Saskatoon Blades legend Wendel Clark honoured this weekend - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Saskatoon Blades legend Wendel Clark honoured this weekend

Kelvington, Saskatchewan's Wendel Clark reflects on his young days playing hockey in Saskatoon.

Toronto Maple Leafs made Clark the first overall pick in the 1985 NHL Draft

Wendel Clark made his name scoring goals for the Toronto Maple Leafs. Now he'll count on that name to convince hungry Hamiltonians to eat at his restaurant, to be located at the historic Lister Block. (Jerry S. Mendoza/Associated Press)

Before he became the first overall NHL draft pick in 1985, Wendel Clark was just a young kid trying out for the WHL's Saskatoon Blades.

As a young hockey player from Kelvington, Sask., Clark remembers what it was like heading into camp.

He said because there wasn't a WHL draft at the time, he started heading to junior camps at around 13 years old.

"I was used to camps. But when you get older closer to the 16 level you know you might not make it, so it's a lot of nerves," Clark told Saskatchewan Weekend host Eric Anderson. "You're always watching all the players beside you because you recognize the names but you don't know the faces."

On Friday, the Blades honoured Clark before the team's home opener.

Clark said he still remembers the excitement and nerves of starting out in the WHL himself.

"You're all trying to make the team," he said. "You're fighting for jobs. There's no friends until the team is made."

Not far from home

Wendel Clark sports his old Saskatoon Blades jersey before being honoured in his hometown province. (Eric Anderson/CBC)

Unlike a lot of young players these days, Clark was able to stay relatively close to home and family.

"We were three hours down the road, so (my) parents were always in watching the games," Clark said. "I had left home a couple of years earlier going to Notre Dame so it broke the ice a little bit.

"The biggest change is you have to have great billets and I had outstanding billets," he said.

While the importance of billets hasn't changed, Clark said the game itself has.

"The game is getting quicker and faster at every level," he said. "And the talent level. Some times the old people think it was always way better back when. Rewatch the skill level today from the top line to fourth line - there's a lot more paritybetween the best line and fourth line today than there was in the old days."

All in all, Clark remembers his time in Saskatoon fondly.

"We had a great organizations here," he said. "They really handled the kids well and that's what helped a lot of us make the transition."

In his two seasons with the Blades, Clark scored 55 goals and 100 assists.

The million dollar question

Former Toronto Maple Leafs captain Wendel Clark will be part of CBC-TV's Hockey Day in Canada broadcast on Saturday, Feb. 21. (Rick Stewart/Getty Images)

Clark spent 13 seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs between 1985 and 2000.

The former Leafs captain isstill employed by the team as a community ambassador.

So how does the man idolized by Toronto hockey fans think his former team will do this season?

"I think we'll be competitive," he said. "It's a growing stage. We've got a longways to go to get a lot better, but I think we're going to be better than what some people think."