Gordie Howe, the gritty and mighty 'Mr. Hockey,' dies at 88
Gordie Howe, the rough-and-tumble Canadian farm boy whose
boundless blend of talent and toughness made him the NHL’s quintessential star
during a career that lasted into his 50s, has died. The man forever known as
“Mr. Hockey” was 88.
Son Murray Howe confirmed the death Friday, texting to The
Associated Press: “Mr Hockey left peacefully, beautifully, and w no regrets.”
Howe shattered records, threw elbows and helped the Detroit
Red Wings win four Stanley Cups, becoming an idol to Wayne Gretzky and countless
other Canadians while also helping the sport attract American fans.
His final NHL season came at age 52 when Gretzky was a
rookie — a fitting symmetry since Howe was the league’s most prolific scorer
until the “Great One” broke his career marks for goals and points.
Red Wings general manager Ken Holland called Howe “one of
the greatest players, if not the greatest” in NHL history and the “greatest Red
Wing of all time.” Speaking to the AP by phone, Holland said Howe had “as much
skill and toughness as anybody who ever played.”
“As a human being, he was incredible,” he added. “He loved
to be around people and to make them laugh. He was an incredible ambassador for
the sport.”
With finesse and a heavy dose of grit, the Hockey Hall of
Famer set NHL marks with 801 goals and 1,850 points — mostly with the Red Wings
— that held up until Gretzky came along. Howe was also so famously fierce that
a “Gordie Howe Hat Trick” became synonymous with the combination of having a
goal, an assist and a fight in one game.
Howe suffered a stroke in late October 2014 while at his
daughter’s home in Lubbock, Texas, losing some function on the right side of
his body. He suffered another stroke a short time later and family members said
chronic back pain, advanced stages of dementia and high blood pressure were
taking a toll. The body Howe relied on as an athlete stayed relative strong,
but memory loss became a problem that family members noticed before the death
of their mother, Colleen, in 2009.
Howe was a giant of the game and no list of the NHL’s
greatest players has him anywhere but near the top alongside players like Bobby
Orr, Maurice Richard, Mario Lemieux, Guy Lafleur, Bobby Hull and Gretzky. Like
few others, Howe’s impact on the game stretched over decades.
Besides the four Cups, the talented right winger won six
Hart Trophies as NHL MVP and six Ross Trophies as the league’s top scorer. Howe
began playing for the Red Wings in 1946, leading them to seven straight
first-place finishes in the regular season. He was a part of what was known as
“The Production Line” with fellow future Hall of Famers Ted Lindsay and Sid
Abel during his 25-year run with the franchise.
“When Gordie came into the NHL, hockey was a Canadian game.
He converted it into a North American game,” former NHL President Clarence
Campbell said when Howe retired the first time in 1971 because he was playing
with arthritis in his left wrist and for a last-place team.
Howe’s wife orchestrated a plan to get “Mr. Hockey” back on
the ice two years later. She helped him live his dream of playing professional
hockey with sons Mark and Marty in the World Hockey Association. And at age 45,
Howe still had it. He scored 31 goals and had 69 assists, was named MVP of the
NHL’s rival league and led the Aeros to the 1973 WHA title — a run that was the
focus of a movie: “Mr. Hockey: The Gordie Howe Story.”
Howe had 41 points for the Hartford Whalers during the
1979-80 season in what was his 26th and final year in the NHL.
When Howe finally retired for good from the NHL, he was 52.
And with a single shift with the Detroit Vipers in the International Hockey
League in 1997, he played professionally in a sixth decade at the age of 69.
He referred to his play as “poetry in slow motion” late in
his career, a far cry from his score-and-smash style in his 20s, 30s and early
40s.
Of course, Howe’s prowess in scoring was matched by his
skill with the rough stuff. Unlike anyone in quite the same way, Howe handled
his business with his elbows and fists almost as often as he did with wrist and
slap shots. He ranked among the NHL leaders in penalties minutes three times,
spending 100-plus minutes in the penalty box during those seasons. When he
resumed playing as a parent with sons on the same sheet of ice, opponents often
found out not to mess with his boys.
“If I can skate, I’ll get even,” Howe once said.
Howe needed more than 400 stitches to close cuts, lost
several teeth, broke ribs and nose. He had a serious head injury in 1950 that
led to emergency surgery to relieve pressure on his brain. Despite the blood
and broken bones, he didn’t miss many games during his NHL-record, 1,767-game
career and played in all 80 during his final season that ended after his 52nd
birthday.
“You’ve got to love what you’re doing,” Howe once said. “If
you love it, you can overcome any handicap or the soreness or all the aches and
pains, and continue to play for a long, long time.”
Mark Howe said his father was “the toughest, meanest guy
I’ve ever seen on a pair of skates,” and that’s why he was able to play for
decades.
“No one in their right mind ever wanted to tangle with him,”
Lindsay has said. “Gordie had a lethal pair of elbows, was strong as a moose
and knew every angle.”
Gordon Howe was born March 31, 1928, in tiny Floral,
Saskatchewan, and raised nearby on the Canadian prairie in Saskatoon. His
father was a laborer and Howe pitched in early, growing strong with the work.
“He was born in a barn and the house he grew up in was no
bigger than a garage,” Mark Howe said. “They had nothing, like many people
during the Depression. Someone was going door to door, selling bags of stuff
for $1 and in one of those bags, dad got his first pair of skates.”
Howe left as a teenager to pursue a hockey career. Howe made
his NHL debut for the Red Wings when he was 18. In Howe’s second season, he was
an All-Star for the first of a record 23 times.
“Finally, I saved enough to buy my mom and dad a brand new
home — with running water,” he once recalled. “I think that’s the biggest thing
I ever achieved. That’s what I wanted, and I saved my money to buy it.”
Howe was 6-foot and 205 pounds during his career, bigger
than most players. His ability to skate, shoot and pass made him a threat every
time he had the puck. No one, according to Hall of Fame coach Scotty Bowman,
could match Howe’s style of play.
“He could fight, intimidate, play offensively,” Bowman
recalled.
Howe surpassed Richard’s NHL record of 544 goals in 1963.
After the turn of the century, Howe, his sense of humor in full gear, would
walk around Joe Louis Arena in Detroit carrying a teacup poodle named Rocket.
Howe ranked among the top five in scoring for 20 straight seasons.
Gretzky would later break his records for goals, points, MVP
trophies and scoring titles while wearing No. 99 in a tribute to Howe, who wore
No. 9 during a lower-scoring era of the game. He finished his career in 1999
with 894 goals.
“I thought I had something they would never touch,” Howe
said. “But I knew when they started scoring 80 goals in a season I was in
trouble.”
Mark Messier reached 1,887 points in 2004 during his 25th
NHL season and pushed Howe from second to third in the record books.
“I haven’t celebrated coming in second too many times in my
life,” Messier said then. “But I’ll tell you, because of what Gordie has done,
for us mere mortals who have played this game, being No. 2 is not so bad.”
Howe, without a doubt, was most proud of his family. He
raved about Colleen, whom he married in 1953. They became personal and
professional partners as the woman known as “Mrs. Hockey” championed the game
for children and later became her husband’s agent.
She died in March 2009 at age 76 after battling Pick’s
disease, a rare form of dementia similar to Alzheimer’s. Their children,
Murray, Mark, Marty and Cathy, each took turns having him sleep at their houses
for weeks or months at a time after their mother died.
Playing with his sons, though, was what Howe said he was
most proud of from his career.
“The fact that I had an opportunity to skate five years with
them,” Howe told the AP in 2011, “I think that’s every father’s dream.”
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