When the Chicago Blackhawks went shopping for a coach in 1998 after missing the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in 29 years, owner Bill Wirtz and general manager Bob Murray went back to someone they felt exemplified Blackhawks hockey. In the process, Chicago became the first NHL team to hire a black coach.
Dirk Graham had already made history with the Blackhawks in 1989, when he became the NHL's first black captain. He retired in 1995, spent one season as an assistant under Craig Hartsburg, took a year off and returned as a scout. On June 29, 1998, he became Chicago's 31st coach and made some more history.
To Graham, Blackhawks hockey meant "commitment to the team, commitment to your teammates. Playing with heart, playing with desire. Showing up every night."
That's exactly what Wirtz said he was looking for.
"This man personifies [Blackhawks hockey] more than anybody I know," he told the Chicago Tribune.