"That's why the people of Vancouver loved Pat Quinn," Canucks president of hockey operations Trevor Linden said. "He made people feel special, whether you were a first-line center or a fourth-line right winger, he had a way of getting the most out of people."
Linden was joined by more than half a dozen former Canucks players to help with the unveiling, including Jyrki Lumme and Dave Babych, whose names are also on the lineup card.
"Seeing that lineup card in his hands when he came into the dressing room every night with a lineup card and those big cowboy boots, let me tell you, he had everyone's attention," Linden said. "It's where Pat loved to be. He loved to be behind a bench. You could see it. He loved to teach, he loved the game, he loved to be as close to the game as he could."
Quinn was posthumously inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder in 2016. He played 606 NHL games as a defenseman then coached 1,400 more over 20 seasons. He won 684 games, eighth most in NHL history, the Jack Adams Award twice as the League's top coach (1980, 1992) and was Canucks coach, president and GM at various points from 1987 to 1997.
Quinn's legacy went beyond wins and losses. It could be seen in the players and people he inspired and mentored on and off the ice who returned for the statue unveiling, including Linden and Flames president of hockey operations Brian Burke.
"My father loved them like sons and all he wanted was to succeed and it didn't matter where it was, on or off the ice, and for them to take the time to be here and recognize him in this way, it's special for the family," Kalli Quinn said. "Every honor he has received is special in its own way and he is going to be remembered forever everywhere but this is something life-sized and tangible that people can come and experience. It's so amazing and so wonderful and I don't even have the words for it."