Gordie Howe dies at 88

Hockey icon was one of most respected, beloved players in history

The nickname “Mr. Hockey” said it all.

Gordie Howe, widely regarded as the most complete player in the history of the sport, has died at the age of 88.

Howe’s health had deteriorated in recent years, and he suffered a series of strokes in the fall of 2014.

Howe’s sister Helen Cummine, who lives in Saskatoon, told the CBC that Howe’s son Murray was with him when he passed away at his home in Ohio on Friday morning.

“I guess he didn’t want to fight anymore, but what a fight he had,” Cummine said.

Career spanned 6 decades

As a player, longevity and productivity were Howe hallmarks. No one proved more durable.

The native of Floral, Sask., played an unparalleled 33 professional seasons, breaking into the pro ranks in 1945 as a teenager with the Omaha Knights of the United Hockey League and skating one final shift for the Detroit Vipers of the International Hockey League in 1997 — at the age of 69.

In between, he spent 25 seasons in the National Hockey League with the Detroit Red Wings and six more in the rival World Hockey Association before returning to the NHL for one last hurrah with the Hartford Whalers.

Known as “Mr. Hockey,” Gordie Howe was one of the most respected figures in the history of the game.

Howe retired in 1980 as the NHL leader in career goals (801) and career points (1,850) — both records were later broken by Wayne Gretzky — but Howe always maintained his string of 20 straight seasons as one of the league’s top-five scorers was the true measure of his Hall of Fame career.

Howe now ranks fourth on the NHL’s all-time points list after being surpassed by Mark Messier and, this past season, Jaromir Jagr. Howe still ranks second all-time in goals.

Gretzky raised the bar statistically. But it was Howe who set the standard for consistency in an unprecedented playing career that spanned six decades.

“I got to meet him when I was 10 years old,” Gretzky recalled. “And when you’re 10 years old, a lot of times you meet your idol and they’re not as nice or as big as you think … I was lucky that I picked the right person to look up to.”

Such was Howe’s personality, as glaringly different as it was from his hockey persona.

Howe the man was charming — soft-spoken, at times shy, with a self-deprecating sense of humour and an easy laugh.

When current Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch named one of the entranceways into Joe Louis Arena after him, Howe told reporters after the presentation: “I said to Mr. Ilitch, ‘Before I go out there, I just want to make sure that it isn’t an exit.'”

Howe the hockey player, on the other hand, was fearsome — a strapping winger with strong instincts, an efficient stride and a nastiness that belied his gentle nature off the ice.

OCTOBER 1950: Gordie Howe, 22, in his fifth season with the Detroit Red Wings. (Associated Press)

Total package

Howe was a formidable winger blessed with brawn and the biggest elbows in the business. He was relentless in his pursuit of the puck and that, combined with his prodigious strength and stamina, made him a force to be reckoned with in the corners and sweeping through the slot.

Already an immaculate passer, he strived to develop a more powerful wrist shot and in 1952-53 became the first NHLer to reach the 90-point plateau with 95, including a career-best 49 goals.

Howe hit 40-plus goals five times with Detroit and notched a career-high 103 points in 1968-69, partnered with Alex Delvecchio and Frank Mahovlich.

From 1949 to 1971, he never scored fewer than 23 goals per season. At 41,  he had 44 goals for Detroit.  At 46, he earned WHA MVP honours with a 31-goal, 100-point campaign for the Houston Aeros. And at 52, still as robust as he was respected, he had 41 points in 80 games that final NHL season with Hartford.

Howe was the total package — an all-around talent and 21-time NHL all-star.

Howe’s career nearly ended in the opening game of the 1950 playoffs, when he tried to throw a bodycheck at Toronto’s Ted (Teeder) Kennedy. Howe slammed so hard into the boards that he was knocked unconscious and, bleeding profusely, removed from the ice on a stretcher. Howe was diagnosed with a fractured skull and had surgery to relieve the pressure from his brain before making a full recovery. He returned next season to win the scoring title by 20 points over Montreal’s Maurice (Rocket) Richard.

Howe was a dominant presence as Detroit hoisted the Stanley Cup four times in six seasons in the 1950s, teaming with Sid Abel and Ted Lindsay to form the Motor City’s aptly named “Production Line.”

Lindsay once claimed that Howe worried needlessly about losing his place on the teams he played (as a rookie, he kept a scrapbook to show others that he actually played in the NHL) and that neither six Hart trophies as NHL MVP nor six Art Ross trophies as scoring champion managed to soothe Howe’s feelings of insecurity.

Or so the story goes.

Howe figured he had to fight to establish himself early in his career and scrapped plenty, scoring a one-punch knockout of the aforementioned Richard in his first game at Montreal. But he eventually realized that he couldn’t score goals from the penalty box so heeded the advice of Red Wings head coach Jack Adams, who told him not to turn his back on a fight but not to go looking for one, either.

Howe fought selectively after that, preferring to deliver the devastating elbows for which he became most famous. Yet such was Howe’s reputation that, to this day, his name remains synonymous with fighting: score three goals and, in modern hockey parlance, it’s a hat trick; get a goal, an assist and into a fight and it’s a “Gordie Howe” hat trick.

Played with sons in WHA

Hampered by an arthritic left wrist, Howe elected to retire from the NHL following the 1970-71 season. But two years into an unfulfilling tenure as a Red Wings vice-president, he was offered a unique hat trick by the upstart WHA — the opportunity to play in Houston alongside sons Mark and Marty.

Howe had the wrist surgically repaired, signed with the Aeros and starred for six seasons in the WHA (he had 174 goals and 508 points in 419 games) before it merged with the NHL in 1979.

One final season with the Whalers in 1979-80 (ironically, Gretzky’s first in the NHL) and one last shift with the minor-league Vipers in 1997-98 to earmark six decades as a pro player and Howe hung up his skates — for good, this time — on Oct. 3, 1997.

Howe spent much of his retirement making personal appearances and involved with charitable ventures, notably the Howe Foundation. His charming demeanour, fondness for fans and penchant for telling funny stories made him a popular public speaker and a frequent guest at hockey camps and sports memorabilia conventions.

“Some wise old man told me, ‘If someone is interested enough in you to ask for your autograph, you should be interested enough to sign it,'” he explained. “I remember years ago, at the Olympia [Stadium] after the game, they had rails for people to stand behind for autographs.

“I used to put two chocolate bars in my pocket and eat them after the game to give me a little boost because of the long lines. The staff would often open the door so cold air would come in to get rid of us because we would just stay and sign autographs.”

Throughout his career and well into retirement, Gordie’s wife of 56 years, Colleen, handled the family finances and built the Howe brand under the company label Power Play International until she was stricken with Pick’s disease, a rare brain illness associated with dementia.

“She was the sole initiator for everything in the relationship,” said Dr. Murray Howe, an Ohio-based radiologist and the youngest of the Howes’ four children.

With the passing of his wife in March 2009, Howe became a vocal crusader for dementia, Alzheimer’s and similar conditions, establishing the Gordie and Colleen Howe Fund for Alzheimer’s in partnership with Baycrest —  a facility dedicated to aging and brain health operated out of the University of Toronto.

Though he didn’t suffer from dementia, Howe struggled with cognitive impairment and short-term memory loss later in life.

May the memories of Mr. Hockey be everlasting.

Article Written By: Rob Sinclair of CBC Sports

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