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A dying boy's special legacy

It changed the life of Pat LaFontaine - Hall of famer sets up `oasis' in hospitals

BY PAUL HUNTER, SPORTS REPORTER FOR THE TORONTO STAR

Pat LaFontaine took to the ice more than 900 times as an NHLer. Put up impressive numbers, too. Good enough to land him in the Hockey Hall of Fame.

But the biggest games of his life, the ones that still resonate five years after concussions forced him to retire, aren't the ones you'll find on any statistical resumé. They, instead, took place with a 12-year-old boy who was battling terminal leukemia in an isolation ward at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo.

His name was Robert Schwegler "and we'd play video hockey games two or three times a week," recounted LaFontaine yesterday picking up the story.

"Robert would almost always beat me. He was always the Sabres. I was the Rangers or the Islanders. One day I came and one of the nurses was beside herself, she was in tears. She said, `Thank you so much for coming. It's the only time that Robert smiles.' I never forgot that. Robert passed away about six months after that. It had a huge impact on me.

"When you reflect back on this game, it's great scoring goals, having assists and being part of winning teams," he continued. "But when all is said and done, if you can have an effect on somebody and make a difference, I think that's more important."

Last night, the hockey world gathered to celebrate the careers of LaFontaine, Edmonton Oiler great, and one-time Maple Leaf goaltender, Grant Fuhr, long-time Ottawa 67's coach Brian Kilrea and Detroit owner Mike Ilitch, all deserving recipients of their hall of fame rings.

LaFontaine, of course, was a dazzling, playmaking centre for the Islanders, Buffalo and Rangers before his career was cut short at 33. Last night, they celebrated the fact he had six consecutive 40-goal seasons, scored more than 30 goals nine times in his 15-season career, twice topped the 100-point mark and had 545 helpers, some of them the prettiest passes you'll ever see.

Today, though, LaFontaine will go back to working on an even bigger assist, one spawned as an idea during his afternoons with Robert and other similarly ill children.

While countless athletes spend time with sick children, when LaFontaine tried to inspire Robert, the young boy ended up inspiring him.

"I came up with this dream that if we could create a space within a hospital that kids could escape to, where there are no doctors and no needles, it could be a safe haven, an oasis, a place where they could some of their life back."

And, maybe, by improving their environment, lengthening that life.

"Doctors have said to me on a few occasions, there's no medical explanation as to why a certain child is alive today," he said. "To me, that's motivation enough."

LaFontaine, a father of three himself, envisioned an environment where the cold, antiseptic smells of medical care are replace by the latest in technology where kids could play games, create music, do artwork and video conference with friends and family.

LaFontaine teamed with Microsoft and, through his Companions in Courage Foundation (www.CiC16.org), he is now beginning to build those rooms in three American hospitals, focusing first on the cities in which he played. His hope, if corporate America gets involved, is to outfit every children's hospital with a similar environment.

Rather than lament what might have been if his career hadn't been cut short or is he hadn't lost a season to reconstructive knee surgery, LaFontaine says he believes any medical troubles he had in his life - "trivial," in the bigger picture he says - helped prepare for what he calls his second career.

"Throughout my career I met people who were less fortunate. My biggest regret would have been retiring and not taking advantage of being in a position to impact someone else's life and need," he said.

"Before goals and assists, that is an accomplishment that I'm more proud of than any games."

LaFontaine has a connection with the other inductees.

He played midget hockey in Detroit the year Ilitch bought the Red Wings, he played for the New York Islanders when Kilrea was an assistant coach, he and Fuhr were Buffalo Sabres teammates.

"To be here with these three guys, I feel like the luckiest guy in the world," LaFontaine said after the four received their rings and blazers.

 

Pat La Fontaine - Hockey

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