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- Wednesday, December 2, 2009, 5:34
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MONTEREY PARK, CA â Whether you played the game at any level or are just a spectator, if you truck the kids to hockey practice very early in the morning or just lie on the living room couch and watch games on television, just about everyone touched by the game has a hockey dream or two.
In Living The Hockey Dream, author Brian Kennedy, Ph.D., a native of Montreal, an Associate Professor of English at Pasadena City College and a freelance hockey writer who covers the Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Ducks for Inside Hockey, explores the hockey dreamsârealized or notâof people involved with the game at all levels and all walks of life.
To be sure, this is not a book focusing on National Hockey League superstars and their glory days in the NHLâif thatâs what you are looking for, prepare to be disappointed.
âWhat I was trying to do was get them to tell similar stories,â Kennedy explained. âTake a guy like [former Kings superstar] Marcel Dionne. It wasnât just âtell me about your hockey career,â because I can find that out from books, from the Internet, whatever. But tell me about you growing up in the game. What was your corner rink like? What was your neighborhood like? Then, of course, it extends into their career.â
âWhat I was trying to do was get, not just an inside story, but a story that had the theme of the young person and the way the game appeared or had meaning to him or her and then how that extended into the present,â Kennedy elaborated.
Like his previous book, Growing Up Hockey: The Life and Times of Everyone Who Ever Loved The Game (see Recommended Reading For the âLull:â Growing Up Hockey), this is not your typical hockey book about NHL stars, past and present. In fact, even when dealing with a former NHL player, Kennedyâs approach was unique and refreshing.
âWhat I tried to do was, instead of looking at their lives starting from their careers, I went from the opposite way,â said Kennedy. âStart with you as a kid. Tell me who you are and what your dreams were. How were they lived out as a child and in your younger days? What happened later was a product of that.â
âThe focus is on stuff that maybe most readers wouldnât know and that I certainly didnât know, and, in some cases, stuff that these guys hadnât even thought about in years,â added Kennedy. âSome of them, I would ask them a question about their corner rink, or when they got their first hockey stick. They would look at me strangely because they hadnât thought about that forever because they get the same questions over and over. I was trying to get at some different aspects of their lives in the game.â
Of course, what NHL players did in their careers remains significant. Nevertheless, Kennedy was looking deeper into the souls of those who are profiled in the book.
âI talk about their numbers and the number of goals guys scored or the Stanley Cups they won,â he said. âBut all that can be found on the Internet. But that stuff isnât a narrative. What I was trying to do was create a narrative about what the magic of the game is for these guys.â
âIan Turnbull, who played for the Toronto Maple Leafs and also for the Kings, told me exactly what he was like when he was a boy and the things that happened to him, including one time when he got in trouble,â he added. âWhen you get to know him now, and heâs in his fifties, I guess, you realize that heâs the same person and thatâs the magic. So if people want that glimpse into the personality behind the player or what generates that spark of passion, thatâs what I was trying to bring out.â
Some of the former players profiled in the book are among the all-time greats, including the legendary Bobby Hull, the great Chicago Blackhawks left wing who, along with teammate Stan Mikita, brought the curved stick blade to hockey. To be sure, Hull is one of the few players who revolutionized the game.
But when the time came to interview him, Kennedy got a rather severe case of cold feet.
âIt was funny…his son, Bobby Jr., told me his story and then he told me, âhereâs my Dadâs cell phone number, but youâll never get ahold of him because he never answers his phone,â said Kennedy. âI had that number for two or three months and never could work up the courage to call him.â
âBut I finally dialed the number, even though I was terrified to call him,â added Kennedy. âI had done my research and had my questions ready. But with all of these stories, you donât know the direction theyâre going to take until you start chatting with them where that story is until you start talking to the guy.â
Kennedy then described his exchange with the great Bobby Hull.
âHe answered in his gruff, somewhat raspy voice, âHello?â I introduced myself. âMr. Hull. This is Brian Kennedy and Iâm writing this book…ââ
At that point, Hull cut Kennedy off.
âOh, OK,â Hull told Kennedy. âLet me tell you what happened when I was a little boy. You just listen.â
âHe started to tell me the story and I said, âOh…thatâs very interesting,ââ said Kennedy.
âNo, no. Donât interrupt me, just let me tell the story,â Hull said to Kennedy. âYou just listen and then after, you can ask any questions you want to.â
âHe talked for about five or six minutes and gave me some great details about his childhood and he let me ask all the questions I wanted,â Kennedy noted. âI guess we talked for about thirty or forty minutes. The first few minutes was almost surreal because I couldnât believe I had this guy on the phone.â
Kennedy was totally in awe of the legend on the other end of the line.
âWhile I was interviewing him, I was seeing that famous picture of him with the curved stick that we all saw when we were kids,â Kennedy beamed. âI was seeing video of him scoring certain goals and I was thinking of everything Iâve ever read about the slap shot and when he first started launching those missiles.â
âSo Iâve got all that going on in my head at the same time, so Iâm not fully grasping the fact that Iâm having a conversation with the great Bobby Hull.â
Another player from days gone by who is profiled in the book was former Kings and Montreal Canadiens superstar goaltender Rogie Vachon.
â[Vachon] is the kindest person, the most warm and honest,â said Kennedy. âI talked to him in person at a game and I called him to do the interview, but I felt like I was sitting in his living room. Heâs just that open.â
âHe is from way far north in Quebec,â added Kennedy. âThe chances of him ever making it to the NHL, based on the remoteness of where he was and the time he was playing his minor hockey, was extremely unlikely, and especially to make the Montreal Canadiens, given the depth of talent they had in goal over the years. So in a way, he set up his own success, and thatâs what makes it so nice to tell his stories. You just get the feeling that he thinks of his career as a gift, even though itâs notâitâs something he deserved because he was so talented and courageous as goalie back in those days.â
âWhile talking to him, you get a sense of reverence for the game in the era when he played. Talk about the icon of a goalie of his time. For me, thatâs Vachon.â
Kennedy also noted the black mark on the history of the Hockey Hall of Fame in that Vachon has not been inducted as an honored member.
âI asked him about that and people who read the book can see the reaction…again, very gracious,â said Kennedy. âBut if there was anyone who deserves to be in the Hockey Hall of Fame who is notâif you look at his numbers, a Vezina Trophy, three Stanley Cups, and the fact is, he wasn’t just the second fiddle on that team.â
â[Vachon] shared the goaltending duties with Gump Worsley in that Vezina season and they won the Cup that same season, let alone everything he did for the Kings in the mid-Seventies,â added Kennedy. âThere is no way we can keep that guy out of the Hockey Hall of Fame.â
Kennedy also looked at the lives of some of the current players in the NHL, including Carolina Hurricanes forward Eric Staal.
âWhen you look at a game, you donât read the depth of these guysâ pasts,â Kennedy stressed. âI love the history part of the game, including the recent history. Look at Eric Staal. Heâs one of four brothers and we know a little bit about his parents and they have that commercial on the NHL Network, so weâve seen them. But you donât think about who he is really and what he sacrificed as the oldest brother who leaves home early to play the game, and thatâs an experience that most of these guys have.â
âEspecially for an American fan who isnât in a city where you have a junior teamâI went to high school in Ontario [Canada] and we had the Peterborough Petes in our school, so we knew these guys were hockey players and came from somewhere else,â Kennedy explained. âI think a lot of people donât think about that. For a guy like Eric Staal, thatâs a dimension of his life that comes out in his story. I think that gives fans more of a glimpse into the human side of it or the depth of these guys as people.â
âWe think of hockey players like our elementary school teachers. When you go home, they either donât exist anymore or they live in the classroom. After all, you donât see them anymore. What these guys are doing is showing me facets of their lives from before they played in the NHL, and, in the case of the retired guys, afterwards. Thatâs something you donât see when you watch them on the ice and that you donât read in game coverage.â
In the past, Kennedy has talked about the love Canadians have for the Stanley Cup, and in covering the Ducks during their 2007 run to the Stanley Cup Championship, Kennedy got to touch that most revered of all sports trophies.
âTo me, [former Canadiens legend] Maurice Richard is still alive,â said Kennedy. âHowie Morenz, the great Montreal Canadiens player from the Thirties. All those guys are there in that trophy. So when I touched itâand I could feel itâI really could, under my fingertips, feel the surface of it, I still have that exact feeling in my mind. It was like I was part of something huge and eternal, in a way.â
âI had seen it before and I had touched it before, but in another context, when the Los Angeles Kings hosted the 2002 NHL All-Star Game,â added Kennedy. âYou could get your picture taken with it and everything. But thatâs out of context. The night I touched it on the ice [when the Ducks won it] was a totally different thing. I felt like all the moments that all the great players had ever touched it were distilled in that moment when I touched it. I know that I was never much of a hockey player and that thereâs no way I wouldâve won the Stanley Cup by myself. But I think everyone wins it in their own way and thatâs my way of winning it.â
Kennedyâs love for the Stanley Cup gave him the idea to profile the âKeeper of the Cup,â Phil Pritchard.
âHereâs a guy who takes the Stanley Cup with him to his hotel room every night,â said Kennedy. âHe could dance around with it. Take it into the shower if he felt like it. Whatâs that like? What would you do?â
âI managed to get ahold of him and it turns out that heâs the most regular guy on the planet,â added Kennedy. âBut he takes his role almost as a sacred obligation. He understands what that trophy means.â
Indeed, Kennedy looked way beyond NHL players in writing the book.
âItâs not just about hockey players,â he emphasized. âItâs about other people in and around the game. [USA womenâs hockey great] Cammi Granato. [Television reporter] Chris Simpson. The paralympic captain, who lost his leg to cancer, even the minor league players. Theyâre all in there for different reasons.â
Another chapter went in yet another direction, looking at Kennedyâs nephew, who is playing youth hockey. But even though the chapter does not come right out and hit you in the face with it, there is an unmistakable message here.
âThis generation is probably asking too much of kids,â Kennedy stressed. âI know I never was a great hockey player. But when I look at my nephew Danielâs games, I think âwow. You donât really have to be that much better to be the best kid out there.â So you think, âcâmon boy. Why canât you be the one?ââ
âBut what youâre really saying is, âwhy couldnât I have done that back then,ââ Kennedy added. âSo I guess if thereâs an underlying message itâs to parents to say âlook, let the kid play the way he wants to play. Donât try to make your lack of having fulfilled the dream come true in the child.ââ
âDaniel, if he makes the NHL, that would be great. I know weâll all be very proud of him. But I donât think he has to do that for hockey to have meaning in his life or to give him something.â
After reading and seeing all the news reports about parents pressuring their children to be better in their respective sports, not to mention reports about how that pressure has often led to altercations at games, Kennedyâs message is one that should resonate with all parents with children in athletics, not just hockey.
One chapter really brought out Kennedyâs love for the game. And before anyone thinks something is fishy here, let me state for the record that this reporter was involved in this particular story, as Kennedy is a colleague of mine who has sat next to me in the Staples Center press box the last handful of seasons as weâve covered the Kings. Nevertheless, the story ends up really having absolutely nothing to do with me at all.
A couple of seasons ago, after former Kings goaltender Jason LaBarbera was injured during a game, Kennedy wondered what would happen if the backup goalie was injured as well?
So what did Kennedy do? He asked Kings head coach Terry Murray during the media scrum interview after the game.
Murray told him, jokingly, but as deadpanned as he could, that someone from the press corps would probably have to put on the pads.
At that moment, knowing that Kennedy had spent some time in goal during his youth hockey days, I pointed to him and said to Murray, âheâs played in goal.ââ
Murray then said that the duty would have to fall to Kennedy.
Of course, I am not telling the story as well as Kennedy does in the book, and I am doing that intentionally. Nevertheless, this chapter might be the one that, not only captures the magic of the game for himself, but also shines a light on how the book captured the magic of the game for all the other people profiled within its pages.
âIâm a person who has an imagination,â said Kennedy. âWith that incident, you and I both know that Iâm not the official Kings press box backup goalie. But in my imagination I am, and in some kind of funny way that the chapter lives out, I actually am.â
âOf course, I donât really believe some of these things, but itâs fun to play with these ideas and sometimes, what you imagine kinda comes true,â added Kennedy. âIf I thought, when I had a ticket to a Kings playoff gameâI saw two playoff games in 2002âif I had thought then that I would walk into Staples Centerâs Team LA store that I would see a book about this team or about hockey that I had writtenâif I had imagined that, there was no possible way this couldâve been true. But like Growing Up Hockey, this book is a product of that same energy and imagination.â
Kennedy, Brian. Living The Hockey Dream. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: Folklore Publishing, 2009. ISBN (10-digit): 1-894864-82-4. ISBN (13-digit): 978-1-894864-82-4.
Cover photo courtesy Folklore Publishing.
This story was originally published on Frozen Royalty, where you can find more in-depth coverage of the Los Angeles Kings and the NHL.
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