Maple Leafs' Shanahan, Babcock saddened by passing of Red Wings owner Ilitch | CBC Sports - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:49 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hockey

Maple Leafs' Shanahan, Babcock saddened by passing of Red Wings owner Ilitch

Brendan Shanahan and Mike Babcock were both visibly saddened Saturday morning by the passing of long-time Detroit Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch. The president and head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs both offered glowing reviews of Ilitch from their respective tenures in Detroit, which included three Stanley Cups as a player for Shanahan and one as a head coach for Babcock.

'He made you want to be a better man'

Mike Babcock, left, and Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch are shown during a news conference in July of 2005. Illitch died on Friday at the age of 87. (File/Getty Images)

Brendan Shanahan and Mike Babcock were both visibly saddened Saturday morning by the passing of long-time Detroit Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch.

The president and head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs both offered glowing reviews of Ilitch from their respective tenures in Detroit, which included three Stanley Cups as a player for Shanahan and one as a head coach for Babcock.

"He made you want to be a better man," Babcock said of lIitch who passed away at age 87 in a Detroit hospital on Friday. "He was committed to doing things right and what he touched in business turned to gold. But he had that presence about him that he made you want to be better."

"He was such a passionate sportsman, but his family always welcomed us," added Shanahan. "They knew the players. They knew the wives, the girlfriends, the kids. We all got to made feel like we were part of his family."

Shanahan, who played 716 regular season games with the Wings and another 106 in the playoffs, said Ilitch and his wife Marian referred affectionately to players as their "boys".

"Sometimes we were 35, 40-years-old but we were still their boys," Shanahan said.

Babcock said the Ilitch family, also owners of the Detroit Tigers, set up an "expectation of success" during his decade-long run as coach of the Wings.

"Some people make you come in earlier," Babcock said. "They don't say nothing. They just show up every day and they grind and they make you grind. And that to me was what he was."

Babcock and Shanahan both credited Ilitch and his family for inspiring the ongoing revitalization of Detroit's downtown, which will include a new arena for the Wings next season.

Shanahan described Ilitch as a competitive sort who wouldn't often venture down to the team's dressing room at Joe Louis Arena, but when he did players took notice. There was one regular season game against Boston in particular, Shanahan said, when Ilitch was particularly driven to beat the Bruins following a board meeting clash with that club's ownership the previous summer.

"He didn't have to say a word to us," Shanahan said. "We knew exactly why he was there. We made sure that we weren't sleeping through that one."

"Great, great man," Babcock said.