He collected himself and continued.
"It was important to me," he said. "Our family is strong, and I dearly thank my mother and father for that."
It says a lot about the late Colleen and Gordie Howe, and a lot about their children how they handled the past two days.
Gordie Howe was not just "Mr. Hockey." He was Dad and he was PeePaw. He was a husband to one, a father of four, a grandfather of nine and a great-grandfather of five. If you've lost a loved one you know how difficult it can be, how much you want to close in and shut out the world.
But the family understood what Gordie Howe meant to the world and why. He was beloved not just because he was a great hockey player, one of the greatest who ever lived if not the greatest. He was beloved because as nasty as he was on the ice, he was kind, open and welcoming off the ice.
And so the family was open and welcoming at the hardest of times.
The visitation and funeral drew VIPs in suits such as NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, Wayne Gretzky, Scotty Bowman and a parade of others from the hockey world. The family also made time for fans in Detroit Red Wings jerseys and T-shirts, more than 15,000 on Tuesday, a few hundred Wednesday.
"I know how much respect he has from anybody that's ever played the game," Mark said. "I don't know of any other human being that can go and knock out teeth; give people cuts, bumps and bruises; punch them in the nose or elbow them in the nose; and they revere the man.
"But I think Dad just had a certain way about him. Not anything you can teach, not anything you can learn. He had a special, special impact on everybody that he met. And for me, that's what sets him apart from any other athlete.
"My father never once corrected anybody in our family. That's grandkids, great-grandkids. As far as he led his life, he had respect for every single person on this earth. He never judged people. He accepted people for who they are, and I think that's why he was such a beloved man."