SportsLife 2015, issue4 | Page 26

Ranford’s Career Nearly Ended at 14, Leads New Inductees Into Manitoba sports Hall of fame By Scott Taylor, Photos courtesy of Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame Bill Ranford will never ask for sympathy. His life was never that hard. He had great family support, his dad was the most influential person in his life and he had the will and desire to become a great hockey player. Trouble was, his dad was also in the Canadian Armed Forces. That’s a good thing for Canadians, but not such a good thing for a teenaged kid trying to make his way through minor hockey. Ranford is living proof that no matter how much skill you have, reaching the pinnacle in any sport, isn’t easy. Of course, he did reach the pinnacle. He won two Stanley Cups, a Conn Smythe Trophy and will now be an inductee into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame. The latest list of Hall of Fame inductees was released this summer and it includes a three-time Grey Cup champion placekicker, a tremendous U of W basketball star (and my old teammate with the St. Andrews Super Saints in the 1990s) a world-champion rower and Ranford, a Conn Smythe-winning, Stanley Cup-winning goaltender. Meanwhile, a legend at the Winnipeg Winter Club in all things racquet sports and a pioneer in sport medicine make up the Builder category and a dominant CIAU (now CIS) champion hockey team rounds out the new slate of inductees.  On Nov. 7, five athletes, two builders and one team will be inducted into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame at the 36th Annual Induction Ceremony at the Victoria Inn in Winnipeg. 26 / sportslife The 2015 inductees are: • Arjinder (Archie) Chawla, Badminton/Squash/Tennis, Builder • Dr. Gordon Cumming, Sport Medicine/Speed Skating, Builder • Trevor Kennerd, Football, Athlete • Ken Opalko, Basketball, Athlete • Ken Peters, Athletics, Athlete • Jeff Powell, Rowing, Athlete • Bill Ranford, Hockey, Athlete • 1964-65 University of MB Bisons, Hockey, Team “These eight recipients join an exclusive group of Manitoba’s finest in sport,” said Susan Nemec, President of the Hall of Fame’s Board of Directors in a written statement. “We strive to preserve, celebrate and showcase the history and heritage of sport excellence and achievement and these seven individuals and two teams have earned their place in Manitoba’s sport history. For Ranford, reaching the Hall is an almost unbelievable accomplishment. Especially considering that he hasn’t lived a great deal of his life in our province. “I was born in Brandon, but I didn’t start playing hockey until I was living in Cold Lake, Alta.,” said Ranford, 59, as he began to tell of young man’s journey with a Canadian forces family. “I played in Cold Lake, then in Germany, then in Portage la Prairie, then in Summerside, PEI, and finally in Red Deer. In Summerside, when I was 14, it almost ended. I went out for the midget team and was cut. I ended up playing forward in House League when one of the goalies decided to play high school hockey and the coach called me back. My career as a goaltender almost ended right there. If I hadn’t got the call, I’d probably have just gone on and been a house league forward.” Instead, he went back, earned the league’s rookie of the year award and started making a name for himself as a great young goalie. “The next year, I went to Red Deer and it was an eye-opener,” he said. “There were 22 goalies in camp for a midget team. The coach was Dave Manning, a guy who taught me so much and brought me to the next level of the game. The next year I was playing junior in New Westminster. In two years, I went from almost ending my career to playing in the best junior hockey league in the world.” After New West, it was off to the Boston Bruins and the rest, as they say, is history. He played 15 seasons in the National Hockey League, most with the Edmonton Oilers, and won two Stanley Cups. The second with Edmonton, in 1990 was the most memorable moment of his career. “Yeah, usually when you win your first Cup, you remember it as your greatest moment,” he said. “But I was a backup in 1988, just a spectator, when we won the first Cup. Winning the Cup in 1990 and having an impact on the outcome