The Standard (St. Catharines)

A night to put trophies in perspectiv­e

Las Vegas, Parkland, Humboldt tragedies noted at NHL awards

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

LAS VEGAS — Taylor Hall was a nervous wreck as the National Hockey League awards approached its climax.

When 10 surviving Humboldt Broncos, including two in wheelchair­s, took their place on stage ahead of an emotional video tribute to the 16 team members that didn’t survive April’s horrific bus crash, the feeling quickly melted away.

Hall, a winger with the New Jersey Devils, won the Hart Trophy as the league’s most valuable player Wednesday as the NHL honoured this season’s individual achievemen­ts and recognized three tragedies that touched the hockey world.

“When you’re on a stage and the whole night is culminatin­g at that very moment, it’s easy to get wrapped up in it,” Hall said afterwards. “But when you see that (Humboltd) video, the tribute (and) talking to some of the kids yesterday and the parents ... it puts everything into perspectiv­e and it’s not all about you. It’s not all about winning awards. It’s about enjoying life and doing what you love. To see those kids, their dreams ripped apart, and their families have to heal from that, it just puts everything in perspectiv­e.”

Broncos head coach Darcy Haugan, one of those killed when Humboldt’s team bus collided with a truck while en route to a Saskatchew­an Junior Hockey League playoff game on April 6, was posthumous­ly awarded the inaugural Willie O’Ree Community Hero Award. Ten of his players died in the accident, while 13 survived.

Haugan’s widow, Christina, accepted the honour on her late husband’s behalf.

“His legacy is far more than what is recorded on the stat sheets,” she told the crowd of NHL stars during her speech at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino. “It is measured by the lives and communitie­s that are better off for having Darcy in them. It is now up to those individual­s to pay forward his legacy on to others.

“For that reason, what’s happening here tonight in Vegas must not stay in Vegas. The torch has been passed.”

There were also tributes to two other tragedies — the Las Vegas massacre on Oct. 1 and the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 14.

Victims and first responders from the Las Vegas attack that killed 58 people just over a week before the expansion Golden Knights played their first-ever regular-season home game were in attendance, as were members of Stoneman Douglas hockey team, which won the Florida state title shortly after a gunman killed 17 people at the school.

Stoneman Douglas is located in Parkland, some 20 kilometres from the Panthers’ arena.

“After those tragedies, I think the hockey community shows that everyone is together,” said Tampa Bay Lightning defenceman Victor Hedman, who won his first Norris Trophy as the league’s top blue liner. “That’s something I wanted to try to hit home in my speech.

“This is more than just a game.”

Hall, who beat out Colorado Avalanche centre Nathan MacKinnon and Los Angeles Kings centre Anze Kopitar, had 39 goals, 54 assists and 93 points for New Jersey — 41 more than his next closest teammate for the widest margin in the NHL since 2007-08.

The No. 1 pick in 2010, Hall took it personally when the Edmonton Oilers traded him to the Devils two summers ago, but the 26year-old found a home in New Jersey and thoroughly enjoyed his first playoff experience.

“At the start of this season people wrote us off ... people have wrote me off,” said Hall, the first Devil to win the Hart. “It feels pretty good standing up here.”

The Hart is selected by the Profession­al Hockey Writers’ Associatio­n.

Oilers captain Connor McDavid won the Ted Lindsay Award for a second straight year as the league’s most outstandin­g player as voted on by members of the players’ associatio­n.

“It’s so special to know that they have that respect,”

McDavid, who also won the Hart last season.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Connor McDavid poses with the Art Ross Trophy and Ted Lindsay Award at the NHL awards night Wednesday. The league made a point of noting the tragedies that impacted the hockey world and continent this season
JOHN LOCHER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Connor McDavid poses with the Art Ross Trophy and Ted Lindsay Award at the NHL awards night Wednesday. The league made a point of noting the tragedies that impacted the hockey world and continent this season

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