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Authors: Bob McKenzie

Hockey Confidential (27 page)

BOOK: Hockey Confidential
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“Feel bad for the Leafs?” he mused. “No. It happens. I know. But I really, really didn't feel sorry for them.”

No one ever said a Bruin fan is necessarily benevolent.

In some ways, the Bruins have always existed on some higher plane, beyond even hockey, for Downie.

That championship bantam season was his personal zenith as a player. The next year, in minor midget, he played on what he termed a “super-struggling team.” He quickly started to lose interest in the game, and when his family moved from Amherstview to Kingston after that season, he knew it was time to quit, in part because he didn't want to start all over again with new teammates and a new team, but also because he simply had so many other interests beyond hockey.

“Living in Kingston, instead of Amherstview, there was so much more to do,” he said. “Hockey just fell like a coat off my shoulders. I never looked back.”

Downie had always been fascinated by music. He would listen to his sister's 45-rpm records. In Kingston, he got into a band.

“It's all I wanted to do,” he said.

Downie met Paul Langlois in Grade 11 and they became best friends. Downie joined a band called the Slinks. Meanwhile, that same year, Robbie Baker and Gord Sinclair were in Grade 13, in a band called the Rodents, but they didn't know Downie and Langlois at that time. Johnny Fay was still in Grade 9 then, unknown to them all.

Between high school and Queen's University, there was for Downie, briefly, a band called the Filters, but that soon gave way to the Tragically Hip forming in 1983. And they've been together ever since.

It's not lost on Downie that his desire to be a goalie, rooted in wanting to be the individual with the greatest cause and effect on the game, was likely the same motivating force for him wanting to be the lead singer and front man of a band.

Downie was thirtysomething before he started playing hockey again. He played in a regular pickup game on Friday afternoons in Toronto, returned to his roots and played goal. He and his buddies would also play shinny when they could—he'd be a skater in that—climbing the fence and sneaking into Toronto's Withrow Park in the Riverdale area of Toronto on Sunday nights when the lights were on but no one was home.

But he soon got tired of the rigours of even once-a-week Friday afternoon goaltending. “I'd be gobbling Advil until the next Wednesday,” he said. Not unlike when he was a teenager, playing hockey just more or less fell off his shoulders like a coat once again.

With 15 albums, more than 150 songs, countless tour dates
all over the world, multiple No. 1 hits in Canada, all spanning parts of four decades over 30-plus years, the Hip is a national treasure. Downie and Fay reside in Toronto; Langlois, Baker and Sinclair live back home in Kingston.

The band that plays songs about hockey.

It's a funny thing to be known for, especially since there have been only four Tragically Hip songs with a hockey connection. (On the flip side, that's four more than many popular bands). Well, five if you count Downie's live freestyling lyrical treatment of their old standby “New Orleans Is Sinking,” where instead of singing, “I had my hands in the river / My feet back up on the banks / Looked up to the Lord above / And said, ‘Hey man, thanks,'” he would sing, “I had my hands in the river / My feet back up on the shore / Looked up to the Lord above / And said, ‘Hey man, thanks, it's Bobby Orr.'”

The first Hip hockey reference, and arguably its most famous, was “Fifty-Mission Cap,” a single from the 1992 album
Fully Completel
y
:

Bill Barilko disappeared that summer

He was on a fishing trip.

The last goal he ever scored

Won the Leafs the Cup

They didn't win another until 1962,

The year he was discovered.

I stole this from a hockey card,

I keep tucked up under

My fifty-mission cap, I work it

To look like that.

Downie had been unfamiliar with the legend of Barilko—the Maple Leaf defenceman who scored the game-winning goal in overtime of the 1951 Stanley Cup final, only to disappear the following summer in a plane crash—until he read about it on a hockey card. Around the same time, the Hip were in Washington, D.C. Downie was visiting the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, where he saw the cap worn by World War II American pilots, who would “crush” the standard-issue air force cap to make themselves look more experienced than they actually were.

“Back in those days, I was into collage or cut-and-paste writing,” Downie recollected of his melding of the Barilko story and the fifty-mission cap. “I wrote ‘Pigeon Camera' from the same visit (to the Smithsonian) because I learned pigeons with cameras attached to them were used to spy during the war. So I took the fifty-mission cap and the Barilko hockey card ideas, mashed them together.

“I was taken with the idea of a veteran pilot whose ultimate goal is to stay alive, to fly fifty missions, that in itself is its own glory and contrast that with Barilko's flashing moment—that ‘is it better to burn out than to fade away' sort of thing. I wasn't comfortable with doing just a straight narrative of what happened to a hockey player.”

It's a song that packs a powerful punch, most notably for Maple Leaf fans and especially when the song was played in Maple Leaf Gardens or at the Air Canada Centre, with a single spotlight shining on Barilko's retired No. 5 banner in the rafters as the Hip launched into the hard-driving but haunting song.

“I remember performing it at Maple Leaf Gardens—it was February 10, my sister's birthday, I don't recall the year [it was 1995]and we played that song with the light on the banner at the Gardens, in the building where the goal was actually scored. I know my dad was there. I think he fell to his knees on that one and he doesn't even play hockey. That was a special moment.”

The Hip's second hockey reference in a song was “Fireworks,” from the 1998 release
Phantom Power
. Most Hip hockey fans can instinctively sing the words:

If there's a goal that everyone remembers, it was back in ol' 72

We all squeezed the stick and we all pulled the trigger

And all I remember is sitting beside you

You said you didn't give a fuck about hockey

And I never saw someone say that before

You held my hand and we walked home the long way

You were loosening my grip on Bobby Orr.

The curious aspect of “Fireworks” is how the song is so often interpreted as an ode to hockey, notably international hockey, when in fact the song is actually about an opposite ideal (“Isn't it amazing anything's accomplished when you don't let the nation get in your way”) and represents that period of time when Downie quit hockey as a teenager.

“Yeah, there actually was a girl who said [she didn't give a f--- about hockey],” Downie said. “On that song, I was thinking about hockey falling off my shoulders like a coat to the floor. Girls do that to you. All of a sudden, you don't want your Saturdays tied up with the sweaty game. And I had never heard a girl swear and I'd never heard anyone say that before, that they don't give a f--- about hockey. It's like there's a whole other world out there, which is hard to fathom sometimes.”

Six years after “Fireworks,” from 2004's
In Between Evolution
, there was a third foray into hockey, with “Heaven Is a Better Place Today”:

Here's a glue guy performance god

A makeshift shrine newly lain sod

Hardly even trying gives the nod

I sure hope I'm not the type to dwell

Hope I'm a fast healer fast as hell

Heaven is a better place today because of this

But the world is just not the same

If and when we get into the end zone

Act like you've been there a thousand times before

Don't blame don't say people lose people all the time anymore . . .

It's just not the same because of this

It's not the same.

This is a song that Hip fans know was written in honour of the late Dan Snyder, but it's also very much for Dany Heatley. Snyder and Heatley were teammates with the NHL's Atlanta Thrashers in the fall of 2003. On September 29 of that year, Snyder was a passenger in Heatley's Ferrari. He suffered head trauma in a high-speed car crash and died six days later. Heatley, who had some broken bones and non-life-threatening injuries, was charged with vehicular homicide in the first and second degree, reckless driving, driving too fast for conditions, failure to maintain his lane and speeding. Heatley had alcohol in his system, but it was below the legal limit in Georgia. He later pleaded guilty to four of the six charges, with vehicular homicide in the first degree and reckless driving being dropped. He was sentenced to three years' probation.

“Like everyone else, I watched all of that pretty closely,” Downie said. “Dan Snyder, I didn't know at all. Dany Heatley, I didn't know him too well but knew of him. It seemed to me that Dany Heatley needed a friend after that. It was a tough time for him. We weren't in that vehicle—none of us were. They were in that car together, they were buddies, that's something [Heatley] doesn't need a reminder of how it's going to bother him for the rest of his life. He can pay whatever debt to society that society feels it needs him to pay, and that makes [society] feel better, but that doesn't help him. That's not the real punishment here.”

Downie was also greatly influenced by the Snyder family—Dan's father, Graham, and his mother, LuAnn—and how, amid their grief over the tragic loss of their son, they still managed to find forgiveness in their hearts for Heatley.

“They're such a beautiful family,” Downie said. “I was struck by their reaction. That's a big part of the song, too. It was like, ‘We're going to handle this between us all, all that pain, but what they did outwardly and inwardly, I was so impressed.”

Even years after the fact, Downie will still occasionally get text messages from Heatley.

“It may be odd hours—I envision him on a dock somewhere and maybe the Hip has come up on someone's iPod,” Downie said. “He'll hit me up with a text, which I love. I love getting those texts from people, love those little friendships with people we've met along the way, who might hear [a Hip song] and decide to reach out.”

Without question, though, the most meaningful Hip-to-hockey connection for Downie is “The Lonely End of the Rink,” from 2006's
World Container:

I looked up and you were there

Just sitting there all alone

Holding your fist in the air

Like, if you need me you're on your own

You drove me home through a snowy tomb

I fell asleep in my seat

I had the dream of having no room

You were there just staring at me.

At the lonely end of the rink, you and me

At the lonely end of the rink, you and me

Oh to join the rush

As the season builds

I hear your voice 'cross a frozen lake

A voice from the end of a leaf

Saying, “You won't die of a thousand fakes

Or be beaten by the sweetest of dekes.”

This song is deeply personal. It's about his father, Edgar, who was far too busy selling homes to be involved in any regular way with Gord's minor hockey, yet they still managed to connect on some
deep level.

“My dad wasn't a hockey dad—he was the furthest thing from it,” Downie said. “My dad could never drive me, but it never bothered me. I'd walk to practice with my gear—I kind of liked the independence of that. And my friend Phil, for games, we never had to call him, but his dad would pick me up, it was automatic. They just knew I needed a ride. But I'd be playing in a game, I would look up and my dad would just appear there. He wouldn't be with the other parents, grouped under the heaters. He'd be alone, down in my end, and I would look up at him. He would just go like this [he raises a fist in the air]. I'd make a flurry of saves, I'd look up and he would be gone. He had places to be. He's a very good dad. I was always very hard on myself; he would listen. I never really was told [by him] what I could have done better, but he always listened . . . when he showed up, when he raised that fist in the air, to me, it meant, ‘I'm here, I'm with you, maybe no one else in the building is, but I am.' That's what [‘The Lonely End of the Rink'] is about.”

What Downie will also never forget about that song is playing it for the first time for his older brother, Mike. Gord picked up Mike, and, as is their custom when Gord wants Mike to hear some of his music, they drove to Toronto's Cherry Beach and played it on the car stereo.

“Mike heard the song and he started to cry,” Downie said. “We cried together, thinking of the old man. I just admire my dad so much and how he approached things. By design or neglect, he was the perfect hockey dad, and he let me do it. I could learn from him. . . . My son plays basketball, he's a good player, but I got pissed off recently after one of his games. I was a bad basketball dad that day. I should have been more like my dad and said nothing.”

Downie's passion for the Boston Bruins is impenetrable. He
knows this to be true because, as much as he loves the Bs, he isn't sure sometimes how much he really loves hockey. If that makes any sense.

“In ways I don't even like the game anymore,” he said, “I still do like the Bruins.

“There is a normal level of violence that erupts from the game, just from two guys who want something really badly,” he added. “That, I understand. But I see some things happening now [line brawls off opening faceoffs] and it strikes me that it's nothing more than organized brutality. It's organized intimidation and it comes from the highest echelon of the game. That dude in baseball [
Boston Globe
baseball writer Peter Gammons, who said the NHL remains a fringe sport in America because of a game-opening Vancouver–Calgary brawl in the 2013–14 season] was right. It is bush.”

BOOK: Hockey Confidential
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