In Memoriam Former pro hockey players/management/others deaths (Kristian Antila)

Howie Hodge

Zombie Woof
Sep 16, 2017
4,457
4,107
Buffalo, NY
Red Kelly looked very ill at his number retirement in Detroit, so this is not a shock.

It is a great loss as he was one of the greats as a player.

Pyramid Power forever Red!!
 
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The Panther

Registered User
Mar 25, 2014
20,172
17,214
Tokyo, Japan
Wow, Red Kelly, what a legend. He always seemed a classy, smart guy.

Both he and Terrible Ted seemed to have the game figured out, unique to their era. I love how when Adams traded Kelly, he responded, "Yeah, I'll think about it." They were both ahead of their time.
 

BadgerBruce

Registered User
Aug 8, 2013
1,632
2,414
Excellent hockey player, former MP, fine boxer and by all accounts an outstanding human being. RIP.
 

byrone12

Registered User
Aug 2, 2005
291
129
Former NJ Devil and Pittsburgh Penguin Mitch Wilson passed away after battling ALS.



From his Facebook page:

“Friends of Mitch Wilson, it is with deep sorrow to inform you that Mitch passed peacefully at his home along the Hood Canal in Brinnon, WA on May 18, 2019. His father, stepmother & caregiver Christina, were at his side.
Thank you to everyone for your support through this difficult time. Mitch fought this battle the best he knew how & did so with courage.
When the family decides on funeral arrangements we will post an update to his ALS site & personal page.”
 

byrone12

Registered User
Aug 2, 2005
291
129
Former NJ Devil and Pittsburgh Penguin Mitch Wilson passed away after battling ALS.



From his Facebook page:

“Friends of Mitch Wilson, it is with deep sorrow to inform you that Mitch passed peacefully at his home along the Hood Canal in Brinnon, WA on May 18, 2019. His father, stepmother & caregiver Christina, were at his side.
Thank you to everyone for your support through this difficult time. Mitch fought this battle the best he knew how & did so with courage.
When the family decides on funeral arrangements we will post an update to his ALS site & personal page.”

John Mitchell Wilson
1962-2019
NHL veteran, commercial tugboat captain, and outdoorsman Mitch Wilson passed away quietly in his sleep, Saturday, May 18, at his home in Brinnon, Wash. following a courageous battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), better known as Lou Gehrig's disease. He was 57.
John Mitchell Wilson was born on February 15, 1962 in Calgary, Alberta. At an early age the family moved to his hometown of Kelowna, B.C. where his father John helped him nurture a passion for ice hockey at the local rink. Growing up in British Columbia's Okanagan, Wilson also developed a love for the solitude of the outdoors - fishing, hunting, hiking and making four-wheel trips on remote wilderness roads.
Despite the odds, and listed on most rosters at just 5-9, but a stout 190 pounds, Wilson pursued his passion for hockey, learning and perfecting the game, applying his trademark street smarts and Bulldog determination to be just a little smarter, a little tougher than the other boys on the ice.
Following graduation from Okanagan Mission Secondary School in 1980 and two years with the local Buckaroos of the British Columbia Junior Hockey League, Wilson earned his way into the WHL, traveling down to the states to play for the Seattle Breakers - a team that struggled to win.
His fierce, bump and grind style eventually caught the attention of the professional scouts sitting high in corners of the old Seattle Center Arena. It was an era where tough, physical and unrelenting play opened doors. For Wilson, that included the boyhood dream of playing in the NHL. His professional career included games with the Pittsburgh Penguins and New Jersey Devils. During a 12-year career, he reached the post season seven times and amassed more than 200 penalty minutes eight times during stints with the Wichita Wind, Maine Mariners, Baltimore Skipjacks, Muskegon Lumberjacks, Louisville Icehawks, San Diego Gulls, Fresno Falcons and Las Vegas Aces.
Following retirement from hockey in 1995, Wilson returned to the Seattle area and eventually pursued a career in the maritime trades, which he grew to love along with spending time with his longtime partner Collete Russell in their home overlooking Hood Canal in Brinnon, Wash.
Wilson loved the outdoors. Hunting and fishing near property on the Bogashiel River that he had purchased with the savings from his playing years, was nearby. And he always looked forward to his Sunday phone conversation with his "Mum" Vanna.
Beginning with Island Tug and Barge, Wilson cut his teeth at sea as an Ordinary Seaman before earning his Able Bodied license, which qualified him for greater responsibility on tugs and other commercial craft.
Rising through the ranks with Island Tug and Barge, Western Towboat Co., Salmon Bay Barge Line and others, Wilson eventually earned a Master Captain's License qualifying him to pilot 100-ton commercial vessels.
He talked often about trips up and down the Pacific Coast, to Hawaii and especially the many trips along Vancouver Island, through the Johnstone Straight, past Port Hardy and Ripple Rock and into Alaska's inside passage and the Bearing Sea.
Following his 2014 diagnosis with ALS, Wilson fought courageously to keep the progressive neurodegenerative disease at bay.
With the support of the late Kurt Walker, a former Toronto Maple Leafs player and his organization, Dignity After Hockey, along with Kandace Stoltz at Premier Regenerative Stem Cell and Wellness Centers, Wilson became relentless in his understanding of ALS and pursuit of treatment. Wilson also traveled to Mexico and Thailand with good friend Jake Goertzen and friend and caregiver Debra Howard, in the pursuit of innovative and often experimental medical procedures. Wilson found hope and often relief from the struggles of ALS, defying the statistics and odds. He didn't back down.
Wilson is survived by his mother Vanna Wison (Ray) of Kelowna, B.C., father John Wilson and stepmother Darlene of Fruitvale, B.C., who followed Wilson throughout his hockey career, rarely missing a game and later becoming caregivers of Wilson themselves. Sister Karen Brost of Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, brother Wayne Wilson of Salmo, B.C., step-sister Tricia Lonsdale of Gemseg, New Brunswick, and step-brother Scott Nuttall of Port Coquitlam, B.C. Along with friends Jason Russell and Steve and Linda Curran all of Brinnon, WA,
He was preceded in death in 2014 by partner, Collete Russell.
A celebration of life is being planned this summer near his home in Brinnon,Washington
Despite having ALS, Wilson wanted to help other Hockey players in need. Remembrances can be made to
Premier Regenerative Stem Cell and Wellness Centers, where 21 players are currently on a wait list for treatment.
5451 Dripping Rock Lane, G104
Fort Collins, Colorado 80528
OR
www.venmo.com/Kandace-Premier-Fund
 
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Robert Gordon Orr

Registered User
Dec 3, 2009
979
2,045
Johnson, only 48, sad. R.I.P.

Another NHL'er who passed away earlier (in May) is goalie Jim "Jumbo" McLeod [1937-2019].
He had a long playing career in the minors and only played briefly in the NHL for St.Louis in 1971/72.
He also played three seasons in the WHA.

jim-mcleod1_orig.jpg



Also worth mentioning is the passing of another goalie, Al Picard [1923-2019].
He never played in the NHL, only in the AHL (in the Montreal Canadiens system), but he was the goalie for Canada at the 1949 World Championships. After his passing, there's only one player left alive from that team, Tom Russell.

original.png
 

Robert Gordon Orr

Registered User
Dec 3, 2009
979
2,045
R.I.P. Glen Cressman [1934-2019]
He played four games in the NHL, and he did it with the strong Montreal Canadiens in 1956/57.
That season Montreal won their second out of five straight Stanley Cup titles, so it was an accomplishment in itself to just make that team.

Glen-Cressman.jpg
 

SealsFan

Registered User
May 3, 2009
1,735
540
R.I.P. Mike Christie, defenseman for the Seals, Barons, Rockies and briefly the Canucks. He had a Facebook page up looking for a kidney donor but sadly passed on Thursday at age 69 before he could get one. Hailed from Big Spring, Texas!
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ucanthanzalthetruth

#CatsAreChamps
Jul 13, 2013
28,626
34,411
Johnson, only 48, sad. R.I.P.

Another NHL'er who passed away earlier (in May) is goalie Jim "Jumbo" McLeod [1937-2019].
He had a long playing career in the minors and only played briefly in the NHL for St.Louis in 1971/72.
He also played three seasons in the WHA.

jim-mcleod1_orig.jpg

Are you certain he died? Can't see anything online, his wikipedia and hockey reference still have him alive too...
 

iamjs

Registered User
Oct 1, 2008
12,593
959
Are you certain he died? Can't see anything online, his wikipedia and hockey reference still have him alive too...

Unfortunately yes.

News also broke today that it was more than likely a suicide with no note left behind.

A police report says the death of former Nashville Predators captain Greg Johnson was an apparent suicide, according to the Detroit News.
The paper said Wednesday it had obtained a Rochester Police report, and that Johnson was found by his wife shortly before 10 a.m. on July 7. A gun and a single bullet were found near him. No suicide note was left.

https://www.cbc.ca/sports/hockey/nhl/greg-johnson-death-predators-nhl-suicide-1.5215925
 
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SabbathBloodySabbath

Registered User
Oct 8, 2017
81
102
Erþō
Are you certain he died? Can't see anything online, his wikipedia and hockey reference still have him alive too...
Unfortunately yes.

News also broke today that it was more than likely a suicide with no note left behind.
I think ucanthanzalthetruth meant McLeod, not Johnson. McLeod's Hockey Reference and Elite Propects page don't listed him as dead and his Wikipedia page wasn't updated until two months after he died (and a few days after that comment).
 
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Robert Gordon Orr

Registered User
Dec 3, 2009
979
2,045
There's one former NHL'er who passed away this year that we haven't mentioned here yet.

Len Fontaine [1948-2019], who played briefly with Detroit in the early 1970s.
He also played in the WHA and had a long and productive minor league career in the AHL and IHL.
Fontaine was a small player who was noted for his hard and accurate shot.

R.I.P.

len-fontaine-1973-34.jpg


Fontaine, Leonard Joseph | Steadman Brothers Funeral Chapels
 
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SealsFan

Registered User
May 3, 2009
1,735
540
Oh dang, Arnie Brown... I had recently added him to the "Dude, what are you doing in that uniform?" thread. RIP, Ranger d-man...
 
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