Pat Burns was one of the great NHL coaches. He worked with the
Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins and New
Jersey Devils, and seemed always to enjoy instant success. He
capped his extraordinary career by coaching the New Jersey Devils
to a Stanley Cup victory in 2003. Cancer--his third bout--finally
claimed him in 2010, aged 58.
Rosie DiManno, who knew Burns well, has written a revealing,
exhilarating and heartfelt account of his life: his childhood as a
fatherless, solitary male surrounded by many women, his years as a
police officer, his glorious coaching career and his long and
characteristically valiant ending.
Coach is both the first major biography of Burns and one that,
with its revelations, personal insights and riveting prose,
is--like the man himself--sure to be both controversial and hard to
beat. Rosie DiManno knew, liked and admired Burns, and in the
writing of this book has interviewed many, many people from every
stage of his life. She is not blind to his less endearing
qualities, but seeks to explain them.
DiManno reveals a man of contradictions--gruff and crude, bullying
and sentimental, and easily wounded. She shows, moreover, a man of
hockey. The Burns who rode motorcycles, dressed like a cowboy, and
sweet-talked the ladies was, says DiManno, a self-creation. His one
indisputable, true talent was for coaching hockey. He was a pure
coach.
DiManno tells a compelling story and helps us to understand a
complex man, one who gave little of himself to the public and yet
whose funeral was a spectacle. How did that happen? Who was Pat
Burns? Rosie DiManno, who witnessed much of the story, has the
answers.