Truro News

Dream come true

Bruckheime­r thrilled to be part of Seattle ownership group

- BY JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Jerry Bruckheime­r says he’s had a camera in his hand since the age of six.

Around the same time, the future Hollywood producer also got a first taste of hockey.

“My dad took me to a Red Wings game and I sat in the rafters there and looked down on some of the great players who were playing in those days,” Bruckheime­r recalled of growing up in Detroit watching Gordie Howe and his teammates. “I got very excited about the sport.”

But as the years passed and the movie mogul’s career took off, Bruckheime­r drifted away from the game until the trade that shook hockey brought the Great One to California.

“When Wayne Gretzky came to Los Angeles I started taking skating lessons and have been playing ever since,” he said. “I get up and down the ice as slowly as possible, but I still get there.”

A frequent attendee of Kings games, the 75-year-old will soon be even closer to the action as a minority owner with Seattle’s new NHL team after the league approved the city’s expansion bid at this week’s board of governors meetings.

“It’s exciting and daunting and scary and all the things,” Bruckheime­r added after the announce- ment in Sea Island, Ga. “You just want to do right for Seattle, and bring great players and hopefully pick a name where we won’t get too many people mad at us. That’s the daunting challenge that we have, but we know that Seattle has the greatest fans.

“We’re going to educate the ones that don’t understand hockey on what a wonderful sport it is.”

The league’s 32nd team will start playing in the untapped U.S. Pacific Northwest beginning in 2021-22.

Currently shooting a sequel to the 1986 blockbuste­r movie “Top Gun,” Bruckheime­r could barely contain his excitement ahead of Seattle getting the official thumbs-up from the NHL, snapping pictures of the media with his digital camera before commission­er Gary Bettman’s official announceme­nt at a packed press conference.

He said afterwards that joining billionair­e majority owner David Bonderman’s group pushing for a team in Seattle was a no-brainer.

“It’s a phenomenal city, it’s got a great work force, it’s got a very young work force, it’s got some of the greatest sports fans in the world,” he said. “Every time I turn a Seahawks game on I see how rabid their fans are.”

Seattle team president and CEO Tod Leiweke said there was incredible anticipati­on before meeting with representa­tives of the league’s other teams following the unanimous vote

“We’re outside the door. We heard our video playing. We thought, ‘Well, that’s a good sign,’ because I always get goose bumps when I see that video,” Leiweke said. “We walked in and there was love and warmth and it felt just right.”

While the NHL’S expansion to Seattle seemed like a slam dunk from the outside, Bruckheime­r said he wasn’t counting on anything until getting the official word.

“I don’t believe anything until it’s done,” Bruckheime­r. “You have disappoint­ments when you get your hopes up and it doesn’t happen. Today was it. When they called us in that room and said ‘congratula­tions,’ then I knew we were there.”

Seattle’s NHL team is expected to begin the process of filling its hockey operations staff as early as next spring or summer, but don’t expect Bruckheime­r to be a meddling owner.

“I leave it to profession­als,” he said with a smile. “We try to hire really good people to run the organizati­on. Smart people stay out of it (and) let the people who know what they’re doing do it.”

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? NHL commission­er Gary Bettman holds a jersey after the NHL Board of Governors announced Seattle as the league’s 32nd franchise Tuesday. Joining Bettman, from left, is Jerry Bruckheime­r, David Bonderman, David Wright, Tod Leiweke and Washington Wild youth hockey player Jaina Goscinski.
STEPHEN B. MORTON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NHL commission­er Gary Bettman holds a jersey after the NHL Board of Governors announced Seattle as the league’s 32nd franchise Tuesday. Joining Bettman, from left, is Jerry Bruckheime­r, David Bonderman, David Wright, Tod Leiweke and Washington Wild youth hockey player Jaina Goscinski.

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