Dryden: Time for a ‘Game Change’ when it comes to hockey and hits to the head
TORONTO — Ken Dryden never met Steve Montador. But after hearing of the death of the NHL veteran defenceman at just 35, he wanted to know how and why.
“Game Change” is the result.
Subtitled “The Life and Death of Steve Montador and the Future of Hockey,” the book documents what Dryden learned. Given the outcome, it’s a sad, sad story.
But Montador, a larger-than-life character beloved by teammates for always doing “what needed to be done,” is worth getting to know. And in intertwining his story with the history of hockey, Dryden brings the reader to a place where he can ask what can be done to prevent the type of brain trauma that Montador suffered.