NESN Travis Roy - A life & A Legacy

Gee Wally

Old, Grumpy Moderator
Sponsor
Feb 27, 2002
74,640
89,630
HF retirement home
NESN documentary poignantly shows the grace with which Travis Roy lived, and the impact he had - The Boston Globe



NESN’s new documentary on Travis Roy gets to the heart of who he was before and beyond suffering a spinal cord injury that left him paralyzed from the neck down 11 seconds into Boston University hockey career.
It gets to your heart, too.
The hourlong film, titled “Travis Roy: A Life & A Legacy,” premieres Saturday at 4:30 p.m. on NESN, and will re-air Sunday at 5 p.m. and Tuesday at 6 p.m. Roy’s story is more than familiar to New England sports fans; it’s part of the region’s fabric.
But NESN’s documentary — which tells the story of his life in full, framed by his annual Wiffle ball fund-raiser in Vermont for his foundation — does a remarkable job of reminding us of who Roy was before his 1995 accident, and all that he did to help others before dying in October 2020 at age 45.

“We wanted to remind people about the player and the person before the accident,” said Tom Caron, who narrates and conducts the interviews in the documentary, including those with Roy’s parents, Lee and Brenda, and sister Tobi. “I think he was just always an inspirational person. Whether that was playing in the NHL or something else, he was going to be a leader in whatever he did.”



Caron, like Roy a native Mainer, was an excellent choice — he called Roy’s high school state championship game on Maine television in the early ‘90s, before either had arrived in Boston. Dale Arnold, the play-by-play voice for the AHL’s Maine Mariners when Lee Roy was the arena manager and Travis was a stick boy, also provides depth and poignancy to Roy’s early years.
Roy, with his blond hair and ever-present smile, percolated charisma, yet was perceptive beyond his years. A speech to classmates he made during his time at Tabor Academy detailing his 10 rules of life still resonates with those who heard it.


The entire documentary is poignant, but there is a pivotal moment when it is particularly so. Jack Parker, Roy’s coach at BU and a rock of a friend afterward, recalls a night a few months after the accident when Roy confided to him that he feared he would never have anything as fulfilling in his life as hockey.
“If he was a player that got hurt in his junior year, he would have had all these experiences with his teammates that he could talk about and hang with, we did this and we did that,” says Parker in the documentary. ” ‘Remember this, Trav? Remember that, Trav?’ Well, there’s no ‘remember that’ with his teammates. He only played 11 seconds.”
Parker promised Roy that he would find something else he was passionate about, and he did — helping others who had suffered spinal cord injuries. In 1996, the Travis Roy Foundation was founded, initially operating out of his bedroom. By the time it reached its 25th anniversary this year, it had helped more than 2,000 individuals with grants and donations to spinal cord research.
 

Alicat

HFBoards Sponsor
Sponsor
Jul 26, 2005
87,913
98,021
Boston
Travis Roy continues to be an inspiration. I am DVRing this and fully expect to cry a number of times
 

Fenway

HF Bookie and Bruins Historian
Sponsor
Sep 26, 2007
69,015
99,838
Cambridge, MA
Travis Roy continues to be an inspiration. I am DVRing this and fully expect to cry a number of times

I worked that game for the long-gone Channel 68.

That was a case where we all knew it was bad and after the game, everybody at T's Pub shuddered when the phone rang as we all feared he would die that night.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad