Gretsky: RETIREMENT APRIL 1999

RonPrice

Registered User
RETIREMENT APRIL 1999

I retired from full-time employment as a teacher-lecturer in April 1999. Wayne Gretsky retired in the same month and in the same year. Nicknamed The Great One, Gretzky was called "the greatest player of all time" in Total Hockey: The Official Encyclopedia of the NHL. He is generally regarded as the best player in the history of the NHL and has been called "the greatest hockey player ever" by many sportswriters, players and coaches. Upon his retirement on April 18, 1999, he held forty regular-season records, fifteen playoff records and six All-Star records. He is the only NHL player to total over 200 points in one season—a feat he accomplished four times. In addition, he tallied over 100 points in 15 NHL seasons, 13 of them consecutive. Gretzky's #99 has been retired by all teams in the National Hockey League. He is one of only two athletes to have earned this honour from a major professional sport, the other being Major League Baseball's Jackie Robinson, who wore uniform #42.

On his retirement Gretsky was immediately inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, being the last player to have the waiting period waived. He became Executive Director for the Canadian national men's hockey team during the 2002 Winter Olympics, where the team won a gold medal. In 2000 he became part owner of the Phoenix Coyotes and in 2006 he became their head coach. -Ron Price with thanks to Wikipedia, 12 August 2009.

I was nowhere near Canada, Wayne,
when you performed those amazing
feats of hockey prowess. I was all
over Australia in your famous years
skating yourself into hockey’s hall
of fame. I lived in your hometown,
in Brantford, when you were six &
when you joined the WHA in ’78 I
was in Ballarat about as close as I
ever got to being a professionally
academic-type before my bipolar
disorder struck again but, Wayne....

I had some very good years while
you were making it very, very big
in a world I played in, too, back in
‘57 to ’62 in those cold Canadian
winters, but I could never skate
well--that was my downfall.....I
turned pro far, far differently than
you, went professional in a new...
world Faith1 that was very slowly
taking the globe by storm, yes.....
quite unobtrusively...and I went to
Australia the year old Gordie Howe
retired, 1971.....wasn’t it, didn’t he?

They don’t know you Downunder,
Wayne.....it’s all cricket and footy
here and kangaroos and the heat...
Wayne!! It’s far too hot for ice-
hockey. I’m sorry I was not there
to watch you. My days had Frank
Mahovlich, Dave Keon, Bobby Orr
and Mr. Hockey, old Gordie Howe...

1 The Bahá'í Faith

Ron Price
12 August 2009
 

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