Synopses & Reviews
Herb Brooks is best known for forging the “Miracle on Ice” team that stunned the world in 1980. He also resurrected the University of Minnesota hockey program in the 1970s, coached in the NHL, and built a reputation for unorthodox motivational and conditioning techniques. But perhaps Brooks’ greatest hockey achievements were his steadfast support of American-born hockey players and his tireless adherence to a creative, European-influenced style of play.
As the hockey beat writer for the daily Minneapolis Tribune, John Gilbert was on hand to cover those Brooks-coached “U” teams and the meticulously assembled 1980 Olympic squad. In the process, Gilbert became Brooks’ confidant, close friend, and sometimes his critic. Now, for the first time, Gilbert offers recently gathered anecdotes and reflections from former players and colleagues, as well as his own first-person perspective, to illuminate the people, experiences, and even the specific game situations that shaped and propelled Brooks’ philosophies and methods. In the process, he also busts many of the myths that have grown up around the coach and his colorful career.
Gilbert begins with Brooks’ childhood in blue-collar East St. Paul, his amateur playing career, and his ill-fated stint with the 1960 gold medal–winning U.S. Olympic team (from which he was famously the last player cut) before dissecting his tenure behind the Gophers bench and the entire 1980 Lake Placid story, from the selection process and barnstorming tour to a game-by-game breakdown of the Olympics themselves. Throughout, readers are also treated to impossibly colorful quotes from Brooks and a complete examination of his post-Miracle career, including his passionate battles with USA Hockey and coaching turns with Division III St. Cloud State, four NHL teams, the 1998 French Olympic team, and the 2002 U.S. Olympic squad. The result is a comprehensive, thoroughly unique, and at times rollicking portrait of the man some have called the greatest hockey coach ever.
The Author - John Gilbert has been around sports his entire life. The son of the late Wally Gilbert, Duluth's greatest athlete (Brooklyn Dodgers, Duluth Eskimos, pre-NBA pro basketball, and Duluth curling), he has written about hockey at all levels. A former Minneapolis Star Tribune writer, Gilbert now reports for various magazines and radio stations. He continues to play amateur baseball in his attempt to avoid reaching retirement age.
Review
St. Paul Pioneer Press, December 6, 2008 (circ.: 184,500)
“The book fans of Herb Brooks waited nearly 30 years for has finally reached bookstores… This book reminds us how much everyone in the hockey world misses Brooks, who died in a car accident on Aug. 11, 2003, on his way home from a hockey fundraising golf event on the Iron Range.”
Synopsis
The U. S. hockey team’s victory at the 1980 Olympics was a “Miracle on Ice”--a miracle largely brought about by the late Herb Brooks, the legendary coach who forged that invincible team. Famously antagonistic toward the press at Lake Placid, Brooks nonetheless turned to sportswriter John Gilbert after each game, giving his longtime friend and confidant what became the most comprehensive coverage of the ’80 team. This book is Gilbert’s memoir of Brooks. Neither strictly biography or tell-all exposé,
Herb Brooks: Born to Coach is the story of an extraordinary man as it emerged in the course of a remarkable friendship.
Gilbert, writing for the Minneapolis Tribune, first met Brooks during his coaching days at the University of Minnesota, whose hockey program he resurrected in the 1970’s. The two became fast friends, and here, for the first time, Gilbert relates anecdotes--his own and former players’--that illuminate Brooks’ oftentimes hard-nosed coaching methods, his dramatic successes, and his incomparable character. From Brooks’ beginnings in East St. Paul and his stint with the 1960 gold medal-winning Olympic team (from which he was famously the last player cut), Gilbert goes on to dissect the coach’s tenure with the Gophers (including three national titles) and the Lake Placid story, from the selection process and yearlong barnstorming tour to the Games themselves. Throughout this and later chapters of Brooks’ career--including coaching turns with St. Cloud State University, four NHL teams, and the 2002 U.S. Olympic squad--readers are treated to impossibly colorful quotes, rare photographs from Brooks’ playing and coaching careers, and pertinent sidebar pieces that originally appeared in the Minneapolis Tribune.
Synopsis
A memoir of the irrepressible Herb Brooks, impresario of U. S. hockey’s 1980 “Miracle on Ice,” by a longtime sportswriter and confidant.
Synopsis
The U. S. hockey team’s victory at the 1980 Olympics was a “Miracle on Ice”--a miracle largely brought about by Herb Brooks, the legendary coach who forged that invincible team. Famously antagonistic toward the press at Lake Placid, Brooks nonetheless turned to sportswriter John Gilbert after each game, giving his longtime friend and confidant what became the most comprehensive coverage of the ’80 team. This book is Gilbert’s memoir of Brooks. Neither strictly biography or tell-all exposé, Herb Brooks: The Inside Story of a Hockey Mastermind is the story of an extraordinary man as it emerged in the course of a remarkable friendship.
About the Author
John Gilbert began his sports writing career with the Minnesota Daily as a freshman at the University of Minnesota in 1963. He went on to cover Gopher and North Stars hockey for the Minneapolis Tribune and Minneapolis Star Tribune before moving back to his native Duluth in the late 1990s. He divides his time between Duluth and the Twin Cities.