NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and Centennial ambassador Wayne Gretzky, statistically the greatest player hockey has ever seen, met the media for a breezy early-afternoon session Sunday. And then into the room trooped Bower, Bucyk, Keon, Hall and Kelly for a short question-and-answer period.
Bower, 92, skirted a question for a perfectly valid reason.
"I'm a little hard of hearing from all these pucks I stopped and kept a lot of these guys in the League, but I just want to say, you have to speak up a little bit, OK?" Bower said. "I can't speak too well, I just had my front [teeth] bashed down and back and I'm forgetting what I'm saying, so I just want to say I'm very happy and pleased to be here at this special event, and [for] the voting."
At the end of the row, Hall had a few thoughts about modern goaltending equipment.
"Certainly we knew nothing about good equipment but, yeah, today's goalkeepers, they're absolutely great. I'll tell you, the goalkeeper gets educated by the forwards. And you learn in practice a little bit. … I learned until I was 25 years old, and then after 25, practice became a problem rather than a solution."
Not long after his stadium introduction, Hall wandered into the suite, a beer soon in his hand. He was wearing a spiffy new winter jacket, crested with the NHL's Centennial logo.
"Can I keep it, or will they ask for it back?" he asked, and with this mischievous gentleman, you never know whether your leg is being pulled.