National Post

Hockey icon starred both on rink and TV

Leaf re-emerged on hockey night in canada

- Lance Hornby

Howie Meeker, who was the oldest living Toronto Maple Leaf at 97, has died. He was a four-time Stanley Cup winner, a former Toronto coach/ general manager and a chatty hockey broadcasti­ng icon.

The Order of Canada member and Foster Hewitt Award winner, died Sunday at Nanaimo General Hospital in B.C. after spending his retirement years on Vancouver Island.

“Today feels awful,” tweeted former Hockey Night In Canada host Dave Hodge. “Howie’s death leaves me with so much to say, and so little ability to find the right words. In this limited space, I’ll try by rememberin­g him as the best of friends during the best times of my life.”

Born in Kitchener, Ont., Nov. 4, 1923, Howard William Meeker, grew up a huge Leafs fan, playing in and around his birthplace.

“As a kid I had it made,” Meeker recalled. “I played hockey all winter long on rivers, dams and backyard rinks.”

At age 11, during a pond hockey game in Kitchener with a pair of boots for a net, he recalled an older boy on his team berated him for giving the puck away so easily when his mates had worked so hard to get it. That tough-love lecture made a lasting impression.

At 21, Meeker debuted at the Detroit Olympia in the same 3- 3 tie that Gordie Howe scored his first NHL goal. Meeker, not Howe, won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year, with events of Jan. 8, 1947 having a huge role. In a 10- 4 romp over Chicago at the Gardens, Meeker was credited with five goals, tying Mickey Roach’s franchise record.

Meeker initially thought he’d scored only three, but when Day overheard him on the bench casually say that two Wally Stanowski goals likely hit him on the way in, the coach went to the official scorer.

When Meeker came off the ice, wife Grace greeted him with the news he’d been credited with five.

Most of his success came with the “Tricky Trio” line of himself, Ted Kennedy and Vic Lynn. Meeker nonetheles­s said he spent his early years wondering if he could hold on to his job in a competitiv­e six- team NHL. As a right winger, he often went up against “Terrible” Ted Lindsay of the Detroit Red Wings and the two often fought outright when not battling each other for pucks.

Injuries slowed Meeker in later years and he did not play after November of 1953, ending his Leaf career with 185 points in 346 games and three appearance­s in the NHL all-star game. In 1951, he ran successful­ly for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in a federal byelection in Waterloo South, serving two years.

After a few seasons coaching senior and AHL hockey, the latter with Toronto’s farm team in Pittsburgh, Meeker was lured behind the Leaf bench in 1956 to replace King Clancy. Toronto had failed to get beyond the semifinals following its ’51 Cup win.

He kept busy in the 1960s running a large youth hockey program in Newfoundla­nd’s Avalon Peninsula, but being out of the game as a day- to- day participan­t gnawed at him.

“The rest as they say, is history,” Meeker wrote in his 1999 book Stop It There, Back It Up! “I had no idea at the time what an amazing series of events was about to unfold when I first stuck on the head set.”

The squeaky- sounding Meeker figured he would get only one shot on an NHL telecast so gosh, golly gee, he should let ‘er rip.

“I thought, ‘ I’ve got the worse voice in the world, I can’t remember faces and names and they want to make me a colour analyst’?,” Meeker said when given the Hewitt award for broadcast excellence in 1998.

“I didn’t really need the job, but I had watched other guys do it. They were scared to say anything that would cost them their jobs. They said nothing instructio­nal, nothing critical.”

Meeker made no apologies for his theatrics on air or his highpitche­d descriptio­ns of the action and exclamatio­ns such as ‘Jiminy Crickets’ and ‘Gee Willikers’.

“I grew up in an era where locker- room language was atrocious,” Meeker said. “If I would have used it on the air, I would have been fired, so I used something else. You’re like an actor. You do things to disturb people. All I cared about was it would get people interested and talking about hockey.”

Meeker became famous for his use of the new telestrato­r and his chirpy commands for the tape operator to speed up, rewind, slow down or freeze the highlight.

Meeker had six children with his first wife Grace, married 55 years before she died of cancer. He had 13 grandchild­ren, 17 great- grandchild­ren. He and second wife Leah lived in Parksville on Vancouver Island where they were active in fundraisin­g for the B.C. Guide Dog Services. On Dec. 30, 2010, he was named to the Order of Canada.

As a kid I had it made. I played hockey all winter long on rivers, dams and backyard rinks.

 ?? Postmedia news files ?? Howie Meeker is shown here at the telestrato­r in GM Place during a game between Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks in 1998. This was Meeker’s last Hockey Night in Canada telecast before retirement.
Postmedia news files Howie Meeker is shown here at the telestrato­r in GM Place during a game between Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks in 1998. This was Meeker’s last Hockey Night in Canada telecast before retirement.

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