What a great detailed hockey book that gave snippets of history about junior and college hockey, draft day and rookies in camp, the politics of salary battles between management and players, famous coaches, famous teammates, winning the Stanley Cup, free agency, depression and mental health… wait, whaaaa? Yes, the game’s speed, hits, violence, and intensity does yield collateral damage. But what that damage is, is highly controversial, with corporate NHL Brass not wanting to listen to the ugliness of science, of facts, once you slice into the brain of an ex-warrior of the ice wars known as the National Hockey League. Well, any league actually.
Such a well-written book for the pure hockey fan, even without the focus of head trauma, of caution for parents out there who want to protect their progeny from concussions, from, headaches and body aches, from temper control issues, memory loss, confusion.
This is the story of Joe Murphy, a highly touted 18-yr old, ready to burn up the NHL, working his wares for one of the most storied organizations in hockey, the vaunted Detroit Red Wings. He would be their savior, eh. Jimmy Devalano, Mike Ilitch, Jacques Demeurs, Harry Neale… all revealed. Then we follow his journey through the NHL, eventually leading to homelessness brought on by severe mental health issues. But brain trauma aside, it’s clear this star was uniquely ‘wild’ to begin with. I’d never heard of his behavior in the staid team culture that is hockey. What an amazing collection of anecdotes, highlighting the personal demons of one Joe Murphy. 18 years after his last game, we find him on a Kenora park bench, with painful interviews recalling this young/old man’s journey. Finding a place to sleep and $20 was his main concern in life nowadays… having made and lost $20M over his hockey career. Drugs, gambling, and mental illness robbed him of that life. And the NHL didn’t care, worried about their public relations dilemma of fighting, of concussions, of making more money.
The book delved a little too deeply into CTE studies (linking concussions to long-term neurological disorders) for my tastes/intelligence, which was much less interesting to me than the actual hockey reminiscing itself. There are 318 players suing the NHL for concussion-related reasons. Superstar Sydney Crosby was out for 320 days. And the basics… There are about 700 players on the 32 teams, with an average salary of $2.7M, compared to $8.3M for basketball, $4.0M for baseball, and $3.3M for football.
The book had a great chapter near the end, on homelessness and the problem of living on the street, or in the forest, or at a shelter. So sad for everyone in that situation. Such a fall for a #1 draft pick, former friend and businessman, husband and father… now wearing his pants inside-out, searching for archangels.