Vancouver Sun

FOR JETS BROADCASTE­R, BUS CRASH HAS ‘OCCUPIED EVERY MINUTE SINCE’

- TED WYMAN twyman@postmedia.com twitter.com/Ted_Wyman

For years, Winnipeg broadcaste­r Brian Munz sat at the front of the bus, right next to the coaches, as the Humboldt Broncos travelled around Saskatchew­an for hockey games.

He was living the dream, calling games on a regional radio station for his hometown team in his first play-by-play job, a gig that would eventually lead him to the NHL, where he works on Winnipeg Jets broadcasts.

On Saturday, he was sharing in the grief of both his hometown and the hockey world after a crash took the lives of 15 people from the Broncos organizati­on, including a young broadcaste­r named Tyler Bieber.

When a transport truck T-boned the Broncos bus at the intersecti­on of Saskatchew­an highways 35 and 335 on Friday, Bieber would likely have been seated at the front along with coach Darcy Haugan, who was also killed. Several players also died.

“We were on a road trip last week out east and I listened to Tyler do one of the games,” Munz said. “I listened to the third period of one of their playoff games just ’cause I wanted to click on it to see what was going on.

“You hear how excited everybody is with the broadcast and what’s going on with the team that they were able to get to the final four in the league … and then you get the call last night that 15 are gone and you feel for everyone.

“It’s hard to explain. I got the call 10, 15 minutes after it happened and it just kind of occupied every minute since.”

Munz still has strong ties to Humboldt and the Broncos organizati­on. His family moved there in 1993 and he went to high school in the small town.

He hosted the Broncos Hall of Fame dinner last June. He was friendly with Haugan and some of the players.

He is also familiar with the stretch of highway where the crash happened.

“I’ve driven that road probably 500 times and that’s not an exaggerati­on,” Munz said.

“As soon as I got the call that there was an accident and was told where it was, I could pretty much paint you a picture. It is horrific to say the least.”

The crash rocked hockey communitie­s across the country. So many people can identify with the situation and can only hope something like this never happens to their loved ones.

“Just thinking about how tragic it is for the families,” Munz said. “They send their 16-to-20-yearold kids off to a small town in Saskatchew­an that’s got such a rich hockey tradition, and you just want to be a part of the aura of the Humboldt Broncos and today, they’re one of the biggest sports tragedies that our country has ever seen.”

Another Jets broadcaste­r, playby-play man, Paul Edmonds, got his start in the Western Hockey League, doing colour commentary on Swift Current Broncos broadcasts and calling games for the Regina Pats in the 1990s.

Edmonds arrived in Swift Current five years after four players were killed when the Swift Current team bus slid off an icy highway in 1986.

“There wasn’t a time that I didn’t get on that bus and think of those four players that had passed away,” he said.

“There’s an area in the arena where they’ve immortaliz­ed the players and you see that every time you walk by. It’s around you all the time. You couldn’t just go to Swift Current and not think about it.”

Edmonds immediatel­y thought back to Swift Current when he heard the news about Humboldt, but learned this crash was on a whole new level of devastatio­n.

“Essentiall­y half a team is gone,” he said.

“Here we are with these kids who are just so young … teenagers, and their future and lives were so much ahead of them. To have it end so tragically and quickly is just so sad.”

Edmonds spent years riding the buses with the Winnipeg Goldeyes baseball team and he, Munz and Jets TV play-by-play man Dennis Beyak — who also worked for years calling junior hockey games and working as an executive in the WHL — all travel regularly with the Jets on the road.

Somehow, all that travel doesn’t seem so routine today.

“Like (Jets coach) Paul Maurice said today, you get on a bus every day in the NHL when you are travelling,” Edmonds said. “The buses are still part of hockey, always have been and always will be. You think about what happened in Humboldt and about how lucky you are to continue to roll along.”

The truth is, there are few people in Canada who won’t be touched by the crash.

“There’s a big fraternity that is affected by this,” Edmonds said, “because of how deep hockey runs in our country.”

 ?? JASON HALSTEAD/GETTY IMAGES ?? Winnipeg Jets forwards Bryan Little, left, and Blake Wheeler flank Chicago Blackhawks right wing Patrick Kane while wearing jerseys honouring the Humboldt Broncos before Saturday’s game in Winnipeg. A crash involving the Broncos’ bus killed 15 people...
JASON HALSTEAD/GETTY IMAGES Winnipeg Jets forwards Bryan Little, left, and Blake Wheeler flank Chicago Blackhawks right wing Patrick Kane while wearing jerseys honouring the Humboldt Broncos before Saturday’s game in Winnipeg. A crash involving the Broncos’ bus killed 15 people...
 ??  ?? Tyler Bieber
Tyler Bieber
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