The Province

Hockey pioneer O’Ree honoured

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BOSTON — Hockey pioneer Willie O’Ree was honoured in Boston Wednesday on the 60th anniversar­y of the Bruins forward breaking the NHL’s colour barrier.

At a news conference at TD Garden before the Bruins game against the Montreal Canadiens, Mayor Marty Walsh declared Thursday to be Willie O’Ree Day. O’Ree made his debut in 1958 during a 3-0 win against the Canadiens at the Forum in Montreal.

Walsh called O’Ree a Boston legend who changed the city for the better and thanked him for his courage. As part of the celebratio­n, the city dedicated a new street hockey rink in the Allston-Brighton neighbourh­ood to be known as Willie O’Ree Rink.

The 82-year-old O’Ree, from Fredericto­n, N.B., received loud applause while he walked to centre ice for a ceremonial puck drop between captains Zdeno Chara of Boston and Max Pacioretty of the Canadiens. Wearing his No. 22 on his Bruins jersey, O’Ree tipped his black fedora to the crowd.

Both teams wore patches with the No. 60 centred in a circle, the NHL logo on top, “Willie” on one side and “O’Ree” the other with “anniversar­y” scrolled across the bottom. The same design was on the ice behind both goals.

Despite being legally blind in one eye, O’Ree dressed for the Bruins and stepped onto the ice at the Montreal Forum on Jan. 18, 1958. He played two games with Boston before being sent to the minors. He returned to the NHL in the 196061 season, scoring four goals with 10 assists in 43 games before being traded to Montreal. He spent a total of 21 years in pro hockey.

For the past two decades, O’Ree has served as the NHL’s diversity ambassador.

 ?? — AP ?? Willie O’Ree, who broke the NHL’s colour barrier in 1958, was feted before a Bruins-Canadiens game on Wednesday in Boston.
— AP Willie O’Ree, who broke the NHL’s colour barrier in 1958, was feted before a Bruins-Canadiens game on Wednesday in Boston.

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