"It's such a great community to be a part of because you try to lift each other up," he said. "The people that came together to try to lift me up, the prayers, the notes, the gifts from the fans in Jersey and elsewhere. It's unbelievable."
It was a tough year in the hockey community on many fronts, a fact Boyle was quick to acknowledge. He knows he didn't suffer alone.
There was the mass shooting in Las Vegas on Oct. 1, 2017, five days before the Vegas Golden Knights opened their inaugural season. There was the school shooting in Parkland, Florida on Feb. 14 that killed 17 people. Several members of the Florida Panthers, including goalie Roberto Luongo, another Masterton finalist, live in or near Parkland. On April 6, a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos, a junior hockey team, crashed in Saskatchewan, killing 16 people.
Each tragedy was memorialized during the awards show, its survivors celebrated.
"Things happened this year all across the League that were just devastating; devastating news all over the place it seemed like," Boyle said. "If you dwell on that, it's pretty depressing. When I get interviewed, when I get asked about what was so special this year, that was a big part of it. People are good. People are good people. Bad things happened and it's how we react to them. Your faith in humanity gets restored a little bit when I saw it firsthand."
Boyle is ready to finish his mini-vacation/anniversary celebration with his wife and get back to his children and continue the return to better health with Declan.
He sees brighter days ahead.
"It's [been] a ton of emotion this week," Boyle said. "Hopefully, [Declan] is on the road to recovery and we can get him in and get him fixed up again. Then we can go into next year, just worry about hockey and just winning and losing and all that fun stuff."