Skip navigation
Site powered by
Latest news:
msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines: Violence widens ahead of Greek austerity vote

Hockey finally returns the love to O’Ree

72-year-old broke professional hockey's color barrier 50 years ago

Image: Willie O'Ree Getty Images file
Willie O'Ree

JIM LITKE
Jim Litke
AP columnist
Friday will mark 50 years to the day that a rangy black kid from Fredericton, New Brunswick, donned a Boston Bruins sweater and broke pro hockey’s color barrier on a sheet of ice in Montreal.

If you’re lucky enough to catch 72-year-old Willie O’Ree telling stories during the festivities the NHL and the rest of the hockey community has planned to commemorate the occasion, listen closely. Turns out he’s got another tale about overcoming adversity that might be even better.

“That’s one reason I feel blessed, “ O’Ree said in a telephone interview from Boston, where Saturday afternoon he’ll be honored before a game against the Rangers. “I work with kids through my role with NHL Diversity and it’s a chance to tell them, ’If you really feel strongly enough about something, you’ll find a way to make it happen.’

“I guess that’s why I’d like to be remembered most for what I’m doing now,” he added a moment later, “for giving back to the sport for everything it gave me.”

The reason O’Ree loved hockey more than it loved him — at least until recently — is because he made a comfortable, joy-filled living playing left wing for 21 years, nearly all of it in the minor leagues, while almost nobody knew he was blind in his right eye.

O’Ree was hit by a deflected shot playing in an Ontario junior league game some two years before his historic pro debut. When he came to after an operation, the first few words he heard couldn’t have been more devastating.

“The surgeon said my sight was gone and that I’d never play hockey again,” O’Ree said. “I was 19, going on 20. Everything I loved from the time I was a kid was about to disappear.”

A month later, though, O’Ree laced on a pair of skates, determined to regain mastery over the things he could control and not worry about the rest.

“Back then,” he chuckled, “nobody gave players eye exams. They might look at your knees, or how bruised the rest of you was, but that was it. Desire will take you a long way.”

After patiently climbing the minor-league ladder, O’Ree got called up to Boston and ushered into Bruins general manager Lynn Patrick’s office along with coach Milt Schmidt. The conversation was brief and to the point.

“They said, ’We know you can play,”’ O’Ree recalled. “’Don’t let anything you hear shake that belief.”’

Slideshow
Image: Snee, 8, son of New York Giants player Chris Snee and head coach Coughlin's grandson plays in the confetti after the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots in the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game in Indianapolis
  The Week in Sports Pictures
The Giants on top of the football world, getting ready for the London Olympics and more.

more photos

History suggests even that brief conversation was unnecessary. It was a decade after Jackie Robinson integrated baseball, O’Ree had already played in Montreal as a minor leaguer without incident, and teammates, fans and even opponents treated him respectfully. His pioneering role in that Jan. 18, 1958 game seemed so unremarkable at the time that it didn’t merit mention in most newspaper accounts the next day.

He stayed with the club for the return home game in Boston, then went back to the minors, not returning to Boston again until 1961. In all, O’Ree wound up playing only 45 games in the NHL. But that’s when his story got even more interesting.

The pay wasn’t as good and the fans weren’t as tolerant at some of the minor-league stops. Playing in the old American Hockey League, O’Ree found himself in a few Southern towns where racism still wasn’t muted. At least he knew what to expect, having spent a few weeks in Waycross, Ga., in 1956, trying out for baseball’s Milwaukee Braves. His favorite story from that experience was the bus ride back.

“I got cut, but I wouldn’t have taken the job even if they’d offered me one. Whites-only this, coloreds-only that — I couldn’t live that way,” he said. “When I got on the bus out, I went right to the back and didn’t get off, except to use the bathroom or grab a sandwich.

“But the farther north we went, the more I moved up. And by the time we got to the (Canadian) border,” O’Ree said, “I was in the front seat.”


advertisement
More news
Washington Capitals v New York Rangers
NHLI via Getty Images
Rangers extend lead in East

Ryan Callahan scored for the fifth time in four days and defenseman Ryan McDonagh snapped a second-period tie to lift the New York Rangers to a 3-2 victory over the Washington Capitals on Sunday.

Washington Capitals v New York Rangers
NBC Sports
Highlights: Capitals - Rangers

    Check out highlights from the Rangers 3-2 win over the Capitals.

Video: NHL from NBC Sports
Washington Capitals v New York Rangers
NHLI via Getty Images
Highlights: Capitals - Rangers
Check out highlights from the Rangers 3-2 win over the Capitals.

Slideshow
Image: Chicago Blackhawks Marian Hossa of Team Chara celebrates his goal with New York Rangers Marion Gaborik during the NHL All-Star hockey game in Ottawa
  NHL All-Stars
Take a look at the players who competed in Team Chara's 12-9 victory over Team Alfredsson.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: Stanley Cup Finals - Pittsburgh Penguins v Detroit Red Wings - Game Seven
  Sid the Kid
Penguins captain Sidney Crosby has gone from phenom to Stanley Cup champion.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: Washington Capitals Ovechkin celebrates his goal against the Montreal Canadiens during Game 5 in Washington
  Alexander the Great
Take a look at Capitals star and two-time MVP Alexander Ovechkin

more photos

Slideshow
Pamela Anderson
  Celebrity fans
Some of Hollywood's hottest celebrities take in NHL games.
Slideshow
Colorado Avalanche v Anaheim Ducks
  Icy Hot
Check out the ice girls from around the National Hockey League.

more photos