Black Man of the Day: Willie O'Ree (1st Black NHL player) UPDATE: NUMBER RETIRED TODAY!!!

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Willie Eldon O'Ree, OC, ONB (born October 15, 1935 in Fredericton, New Brunswick) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player, known best for being the first black player in the National Hockey League. O'Ree played as a winger for the Boston Bruins. O'Ree is referred to as the "Jackie Robinson of ice hockey" due to breaking the black colour barrier in the sport, and has stated publicly that he had met Jackie Robinson twice in his own younger years

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WHL Second All-Star Team (1969)
Lester Patrick Award (2000)
Order of New Brunswick (2005)
Willie O'Ree Place (Fredericton arena, dedicated 2008)[13]
Order of Canada[14] (2008)
Breitbard Hall of Fame (2008)
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I'll never forget reading an article involving O'Ree and a few other Black NHL players in "THE DAILY CHALLENGE" Black newspaper in NYC during the early 80s.

The writer basically had to pull teeth to get these Brothers to talk. They were pretty bitter to say the least about their experiences in/with the NHL.

I used to watch Hockey on TV with The GrandFather during the 70s.
But never was much of a fan.

Started watching it again for a bit when I came upon Sidney Crosby's autobiography during running the Arts section at Barnes & Noble.
 
I'm a Firefighter and years ago this guy came to the station to visit.He hung out and briefly told us his story.Ended up giving as a hockey sweatshirt and a pin as well.
 
I'm a Firefighter and years ago this guy came to the station to visit.He hung out and briefly told us his story.Ended up giving as a hockey sweatshirt and a pin as well.

Thank you for your service. I'm not going to go deep on here.

Firefighters saved my mother twice. She had some spinal issues.

Peace.
 

'We will never let his name die': How NHL players have been inspired by Willie O'Ree
Mike Stobe/NHLI via Getty Images
7:00 AM ET
  • Kristen ShiltonESPN NHL reporter
Wayne Simmonds was drawn to hockey at a young age.
He just wasn't allowed to participate until one specific homework assignment was complete, on one specific figure.

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"I remember being 6 or 7 years old, and I told my parents, 'I want to play hockey.' And they said before I could, I had to look up Willie O'Ree," Simmonds, a Toronto Maple Leafs winger, told ESPN recently. "They wanted me to know why I was getting this opportunity to even be able to play the game. I did a lot of studying about Willie growing up, and ever since that, Willie has been my idol. Without him, not only Black children, but other BIPOC kids as well, probably wouldn't have had their opportunities. Every ethnicity has its trailblazer; it's first. Willie was the first."
It was Jan. 18, 1958, when Willie O'Ree donned a Boston Bruins sweater and made history as the NHL's first Black player. Because of a lifetime devoted to improving the sport he loves, O'Ree ensured he would not be the last. On Jan. 18, 2022, the Bruins will honor that legacy and their legendary alum by raising O'Ree's No. 22 to the rafters in a long-awaited jersey retirement ceremony.
Due to a rise in COVID-19 cases throughout North America, O'Ree will have to attend the event virtually. His presence, though, could never be diminished. In speaking to those in and out of hockey whom he has inspired, his legacy will live on forever.
O'Ree's story
O'Ree is a part of hockey lore, his story riddled with hardships overcome in the pursuit of one groundbreaking dream. Even before the Bruins initially recalled O'Ree to their ranks, he was harboring a painful secret: Just two years prior, the winger had been hit by an errant puck that left him blind in one eye. Had Boston known, O'Ree wouldn't have been eligible for his NHL debut. The entire course of pro hockey might have changed forever.
As it was, O'Ree suited up in 45 games for Boston from 1958 to 1961, recording four goals and 14 points. His entire tenure there was marred by violence. Being the only Black player in the NHL made O'Ree a focus of vicious, racially charged attacks, from horrific slurs spewed by fellow players and fans, to targeted altercations on the ice -- one of which knocked out O'Ree's front teeth and broke his nose.
More from The Undefeated
Bell: O'Ree's short but pathbreaking stint with the Bruins
Walker: The players and circumstances that paved the way for O'Ree
Yates: O'Ree broke color barrier, but there's more work to be done
But O'Ree would not be deterred, even after he was traded to Montreal following the 1960-61 season. The Canadiens already had a stacked forward group at the time, and O'Ree had to try drawing the club's attention during their Eastern Professional Hockey League team's camp. His performance there was strong, but O'Ree still failed to receive an invitation to the Canadiens' next training camp. He would never play in the NHL again.
O'Ree pivoted instead to a successful 17-year career in the minor leagues, appearing in 785 Western Hockey League games and scoring 639 points before he retired at age 43. The time O'Ree spent in the NHL was too brief, but the experience fueled his incomparable second act, leading the charge for a more inclusive hockey space.
Since 1998, the Fredericton, New Brunswick, native has been the NHL's director of youth development and an ambassador for NHL Diversity, roles that put O'Ree face-to-face with the generations of players his work is impacting.
That vision O'Ree holds for a better hockey community has resulted in numerous awards and honors over the years, one of the largest being his enshrinement by the Hockey Hall of Fame's Builder category in 2018. It's also what earned O'Ree the Order of Canada -- that country's highest civilian honor -- in 2008. And it's why the 116th U.S. Congress is bestowing the United States Congressional Gold Medal to O'Ree this year. At 86 years old, O'Ree's passion for his cause remains unchanged.
That's all the more impressive considering O'Ree never chose to be a pioneer. He didn't ask to bear that burden, to have been one of one. But O'Ree met the challenge, while creating space for more minority players in the hockey world. For those like NHL Players' Association agent Eustace King -- O'Ree's own longtime representative -- who has traveled the road O'Ree paved, to write their own stories.
"If it wasn't for Willie O'Ree, there would be no Black executives in the National Hockey League like myself. There wouldn't be any Black players," King said. "And if there were, it would have been [much] later on. But [what he went through] really opened up everyone's eyes, and I think that because of his personality and character, he was able to handle it."
Inspiring younger generations
Anthony Stewart has the photo hanging in his office.
It's from 2003, and Stewart had just been drafted by the Florida Panthers. He had exchanged pleasantries with commissioner Gary Bettman, pulled on that traditional jersey/hat combo, and was exiting the stage when O'Ree came into sight. Their interaction was short but meaningful, and remains memorialized on Stewart's wall.
"He was going above and beyond to make sure he was meeting all the minority draft picks," Stewart recalled. "So just to have him be a part of that day was definitely special. I still remember it. I have the picture of us framed. It just showed he cares about growing the game, he cares about the game of hockey. I've definitely looked up to players like Willie, who was the first."
A decade later, O'Ree was still waiting in the wings to greet NHL draftees. Anthony Duclair recalls being selected by the New York Rangers in 2013 and sharing a "really cool moment" right after with O'Ree and fellow draftee Jordan Subban.
"It was just a time where I was in awe, to be honest," Duclair said. "He's just meant a lot and touched so many people's lives. I remember [we talked about] working hard and being yourself. I really took those words to heart, about just being yourself. Don't try to be someone else to please other people. Just work hard and have fun. That was his message."
Subban arrived at draft day inspired by his older brother, New Jersey Devils defenseman P.K. Subban, already making inroads through the NHL. But meeting O'Ree that first time was something special for the younger Subban, cementing his beliefs about what was possible for his own future.
"Willie O'Ree was a tremendous role model," Subban said. "I looked at him as almost a symbol of being able to accomplish your dreams, no matter what the circumstances. I think especially nowadays, there's a lot more talk about some of the barriers that Black players have to go through playing hockey. When he was able to break the color barrier in the NHL, those barriers were most likely significantly worse. He's someone that I look up to as [an example] to just keep pushing forward."
"Every ethnicity has its trailblazer; it's first," Wayne Simmonds said. "Willie was the first." Paul Bereswill/NHLI via Getty Images
Blake Bolden can attest to O'Ree's power in that respect. It was his influence that motivated Bolden to blaze her own trail, as the first Black player to compete in the National Women's Hockey League, and the first Black female pro scout for the Los Angeles Kings.
"Willie has been an integral part of my life and journey as a Black professional hockey player," she said. "His words have fueled me to be the best version of myself and give back to the game. He is a legend, a trailblazer and inspiration. His legacy will continue to transcend the sport of hockey as an icon for true diversity, equity and inclusion."
O'Ree has always been more than another handshake; he has become a great friend to many mentees. Simmonds was also introduced to O'Ree after being drafted by Los Angeles in 2007; now they share an agent in King and speak often. A lot has changed over the years since then for Simmonds, as a player and a person, but he has stayed close with O'Ree and learned myriad lessons from him in the process.
"The thing I've taken from Willie the most is just his humility," Simmonds said. "After everything he's gone through, and that he's faced, I've never met a more humble man. After what the game put him through, I don't know anyone else who would want to give back to it as much as Willie has. Willie has been a pillar in the hockey community and for players who look like myself since he broke into the NHL. He's a trailblazer. He's an astronaut in my eyes. Without Willie, it wouldn't be a possibility for me to be where I am."
The Jackie Robinson of hockey
"For me, Willie was just as big as Jackie Robinson," Simmonds said. "I think he should be viewed that way throughout the whole sports world. I'm a big believer in if you don't know where you've come from, you don't know where you're going to go. I took that to heart with Willie."
It's virtually impossible for those players most impacted by O'Ree's legacy not to mention Robinson in the same breath. Both were icons in their respective arenas for doing what no one else had, and over time they changed the perception of what players at the highest level would look like.
"Willie's the Jackie Robinson of hockey," said Minnesota Wild defenseman Matt Dumba. "Breaking down the barriers that he did, being that name, that player of color, to look to him as the first person that ever did it. He made it possible for minorities to play in the league. It just is really special, because that representation definitely matters, and to know that he did it in a different era and knowing what he went through during those times? It's just incredible; it was a whole different time in the world."
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Stewart admits it was harder at 18 to appreciate what O'Ree endured during his early life. Now, being 37 years old and having experienced his own obstacles on and off the ice, Stewart can better understand O'Ree's past.
"Just imagine how bad Willie had it at that time, being the first and only Black hockey player," Stewart said. "That puts things in perspective when you have guys that trailblazed and paved the way to make it easier for players. He should be in the same conversation as Jackie Robinson. You see how beloved Jackie is, and that should be the equivalent of [Willie] in hockey. 2,000 years from now, when they dig up the archives of what hockey was or what hockey is, Willie's story and plight should be there with all the other stories as well."
In the five decades since O'Ree's debut, more than 100 non-white players have appeared in NHL games. But the league remains approximately 97% white. That imbalance has led to initiatives like the NHL's "Hockey Is For Everyone," which strives to spread a message of inclusion. The Hockey Diversity Alliance has taken it a step further, launching its own messaging to not only highlight racism that is still prevalent in the league, but calling out white allies to amplify their voices.
"We talk about a sense of loneliness [being a player of color] among your own teams now," Dumba said. "But Willie was the only one in the entire league. So, I think that's just an incredible feat, and we're all very proud of him. He's a legend. He will always be a legend in every way, just being able to break down that color barrier. He's been a beacon of hope."
That's what O'Ree was, in part, to a young Mark Fraser. Years before Fraser was drafted by the Devils in 2005, he was absorbing the stories of great Black athletes who would eventually inspire his own 200-plus game NHL career.
"My first book report at a very young age was on Jackie Robinson. And being a Canadian kid and a hockey lover and hockey player, I had a similar interest in learning the story of Willie O'Ree," Fraser said. "Just celebrating Black excellence and the overcoming of adversities and doing it with such elegance and grace is something that I've always really admired with Willie."
Fraser hasn't met O'Ree in person, but his journey has been indelibly marked by O'Ree's contributions to the sport. Like Dumba, Fraser can recall a sense of isolation in NHL dressing rooms, of not feeling empowered to speak up against "daily microaggressions" that still exist. At the same time, Fraser knew he wasn't truly alone in that battle. O'Ree had tackled it first, to make the road ahead easier on others.
"His legacy is so much bigger than what he did on the ice," Fraser said. "And that stuck with me. If Willie was able to get through [these challenges] in a time which I can only believe was tougher to be resilient and to overcome than the generation that I grew up in, then that 100 percent empowered me and encouraged me to not let a racial epithet or whatever you're potentially dealing with to win and not let it overcome you and to not succumb to it."
'We will never let his name die'
Bryant McBride knows about conquering a challenge. He's a successful film producer and businessman, and was the first Black class president at West Point.
But nothing could prepare McBride for just taking a walk with O'Ree.
"One of the hardest things I've ever had to do is go through an NHL arena with Willie O'Ree," Bryant said. "Because there's 10,000 people coming up to him. I can't even begin to tell you how many people he's met that love him, that just will do anything for him. Because he would do anything for so many people. It's Willie's personality, it's his love for the game and his passion to include everybody. That's his magic."
McBride captured that essence in the sports documentary "Willie," and he reflects fondly on what the experience taught him about O'Ree's legacy. He recalls going to O'Ree's house and seeing his Order of Canada award on the wall, next to his plaques for earning employee of the month from a security guard job. To O'Ree, all work is equal. All work has value.
"What sets him apart? It's that while it is really so easy to be bitter, Willie is just all about providing opportunities looking forward," McBride said. "He's not looking back. He's lived through that and it's hard, and it was still fun and he's talked about it at length with real candor, but he's looking forward. And asking: How do we make it better? That's his mantra, and it has served him well."
Bryant McBride (left), shown with ESPN's Brian Lockhart, was executive producer of the "Willie" documentary. Melissa Rawlins/ESPN Images
It's a journey O'Ree seems destined to travel until, well, he can't anymore. Even at the pinnacle of a career for most people -- being inducted into the Hall of Fame -- O'Ree was wondering, what's next?

"One of the last things that he said [at the Hall of Fame] was, 'My job is not finished; I still have plenty of things to do and accomplish,'" King said. "And he was talking about things that he was doing with the NHL programs. He wanted to make sure he helped kids and traveled [the world] to make sure he got the message across. To me, that's his lasting legacy. He did break the color barrier. He basically integrated the sport of hockey, he's the one that did it. And he was a hell of a hockey player as well."
That's where it all started for O'Ree, with a pure love of the game. Raising his jersey in Boston will acknowledge all for which O'Ree has stood: One person destined to change the lives of many.
"I think he'll be remembered just as a man who, in my eyes, went through a ton even just to get to the NHL, but he didn't stop there," Simmonds said. "He continued on, and he continues to push for more equality and for other people who look like him to be able to play this game and enjoy this game.
"We will never let his name die. It will never die; I can tell you that."

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'An honor and a message': The meaning of Willie O'Ree's jersey retirement
Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Jan 12, 2022
  • Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Mathieu Joseph

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Editor's note: With the No. 22 sweater rising to the rafters in Boston on Tuesday, Jan. 18, two Black NHL teammates reflect on Willie O'Ree's lasting impact.
In this game, there are a few honors that separate the memorable from the unforgettable.

There's the Stanley Cup; the ultimate recognition for a team.
There's the Hockey Hall of Fame; the ultimate recognition for a career in our sport.
And there are jersey retirements; the ultimate recognition of what a player means to a franchise, a fan base, and a community on and off the ice.
In our opinion, getting your jersey retired is probably the biggest honor a player can receive. It forms an unbreakable bond between your jersey and every NHL home game your team will ever play. And it's an honor Willie O'Ree will receive next week, when his jersey is raised to the rafters in TD Garden.
Seeing the NHL's first Black player honored in this way is a chance for the hockey community to reflect on everything attached to being "the first," from the obstacles Willie faced to the hope he inspired in so many people who had never seen themselves represented on hockey's biggest stage.
The obstacles are where we need to start. Because we need to remember how enormous they were.
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If you've heard Willie talk about his response to the racial slurs he heard on the ice -- how he didn't let it bother him, how he "just wanted to be a hockey player, and if they couldn't accept that fact, that was their problem, not mine" -- you've only heard part of the story. He's speaking to an incredible resilience that enabled him to keep going.
But let's think, for a moment, about what this resilience really meant.
It meant years of hearing people in and around rinks say that he was unwanted and unwelcome. It meant using their ignorance as fuel to defy stereotypes, while trying not to burn out from frustration over the fact that these stereotypes exist. And it meant carrying the weight of social stress and pressure on top of the daily training, focus and commitment it takes to be an elite athlete. That extra weight made every step of Willie's journey more demanding than the steps taken by white players as everyone worked toward their dream of playing in the NHL.
And yet, Willie persevered.
We can never understand what Willie went through in an era when explicit racism was common. But we can connect some of our experiences to the same forces Willie had to deal with, even though those forces now operate in more indirect ways.
Crowds applaud Willie O'Ree now, but were not as welcoming when he played. Jamie Cotten for ESPN
Youth hockey gave us some of our first examples. Although we played in different parts of the world -- Canada and France -- our memories are similar: Seeing kids who didn't look like us talking on the side or behind our back. Hearing those kids' parents describe us with narrow-minded assumptions such as "Well, it's normal he's fast." Hearing other parents question why Black kids were getting ice time over the kids they thought belonged there.
In response, we turned to our own parents for support. They explained that these moments were unfortunately going to happen, because society hasn't reached a point where everyone is treated equally. And they reminded us to work hard and prove the doubters wrong. Their words prepared us for what to expect and gave us the motivation to keep going. But on the really hard days, when we needed extra motivation, we knew we could find it in the Black players who had already made it to the NHL. We could look to them as role models. We had proof that people like us could be recognized and valued for their contributions at the highest level of professional hockey.
More from The Undefeated
Bell: O'Ree's short but pathbreaking stint with the Bruins
Walker: The players and circumstances that paved the way for O'Ree
Yates: O'Ree broke color barrier, but there's more work to be done
Willie didn't have that proof. All he had was his own dedication and mental strength to push forward, without knowing when or if his dream of making the NHL would become possible.
Somehow, he never wavered. And that's why he was ready for his historic call-up to the Boston Bruins.
It's worth considering how Willie's NHL debut was experienced by fans in the stands. Imagine a nearly all-white crowd watching him play in the Bruins sweater. They lived in a time when it was normal to claim Black people couldn't play competitive hockey because their ankles were "too weak" to skate. But right there, on NHL ice, was Willie O'Ree -- competing against the best in the old Montreal Forum. His presence must have forced people in the crowd to reevaluate their assumptions. Silently and slowly, it had to spark some change in their thinking about race and society.
Willie was probably aware of this, but we bet he wasn't focused on it. He probably just wanted to represent the Bruins well and help the team win. And that's part of the beauty of his impact. He wasn't playing hockey to try to change anybody's mind. All he wanted to do was be himself and play a sport he loved to the best of his ability. Meanwhile, by holding his own on the ice, he helped everyone who looks like him get a little more respect.
This is the story the hockey community needs to tell when we talk about Willie's 45 games in the NHL.
The career stats for Willie O'Ree paint only a fraction of the picture. Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images
People sometimes use that statistic -- 45 games -- to downplay Willie's legacy and claim he doesn't deserve to have his jersey retired.
The thing is, when they stop counting at 45, they're missing the point.
Forty-five is just the base.
Add the number of games that every Black player has ever played in the NHL. The careers of Tony McKegney and Grant Fuhr and Jarome Iginla and P.K. Subban. We can go through the whole list. And yes, add all the games played by Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Mathieu Joseph.
Without Willie, who knows whether any of us would be here?
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So, this should be pretty straightforward: The true measure of Willie's legacy isn't just the number of NHL games he played but the door he opened for every diverse player who came after. He could've played one game, in our opinion, and his legacy would still be huge.
On top of that, Willie's legacy includes the 130,000 kids he has reached through Hockey is for Everyone programs, which he helped create in the 1990s. The programs serve underrepresented kids across North America by giving them access to hockey and teaching life skills like confidence, teamwork and leadership. You'd have to fill up the average NHL arena seven times to fit all the diverse boys and girls who have benefited from Willie's work in the community.
Not many people make the choice to give back in such a big way. But then again, Willie's journey is full of rare choices that changed the course of this game. The most important one was definitely Willie's choice to not give up. At the same time, Willie also needed leaders in hockey who were willing to challenge the game's idea of "normal." Back in 1958, the Bruins made a bold choice by giving Willie a chance to play despite the risk of racist backlash. The organization deserves its share of credit for taking the risk.
Now, 64 years later, Willie is joining the most honored names in franchise history because of how he seized his chance and used it to contribute to his team, the sport and our society.
O'Ree's legacy includes his extensive work in programs that introduce hockey to children who might not otherwise have played. Chris Christo/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images
The world has changed a lot in the past 64 years. Still, it's clear that there is more work to do to address the causes at the heart of Willie's story. In hockey, there are more diverse kids who need our help to feel supported and empowered. In society, there are racial injustices that continue to affect Black people and other people of color. As the hockey community celebrates Willie's jersey retirement, we should also view it as a reminder of how much these issues matter, how much progress has been made by past generations and how each of us can keep the progress going by committing to being a force for good.
When you think of it like that, Willie's story will always be bigger than hockey.
But for us, of course, hockey is the reason his story feels so personal.
Every once in a while, when we're both on the ice -- whether we're playing or practicing or running a penalty kill -- we realize how grateful we are to be here together. We get to compete at the highest level in a sport we love, and we're able to share the experience as guys who have gone through similar things on our way to the league. We've had the chance to create great memories as two NHL players who happen to be Black.

And we know those memories exist only because Willie opened the gates for us to follow in his footsteps.
On every team and in every city, there are players and fans with their own reasons to be grateful that Willie wore the Bruins sweater. All of them -- us included -- will look on with pride when No. 22 joins those of other icons in the rafters at TD Garden.
It's an honor that recognizes Willie for his pioneering accomplishments, and it's also a message that will resonate forever: Against impossible odds, Willie O'Ree left an amazing mark on his franchise and on the entire National Hockey League. And we are all better off for it.
Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Mathieu Joseph are teammates on the Tampa Bay Lightning. Bellemare is in his eighth NHL season, and Joseph is in his fourth.

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Willie O'Ree 'overwhelmed and thrilled' as his jersey No. 22 is finally retired by Boston Bruins

Willie O'Ree, the first Black player to appear in an NHL game, finally had his No. 22 retired by the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night.
"From a young age, my heart and my mind were set on making it to the NHL. I'm grateful and honored that it was with the Bruins," said O'Ree, in a speech delivered virtually before the Bruins' 7-1 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes in Boston.

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The honor came 64 years to the day after O'Ree, 86, broke the NHL's color barrier on Jan. 18, 1958, in a game between the Bruins and the Montreal Canadiens. He would play 45 games in the NHL, all with Boston, over the course of two seasons (1957-58, 1960-61).
O'Ree is the 12th Bruins player to have his number retired and the first since Rick Middleton's No. 16 went to the rafters in 2018. O'Ree was supposed to have his number retired on Feb. 18, 2021, but it was postponed due to COVID-19 fan capacity restrictions.
"To the Bruins fans, I am honored to have had the pleasure of playing before you. Thank you for your tremendous love and support," O'Ree said. "This is an unforgettable day. I am overwhelmed and thrilled to be a part of the Bruins, forever."
O'Ree was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2018. A native of Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, he has served as a diversity ambassador for the NHL over the past few decades.
He delivered his keynote remarks virtually from his family's home in San Diego.
"While my family and I looked forward to participating in the ceremonies in-person, the long travel and associated risks that come along with a cross-country trip have led us to make the difficult decision to participate virtually," O'Ree said earlier this month.
Bruins players took the ice for warm-ups in special edition jerseys with commemorative Willie O'Ree patches on them -- his No. 22 inside their logo, with his two NHL seasons listed underneath. The players also wore No. 22 in warm-ups. Inside their dressing room, their lockers had commemorative nameplates with the patch and a photo of O'Ree. The TD Garden ice had No. 22 decals installed behind both nets, where they will remain for the next three home games in Boston.
The celebration extended outside the arena, too. The city of Boston declared Jan. 18 "Willie O'Ree Day." Fenway Park, Gillette Stadium and City Hall were all lit up in gold to honor him. Arenas around the NHL honored O'Ree on the Jumbotron before games.

"I think it's a great honor for Willie," Boston coach Bruce Cassidy said. "He's a trailblazer to say the least. I'm very happy for him and his family."
The Bruins met with O'Ree virtually on Monday, with players gathered in the team's film room. He was given one of his trademark fedoras by the team, with winger David Pastrnak adding that it had feathers in Bruins colors tucked into the band.
Players of color from around the NHL also celebrated the moment for O'Ree. Some appeared in the pregame video tribute, including New York Rangers forward Ryan Reaves and Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Mathieu Joseph.
Others reached out on social media.
"Tonight, my idol Willie O'Ree's No. 22 will be hung from the rafters," tweeted Wayne Simmonds of the Toronto Maple Leafs. "I can't stress how much Mr. O'Ree has meant to me and millions of other BIPOC kids who love the game of hockey."
 
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