The Denver Post

15 die when truck collides with bus carrying Canadian junior hockey team.

- By The Canadian Press and The Associated Press

TORONTO» Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock stood at a podium and fought back tears, the grief resonating across Canada and the entire NHL.

A bus crash in Babcock’s home province of Saskatchew­an left 15 dead and 14 injured, three critically. A junior hockey team, the Humboldt Broncos, was headed to a playoff game Friday afternoon when a truck collided with its bus. Among the dead were the team’s coach and captain.

“It’s got to rip the heart out of your chest,” Babcock, who grew up in Saskatoon, said at Toronto’s Air Canada Centre. “We pray for those families and think about them. Horrific, hor- rific accident.”

Added NHL commission­er Gary Bettman: “The NHL mourns the passing of those who perished and offers strength and comfort to those injured while traveling to play and be part of a game they all love.”

Toronto center Tyler Bozak said he had difficulty sleeping after hearing the news about the crash near Nipawin. “You can’t really put into words, anything,” Bozak said before Saturday’s regular-season finale against the Montreal Canadiens. “I can’t imagine what everyone’s going through back in Saskatchew­an.”

Former NHL player Sheldon Kennedy well understand­s the “state of shock and confusion” people are feeling. Kennedy was involved in a crash in 1986 that killed four players when a bus carrying the Swift Current Broncos hit a patch of ice and crashed.

“I think one thing that we underestim­ate with the impact of trauma and PTSD and going through things like this is the magnitude of the impact,” Kennedy said. “That is what I can’t stress enough.”

Patrick Marleau of the Maple Leafs was a boy in Saskatchew­an when the Swift Current crash happened.

“It’s something you remember when you’re that young,” Marleau said. “You see the players wearing the logo on their jersey for the players that were lost. It definitely hits home. Growing up around Swift Current, it was always in people’s mind. There’s memorials. They’re never forgotten.”

Babcock has driven the stretch of two-lane highway north of Tisdale where the Humboldt team was heading to play Game 5 of a series against the Nipawin Hawks. “I know that road pretty good,” Babcock said. “It didn’t seem like a big spot, it’s not mountains or anything like that, but accidents do happen.”

Marleau knows the hold that hockey has in his country, and how “hockey is everything in Canada.”

“But in Saskatchew­an, every community’s fairly small,” he said. “So everybody knows everybody, and you try and look out for each other and take care of each other.”

 ?? Liam Richards, Canadian Press ?? Residents of Humboldt, Saskatchew­an, attend a news conference there Saturday.
Liam Richards, Canadian Press Residents of Humboldt, Saskatchew­an, attend a news conference there Saturday.

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