A captivating memoir from Canada's foremost hockey historian and a
beloved NHL commentator It's been 85 years since Brian McFarlane first
laced a pair of skates and tested the black ice on a tiny pond. And then
he discovered the joy of hockey. Ultimately, there would be grade school
hockey, high school hockey, junior hockey, college hockey, and,
miraculously, two decades with the NHL Oldtimers anchoring his life. He
was the rank amateur playing on a line with the Big M and Norm Ullman,
facing off against icons like Gordie Howe and Ted Lindsay at Maple Leaf
Gardens -- even scoring a goal. He suited up at the Montreal Forum,
elbow-to-elbow against John Ferguson, before thousands of fans. (There
was even a stint with the Flying Fathers who ordained him a "Bishop"
after a hat trick.) Off the ice, in 1960, McFarlane was the first
Canadian to be a commentator on CBS's coverage of the NHL. He also
survived 25 years of Hockey Night in Canada -- despite confrontations
with Punch Imlach, Harold Ballard, Bobby Hull, and Eddie Shack. Now, in
this revealing autobiography, he remembers it all. For Brian McFarlane,
it has been a helluva life in hockey.