After many years of admiring the story behind the man who created the greatest sports moment of the twentieth century - the Miracle on Ice 1980 Olympic gold-medal hockey team - John Gilbert finally gave me the ultimate biography of a person he knew oh-so-well and gladly shared with the world in “Herb Brooks: The Inside Story of a Hockey Mastermind.” Scratch that: I will never truly be done with finding out more about Herb Brooks, and that makes me all the more happy to keep researching this hockey legend!
I first heard of Herb Brooks the day I saw him for the first and final time. Herbie was a tried-and-true East Sider of St. Paul, Minnesota, and was at his high school alma mater, St. Paul Johnson, for the annual pancake breakfast in Spring 2003, 5 months before his untimely death in a car accident. Dad pointed Herb out to me, and I’ll never forget how happy Herb looked talking with a group of people in the school cafeteria. Sure, Herb easily could have known those people his entire life, or just as likely, he had just run into them that morning for the first time and wanted to have a cordial conversation with some fellow Johnson Governors. Though Herb had played and / or coached in colleges, the NHL, and for international and Olympic teams from around the world for the past 40 years, here he was at a simple pancake breakfast in his hometown chit-chatting with some fellow East Siders. The very next year at the pancake breakfast, the school honored Herb’s memory by retiring his #5 jersey. On a national scale, Disney released the greatest hockey movie ever made, “Miracle.” My desire to learn everything I could about Herb was on!
Gilbert does a fantastic job of covering the life and times of Herb Brooks from birth to death, with special emphasis on his coaching career at the University of Minnesota and the 1980 Winter Olympics. The author’s relationship with Brooks - which began when he was working as the noted hockey reporter at the Minneapolis newspaper and when Brooks became the Gophers head coach, with their great working relationship transforming to a deep friendship - is perhaps the greatest element to this biography and will forever make this piece stand out compared to anything published before or since. Ross Bernstein’s “Remembering Herbie” - which is essentially just a book of quotations gathered from Herb’s friends, family, players, and contemporaries - did a good job in highlighting Brooks’ philosophy degree and how he likely used it to his advantage throughout his coaching career, as well as stories of his exploits on St. Paul’s East Side. The recent work on highlighting each member of the 1980 Olympic team, “The Boys of Winter”, goes beyond all measure in covering most aspects of that 8 month journey. However, it wasn’t until this book that I was finally satisfied with the commentary on the great upset of the #2 seed, Czechoslovakia - leave it to a Minnesota newspaper reporter to be the one who actually followed Team USA all 8 months and recognized the importance of each Olympic game played.
All in all, Gilbert manages to capture the essence of both these aforementioned books while offering the complete and focused story of the greatest developmental hockey coach the world may have ever known. As a fellow East Sider and Johnson alumni, but also as a fan of this great sport, I will always cherish everything Herb Brooks gave to this world. For that, we say “Thank you, Herb!” (And my grandma’s sister will always be thankful for that kiss you shared with her, probably in the late 1950s, while my grandma was in the other room. Oh, Herbie!)