Gordie Howe Dead At 88

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
I remember growing up watching him play for Detroit and then the Toronto Maple Leafs and how great his stick control of the puck was and how great of a shot he had......

Craig Custance
ESPN Senior Writer

Gordie Howe never took anything for granted. Not his place in hockey history. Not his place on the Detroit Red Wings' roster.

For 25 seasons, he was the face of the Red Wings, and former teammate Ted Lindsay doesn't remember a training camp in which Howe wasn't fighting for his job.

"He was always worried about making the team," Lindsay said. "It was a tough job for the guy playing on the wing in training camp. This guy was fighting for his position."

He was humble. On the ice, he could be mean. And when he finished his career, Lindsay said Mr. Hockey's place was at the top.

"He's the greatest hockey player who ever played," Lindsay said. "That includes all of them."

On Friday, Howe died at age 88.

He died more than four decades after playing his last game for the Red Wings, years after his final NHL action, with his impact on the game undisputed. He won six Hart Trophies, six Art Ross Trophies and, most importantly, four Stanley Cups.

His professional playing career spanned six decades.

He finished with 801 career regular-season goals, a total topped only by Wayne Gretzky. His 1,850 regular-season points was another mark that Gretzky broke.

"Gordie, what he did for the game of hockey and the passion and spirit he played the game with, was just amazing," Gretzky told ESPN.com's Pierre LeBrun in an interview before Howe's death.

Howe was a dominant player in an NHL that no longer exists. He created space on the ice through any means possible, legal or illegal.

Lindsay remembered one player on the New York Rangers harassing Howe during a game at Olympia Stadium.

"I said, 'Why don't you get rid of that SOB?"' Lindsay recalled.

The next period, Lindsay looked out on the ice, and there was the Rangers winger on the ice. Out cold.

"Nobody saw it happen. No penalty. The referee was down on the other end," Lindsay said. "Nobody bothered [Howe] too much. He enforced himself."

As he gained experience, he got even more proactive.

When sons Mark and Marty Howe played with him in the World Hockey Association with the Houston Aeros, Marty noticed that the player lining across from Gordie always got a whack across the head with the stick early on in the game.

"Every time we played a new team, whoever he lined up against, I felt sorry for," Marty Howe told ESPN.com last year. "Guys are lining up for the faceoff and they're 10 feet away. He was getting what he wanted. He was getting room."

His ability to create his own room with his ferocious style of play defined him on the ice. His class and humility defined him off it.

Howe had a moment for everybody, whether it was a fan waiting in line for an autograph or a kid who would go on to be the best scorer of all time.



"A lot of times when you meet your idols and people you respect and look up to, sometimes it's not as great as you had anticipated or you built it up too much. I was so lucky when I met Gordie," Gretzky said. "I was 10. It was so much nicer and bigger and better than I had ever imagined it. To this day, when people come up to me that talk about having done a book report or speech about me, I always talk about the time that my fondest memory in public school was writing a book report on Gordie Howe."

His impact on the Red Wings laid the foundation to the franchise's becoming one of the most storied and successful franchises in all of sports. His 786 goals with the Red Wings remains the franchise record. So do his 1,808 points.

Only Bob Probert and Joe Kocur compiled more than Howe's 1,643 penalty minutes with the Red Wings.

"When you look at the history of the Detroit Red Wings, they started in 1926. There are three players who are distinctly at the top and then there is a mammoth drop off," said Red Wings senior vice president and Hall of Famer Jimmy Devellano. "The first one is Gordie Howe, the second one is Steve Yzerman and the third one is Nicklas Lidstrom. They all won Cups. They were all captains. They were all the best players. In Howe's case, for many, many years he was the best player in the entire league. Who plays for one team for a quarter century? That's how good he was. That's probably what defines him."

At least as a hockey player.

His wife, Colleen, had a rule when they were raising their children. Hockey stays beyond the garage door.

When he was at home, he was husband and father first. Talk to any of his sons -- Marty, Mark or Murray -- or his daughter, Cathy, and the humble, family-first attitude has survived.

"For me, he's just dad," Cathy said. "He's the guy who said, 'No dates until I meet this guy. Be home at 11. What does your report look like?' When he came through the door, it was never about what I'm doing, what I've accomplished."

To Mark, who joined his father in hockey's Hall of Fame in 2011, that's the legacy.

"He's just a down to earth human being who happened to play hockey," Mark Howe said last year.

"He's just a wonderful man," Gretzky said, "and was wonderful for the game."


SASKATOON, Saskatchewan -- The Great One would have the last word on this memorable night.

"He is, he was, he will always be the greatest of all time," Wayne Gretzky said.

A sold-out crowd of 1,500 stood in delirious applause as the annual Kinsmen celebrity dinner came to a close Friday night. Their native son, the incomparable Gordie Howe, had been honored beautifully on this cold and blizzard-like evening in the heart of the Canadian Prairies.

And Gretzky's final words were not rehearsed.

"It was from the heart. You don't plan something like that. He's so special," Gretzky told ESPN.com about an hour afterward, as he sat down to process what this evening meant to him.

"My relationship with Gordie goes so far back. He's such a unique individual,'' Gretzky said, pausing.

Was that a lump in his throat or just a moment to collect a long list of moments he has shared with Mr. Hockey?

For starters, Gretzky shared, most people don't realize he actually met Gordie Howe previous to that famous stick-around-the-neck photo taken of them both in 1972.

"I was telling Mark [Howe] and Marty [Howe] this, the first time I actually met Gordie was two years before that picture was taken," said Gretzky, which means he was 8 or 9 at the time. "I had gone down to the Brantford Civic Centre, Mark and Marty were playing Junior A for the Detroit Junior Wings against the Brantford Majors. And Gordie was at the game. I stood in the corner where he sat and just stared at Gordie the whole time, for two hours. I was too scared to get his autograph but I shook his hand. That was the first time I met Gordie."

Our conversation on this night, like so many times before, is briefly interrupted from time to time by autograph seekers or fans looking to snap a photo with The Great One.

The answer is always the same, Gretzky obliging, and not in a manner that makes it look like a chore, either. Another gift from Mr. Hockey passed on to him.

"I often say this, nobody handles people like Gordie. He's just a natural," Gretzky said at a news conference Friday morning. "He's at ease. He treats everyone the same, whether it's the prime minister of Canada or somebody that lives on a farm in Saskatchewan."

Gretzky signs his autographs carefully with clear penmanship, so the signature is easy to read. Gretzky learned that from both Howe and the late Jean Beliveau.


During a gathering of legends, Wayne Gretzky said Gordie Howe is the greatest of them all. AP Photo
Gretzky can go on forever telling Gordie Howe stories. They come to him in an instant. And the look on his face as he gets ready to tell the next one says more than words how much Mr. Hockey means to him.

Which is why when he committed to the Kinsmen dinner two months ago, he made another decision: He would bring two of his kids, Ty, 24, and Trevor, 22, to be part of this event.

"I wanted my boys to see this," said Gretzky. "I wanted them to see who and what I idolized, not only Gordie, but his entire family. What it means to hockey, what Gordie Howe means to people in Canada. I wanted them to see what it's meant to me, not only as a hockey player but how Gordie influenced me as a person in my life."

The Gretzky kids are L.A.-born and bred, but summer visits to Grandpa's place in Brantford, Ontario, over the years helped draw a picture of what their famous father means to this country. Seeing their dad take his place with Gordie Howe on this special night also hammered home the point.

"I realize what this country has done for my family, it's unbelievable," Trevor, a baseball prospect in the Los Angeles Angels system, told ESPN.com on Friday night. "Every time I come up here, the people are so nice, they're unbelievable. Any time my brother and I have a chance to travel with him up here, we come. ...

"Everything we have in our family is because of the NHL and the sport of hockey."

Watching his father navigate politely through autograph seekers here the past few days again reminded Trevor, a pro athlete in his own right, the way things should be done.

"I've always looked up to him," Trevor said of his dad. "As a young kid, I noticed how he interacted with people. Every kid wants to be like their dad, we're no different. I've watched him throughout my life and how he handles people, and I try to go about it the same way."


Gordie Howe was able to walk on his own at the Saskatoon Kinsmen's annual sports celebrity dinner. AP Photo/The Canadian Press/Liam Richards
Trevor and Ty watched Friday night as Gretzky took his turn on stage in front of the crowd of 1,500 to tell a few Gordie Howe anecdotes. Gretzky talked about the time he and Gordie met President Ronald Reagan.

"I'll never forget the president saying to Gordie during our visit, 'You know, Gordie, I don't trust those effing Russians.' Gordie says, 'You know what, neither do I,'" recalled Gretzky, and the crowd erupted in laughter.

Later on Friday night, during my conversation with Gretzky, he talked about that exchange again and the reason it stuck with him all these years later.

"It's that the president was so comfortable talking to Gordie," said Gretzky. "I remember saying to my dad when he asked me how it went, I said, 'The president swore to Gordie Howe!' It was so empowering to me. I was like, 'Oh, my gosh.' I'll never forget that moment."


It's important not to forget. Gretzky mentioned several times during this visit that younger people need to realize just how amazing Howe was, playing in the NHL at the age of 50.

"I'm impressed by Crosby, Ovechkin, Stamkos, Toews -- those guys do such great things for our game today," said Gretzky. "But Gordie Howe is the greatest player who ever lived. There's not even a question about it. Imagine scoring 20 goals at 50 years old? Jonathan Toews might be the greatest athlete in the game today. He's not playing at 50 and he's not scoring 20 goals. Nobody ever will again. It's a fact."

Gretzky's voice goes a little quiet. He thinks about his dad, Walter, and the connection that also exists with Gordie Howe.

"My dad idolized Gordie Howe," said Gretzky. "And Gordie always treated my dad like he was the prime minister of Canada. From day one in 1972 when I first met him, until when I became MVP in the NHL, he always treated my dad the same way.

"My dad would always say, 'Gordie Howe is the greatest player who ever lived.' My dad is my biggest fan, but I'm always No. 2 to Gordie Howe for my dad. And I'm OK with that."

If this indeed was the last time Wayne Gretzky and Gordie Howe are together, it will have been beyond perfect.

"But I hope I get one more chance to be with Gordie," said Gretzky. "He's just a good man."
 

stehno

Well-Known Member
Jul 5, 2014
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Salem, OR
Steve, I had no idea you were a hockey fan. I grew up in Michigan playing hockey and in high school around 1975 I played against Gordie's linemate Ted Lindsay (man of 1000 stitches) in an exhibition game. Also used to scrimmage occasionally against Ken Morrow and his brother Greg who I thought was the more refined of the two.

I loved Gordy Howe though I never considered him the GOAT (greatest of all time) as that spot is reserved for Bobby Orr. Sorry. :) But aside from Orr, Howe was ineed the greatest.

I remember reading a lengthy article I think in the late 70's about Howe and it was rather fascinating. Some of those highlights included:

- Gordie's shoulders went all the way down to his wrists.

- Gordie's elbows went everywhere. (I just made that one up).

- Gordie was ambidextrous as he could play equally well left or right-handed.

- In the 1960's, he was the best in the league and making like $3500 annual salary. He'd have to get a summer job to support the family while his neighbor, a teacher, would pack the kids into their station wagon pulling a trailer and travel the states.

- Gordie was a natural athlete. He was asked if he thought he could hit a baseball and said yes. So they took him out to a Detroit Tigers practice and gave him a bat. The pitcher was instructed not to let up on him and at the 3rd pitch, he knocked a home run into the bleachers.

- My favorite highlight. No doubt Gordie was a pitbull and not the cleanest of players. More importantly, the author said, Gordie had the memory of an elephant. Rookies and others trying to make a name for themselves would take cheapshots at Gordie and Gordie rarely retaliated then and there. It might not be that period, that game, nor perhaps even that season, but at some point in the future there'd be a skirmish in the corner for the puck and the puck would come flying out with somebody taking it down to the other end of the ice with all eyes on the puck and suddenly there'd be a sonic boom back in the corner with the boards swaying back and forth, the other player lying face down on the ice, and there's Gordie skating away blinking innocently.

Anyway, Gordie was incredible and humble too and how cool to realize a dream come true to play with his two sons well into his 50's.
 
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