The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Blind in one eye

Sixty years later, O’Ree marks anniversar­y of breaking NHL’s colour barrier

- BY KEVIN BISSETT

When Willie O’Ree donned a Boston Bruins jersey and jumped onto the ice at the Montreal Forum on Jan. 18, 1958, he had no idea he was making history.

Just a decade after Jackie Robinson broke the colour barrier in baseball, O’Ree had become the first black player in the National Hockey League.

Sixty years later, O’Ree looks back fondly on that game and a career in hockey that continues to this day.

“I didn’t even know I broke the colour barrier until I read it in the newspaper the next day,” O’Ree said while sitting in the stands of Willie O’Ree Place — a modern hockey arena, named in his honour, in his hometown of Fredericto­n, N.B.

“It was a nice feeling. I just happened to be playing and just happened to be black,” he said.

While O’Ree didn’t score during that game, his Bruins beat the Canadiens 3-0. He would play just one more game with the Bruins that season.

O’Ree would return to the Bruins for the 1960-61 season, playing a total of 45 games in the NHL — scoring four goals and 10 assists — all while keeping a secret that would have kept him out of the league. He was blind in one eye.

O’Ree left Fredericto­n at the age of 17 to play junior hockey with the Quebec Frontenacs, and the next year he moved to Kitchener, Ont.

It was during that second year in junior that he had an unfortunat­e accident.

“Back then, none of the players wore any helmets, no face shields, no cages, so there was no protection on your face. There was a slapshot, and I’m on the ice in front of the net. A ricochet came up and the puck struck me in the eye. I lost 97 per cent vision in my right eye. I was out of action for about six weeks,” he said.

Doctors told him he would never play again. But O’Ree never told his coaches or even his parents about the extent of his injury and he resumed playing.

The next season he was called by coach Punch Imlach to go to the Quebec Aces training camp in Quebec City.

“I went up and made the team but I didn’t disclose that I couldn’t see out of my right eye. I said if I’m good enough to make the team with one eye, just don’t tell them,” he said.

The team won the championsh­ip that year, and for the next two seasons O’Ree tried out at the Boston Bruins training camp, finally getting the call to play in the NHL in January 1958.

“I was just thinking about the hockey game, because first of all I had played against the Montreal Canadiens in a few exhibition games and then I played against the Montreal Junior Canadiens in the Forum. I played against the Montreal Royals, the profession­al team, in the Forum. So when I stepped on the ice on Jan. 18, 1958, I was just Willie O’Ree with a Bruins jersey on.”

O’Ree said he knew people were pointing at him during that first game, and he was nervous, but once he got into the action, he just concentrat­ed on the game.

He said colour was an issue when he played in junior and he would often be subjected to racial slurs and remarks, but he had learned from his older brother to ignore them and just go out and play hockey.

“He said ‘Willie, just forget about these racial remarks because you can’t change the colour of your skin and you wouldn’t want to even if you could’.”

O’Ree said players on other teams would often make racial comments, but everyone in the Boston Bruins organizati­on was very supportive, especially coach Milt Schmidt and general manager Lynn Patrick.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY ?? Willie O’Ree, known best for being the first black player in the National Hockey League, is shown in Willie O’Ree Place in Fredericto­n, N.B., on Thursday, June 22, 2017. When Willie O’Ree donned a Boston Bruins jersey and jumped onto the ice at the...
THE CANADIAN PRESS/STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY Willie O’Ree, known best for being the first black player in the National Hockey League, is shown in Willie O’Ree Place in Fredericto­n, N.B., on Thursday, June 22, 2017. When Willie O’Ree donned a Boston Bruins jersey and jumped onto the ice at the...

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