EDMONTON, AB - Longtime Oilers Athletic Trainer Ken Lowe had a knack for being in the right place at the right time over 35 years in the profession.
During Canada's quest for gold at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, he was presented the opportunity to play a small but significant role from the treatment room.
Two back-to-back games against Germany and the Czech Republic would decide Canada's fate in the group after an opening loss to Sweden. A serviceable, then 36-year-old Mario Lemieux was critical to determining that outcome.
Fixing an ice pack for Lemieux and his lingering hip issues that stemmed from arthroscopic surgery just over three months earlier, The Magnificent One posed the question to Lowe of playing back-to-back games for the first time in an extended period.
"What do you think?" Lemieux asked.
It would be a defining moment for Canada, and one of the biggest thrills of Lowe's career as a trainer.
ALUMNI: Lowe's Hall of Fame induction a product of timing and connections
Developing connections over a 35-year career and being in the right place at the right time helped elevate the former Oilers athletic trainer to hockey's highest honour

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Hall of Fame | Ken Lowe Honoured

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