Lethbridge Herald

Former Habs’ great Lafleur dies at age 70

- Joshua Clipperton

Guy Lafleur had been passed the torch as the Montreal Canadiens’ next great Quebec-born player.

Maurice (Rocket) Richard was still revered in the province, while the just-retired Jean Beliveau cast a long, imposing shadow when the kid from Thurso was selected first overall at the 1971 NHL draft.

A dynamic forward with blonde locks that rippled in the wind as he glided up the ice before unleashing one of his bullet shots, Lafleur was expected to fill the void and become hockey’s new French Canadian icon.

It just took him a while to get there.

“There was a lot of pressure,” former Montreal head coach Scotty Bowman said Friday.

“But he worked through the pressure and he became a player of his own.”

And one who inspired a generation.

Lafleur, among the sport’s alltime greats, has died at age 70 following a battle with lung cancer. The team confirmed the Hall of Famer and five-time Stanley Cup champion’s passing.

“A special person,” Canadiens alternate captain Brendan Gallagher told reporters in Brossard, Que. “We’re really proud to wear this Montreal Canadiens logo in large part because of individual­s like Guy Lafleur.”

“The Flower” was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2019 after doctors performing emergency quadruple bypass heart surgery spotted tumours.

Lafleur went under the knife again to remove both the upper lobe of his lung and lymph nodes a few months later, but learned in October 2020 the cancer was back.

“It’s the chemothera­py that really hurts you badly,” Lafleur said in an interview with The Canadian Press in November.

Canadiens legend Serge Savard said Friday even though Lafleur’s health challenges were wellknown, his former teammate’s death came as a shock.

Yvan Cournoyer, who also played alongside Lafleur, had difficulty containing his emotions.

“Guy, he was a fighter,” Cournoyer said with a tremble in his voice. “He wouldn’t let go.

“He never gave up in his fight.” Quebec Premier Francois Legault paid tribute to Lafleur on Twitter.

“Quebec has lost a giant,” he wrote. “He made us dream.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a noted Canadiens fan, also glowingly remembered Lafleur.

“A hero to so many of us,” Trudeau said in Winnipeg. “I remember meeting him as a kid and being overwhelme­d in a way that meeting presidents and queens didn’t necessaril­y overwhelm me.”

Lafleur’s death came as the hockey world continues to mourn Mike Bossy after the New York Islanders legend and fellow Quebecer died last week at age 65 following his own battle with cancer.

“An honour to play with both,” Wayne Gretzky posted to his social media channels. “My thoughts and prayers are with their families.”

Lafleur, who registered a highwater mark of 64 points over his first three NHL seasons before averaging 128 over the next six, had a distinctiv­e style that captivated fans across Quebec and around the league.

“You didn’t need to see Guy Lafleur’s name and number on his sweater when ‘The Flower’ had the puck,” NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said in a statement.

“Lafleur cut a dashing and unmistakab­le figure.”

The family recently thanked fans for their “the outpouring of love,” adding Lafleur was being monitored closely by doctors and had occasional hospital checkups, but was at home.

Lafleur registered 518 goals and 728 assists for 1,246 points in 14 seasons with Montreal. He added 133 points (57 goals, 76 assists) in 124 playoff contests, helping the Canadiens win the Cup in 1973, and then again four more times from 1976 to 1979.

Lafleur, who initially retired in 1985, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1988. But he made a comeback later that year — his No. 10 was retired by the Canadiens in 1985 — with the New York Rangers and played two more seasons with the Quebec Nordiques before hanging up his skates for good in 1991.

Bowman said his favourite Lafleur memory came in the 1979 semifinals when the winger tied the score late in regulation of Game 7 with a memorable blast off the rush after Don Cherry’s Boston Bruins were infamously whistled for too many men on the ice.

“Jacques Lemaire dropped a pass to Lafleur and he put a 45-, 50-foot one-time shot right in the corner,” said the 88-year-old Bowman, whose team would go onto a 5-4 overtime victory.

“Propelled us into the final and allowed Montreal to win the fourth Cup in row.”

Chris Nilan, a future teammate and massive Bruins fan growing up, told a story Friday about running into Lafleur, Lemaire and Gilles Lupien earlier in the series outside the Boston Garden as they waited for a taxi.

Having been drafted by the Canadiens out of Northeaste­rn University the previous year, Nilan informed the trio he’d soon be joining the team.

“They said, ‘What round were you drafted?’ And I said, ‘19th,’” Nilan, who drove the players to their hotel with a friend in his car, recalled with a chuckle.

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