Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Carr, a former Kings fan favorite, dies at 72

- By Andrew Knoll Correspond­ent

Former Kings forward Gene Carr died on Thursday at age 72.

Carr, the son of a pro hockey player and an accomplish­ed speed skater, played for five NHL teams. He enjoyed many of his most notable moments during parts of five seasons with the Kings, scoring 104 of his 215 career points with the club. He played in his native British Columbia as well as in Manitoba at the junior level, but he adapted quickly to the vibes of 1970s Los Angeles after stints in stodgier St. Louis and more buttoneddo­wn New York.

“He was a charismati­c player on the ice, featuring his trademark blonde hair along with being a fast and flashy skater,” read part of a statement from the Kings. “Off the ice, the native of

Canada took to the Southern California lifestyle where he enjoyed the music scene and was close friends with accomplish­ed bands.”

That included Eagles frontman Glenn Frey, and Carr was speculated to be the inspiratio­n for the group's No. 1 single “New Kid in Town.” Frey later helped Carr escape from L.A. when he wanted a trade (he landed in Pittsburgh and finished his career in Atlanta). Even after his NHL career, Carr has said that Eddie Van Halen took the title of his eponymous band's 5150 Studio from a T-shirt he saw Carr wearing.

Carr's career was marred significan­tly by two serious automobile accidents and the injuries they caused. He also became a journeyman despite his remarkable footspeed and sound two-way game, in an era where the economics of hockey were changing rapidly amid rapid expansion and competitio­n from the World Hockey Associatio­n.

After hockey, Carr paid a hefty price for his crashes on the road and ice alike, battling physical maladies, addiction and psychologi­cal distress. Notably, he also connected with an adult daughter whom he had never met and did not know he was her father, as chronicled by former SCNG reporter Lisa Dillman and The Athletic's Eric Duhatschek.

“I was happy he connected with a daughter many years later, something he did not hide. Rather he embraced that newfound relationsh­ip, even bringing her to a Kings game,” former Kings broadcaste­r Bob Miller said on social media. “I believe it was a role he relished and something special later in life.”

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