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Lions in Winter

Authors: Allan Turowetz, Chrys Goyens
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $27.95
Buy New: $18.45
You Save: $9.50 (34%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 1446649

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 3
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 512

ISBN: 0470153474
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9780470153475
ASIN: 0470153474

Publication Date: February 2, 2009  (In 25 Days)
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Not yet published

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
When people talk about dynasties in sport, the Montreal Canadiens come immediately to mind. They are inarguably the greatest franchise in all of hockey and, some would say, the most successful sports team of all time. A few reasons why the Canadiens are truly Les Glorieux:
  • The first team to win 10 Stanley Cups (1957-58), the only team to win 20 (1976-77), and currently at 24 Stanley Cup victories (1993).
  • The only franchise to win at least five Cups in each of three consecutive decades (1950s, 1960s, and 1970s)
  • The only club to win at least one Stanley Cup in each decade of the twentieth century in which it competed (1916, 1924, 1931, 1944, 1953, 1964, 1971, 1986, and 1993).

In 2009, the Habs celebrate their 100th anniversary, and Lions in Winter is the definitive chronicle of that storied past. More than a history of this extraordinary franchise, it is a fascinating look at the heart of the club—an examination of the characters and the qualities that have made that heart pump so strongly for 100 years.

Meet the builders, the early heroes, the coaches and general managers, and the superstars who have helped lead the Canadiens to countless first-pace finishes and championships throughout an entire century. Great hockey strategists including Frank Selke, Dick Irvin, Toe Blake, Scotty Bowman, and Sam Pollock are remembered or interviewed. And the “Flying Frenchmen” themselves are everywhere, reliving the glory of the Habs on every page: Howie Morenz, Maurice and Henri Richard, Jean Beliveau, Guy Lafleur, Larry Robinson, Ken Dryden, Bob Gainey, Patrick Roy, and many, many more.

Lions in Winter , on the 100th anniversary of the Habs, commemorates the legendary players, coaches, and the men in the front office who have made their team the greatest franchise in the history of professional hockey.

“The complete inside story of a great hockey team.” Ronald Corey (former President of the Montreal Canadiens)

“A most sensitive and memorable account of the Club de Hockey Canadien.” Jean Beliveau

CONTENTS

Introduction

Part 1 The Lion Rampant

Chapter 1 Setting the Stage/ Assembling the Cast

Chapter 2 The Darkness Descends

Chapter 3 Maurice Richard, The Lion Rampant

Chapter 4 Father Frank’s Master Plan

Part 2 The Lion Regal

Chapter 5 The Fabulous Fifties

Chapter 6 Jean Beliveau, The Lion Regal

Chapter 7 Good Trader Sam and the Surprising Sixties

Part 3 The Lion in Flight

Chapter 8 The Seventies

Chapter 9 Guy Lafleur, The Lion in Flight

Chapter 10 La Guerre

Part 4 The Lion at the Gate

Chapter 11 The Interregnum/ New Order/Young Lions/The Lions Fly/The 7-Year Itch

Chapter 12 Patrick Roy, the Lion at the Gate

Chapter 13 An improbable Cup in the not-so-gay Nineties (NEW)

Part 5 The Lion of the New Millennium

Chapter 14 A Forum adieu (NEW)

Chapter 15 Bob Gainey, the Lion of the New Millennium (NEW)

Chapter 16 Leaguespeak and the New Hockey (NEW)

Chapter 17 A bleu-blanc-rouge Centennial (NEW)




Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Typos understandable....   May 29, 2000
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

...since the book was originally written in French and translated to English. The rest of the book is pretty dead-on accurate, if a bit homer-ish on the part of the writer (the chapters on Richard, Beliveau, and Lafleur give us an inside look at three of the greatest players not only in Canadiens history, but the NHL's). I re-read part of it yesterday after hearing of Rocket Richard's death, and it really is a nice tribute to the history of Les Habitants, if you can find a copy. Only complaint: the author's ending, a dream of the old Forum ghosts talking to him? Just a wee bit hokey...


1 out of 5 stars I always though this was a classic hockey book. I was wrong!   June 14, 1999
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I cannot tell you how disappointing this book is. First, the writers/editors of this book should be ashamed of themselves! The number of names that are misspelled -- many of them prominent hockey people -- is a DISGRACE! It makes me question the accuracy of everything in the book. They also refer to Molson, the owners of the Canadiens, as "Molson's" throughout the book, which is really annoying and incorrect. I don't know if these guys know anything about hockey. One thing is for sure: they did not have an NHL reference book at their side to spell check names. Just no excuse!

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