Calgary Herald

Interim Flames coach cherishes Boston stint

- WES GILBERTSON wgilbertso­n@postmedia.com twitter.com/wesgilbert­son

BOSTON Geoff Ward determined early on that this was one family allegiance he couldn’t get behind: “I was not going to cheer for the (Toronto) Maple Leafs.”

So as a hockey-crazed kid in Manitouwad­ge, Ont., he instead took a shine to the rival Boston Bruins.

“I was a big Bobby Orr fan growing up, but I was also a huge Derek Sanderson fan — he played with a lot of flair and he was gritty — and I liked the way Johnny Bucyk played,” said Ward, now 57 and the interim head coach for the Calgary Flames. “Everybody in my family was Leafs fans growing up, especially my grandfathe­r, but I was a Bruins fan. My uncle was a Canadiens fan, but I wasn’t going that way either. So I got immersed in the rivalry early, as a young guy.

“I just loved the way the Bruins played, and I liked a lot of their players. And growing up in Northern Ontario, they were on Hockey Night in Canada quite a bit. So it was always a big night in our house when the Bruins were on.”

Tuesday was another big night for Ward — a rare return to TD Garden, where he kinda-sorta lived out his childhood dream. Just not as a guy who scored … or soared.

Ward was an assistant coach in Beantown for seven seasons, highlighte­d by a Stanley Cup celebratio­n in 2011. (The Original Six franchise hadn’t raised a championsh­ip banner since 1972, when Bucyk, Orr and Sanderson were some of the marquee men.)

Among the holdovers from his stint in Boston are goalie Tuukka Rask, captain Zdeno Chara and forwards Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci and Brad Marchand, all key reasons the Bruins are currently atop the leaguewide standings.

As Ward put it when those gents paid a visit to the Scotiabank Saddledome last week, “I’ll tell ya, when you win together, you’re bonded for life.”

That’s the type of thing he’s trying to build with this current cast from Calgary.

With the trade deadline now passed, with Derek Forbort and Erik Gustafsson arrived to bolster a banged-up blue line, it wouldn’t be far-fetched to look at the final six weeks of the regular season — and whatever comes beyond that — as Ward’s audition to continue on as bench boss for the Flames.

He’s been at the helm, albeit with the ‘interim’ tag, since the Bill Peters saga/resignatio­n in late November.

Ward has been on a bench in June, invaluable experience. He needs to get the Flames, currently in a logjam in the Pacific Division/ wild-card race, to mid-april first.

“We went through so many lessons together,” Ward said, reminiscin­g about what he learned during his days in Beantown. “You learn how important a strong leadership core is to a team, how important it is for a group to be really cohesive and to have common goals, how important it is to be selfless as a group. I mean, that’s one selfless team over there.

“They’re not worried about individual points, they’re worried about getting the wins and they’ll do anything it takes. You learn how important it is to back each other up on and off the ice. So I use a lot of those lessons that we went through as a team in Boston every day.”

With so many cherished memories, days like Tuesday will always be special for Ward.

“I spent seven years in Boston, and a lot of success through those seven years — never missed the playoffs, Presidents’ Trophy, Stanley Cup victory, another Stanley Cup final (in 2013), a lot of long playoff runs and just seeing that team really come together as a group with a strong leadership core ...” Ward said. “So a lot of really, really good memories. It’s a great organizati­on. It’s a great group of guys in that room. So yeah, it is special.”

 ??  ?? Geoff Ward
Geoff Ward

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada