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Return To Solid Ground

LaFontaine settles for LI family life

By Joe Gergen, STAFF WRITER, Newsday, Inc.

June 24, 2003 - He was 15 years old, living in the Detroit suburbs, when the Islanders won their first Stanley Cup. What makes the moment so memorable today, of course, is what happened thereafter. Let Pat LaFontaine tell the story.

"I was working in the yard," he recalled recently, "raking leaves. My dad called me in. He said, 'The Islanders are in overtime. You've got to see this.' So we watch [the winning goal from] Henning to Tonelli to Nystrom. We're jumping up and down.

"Four years later, I'm in Maple Leaf Gardens. My dad drives up. I'm centering Tonelli and Nystrom. We win, 11-6. I get my first NHL goal, my first NHL hat trick. And Nystrom, Tonelli and I are the first three stars of the game."

LaFontaine's face glows with the recitation of the details, transforming him into the 19-year-old boy wonder - fresh from the Olympics - who provided an offensive spark to an aging championship team.

Alas, his professional career was not without trauma. The Islanders' Stanley Cup run was derailed in his initial season and his affiliation with the franchise was terminated by a contract dispute. Half of his six years with the Buffalo Sabres were scarred by injuries, and a promising finale with the Rangers ended in a fog of physical pain and mental anguish, the result of post-concussion syndrome.

Five years after his last official game, LaFontaine, 38, is clear-headed and thankful for the bad as well as the good. "I embrace all the times," he said over lunch near the old carriage house he is renovating for his family. "The game has given me so much. I have nothing but gratitude."

His life has come full circle. He is back on Long Island, where he began his pro career and where he met his wife. On Nov. 3, he will be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto, site of that dazzling debut in 1984. Even his fellow inductees are reminders of where he has come from and where he has been, their presence enabling him to connect the dots of a remarkable journey.

Mike Ilitch, the owner of the Red Wings for the last 21 years, was elected in the Builders category along with longtime successful junior coach Brian Kilrea. Ilitch sponsored the Little Caesars amateur club against which LaFontaine competed in the Detroit area. Kilrea was an assistant coach with the Islanders during LaFontaine's first two full seasons with the organization. And Grant Fuhr, the other former NHL player in the Class of 2003, not only was the goaltender for the Edmonton team that stopped the Islanders' dynasty but was a valued teammate for two years at Buffalo.

Some would call that kismet. Even the season with the Rangers, whose supporters had reviled him and shaken the ambulance that carried him to the hospital after his first concussion in the opening game of the 1990 playoffs, was a chance to alter perceptions. "Eight years later," he recalled with a smile, "I tipped in a puck for the Rangers against the Islanders to make the score 2-2 and I got a standing ovation from the same fans."

Besides, the trade from Buffalo provided him a unique perspective. "I'm the only player in NHL history," he said, "to play for three teams and not have to change my license plates." His New York State of mind was not limited to hockey considerations.

It was Lorne Henning, an assistant coach when LaFontaine joined the Islanders, and his wife who fixed him up with Mary Beth, a next-door neighbor in Huntington. The couple celebrated its 16th wedding anniversary earlier this month. "Lorne and Cathy get an assist on that," LaFontaine said.

Henning also played a role, albeit inadvertent, in his departure from the Island. Upset that management promises weren't being kept, LaFontaine asked for a trade in 1991. "We were playing the Rangers that night at the Garden," he said, "and Lorne was wearing a bright, flowered tie. I said, 'It looks like a Garden party tie,' thinking of the Ricky Nelson song. We won, and I think I got a couple of goals. On the bus ride back, when we were about five minutes from Cantiague Park, the song came on and I listened to the lyrics ... 'You can't please everyone, you got to please yourself.' I knew I was doing the right thing."

But now he's back, with a family that includes Sarah (12), Brianna (10) and Daniel (8). "In a perfect world," he said, "I would have liked to play two more years. But some veterans have told me they probably played five years too long because their kids don't want to have anything to do with them. When I played, everything in the family revolved around my life. Now my life revolves around theirs."

Now he has the chance to watch and coach his children, just as his father did for him. And the skills he learned doing renovations on other people's houses in Connecticut after his retirement are coming in handy now that he's helping to finish his own.

Even those days and months he spent rehabilitating injuries or recovering from concussions, all those visits to hospitals, are being channeled through his Companions in Courage Foundation that is pledged to build interactive playrooms for youngsters at medical facilities throughout North America, among them Schneider Children's Hospital in New Hyde Park. When he laces on skates now, it's for a cause greater than himself or the Islanders. Playing under the banner of the Microsoft Hockey Challenge, he's helping to raise money for these high-tech CiC centers.

"At 15," LaFontaine marveled, "all I wanted was to get a scholarship to Michigan or Michigan State."

What he achieved instead was fulfillment on several levels. Said LaFontaine, "It's been a great ride."
 

Pat La Fontaine - Hockey

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