Hall of Fame: Book of Jerseys
Hockey Night In Canada: 60 Seasons
Hockey Now!
"Hockey Smut"
Hockeytown Doc
The Instigator: (Gary Bettman Bio)
Journeyman by Sean Pronger
J.R. by Jeremy Roenick
La Coupe A Quebec (Quebec Bulldogs)
Leave No Doubt by Mike Babcock
Long Shots: Maritime Hockey
Original Six Dynasties: Detroit Red Wings
Marcel Pronovost: A Life In Hockey
Next Goal Wins! by Liam Maguire
Paul Henderson: The Goal Of My Life
Red Rising: The Washington Capitals Story
Refereeing Identity: Cultural Work of Canadian Hockey Novels
Reflections 2012: NHL Hockey Year in Photographs
Selling The Dream by Ken Campbell and Jim Parcels
Sports Illustrated: The Great One
Stanley Cup: 120 Years of Hockey Supremacy
Stickhandling Through The Margins: First Nations Hockey
Straight Shooter: The Brad Park Story
Sudden Death: 1986 Swift Current Broncos
Tales From The Locker Room
Team Canada '72
The Hockey News Top Ten
This Sweater Is For You
Titans of '72 - Mike Leonetti
Wearing The "C" by Ross Bernstein
Year of the Los Angeles Kings

Young Adult
Accidentally On Purpose
Rookie by Lorna Schultz Nicholson

Children's Books
Adirondack Kids: The Pond Hockey Challenge
Hockey Canada: Learn All About Hockey Coloring and Activity Book
H Is For Hockey: NHL Alumni Alphabet
Hockey Superstars 2012-13
Marshall Plays Hockey
The Puck Hog 2
Over At The Rink: A Hockey Counting Book
Puckster (two titles)

Foreign Books
37 Stories About Karlis - Latvia

Papers
Prague Winter 1933 by Roger Godin

January 23, 2013

Bidini Book Due Out In 2013


From Dave Bidini's literary agent:
Canada Reads and Toronto Book Awards finalist, National Post columnist and Bidiniband frontman, Dave Bidini's KEON AND ME: MY SEARCH FOR THE LOST SOUL OF THE LEAFS, a memoir of the writer at 11 as well as a search for his childhood sporting hero, Canada English rights to Associate Publisher of Penguin Canada Nick Garrison for Fall 2013 by Samantha Haywood.

January 18, 2013

Hockey Night In Canada: 60 Seasons by Michael McKinley



Before Twitter, before 24-hour sports channels, long before fans watched highlight goals on their phones—long before something called a “highlight” had been invented—there was Hockey Night in Canada. It was cutting-edge technology back then. Anywhere in Canada, a hockey fan could come in from the snow, sit down by the radio, listen to a game played in Montreal or Toronto, and experience the thrill of a game played hundreds, or thousands, of kilometres away. Before all of what we call Canada had joined Confederation, even before the “Original Six,” there was Hockey Night in Canada to define both the country and the game.

Then, sixty years ago, another technological marvel changed the game—and the country—and launched the longest-running program in the world. CBC’s Hockey Night in Canada, for the first time, was on television.
At first fans worried that television would ruin the game. Now Canadians can hardly imagine the game without the CBC broadcast. 

Hockey Night in Canada: 60 Seasons  celebrates the moments, the personalities, and the innovations that have shaped our experience of the game.

What would hockey be without instant replay or the “three stars”? What would it be without Foster Hewitt, Howie Meeker, Peter Puck, or mythical moments like Bobby Orr’s Stanley Cup–winning goal? What would the game be without the Saturday night double-header, or Coach’s Corner, or Bob Cole’s “Stand up and cheer, Canada!” at the 2002 Olympics? Hockey Night in Canada: 60 Seasons celebrates not only what is great about the game, but how Hockey Night in Canada has come to define it.

Written by Michael McKinley, author of Hockey: A People’s History, with a foreword by Ron MacLean and richly illustrated with rare on-screen and archival material, Hockey Night in Canada: 60 Seasons features behind-the-scenes glimpses into the way the broadcast was born and developed and little-known stories about the men and women who have brought our game to life in sixty fascinating moments.

Buy The Book: Amazon.ca - Chapters - Amazon.com

January 8, 2013

Bobby Orr Autobiography Coming in 2013



Hockey legend Bobby Orr will commit his life to paper in an autobiography that explores both his sports career and personal life.Orr: My Story will be published by Penguin Canada’s Viking imprint in October.

In a press release, Orr is quoted as saying:

I’m like most people in that over time I’ve wanted to write down my thoughts, make sense of many things I’ve seen, and share some things I’ve learned. Having played in the National Hockey League doesn’t make me a better person than anyone else but it does mean that I’ve met some interesting people and been through some experiences I think are worth putting on paper. This moment in my life seems the right time to do just that.

Orr: My Story was acquired by Penguin Canada associate publisher Nick Garrison and will be published simultaneously in the U.S. by Penguin’s G.P. Putnam’s Sons imprint.

Please note: the above cover image is not the cover image for this upcoming release. It is from a book published in 1973.

Long Shots: The Maritime Teams That Played for the Stanley Cup


Guest book review by Ryan Van Horne
Although he never played the game, it could be argued that Frederick Arthur Stanley is hockey's greatest legend – or at least responsible for it.
He is the man who started the sport's greatest tradition by donating the Dominion Hockey Challenge Cup.
Stanley's official title was Lord Stanley of Preston and, as the Governor General of Canada in 1892, he plunked down $48.67 of his own money to purchase a trophy that would become the most cherished in all of sport.
In the early years, it was a true challenge cup and 57 teams from coast to coast played for it. A team from Dawson City, Yukon made a month-long trek to Ottawa and even travelled by sled-dog for part of the journey.
Long Shots: The Curious Story of the Four Maritime Teams That Played for the Stanley Cup was published in October. It explores the history of the Sydney Millionaires and three other Maritime teams that challenged for the Cup.
Nowadays, three of the four cities are represented by major junior teams and the fourth hosts a junior A team. But 100 years ago, there was a Maritime Professional Hockey League and any team could issue a challenge to the defending champion and, if the trustees thought they were worthy, they would arrange a two-game, total-goal series.
Long Shots is the third book by Halifax author Trevor Adams. In researching it, he mucked around in the corners of Maritime hockey lore and came out with the previously unpublished memoirs of Alfred (Cap) McDonald, the captain of the 1912-13 Sydney Millionaires team that challenged the defending Quebec Bulldogs featuring legendary scoring machine Joe Malone.
The other Maritime teams to challenge for the Stanley Cup preceded the Millionaires. They were the Halifax Crescents, the New Glasgow Cubs and the Moncton Victorias. All lost by lopsided scores and no Maritime team played for the Cup after the Millionaires.
Adams explores the early days of professional hockey before the formation of the National Hockey League. From McDonald's memoirs, Adams is able to paint a portrait we rarely see today because it is difficult to interview an athlete and get beyond the cliche.
“He talks about the struggles he went through coming up through professional hockey; playing games and not getting paid and having to work as lumberjack in the offseason because hockey players weren't making any better money than any other sort of blue-collar workers,” Adams said. “They are really sort of authentic, playing mostly playing out of community pride more than anything else.”