Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series
Tasked with finding common ground and building friendships between the world's two largest countries and arctic neighbors, a young Canadian diplomat finds himself on his first overseas assignment in Moscow, the Soviet capital. It's the early 1970s and a Cold War between communism and capitalism, the west and the east, is simmering-while the ice rink is just starting to heat up. Smith opts for sports diplomacy, throwing off his embassy black tie dress codes and donning the blue and white sweater of the Moscow Maple Leafs.



A vodka-infused encounter with the influential Izvestia journalist "The Snowman" leads him into the murky world of Soviet hockey officialdom, the KGB, and the decision that USSR "amateurs" were finally ready to play Canadian professionals in an eight-game Friendship Series of the best versus the best.



Trusted by each side with unparalleled access to officials, coaches, and players on both teams, Smith witnesses this unique and epic hockey series that has come to transcend time.



The 1972 Canadian-Soviet Hockey Series will go down in history as a pivotal political event, changing the course of two nations and the world of hockey.
"1140938706"
Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series
Tasked with finding common ground and building friendships between the world's two largest countries and arctic neighbors, a young Canadian diplomat finds himself on his first overseas assignment in Moscow, the Soviet capital. It's the early 1970s and a Cold War between communism and capitalism, the west and the east, is simmering-while the ice rink is just starting to heat up. Smith opts for sports diplomacy, throwing off his embassy black tie dress codes and donning the blue and white sweater of the Moscow Maple Leafs.



A vodka-infused encounter with the influential Izvestia journalist "The Snowman" leads him into the murky world of Soviet hockey officialdom, the KGB, and the decision that USSR "amateurs" were finally ready to play Canadian professionals in an eight-game Friendship Series of the best versus the best.



Trusted by each side with unparalleled access to officials, coaches, and players on both teams, Smith witnesses this unique and epic hockey series that has come to transcend time.



The 1972 Canadian-Soviet Hockey Series will go down in history as a pivotal political event, changing the course of two nations and the world of hockey.
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Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series

Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series

by Gary J. Smith

Narrated by Kyle Tait

Unabridged — 12 hours, 28 minutes

Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series

Ice War Diplomat: Hockey Meets Cold War Politics at the 1972 Summit Series

by Gary J. Smith

Narrated by Kyle Tait

Unabridged — 12 hours, 28 minutes

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Overview

Tasked with finding common ground and building friendships between the world's two largest countries and arctic neighbors, a young Canadian diplomat finds himself on his first overseas assignment in Moscow, the Soviet capital. It's the early 1970s and a Cold War between communism and capitalism, the west and the east, is simmering-while the ice rink is just starting to heat up. Smith opts for sports diplomacy, throwing off his embassy black tie dress codes and donning the blue and white sweater of the Moscow Maple Leafs.



A vodka-infused encounter with the influential Izvestia journalist "The Snowman" leads him into the murky world of Soviet hockey officialdom, the KGB, and the decision that USSR "amateurs" were finally ready to play Canadian professionals in an eight-game Friendship Series of the best versus the best.



Trusted by each side with unparalleled access to officials, coaches, and players on both teams, Smith witnesses this unique and epic hockey series that has come to transcend time.



The 1972 Canadian-Soviet Hockey Series will go down in history as a pivotal political event, changing the course of two nations and the world of hockey.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/13/2022

Canadian diplomat Smith debuts with a nostalgic account of the 1972 hockey series between Canada and the Soviet Union. He describes the “ugly bickering, bad feelings and raw emotion” between Team Canada’s roster of NHL professionals, who were expected to dominate, and the Soviet “amateurs,” who had Politburo backing and home advantage in the final four games of the eight-game series (the first four games were played in Canada). Off the ice, the stakes were even higher, as Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and Canadian prime minister Pierre Trudeau seized on the series as a way to “move beyond” a strict nuclear containment policy and “improve bilateral relations.” Claiming that life as a diplomat in Moscow in the 1970s “was akin to living in an intense pressure cooker,” Smith details entrapment ploys by KGB agents, awkward encounters with ordinary Russians, and “blow off steam” as a member of the embassy’s hockey and broomball teams. He also recounts negotiations with his Soviet counterparts over everything from press coverage to ice thickness and the criticism Team Canada took for its roster selection. The story gets bogged down by diplomatic protocols, but comes alive when Smith narrates the on-ice action, including Canada’s series-clinching win in Game Eight. This is an appealing account of sports diplomacy in action. (Sept.)

From the Publisher

…superb book…This is a tale of bureaucratic obstacles, mutual suspicion, frequent cultural clashes, and incomprehension that somehow—in significant part due to Smith and his colleagues—culminated in the 1972 series…fascinating tale.” —Ambassador Eric Rubin, The Foreign Service Journal

"Smith relates the tale of these negotiations with the drama of a gifted storyteller. He weaves such a good tale that readers need have no knowledge of hockey’s intricacies or the series’ outcome to enjoy themselves…. readers can’t help but empathize with the tension and uncertainties of the negotiations even as they enjoy his omnipresent sense of humor and inability to take himself too seriously." Washington Independent Review of Books

“Former ambassador Smith has elegantly assembled an honest and uplifting sports history that represents a rare insider view of the diplomacy process and its successes and failures during the Cold War…Readers, especially history and hockey fans, will be mesmerized by this account and will come away with a clearer understanding of the numerous intricate details that are involved in successful diplomacy and how they affect historical events. Highly recommended.” Library Journal

"In 1972, Canada’s birthright, our game, hockey, was suddenly open to inspection. Gary J. Smith wasn’t asked to referee the now famous hockey series between the Soviet Union and Canada, he was asked to referee something greater. He was handed the Cold War. He was 28 years old. With suspicion aroused on both sides, each whisper, every secret, kept feeding into the question, “What is hidden in their hearts?” Such a question bears discussion and publicity. One man had the necessary skill set. Finally, the incredible story of the glue in ’72. The Ice War Diplomat." —Ron MacLean, host of Hockey Night in Canada

"The Canada–Russia series was a truly iconic moment in hockey history. But it was more—a fascinating time in Canadian diplomatic history. Gary J. Smith was a young, Russian-speaking diplomat with a ringside seat. His story is engaging and brilliantly told." —Bob Rae, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations

"They were just supposed to be exhibition games, but the Summit Series turned out to be bigger than the Stanley Cup, and a highlight of my career. I enjoyed Gary J. Smith’s accurate account. Ice War Diplomat brought back very good memories." —Frank Mahovlich, hockey legend and Team Canada member

"[the story] comes alive when Smith narrates the on-ice action, including Canada’s series-clinching win in Game Eight. This is an appealing account of sports diplomacy in action." Publishers Weekly

"An extraordinary, well written, inherently interesting, and impressively presented true life story." Midwest Book Review

Ice War Diplomat is a detailed account of the first professional hockey matches between Canada and the USSR, as told by someone who experienced them firsthand.” Foreword Reviews

"This vivid portrayal of the characters who made the Series happen is a thriller! Smith renders brilliantly the diplomatic skills and sharp minds displayed off-ice and in backrooms that delivered not just a unique Hockey Faceoff, but a top foreign policy priority of the Canadian PM. His own backstory of a first-time diplomat makes us relate even more." —Anne Leahy, Ambassador of Canada to Russia 1996-1999. First Secretary, Canadian Embassy to the USSR 1980-1982

"An engaging and colorful eye-witness account, Ice War Diplomat greatly increases our understanding of the 1972 Summit Series between Canada and the USSR, by focusing on its little-known but crucial diplomatic history. As Smith shows, staging the series that led to one of Canada’s most iconic sports moments was first and foremost a triumph of diplomacy." —Brendan Kelly, Head of the Historical Section at Global Affairs Canada, and author of The Good Fight: Marcel Cadieux and Canadian Diplomacy, winner of the 2020 J.W. Dafoe Book Prize

"Gary J. Smith is the original hockey ‘Insider.’ His Ice War Diplomat contains sweeping history, sharp analysis, keen new insights, and enough action to stand with the best of hockey books. But there is so much more here, much of it unknown before. He was the only one with full access to both sides during the 1972 Summit Series and, believe me, the games off the ice were often as challenging and those on. It’s like seeing the series all over again, with sharper eyes." —Roy MacGregor, author, columnist and feature writer for the Globe & Mail

"Canadian hockey fans remember Canada’s breathtakingly narrow victory in the fabled 1972 eight-game series against the Soviet Union. Now Gary J. Smith, then a young diplomat at the Canadian embassy in Moscow assigned to be Canada’s link with the Soviet hockey authorities, offers the definitive account about how the Soviets viewed, prepared for, and reacted to the series. A tour de force of reportage, history and analysis." —Jeffrey Simpson, national columnist for the Globe & Mail

“A rare side of the Summit Series story that has never been told. A fascinating insider view of how Canada/Russia ’72 was much bigger than the game.” —James Duthie, TSN hockey host

"Gary Smith’s Ice War Diplomat is like Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy meets Disney’s Miracle on Ice, with cases of Molson and vodka as the rink boards and KGB spies masquerading as hockey officials. Smith captures the troika of hockey, history, and diplomacy in one fascinating book. We all know the ending, but it’s a long and winding – and sometimes wild – road to Henderson’s goal in this gripping first person account, which promises to delight." —Paul Deegan, Policy Magazine

Library Journal

★ 08/01/2022

Former ambassador Smith has elegantly assembled an honest and uplifting sports history that represents a rare insider view of the diplomacy process and its successes and failures during the Cold War. In 1972, a team of Canadian hockey players and a team of the then USSR hockey players were assembled to play an epic eight-game series titled the Summit Series. Created to build better international relationships between the two countries, it was ultimately successful. Now, it is often remembered fondly as the beginning of a grand historical bond between the two nations. Just prior to this series, Smith began his 30-year career as a Canadian diplomat, receiving his first assignment at his country's embassy in Moscow, Russia. Among other duties, he was given the awesome task of working to make the series a reality. VERDICT Readers, especially history and hockey fans, will be mesmerized by this account and will come away with a clearer understanding of the numerous intricate details that are involved in successful diplomacy and how they affect historical events. Highly recommended.—Steve Dixon

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175521437
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 05/10/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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