Teams, players, fans and those around the hockey world mourned the 2002 Hockey Hall of Fame inductee, remembering his incredible skill on the ice and giant personality off it.
Chico Resch, a former teammate of Gillies, said Gillies made the most of each day.
"Clarkie and I were born in the same town in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan but when we'd have a party, he loved the mic," Resch said. "He would sing, 'Oh, the shark, babe, has such teeth, dear…' and he'd get into it. He was obviously the life of the dressing room, the party, any social function. That's the personal side. I would say he was loving and lovable, very approachable… anybody could approach him. I didn't see that guy ever really have a bad day."
Though Gillies stood at 6'4" and weighed over 200 pounds, Resch said Gillies never used his size to intimidate competition, adding that Gillies and him spoke about the forward's dislike of fighting.
"He would fight, but he wasn't like a mean guy looking for a fight," Resch said. "If you watched him play, the other team didn't give him cheap shots because Clarkie didn't give cheap shots. Clarkie wasn't saying, 'I'm a power-forward. I'm gonna get an edge here. I'm going to give this guy a stick or that guy stick.'"
Butch Goring, another former teammate of Gillies and Islanders color analyst for MSG, added that Gillies was a loving, lighthearted man.
"To know Clark Gillies is to love him," Goring said on the air. "He's was a fun guy, always joking... He is like losing a family member."