No, Gordie Howe's greatest gift was something much more human: his ability to put starstruck people at ease, be they world leaders, captains of industry, fans stunned speechless or just kids he'd bump into on the sidewalk, with a self-deprecating sense humor and an aw-shucks playfulness, both cornerstones of his mischievous personality.
In 2012, on his final visit to Montreal, where he played some of his greatest hockey, Howe was having the kind of fun that he'd never deny himself, spinning one wonderful yarn after another.
"Kids enjoy it when I do this," he said with a grin, his tongue pushing roughly half his teeth out of his head.
"I wish," Howe's son Marty said with a sigh, rolling his eyes, "that you wouldn't do that."
"How about this, then?" Gordie said, making it look like he was pulling half a thumb out of a ham-sized fist, both of his thick wrists locked from decades in hockey's trenches, his fingers meandering in directions that weren't intended.
GORDIE HOWE CAREER TOTALS | View Full Stats
Games: 1,767 | Goals: 801 | Assists: 1,049 | Points: 1,850
Mr. Hockey, as he was known to all, used those gnarled hands to make NHL history, finishing in the top five in League scoring for 20 consecutive seasons (1949-50 through 1968-69). He became the first NHL player to reach 1,000 points and would retire from the Hartford Whalers in 1980 as the League's all-time leader in games played (1,767), goals (801), assists (1,049) and points (1,850).
As a youngster growing up in Brantford, Ontario, Gretzky idolized Howe; it's fitting that Gretzky, The Great One, would eclipse the records that had been put virtually out of reach by the legend who became his close friend.
Howe was born in tiny Floral, Saskatchewan, on March 31, 1928, soon before the Great Depression, one of nine children raised by his parents, Ab and Kate. The family moved to nearby Saskatoon when Howe was an infant, and he fell in love with hockey when he laced up his first pair of skates, a battered pair of boots and blades that were dropped in the Howe kitchen in a sack of odds and ends by a destitute woman seeking a dollar or two.