He'll take a break from that job Monday when he receives the 2016 Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award for excellence in hockey journalism at the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Also being honored are Hall of Fame inductees Eric Lindros, Sergei Makarov, Pat Quinn and Rogie Vachon, and Sam Rosen, winner of the 2016 Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for excellence in hockey broadcasting.
"I was blown away," Verdi said. "There's guys on that award who covered hockey their whole lives and really dug in the trenches more than I did. I went over to baseball and didn't do [hockey] day-to-day for 30 years. Whoever voted for me to get this amazing honor must have gone back in the archives."
Through the years Verdi's memories remain sharp, and though the Stapleton joke wasn't funny at the time, Verdi holds no anger.
"[Stapleton] was a terrible prankster," Verdi said. "He had [former defenseman] Keith Magnuson traded five times. He'd start whispering in the corner of the room with [former Blackhawks defenseman] Bill White and Maggie [Magnuson] would be looking over. Maggie would say, 'What's going on?' and they'd keep whispering until Pat, with a complete straight face, would say, 'Oh, we can't tell you … it's too much.'"
Magnuson, invariably, kept pressing.
"Stapleton would then say, 'Well, Bill and I heard that you're going to be traded," Verdi said. "Poor Maggie. His head would drop and go back to his locker like he'd been shot. They did this to him time and time again. Stapleton and Bill White. They were awful."
By awful, though, he really meant great.
They were merely hockey people, to use Verdi's terminology, same as coaches, scouts and front-office executives. During his newspaper career Verdi wrote about every professional sports team in Chicago, plus national and international topics. But he has always held a fondness for hockey.
It's a big reason he took on his current role in 2010. He writes columns for the Blackhawks website and feature stories for the team magazine.
"My first real job was covering the Blackhawks for the paper," said Verdi, who also wrote for Golf Digest and Golf World. "I was spoiled. The hockey people, the players, the executives, the referees, the coaches, the writers, the broadcasters … it's just a different landscape. I thought all sports would be like that and they aren't. I don't mean to knock the other sports, but hockey's different."
Verdi is too. He's a master of delivering one-liners and is a gifted writer, but also is self-deprecating and approachable.
That's what first drew the attention of Blackhawks president and CEO John McDonough when he was president of the Chicago Cubs. McDonough had read Verdi's work for years and knew him personally, but watching him interact with Cubs players sparked the idea of hiring him after being hired by the Blackhawks.