As I continue my quest to reduce my TBR mountain to hopefully at least a hill, I chose this book as the hockey season is coming to a conclusion this week. This is the fourth book in a series that highlights the 100 greatest players in a sport - this is one is for the modern era of hockey. I've read all four and so far, this is the best one.
Title/Author:
“The Hockey 100:
The Story of the Greatest Players in Modern Hockey History” By Sean McIndoe and
Dan Robson with The Athletic hockey staff
Rating:
5 of 5 stars (Excellent)
Review:
Since hockey has
some unique traditions like playoff beards and an octopus thrown out on the ice
at Detroit, it is only fitting that some of the greatest players in the game have
some unique stories as well. This book,
listing the 100 greatest players since the NHL expanded from six teams to 12 in
1967, has some of those stories. These have been collected from various writers
for The Athletic and compiled by Sean McIndoe and Dan Robson. These are stories that every hockey fan
should read.
Since this is a
subjective list of those 100 players, there will be omissions or arguments
about where certain players should be ranked. While those are always good for
sports bar arguments or even friendly (?) discourse around the couch while a game
is on the television, these rankings are grounded in well-reasoned arguments.
One great
example of this is the story of Marcel Dionne, ranked #15 on this list. The writer of this story points out that when
people rattle off great players in the history of the NHL, Dionne is overlooked
because he was never on a team that won the Stanley Cup. I wanted to stand up
and cheer this author – it’s an argument I always make about any great player
in a team sport. I have always felt that
degrading a player because his team didn’t win a championship is unfair. The player doesn’t make personnel decisions –
that’s up to the coaching staff and the front office.
The other
aspect of this book that I really like is that many of the stories of these
players don’t always revolve around their statistics and accomplishments. Of course, each player’s feats are included,
but they aren’t always THE story.
Here are two
examples: The first is about Bryan
Trottier, who was a key player on the New York Islanders teams that won four
consecutive Stanley Cups, has been very active in making the voice of Canadian Indigenous
people heard. The second is about
Alexander Mogilny, a Russian player who came to the NHL before the USSR allowed
its players to play in North America. Mogilny had to make his arrangements in Sweden
and even there, the team executives working on the deal felt the Soviet Union
might be following them and tracing their calls. This story was even more intriguing than the
well-known story of The Russian Five from the Detroit Red Wings. Some of those players made this list as well.
Some hockey fans
will not only be disappointed with the book because of player rankings, but it
will also leave out greats from the Original Six era like Maurice Richard, Jean
Beliveau and Gordie Howe (he’s left out because even though he played after
1967, his best years were prior to that). Even without them, it does make for
great reading for hockey fans and pays homage to the great players of the last
60 years.
I wish to thank
William Morrow for providing a copy of the book via NetGalley. The opinions expressed in this book are
strictly my own.

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