|
Wayne Gretzky—The Great One—Page 2
1 | Page 2
Near the end of the 1998-99 season,
rumours circulated that Gretzky was to call it quits.
Each night the Rangers played, a media throng
followed—even though the Rangers were out of the
playoff race. Suspecting that it would be Gretzky’s
last-ever pro game in Canada, fans at Ottawa’s Corel
Centre gave Gretzky a long post-game standing ovation at
the end of their Senators’ match against the Rangers.
Finally, Gretzky admitted what the
public suspected all along—he was going to retire.
Gretzky’s final game was a regular-season match against the Pittsburgh Penguins,
and media from throughout North America would cover the
event.
The Hockey Hall of Fame decided to
waive the normal waiting period required for admission.
Fittingly, number 99 became a Hall of Famer in 1999. On
October 1, 1999, before the team’s home opener against the
New York Rangers, the Oilers’ retired Gretzky’s
number and the NHL did the same League-wide.
Gretzky has regularly heeded his
country’s call. He played in four separate Canada Cups.
He assisted on Mario Lemieux’s famous 1987 tournament
clincher against the Soviets at Hamilton’s Copps
Coliseum. The Gretzky-and-Lemieux combination from that
season was the only time the best two players of their
generation—in the primes of their careers—would play
together. But the Canada Cups were not always rosy for
the Great One; Gretzky received a serious back
injury—which would hamper him for the rest of his
career—in the 1991 tournament, thanks to a vicious hit
from behind from American defenceman Gary Suter.
Gretzky represented Canada at the
1978 World Junior Championships and the 1982 World
Championships after Los Angles upset the Oilers
in the playoffs.
Gretzky’s biggest hockey
disappointment came in the 1998 Nagano Olympics. In the
first Olympic tournament in which NHL players were allowed to
participate, Canada was upset by the eventual gold
medallists from the Czech Republic in the semi-finals.
One of the most enduring memories of the event, is the
image of Gretzky on the bench, staring at a blank sheet
of ice, wondering what could have been.
That loss served to motivate
Gretzky. After leaving the ice for good, Gretzky was
named executive director of the men’s hockey program for
the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. Gretzky used his
experience to assemble a team that did not disappoint;
the team’s gold-medal win over the United States sent
Canadians into a coast-to-coast celebration.
In June of 2000, Gretzky joined the
ownership group of the Phoenix Coyotes as the managing
partner. It was through his work and celebrity that the
Coyotes got public support for a new home arena in
Glendale, Arizona and that the team reinvented its image in
2003 with a brand new maroon uniform.
Gretzky is considered one of the
greatest athletes of the 20th century, along with the
likes of Muhammad Ali, Pele and Michael Jordan. In the
hearts and minds of all Edmonton Oiler fans, and
arguably all Canadians, he is the greatest player to
play the game and will remain a much-loved son of
Edmonton forever.
[back]
[top]
|