In 2010, Blake Geoffrion became the first player from the University of Wisconsin hockey team to receive the Hobey Baker Award, recognizing him as the best player in menβs college hockey. Blake was a rising scion of hockey royalty, descendant of legendary Canadian players Howie Morenz and Bernie βBoom Boomβ Geoffrion, and he would soon be the first fourth-generation player to reach the NHL. His professional career promised to cement his familyβs storied legacy on ice. But in 2012, while playing for the Montreal Canadiensβ minor league team beneath Morenzβs and Boom Boomβs retired numbers, Geoffrion suffered a devastating injury that ended his careerβand nearly his life.
With sure-footed and swift-moving prose, Sam Jefferies tells Geoffrionβs story against the backdrop of modern North American hockey. Thorough research and scores of interviews fuel this tale of soaring success and terrible tragedy, offering insight not only into one manβs athletic journey but also into the rise of American hockey on the national and international stage. Geoffrionβs brief career, marked by tribulation and triumph, illustrates the subtle but omnipresent currents of American media, sports labor, and the interplay between college and professional athletics. It tells the story of what was, what is, and what may yet be for the fastest game on earth.
βA wonderful book about the fastest, meanest, greatest sport in the world and a man who lived it to the core.ββRich Cohen, New York Times bestselling author of Pee Wees: Confessions of a Hockey Parent
βJefferies captures Blakeβs essence both on and off the ice, providing glimpses of a sportβs transformative journey and of a family-rooted individual, wonderful teammate, determined athlete, and passionate competitor. Although Blake has many more chapters to live, this book encapsulates his story, highlighting his passion, his sacrifice, and how he found strength in overcoming adversity.ββHilary Knight, Olympic Medal-winning American ice hockey forward
βA must read. . . . Jefferiesβ overall attention to detail jumps off the page β he knew the name of Geoffrionβs French bulldog, George β but his descriptive writing style makes it easy to devour the book in short order. Any hockey fan will enjoy this book, but any hockey fan with a connection to Mitchell and Stratford wonβt be able to put it down.ββThe Mitchell Advocate
βThe book reveals the finer details of North American hockey and its public reception over the years. Above all, it documents one manβs meteoric rise, tragic fall, and admirable resilience.ββOnWisconsin
βJefferies tells the story in descriptive, quick to the punch prose. Like the best sports writers, he puts the story into wider contexts, including the prideful importance of hockey in Canada, its slower reception in the U.S. and the imprint of labor-management relations within the sport.ββShepherd Express
βTakes you to the front-row seat for each individual moment that helped Geoffrion in his hockey journey. . . . There is something in this book for everybody. The great lengths Jefferies had gone to, ensuring there were plenty of sides and perspectives to every story within the book, is commendable. . . . Well worth the read if you have even the slightest interest in anything the sport of hockey has to offer.ββThe Hockey Writers
βGeoffrionβs story is one of triumph and tragedy, and to have it put together so eloquently with details you wonβt find anywhere online made it a treat to read. . . . You not only get great detail about the life and career of Geoffrion, but a glimpse at how the landscape of North American hockey has changed through the program that he was a part of.ββHabs Eyes on the Prize
βExcellent. . . . This splendid work of Jefferies is far more than a captivating biography. . . . I liked it so much, I hated coming to the end; Jefferies did such a compelling job.β -Β The Hockey NewsSam Jefferies, a University of WisconsinβMadison alumnus, is a freelance writer and communications professional in Seattle. His work has appeared in Sports Business Journal, Sporting Classics Magazine, the Seattle Times, Newsweek, and elsewhere.
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