Somerville was the first in line for Gordie Howe's visitation in June and first at Comerica Park on Monday, wearing a Red Wings cap and a Tigers jacket, clutching a camera. He studied the pictures of Ilitch and his wife on their wedding day, Ilitch and his wife at a championship parade going down Woodward, Ilitch giving two thumbs up with the mark of a Stanley Cup champion.
"Look at that ring on his hand," Somerville said.
Duke Foote, 46, a construction worker from Detroit, came even though he had never met Ilitch.
"He helped out everybody, more people than I know," Foote said. "It's a city that's coming back, a city that's rebuilding. They're showing love, and they want to put it back into the city, and Ilitch definitely did that. I truly appreciate it. I really do. I appreciate everything he's done."
Toni Speir, 44, of suburban Sterling Heights, came because she had worked with Ilitch and the Make-A-Wish Foundation in the mid-2000s.
"He would go around with the kids and just play around with them and talk to them," Speir said. "He was never above anybody. He showed the same respect for everybody, whether you were a janitor or one of the [executives of] his company."