The Telegram (St. John's)

Kevin Lowe finally joins Oilers glory gang

- EDMONTON

EDMONTON — There was a time when somebody from Edmonton being selected to the Hockey Hall of Fame was an annual occurrence.

But there’s never been a hat trick before.

When HHOF chairman Lanny Mcdonald and the 18 voters completed voting with only a handful of them actually in the room at Toronto’s Hockey Hall of Fame, they’d selected three to be enshrined next November.

Kevin Lowe had probably figured he was never going to get there, he’d been left knocking at the door that Glen Sather, Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Grant Fuhr, Jari Kurri, Paul Coffey and, after some delay, Glenn Anderson had all entered before.

Ken Holland, the new Oilers general manager, didn’t expect to get a call to tell him he was going in as a builder because, well, he’s still building.

And while St. Albert native Jarome Iginla was the one obvious first-ballot guy to go in, he seemed to be thrilled with the people he was going in with and the local angles involved when he got his call in his car an hour before all his family members were to gather for the occasion.

Lowe, the first player selected in the first round of the first draft involving the Edmonton Oilers back in 1979 said he never saw himself as a Hall-of-famer.

To me, he was to that Oilers team much like what Rollie Miles ended up being with the first all-time team in Edmonton, the 1954-55-56 Grey Cup champion Eskimos.

One by one, the Jackie Parkers, Johnny Brights and Normie Kwongs were inducted. But you can’t put everybody from one team in the Hall and it wasn’t until years later that Parker, Bright, Kwong and a host of teammates finally convinced the selection committee that one man was missing.

Lowe said the truth is he never saw himself as guy who would one year have his banner hanging from the rafters.

“For me the Hall of Fame was Bobby Orr, Jean Beliveau, Gordie Howe, Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier,” he said. “While I know there are players of my ilk in the Hall of Fame, and it’s a place for everyone, I wouldn’t say I was disappoint­ed in the years I didn’t get in, but I certainly had come to the realizatio­n and understood that you had to put up more points and win awards.

“My dream had always been to win Stanley Cups. The

Hall of Fame was something I never dreamed about,” said Lowe, who won six Cups, five in Edmonton and another with the Rangers. “Today, when I saw it was Lanny Mcdonald phoning me, I thought to myself, ‘Well, surely he’s not phoning to tell me I DIDN’T get in.’

“Just to think that this all started 40 some odd years ago when I was the Oilers first draft pick and actually didn’t know that the Oilers were in the NHL. So, I can’t really explain how shocked I am about this,” Lowe said.

As for Ken Holland, he didn’t exactly wake up in the morning expecting the call to the Hall.

“I’d been in Detroit for 36 years and with the Red Wings 22 years as a general manager and am certainly proud to have accomplish­ed the things we did over a long period of time and I feel very fortunate that Daryl Katz and Bob Nicholson reached out to me and gave me an opportunit­y to come to Edmonton,” the Oilers general manager said of getting the call from Tigers legend Mcdonald. “I’m really cherishing this opportunit­y.

 ?? POSTMEDIA ?? Ex-edmonton Oilers defenceman Kevin Lowe listens to former teammate Wayne Gretzky speak during a news conference at the Westin Hotel in August 2014.
POSTMEDIA Ex-edmonton Oilers defenceman Kevin Lowe listens to former teammate Wayne Gretzky speak during a news conference at the Westin Hotel in August 2014.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada