|
Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Winter sports > Ice hockey
For twenty-six straight seasons from 1978 to 2003 Mount Saint
Charles Academy captured the hearts of its fans and the state s
high school hockey championship. Attributing the streak to a
near-mystical force called Mount Pride, beloved coach Bill Belisle
and his team have built the most successful hockey program in Rhode
Island. In the thrilling 2013 season, they recaptured the Mount
glory as state champions. Yet the high school hockey team is much
more than its wins and losses it s a culture and a family.
Beginning with the earliest days when Rhode Island s four-team
league took to the frozen ponds with tree branches serving as
rudimentary hockey sticks, author Bryan Ethier chronicles the
history of the MSC Flying Frenchmen. Join Ethier as he takes to the
ice with the great games, the star players and the unforgettable
moments to tell the remarkable story of Mount Saint Charles Hockey.
When Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens opened in 1931, manager Conn
Smythe envisioned an arena that would project an aura of
middle-class respectability. In A Night at the Gardens, Russell
Field shares how this new arena anticipated spectators by examining
varying spectator behaviours, who the spectators were, and what the
experience of spectating was like. Drawing on archival records, the
book explores the neighbourhood in which Maple Leaf Gardens was
situated, the design of the arena’s interior spaces, and the ways
in which it was operated in order to appeal to respectable
spectators at a particular intersection of class and gender.
Examining a ticket ledger compiled by arena staff for the 1933–34
National Hockey League season, the book reveals that the average
subscriber purchased more than two tickets, suggesting that
attending hockey games was a social experience. It also shows that
while ticket subscribers were overwhelmingly middle-class men,
women were also present. Oral history interviews with twenty-one
former spectators at the Maple Leaf Gardens detail the experience
of watching the spectacle that unfolded on the ice during each
hockey game. A Night at the Gardens tells the fascinating story of
how one prominent public building became such an important part of
Toronto society.
The U. S. hockey team's victory at the 1980 Olympics was a "Miracle
on Ice"--a miracle largely brought about by the late Herb Brooks,
the legendary coach who forged that invincible team. Famously
antagonistic toward the press at Lake Placid, Brooks nonetheless
turned to sportswriter John Gilbert after each game, giving his
longtime friend and confidant what became the most comprehensive
coverage of the '80 team. This book is Gilbert's memoir of Brooks.
Neither strictly biography or tell-all expose, Herb Brooks: Born to
Coach is the story of an extraordinary man as it emerged in the
course of a remarkable friendship. Gilbert, writing for the
Minneapolis Tribune, first met Brooks during his coaching days at
the University of Minnesota, whose hockey program he resurrected in
the 1970's. The two became fast friends, and here, for the first
time, Gilbert relates anecdotes--his own and former players'--that
illuminate Brooks' oftentimes hard-nosed coaching methods, his
dramatic successes, and his incomparable character. From Brooks'
beginnings in East St. Paul and his stint with the 1960 gold
medal-winning Olympic team (from which he was famously the last
player cut), Gilbert goes on to dissect the coach's tenure with the
Gophers (including three national titles) and the Lake Placid
story, from the selection process and yearlong barnstorming tour to
the Games themselves. Throughout this and later chapters of Brooks'
career--including coaching turns with St. Cloud State University,
four NHL teams, and the 2002 U.S. Olympic squad--readers are
treated to impossibly colorful quotes, rare photographs from
Brooks' playing and coaching careers, and pertinent sidebar pieces
that originally appeared in the Minneapolis Tribune.
Boston University has been synonymous with college hockey
excellence for more than eighty years. Since taking the ice for the
first time in 1918, the Terriers have fashioned a storied history
that has consistently placed the program among the nation's elite.
Boston University Hockey chronicles the many National Collegiate
Athletic Association Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference, Hockey
East, and Beanpot championship team moments; the myriad
accomplishments of individual players and coaches, such as Rick
Meagher, the "BU Four," Jack Kelley, and Jack Parker; and the
overall legacy of achievement by the long line of skaters who have
donned the scarlet-and-white sweaters. The illustrations in Boston
University Hockey (including many that have never been published
elsewhere) offer a compelling view of a team that has won more
national titles than any other eastern college hockey school.
Expectations are too high for beginners in hockey. Beginners are
simply not ready for team play and systems. What is missing is a
transition phase from the first time a player puts on a pair of
skates to that first hockey game. The Hockey Method is a
methodology to fill in this missing link or gap in hockey
development. It identifies skill levels that can be grading to
track player proficiency. The Hockey Method consists of two parts;
Book 1 - Beginner Skating and Book 2 - Beginner Puck Control. These
two parts present 31 skill concepts that are so simple and easy to
learn that you don't need to be a coach to teach them. What is
really needed, for first timers, is one-on-one direction and
instruction. Coaches or parents can do it but parents are a better
choice to instruct beginners because they have the time and vested
interest to dedicate the 1 on 1 instruction needed by beginners at
this early age. The basic idea is to build confidence by learning
to walk before you run, run before you glide, and to be able to
turn the toes in and out before you are able to use edges.
|
|