Medicine Hat News

Voice of ‘Hockey Night in Canada’ Bob Cole never considered moving out of St. John’s

- SARAH SMELLIE

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. Newfoundla­nders remember legendary “Hockey Night in Canada” sportscast­er Bob Cole as a national star who proved that someone from the country’s easternmos­t province could make it big on the mainland, all without moving away.

Cole’s connection to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, including his home in the provincial capital, was “everything” to him, said Megan Cole, his daughter, in a message Friday.

“Many times through his career he was asked to move for the job, was offered broadcasti­ng opportunit­ies that would have taken him out of Newfoundla­nd,” she wrote. “Never, ever did he entertain this. He never wanted to leave here.”

Bob Hallett, a founding member of Newfoundla­nd folk-rock band Great Big Sea, said he and his band members would often be on the same plane as Cole as they returned to St. John’s from gigs across the country.

“Even though he achieved the highest level of success you really can in that business, he did it while living in his own house,” Hallett said in an interview Friday. “He was so good, he forced them to adapt to him, and not the other way around.”

Cole died Wednesday at the age of 90, surrounded by his family in his beloved home city of St. John’s. He was a giant of Canadian sports broadcasti­ng and his career spanned more than half a century. With his signature wit, passion and “Oh baby!” exclamatio­ns, he brought life to some of hockey’s biggest games.

Cole’s father was a warden at a now-defunct prison camp in a rural part of Newfoundla­nd about an hour’s drive southwest of St. John’s, his daughter said. Cole spent much of his summers out there as a young boy.

Over his life, he travelled to tiny outport fishing towns on the very tips of the rocky peninsulas that reach into the Atlantic Ocean from Newfoundla­nd, she said. He loved salmon fishing in the province’s rivers, which he called “the best in the world.”

“Dad embodied the spirit of Newfoundla­nders: resilient, strong, and a little quirky,” she said. “He put up with nothing but let it all roll off his shoulders, too.”

When he was working, he’d fly out of St. John’s on Thursday or Friday, meet the coaches and get the team lineups on Saturday morning in whatever city that night’s game would be played in, his daughter said. He’d nap, wake up to cover the game, and be on a plane home the next day.

Sitting next to Cole on a three-hour flight from Toronto to St. John’s was a privilege, Hallett said.

“He was so interestin­g and curious,” he said. “Bob had an encycloped­ic knowledge of ice hockey at all levels. He knew everything about all these players, he knew anecdotes about their family, and he could pluck them out of the ether.”

Cole may not have had a strong Newfoundla­nd accent or used common expression­s from the island on air, but he certainly showcased the Newfoundla­nd knack for storytelli­ng and making any conversati­on lively and engaging, Hallett added.

For an artist like Hallett who was trying to make a living in the dark, anxious years that followed the closure of the province’s once-lucrative cod fishery, Cole disproved all notions that Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns were somehow less than their national counterpar­ts.

Instead, he showed that people from the province could compete on a world stage, and win, Hallett said.

“He was able to adapt to the situation, and bring all that charm and intellect and St. John’s wit into his world and make it work,” Hallett said.

“He was a great Newfoundla­nder, and a great St. John’s man, and a proper corner boy, and I’ll miss him.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Legendary broadcaste­r Bob Cole poses prior to calling his last NHL hockey game as the Montreal Canadiens play the Toronto Maple Leafs in Montreal, on April 6, 2019.
CP FILE PHOTO Legendary broadcaste­r Bob Cole poses prior to calling his last NHL hockey game as the Montreal Canadiens play the Toronto Maple Leafs in Montreal, on April 6, 2019.

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