Save by Roy

Patrick Roy and the Return of the Colorado Avalanche

By (author) Terry Frei, Adrian Dater

Paperback - £12.99

Publication date:

05 January 2015

Length of book:

320 pages

Publisher

Taylor Trade Publishing

ISBN-13: 9781630760007

In 2013, the Colorado Avalanche announced that Joe Sakic, a franchise legend and Hall of Fame center, would be promoted to become the new executive VP of hockey operations. Soon, Sakic was instrumental in the hiring of Patrick Roy, the greatest goaltender in NHL history, a man crucial to the Avalanche’s Stanley Cup victories in 1996 and 2001, as Colorado’s new coach. This book, a collaborative effort between seasoned sportswriters and authors Terry Frei and Adrian Dater, is an opinionated, interpretive, and in-depth look at Patrick Roy’s first season as a National Hockey League coach, and the Avalanche’s surprising 2013–14 season.
Sportswriters Frei and Dater present a fast-paced, game-by-game account of the 2013-2014 NHL season of the Colorado Avalanche, which was also the first year of its coach Patrick Roy, 'the greatest goaltender in NHL history and instrumental in Avalanche Stanley Cup victories in 1996 and 2001.' As the team heads towards a surprising playoff appearance, the authors detail the 'remarkable thing' that was accomplished in the face of numerous skeptics: 'Roy took a team in disarray and put the pieces back in order.' This includes a frank assessment of Roy’s volatile temper and his successful effort to harness his old school energy to deal with players with vastly different temperaments, such as the 'quiet, reflective' Ryan O’Reilly, 'a yoga devotee often found stretching in corners of locker rooms or hallways.' Frei and Dater provide excellent sketches of almost every Avalanche player and each one’s relationship with Roy, which will delight Avalanche fans. But hockey fans in general will enjoy the moments when the break from the season’s narrative to tell stories from their individual 'notebooks,' such as Frei’s account of a late-season interview with Roy in which the once hyper-intense coach admits that he realizes he has no real control over how playoff pairings develop: 'I believe in destiny…. If it’s meant to happen, it will happen.'