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When the Minnesota Wild paid tribute to Derek Boogaard following the NHL
When the Minnesota Wild paid tribute to Derek Boogaard following the NHL
in Quasselecke 08.09.2018 08:58von jinshuiqian0713 • 1.650 Beiträge
TORONTO - When the Minnesota Wild paid tribute to Derek Boogaard following the NHL enforcers death, the four-minute 45-second video showed the six-foot-seven 265-pounder making hits, smiling with fans and doing charity work. Jerome Baker Jersey .It included each of his three NHL goals. But it did not show a single punch.That really struck me, said author John Branch. It was as if we are not going to be honest with ourselves about why he was there. And why he was popular.Branch, who documents Boogaards troubled life in a new book, notes that Boogaard fought at least 61 times over an NHL career that spanned 277 regular-season games and produced three goals, 13 assists and 589 penalty minutes. Boogaard fought more than 100 times, starting at 16, before he reached the NHL. And he never scored more than twice in a season.Boy on Ice: The Life and Death of Derek Boogaard tells the sad story of a larger-than-life man-child who struggled to fit in on and off the ice. Initially a hockey liability, Boogaard found a role in protecting his teammates.At first, it was spontaneous. During a bantam game in Melfort, Sask., he sent opposing players scattering for safety when he rushed their bench after a brawl broke out. Regina Pats scouts in attendance were so impressed that they immediately put in a claim for his junior rights and came up with a nickname: The Boogeyman. Later, the behaviour was expected of him as he rose through the junior and pro ranks.It didnt take long for the message to get through. In his second camp with the Regina Pats, the 17-year-old Boogaard fought 12 times in the first four scrimmages.As a member of the Minnesota Wild, Boogaard was beloved. But his game came with a mental and physical cost.At 25, Boogaard was beginning his third NHL season and was starting his side down a slippery slope.Within a year, Derek would have teeth knocked out and be prescribed vast amounts of painkillers by team doctors, Branch, a Pulitzer Prize-winning sports reporter for the New York Times, writes in the book. In another year, he would be in substance abuse rehabilitation. In another year, he would be in New York, rich and miserable and alone. And in another year, he would be dead.Boogaard died May 13, 2011, of an accidental overdose, a lethal mix of alcohol and prescription painkillers. He was 28.Subsequent study of his brain showed he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE. Boogaard was classified as Stage 2 of the four stages of the disease a€” more severe than Dr. Ann McKee, a Boston University professor of neurology and pathology, had seen before in a person that young.Boogaards death, coupled with the suicides of Rick Rypien and Wade Belak just months later, focused a spotlight on hockey tough guys and their cost of doing business.Boogaard played five seasons for the Minnesota Wild before signing a four-year, US$6.5-million deal with the Rangers. He would only play 22 games for the Rangers, in the 2010-11 season as he fell victim to his demons.Hockey had started as a place of refuge for Boogaard. But it didnt end up that way.It was a rare place for Derek where he felt like he fit in, Branch said in an interview. And certainly when he made the NHL and became the Boogeyman and became well-known, I think he was very, very proud of fitting in and being somebody who was looked up to as a protector of his teammates. That was a big deal for him.Now as I wrote in the book, I dont think he loved what he did. But I certainly know that he loved what it got him.Branch, who never met Boogaard, wrote a three-part series on the tough guy for the Times that ran in December 2011. It was titled Punched Out: The Life and Death of a Hockey Enforcer.Part of the initial interest was that the Boogaard family had donated Dereks brain to scientists at Boston University and the Times had led the way in coverage of brain injuries in sports. Branchs then-sports editor Joe Sexton suggested that in tracking the scientific examination of Boogaards brain, it might also be interesting to delve into that world of enforcers.Maybe theres a bigger story there, Branch recalled his editor saying.Initially Branch did not know how the Boogaard family might react.I told them from the get-go, Im not sure what its going to uncover, Im not sure if there are things that are going to be make your son look bad, ridiculous, heroic, whatever. I cant promise where its all going to go.The family proved to be helpful and supportive although Branch says: Whether they like the book, I dont know.Dereks father Len provided Branch with a riveting road map of medical, banking, phone and other records available only to next of kin.He was a police officer, a Canadian Mountie, said Branch. And I think after Derek died, he saw a lot of his role as investigating how his son died. And so he did a ton of great investigative work that a reporter probably couldnt do, (like) access to a lot of records. And he handed those things over.The family is pursuing a wrongful death lawsuit against the NHL, which explains the leagues resistance to co-operate on the book.NHL commissioner Gary Bettman did speak to Branch before the newspaper series ran. Deputy commissioner Bill Daly was also interviewed in 2011.The Minnesota Wild, while initially helpful, and New York Rangers were also not very co-operative.Readers of the book will wonder about the substance abuse programs Boogaard was in. Nothing much seemed to happen as he spiralled out of control, although Boogaard appeared to take advantage of holes in the system.Branch calls it one of more head-shaking parts of Boogaards story, noting gaps of communication between counsellors and Boogaard.Derek never really paid a price, even when he was failing drug tests, he said.During his second stint in rehab, Boogaard was granted two long extended recesses to leave rehab. It was the first night of the second recess a€” ostensibly to attend his sisters college graduation a€” that he overdosed.Im not sure Derek was the most willing participant, Branch said of rehab. But certainly I think there are some holes and some flaws in the substance abuse program and in their oversight of doctors.No doubt people tried. The book says Boogaard and an NHL substance abuse counsellor exchanged seven texts the night before he died.The books trail of prescriptions and pills is chilling. Branch, who was unable to speak to team doctors, says matching medical records with games shows a lot of Boogaards locker-room injections and pills came the day before or day of fights.There is certainly a pattern of propping him up, getting him ready for the next big fight. You see that pattern in the drug use.Boogaard realized, according to Branch, that there was little communication between doctors, so he would get a prescription from one doctor and then go to another for more pills.During his fourth NHL season in Minnesota, Boogaard had at least 25 prescriptions for oxycodone and hydrocodone, a total of 622 pills from 10 doctors a€” eight Wild doctors, an oral surgeon in Minneapolis and a doctor from another team. I think one of the more interesting parts is even once he had reached the Rangers, he was still getting pills from Wild doctors, Branch said.The book is more than the sad decline of a hockey enforcer. Branch documents Boogaards life from an early age, helping pull back the curtain with 16 pages of handwritten notes Boogaard made about his childhood.Branch calls the misspelled notes vital to both the newspaper series and the book.They certainly give Derek a voice that he wouldnt have had otherwise.Im proud of the fact that this is a book really about his entire life and not just about his hockey career. I think it makes it a little bit more of a human story, he added.Branch, who covered hockey some 10 to 12 years go while working in Colorado, watched a lot of hockey fights in researching the book.He says he used to think of them as a silly sideshow. That has changed.Now when I watch them. I just think its a little bit sad and a little bit ridiculous that they are allowing people to fight.The NHL will tell you that they are very concerned about injuries and head injuries and concussions for their players. And its hard to balance that with the sight of two men fighting, bare knuckles, sometimes the helmets come off, fans cheering, officials standing by watching, teammates watching. And one man trying to knock out the other one.Now that we know more about brain injuries, it could be a tough spectacle for me to watch these days. The 47-year-old Branch, who is now based in California, also worries about how society views its athletes. It saddens and frustrates me that hockey and I think a lot of other professional sports see these athletes as replaceable parts. And theyll do what they can to keep them on the ice or on the field. And once theyre of little use to them, they are disposed of.I think Derek was seen as somebody who could help the team and when he was no longer helping the team, it was We need to move on and thanks for your time, and theres the door.I really think theres something to be said about the way we treat our athletes and not just the way teams treat their athletes, its the way fans view their athletes and the media view the athletes. We are very quick to prop them but were very slow to help them in their times of need.a€” Boy on Ice: The Life and Death of Derek Boogaard, By John Branch, HarperCollins, 327 pages.---Follow @NeilMDavidson on Twitter Quentin Poling Jersey . This week, topics cover the Blue Jays rotation, the futures John Gibbons and Alex Anthopoulos, protecting pitchers and a bonus question on his predictions for the MLB playoffs. Minkah Fitzpatrick Jersey . The matchup will be made up in Minnesota at a later date. The arena was evacuated about 45 minutes before the scheduled 9:30 p.m. EST tipoff when a generator malfunction outside the arena sent smoke pouring into the building, according to NBA spokeswoman Sharon Lima. http://www.authenticdolphinsshopnfl.com/ . MacIntyre stopped 49 shots and the Marlies defeated the Texas Stars 5-1 in Game 1 of the American Hockey Leagues Western Conference final. "I felt in control, so that was nice," MacIntyre said.DENVER -- Michael Cuddyer homered to extend his hitting streak to 25 games, Jhoulys Chacin pitched eight scoreless innings and the Colorado Rockies beat the slumping San Francisco Giants 4-1 on Friday night. Wilin Rosario also went deep and Jordan Pacheco had three hits for the Rockies, who moved within three games of Arizona in the NL West. Buster Posey homered among his three hits for the Giants, who have lost five straight and seven of their last eight. Cuddyers streak is the longest in the majors this season and extended his franchise record. He has reached base safely in 44 straight games, also a club record. Cuddyer flied out to left in the first inning before connecting in the third. He worked the count to 2-0 before lacing a 79 mph cut fastball just over the scoreboard in right to give the Rockies a 3-0 lead. Rosario followed with a blast to left to make it 4-0. Chacin (7-3) made it stand up and earned his fourth straight win with another standout performance. The right-hander has emerged as Colorados best pitcher in June. He came within an out of a shutout against Philadelphia on June 16 and threw seven scoreless innings in a win over Washington last week. He has thrown 15 straight scoreless innings and has allowed just two runs in his last 27 innings. He was sharp again Friday, scattering three hits and walking three to help the Rockies snap a three-game skid. He retired 10 in a row after the Giants had first and second with one out in the fourth, then got Brandon Crawford to ground out with two on to end the seventh inniing. Dolphins Womens Jerseys. Giants starter Barry Zito (4-6) allowed four runs and 10 hits while striking out three in 5 1-3 innings. The veteran left-hander is 0-3 in his last five starts. His last win came against Oakland on May 30 and he is 0-5 in six road starts this season. The defending champions have struggled to score runs during their slide. San Francisco has managed just 17 runs in its last seven games and just avoided being shut out for the seventh time this season. The Rockies took a 1-0 lead in the first on Carlos Gonzalezs RBI double. Two innings later, Pacheco led off with a single and Cuddyer followed with his 14th home run of the season. Two pitches later, Rosario hits his 13th. Posey led off the ninth with his 11th home run of the year off Rex Brothers to spoil the shutout. It was the first run Brothers allowed in 32 appearances spanning 30 innings. The Giants got the tying run to the plate but Crawford grounded out to second to end the game. NOTES: Colorado OF Dexter Fowler (right hand) was a late scratch from the lineup. Fowler has missed the last two games and three of the last four. ... The Rockies activated closer Rafael Betancourt from the 15-day DL and optioned RHP Juan Nicasio to Triple-A Colorado Springs. ... The Giants reinstated LHP Eric Surkamp from the 60-day DL and optioned him to Triple-A Fresno. He will be added to the roster when he reports on Monday, when he will make a start, the team said. ... Giants RHP Santiago Casilla (cyst on his right knee) threw 30 pitches in a simulated game Friday. 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