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Funeral procession underway in Montreal for Jean Beliveau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 11:26 AM

    MONTREAL — A funeral procession is heading toward a downtown Montreal church where dignitaries, ex-teammates and fans will attend a service to pay tribute to hockey icon Jean Beliveau.

    The ceremony is set to begin at 2 p.m. ET at Mary Queen of the World Cathedral and will be presided over by the Archbishop of Montreal, Christian Lepine.

    The Canadiens legend died on Dec. 2 at the age of 83.

    NHL commissioner Gary Bettman was among those who travelled to Montreal for the funeral.

    "He was just great to be around," Bettman told reporters before the service. "And he's going to be terribly missed."

    He was asked about suggestions that the Conn Smythe Trophy could eventually be named after Beliveau.

    "We've been focused more on his passing and that loss and celebrating his life and I know at the appropriate time we'll focus on what is a remembrance fitting for someone like Jean Beliveau," Bettman said.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper described Beliveau as someone who transcended his sport.

    "We've obviously lost a great citizen, somebody who was admired and respected by everybody everywhere in the country," Harper said on his way into the service. "I certainly have admired Mr. Beliveau since I was a young boy.

    "He was an individual who was great in his sport but ultimately even greater than his sport. He's already part of the Hockey Hall of Fame and now he's become part of the history of our country."

    The Canadiens say former players Yvan Cournoyer, Phil Goyette, Guy Lafleur, Robert Rousseau, Serge Savard and Jean-Guy Talbot will be the pallbearers.

    Team owner Geoff Molson and former Beliveau teammates Cournoyer, Savard, Ken Dryden and Dickie Moore will deliver eulogies.

    Harper, Gov. Gen. David Johnston, former prime ministers Jean Chretien and Brian Mulroney, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard and ex-Quebec premiers Jean Charest and Bernard Landry were among those attending the service.

    Former NHLers included Mario Lemieux and Luc Robitaille.

    A few hundred seats will be reserved for fans on a first come, first served basis. Those who cannot get inside will be able to watch the ceremony on giant screens nearby.

    Montreal police, who have been wearing camouflage pants and red ballcaps in recent months to protest pension plan reforms, have said they will wear their regulation uniforms out of respect for Beliveau.

    Beliveau won the Stanley Cup 10 times as a player and seven more as a team executive. He entered the Hockey Hall of Fame the year after his retirement in 1971.

    Thousands of people filed into the Bell Centre on Sunday and Monday to pay tribute to Beliveau and shake hands with his wife, Elise.

    On Tuesday night, the Canadiens honoured Beliveau before their game against the Vancouver Canucks.

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