Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dinner in Saskatoon pays tribute to hometown hockey legend Gordie Howe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 10:33 AM

    SASKATOON — Gordie Howe learned to play hockey with second-hand skates.

    His first pair tumbled out of a burlap sack his mother bought from a neighbour. He and his sister Edna each took one oversized skate, stuffing them with woollen socks to make them fit. Howe's eagerness eventually won out and he bought Edna's skate for a dime to complete his set.

    The well-known story of Howe's humble beginnings is still discussed by the children who play shinny outside the hockey legend's old school in Saskatoon.

    "He grew up skating on this rink," says 13-year-old Taylor Hanemaayer, pointing to a dark-green house that sits behind King George Community School.

    "That's where he grew up. He's the only famous hockey player that's gone to this school."

    Len Ermine, 12, says hopeful players still look up to the man known as "Mr. Hockey." A large sign reading "Welcome Home Gordie Howe" sits near the school's front entrance.

    "He's a really good player," says Ermine.

    Howe is in Saskatoon on Friday for a celebrity sports dinner that will pay tribute to his life and career. He holds NHL records for most games played (1,767) and seasons played (26). His 801 career goals rank second to Wayne Gretzky's 894.

    The Hall of Famer played on four Stanley Cup championship teams in Detroit during a 25-year stint that began in 1946.

    The 86-year-old suffered two disabling strokes late last year. His family has said his health has improved after he underwent a stem-cell treatment as part of a clinical trial in Mexico.

    Howe's sister, Helen Cummine, who lives in Saskatoon, says Howe is excited to return home. But she adds the family is still reeling after her older brother, Vic, died Saturday in Moncton, N.B.

    Vic Howe played three seasons for the NHL's New York Rangers in the 1950s. Cummine says her two brothers were especially close and fondly remembers them pranking her as a child.

    "(They) would get a brick of ice cream, cut it in half, tie (us) to banister of the stairs and sit there and eat it in front of us. They'd say 'when you're free you can have some,'" she says with a laugh. "We never got any."

    Gordie Howe, one of nine siblings, was actually born in Floral, Sask., a tiny community just southeast of Saskatoon. The family moved to the city when he was an infant.

    "We had a good time," Cummine recalls.

    Patton MacLean lives in the home where the Howe children grew up. He says the house is a point of pride for the community.

    "It's like owning a piece of local history," says MacLean. "He's in many people's mind and in my mind the greatest hockey player who ever lived."

    The city brims with pride for Howe, whether it is a statue, or the street in front of the city's largest arena that is named after him.

    Mayor Don Atchison remembers attending a parade for Howe in 1966.

    "It instilled a lot of pride in the city of Saskatoon," he says. "Here we have a legend that is right amongst us here in our own city."

    Steve Hogle, president of the city's Western Hockey League team, the Saskatoon Blades, calls Howe "a God in the hockey world."

    "He is absolutely a mythical figure," says Hogle. "His name is just so respected in the hockey community."

    Hogle says Howe's career still motivates players.

    "Every child's dream can be realized," he says. "You can come from anywhere, be it small-town Floral, Saskatchewan."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster
    VANCOUVER — Transit Police in Metro Vancouver say they have arrested a 17-year-old boy who was carrying an air pistol resembling a handgun.

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Six people spent much of a day locked up in a Vancouver Island RCMP detachment over what police now say were false robbery and confinement allegations.

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has vowed to make the provincial utilities commission more independent almost three years after it stepped in and refused to allow the body to raise hydro rates for customers.

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Conservation authorities are trying to discredit and embarrass his client, says a lawyer representing an alleged cross-border poacher accused of lying about where he shot a record-setting Dall sheep.

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears
    VANCOUVER — A list of the 18 women and girls whose deaths and disappearances are part of the RCMP's investigation of the Highway of Tears in British Columbia. They were either found or last seen near Highways 16, 97 or 5:

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A former University of B.C. professor has been handed probation for secretly recording study participants in a change room.

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room