Times Colonist

Oh baby, what a life: Bob Cole remembered as a legend in hockey broadcasti­ng

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Bob Cole, a welcome voice for Canadian hockey fans for a half-century, has died at the age of 90.

Cole died Wednesday night in St. John’s, N.L., surrounded by his family, his daughter, Megan Cole, told the CBC.

Born June 24, 1933, the St. John’s native provided a distinctiv­e soundtrack to Canada’s game. He was known for his signature “Oh baby” call, an expression that was not restricted to hockey arenas.

“He’s been saying that around the house as long as I can remember,” Megan said in Cole’s 2016 autobiogra­phy Now I’m Catching On. My Life On and Off the Air.

Cole first remembers using it to describe some memorable Mario Lemieux stickhandl­ing in Game 2 of the 1991 Stanley Cup final against Minnesota.

“Look at Lemieux. Oh my heavens. What a goal. What a move. Lemieux. Oh baby,” Cole said excitedly after Lemieux went the length of the ice, skated through the defence pair of Shawn Chambers and Neil Wilkinson and deked goalie Jon Casey.

“I don’t know when it’s going to come out. No idea … I don’t plan it. It’s spontaneou­s,” he wrote in his autobiogra­phy. “I don’t script the thing. It’s adlibbed … and that’s what broadcasti­ng’s all about.”

Ron MacLean the host of CBC’s Hockey Night in Canada, said Cole’s distinctiv­e play-byplay style “comes on you like smoke from a campfire.”

Fellow broadcaste­r

Greg Millen, a former NHL goaltender, said Cole’s voice was “almost like a symphony.”

“Bob had an unbelievab­le ability of bringing the game up and down depending on what was happening on the ice.”

In typical Cole fashion, he initially wondered ahead of doing the autobiogra­phy who would be interested in reading his story, “just because I do hockey games.”

But what games. He did the 1972 Summit Series on radio. On TV, there was the 1976 game in Philadelph­ia when the Soviet Red Army players left the ice in protest at the Flyers take-noprisoner­s tactics. “They’re going home,” said an incredulou­s Cole.

He was there for the 2002 Olympic final in Salt Lake City when Canada ended its 50-year Olympic gold-medal drought with a win over the United States in the final.

“Joe Sakic scores and that makes it 5-2 Canada. Surely that’s got to be it?” said Cole.

Not to mention a string of Stanley Cup finals.

But Cole was more than hockey. He called Bob Beamon’s world-record long jump at the 1968 Olympics, curled in the Brier, served as quizmaster on Reach for the Top and worked for the Newfoundla­nd government.

Cole’s Hockey Night in Canada swansong came April 6, 2019, the regular-season finale in Montreal between the Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs.

Players, coaches and fans stood in appreciati­on to honour Cole in the second period as his four children, Christian, Hilary, Megan and Robbie, watched in the gondola at the Bell Centre.

“Thank you so much Montreal and Canada,” he said to viewers, looking down from his perch. “It’s been a pleasure. I’m going to miss this.”

Don Cherry praised Cole during his Coach’s Corner segment that night.

“Foster [Hewitt] was good, Danny [Gallivan] was good,” Cherry said of Cole’s HNIC predecesso­rs. “But the best of all, I think, and I’ve seen them all, is Bob Cole.”

NHL greats from Wayne Gretzky to Mark Messier and current stars Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid as well as MacLean and Harry Neale, his former colour man, all feted Cole.

“Mr. Cole, congratula­tions on 50 great years of hockey. You were an inspiratio­n to all of us in Canada,” said Gretzky, adding “Oh baby.”

In his later years, Cole’s broadcasti­ng schedule was reduced by Rogers, which took over national TV rights via Sportsnet ahead of the 2014-15 season. He did 16 games his final season, up from the 10 originally planned.

“I wish it were more, but they’ve got a lot of guys in place,” he said. “They’ve got my phone number.

“I answer every time that it rings,” he added dryly.

Cole counted family, flying, dogs, Broadway shows and fly-fishing among his loves.

His love for hockey started at a young age. At 11, he was bedridden for almost six months due to a knee injury suffered playing soccer.

The neighbourh­ood helped him collect Quaker Oats box tops for a promotion that involved photos of NHL players. With the photos spread out on his bed in line formations, he would listen to the VONF radio broadcasts of games.

He listened to Hewitt bring the game alive. “It was heaven for me,” he told the CBC in a 2019 interview.

Years later, he still had his own system for writing down the lines for use in the broadcast booth.

His first job in radio came in 1954 at VOCM in St. John’s as a part-time news reader and DJ.

His life took a turn in 1956 when, on the way back from a trip to New York, the aspiring broadcaste­r decided to drop off a five-minute audition tape at Hewitt’s Toronto radio station.

To Cole’s surprise, Hewitt made time for him and listened to the tape right there and then. They spent some two hours together.

Hewitt’s advice? Save the big call for the big play, use different voice levels and feel the flow of the game. It served Cole well.

Beginning on radio, Cole looked to paint a picture with his calls.

“You’ve got to take over somebody’s mind, try to get them into the building,” he said.

Starting in April 1969 doing an NHL playoff semifinal game in Boston on radio — Jean Beliveau scored in double overtime to eliminate the Bruins — Cole moved to TV in 1973.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Legendary broadcaste­r Bob Cole looks out over the ice prior to calling his last NHL hockey game between the Montreal Canadiens and the Toronto Maple Leafs in Montreal on April 6, 2019.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Legendary broadcaste­r Bob Cole looks out over the ice prior to calling his last NHL hockey game between the Montreal Canadiens and the Toronto Maple Leafs in Montreal on April 6, 2019.

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