Barry Melrose is sitting on a plush couch in Hidden Havana, a dim but homey cigar club in Southington, just a holler from the ESPN campus in Bristol, Connecticut. “I get paid to talk about hockey,” says ESPN’s hockey analyst, cigar in hand. “If I wasn’t paid, I would be watching anyway.” His hair—a black and silvery mane—is combed back. His size is imposing, befitting one who played defense in the National Hockey League for eight seasons. The face is smiling, honest and ruddy, as if still wind-burned by the frigid climate of Kelvington, Saskatchewan, where he was born and raised. Melrose holds forth on a range of hockey topics, such as how important last year’s Final— with contestants from the biggest media markets, New York and Los Angeles—was for…
