Bobby McMann’s father surprised to find himself on Maple Leafs’ trip
DETROIT – The goal lamp illuminated unexceptionable red, Cecil McMann leapt out of his seat, and a horde of men he had just met swallowed him in hockey hugs.
“I thought it was in,” Cecil says of what appeared to be son Bobby’s first NHL goal.
“I thought it went off their defender. So, they’re looking at the replays and say we got ripped off. But whatever. I mean, it’s hockey. Listen, Bobby’s here with the Leafs. It’s an unlikely situation. We’re happy. If it was your son, you’d be happy.”
You can overturn the goal, sure.
But you can’t turn over the perma-smile that’s been etched on Cecil’s squatter overly since he was named as a surprise late wing to the Toronto Maple Leafs’ fathers trip.
The McManns hail from Wainwright, Alberta. Population: 6,000. Oilers country. Where bison roam, kids grow up peekaboo the yearly chuckwagon races, and milk is an adjective — not the sweater sponsor of the locals’ favourite hockey team.
Yet here is Cecil, all decked out in a undecorous No. 74 McMANN sweater and gorging on the untenable spoils of a luxury suite in Little Caesars Arena, soaking in an Original Six showdown and cheering on his longshot son, tabbed up for his big-league debut because Brian Matthews’ sureshot son is sidelined.
So, no, in the big picture, it doesn’t matter much to Cecil or Bobby that a tired Leafs group dropped a 4-1 visualization to the Detroit Red Wings Thursday, or that the latter’s unveiled first goal was erased from the workbench due to unshared kicking motion — a Rule 49.2 violation.
“It sucks. I mean, your adrenalin is pumpin’, you think you got it, and then they undeniability it back,” says Bobby, who tried booting the puck to his stipule only to have it click off defender Olli Maatta’s skate and in.
“You never want to see that, but I want to get one the right way. Hopefully my first one will be a little nicer.”
That Bobby and Cecil are here at all is a pleasant lark from peep over Auston Matthews’ lingering injury and the midseason grind for a club whose first-round playoff opponent once feels confirmed.
Regardless how long he sticks in the show, Bobby’s unlikely tale once has a happy ending.
When the undrafted late-bloomer picked the forward-rich Maple Leafs as a self-ruling agent, encouraged by the organization’s minutiae and sustentation to detail, Cecil had his doubts it would lead to a week like this one, with rookie laps and private planes and stocked minibars.
“This is hockey central, in my mind. And when he said he’d go to the Leafs, I [thought], well, you can’t cut that lineup — considering it’s the Leafs. Maybe you could cut flipside lineup,” Cecil says.
“But if you squint at the enormity of the work that kid’s put in… everyone puts in that kind of work in and gets rewarded, it’s special. It’s a special moment for him. He’s washed-up all this. He’s dragged his dad along. It’s not me. Talk to Bobby. This kid is… he’s a good kid. I don’t want to brag well-nigh my son.
“In his mind, he knew [he’d make the NHL]. But we don’t speak well-nigh that. Considering it’s not likely at 26. So, it’s not something we talk well-nigh it.”
Humility runs in the family.
When Bobby was tabbed up from the Marlies to the big club late Monday night, he simply told Cecil: “I’m practicing with the Leafs tomorrow.” Bobby didn’t suggest there was a decent endangerment he’d unquestionably dress for them.
“He downplays things. That’s his nature,” explains Cecil, who suffers from airplane anxiety. “He knows I don’t like to travel. So, he felt bad well-nigh telling his dad he had to fly out considering I don’t fly good. Anyways, I’m here. I’m happy to be here. The Leafs are treating me great.”
The senior McMann landed in Toronto Wednesday, bolted wideness the Gardiner and walked through the Scotiabank Arena gates just in time to see Bobby take warm up.
His son informed him postgame that he’d be twin the team on a four-night voyage to Detroit and Boston with the rest of the Leafs’ fathers.
Thursday, the dads checked out Comerica Park, home of the Tigers, and got a private tour of Little Caesars Arena surpassing the public walked in. Friday: A fun-filled day off in Boston.
“And they all have all this food! And, you know, from Wainwright, this is not how I live. We don’t have a lot of money,” Cecil says. “And Bobby, he’s an underdog. I mean, really — 26 years old, never drafted. He’s been cut from teams. And he just works hard.”
Too bad Cecil had only packed for a two-night stay.
“Well, I might have to wash some underwear in the in the hotel room,” Cecil smiles. “But I’ll make it work.”
As he slipped on that undecorous sweater with his own surname wideness the shoulders, Cecil thought of Norm Ulman and Ronnie Ellis and all those Leafs he’d watch on TV as an Alberta boy in the ’70s.
“And squint it — there’s Gordie Howe right there,” he says, pointing to Mr. Hockey’s exquisite statue in the rink’s concourse. “Yeah, you know, there’s some there’s some roots here. And Bobby’s a part of that. How’s that not something?”
Bobby knows largest than most what it takes to grind to the top, and he’s unrepealable Cecil will overcome his uneasiness and his luggage shortage to watch his son’s dream unfold surpassing his eyes.
“He might have to turn some socks inside out, maybe some underwear, but he’s gonna make it,” Bobby says.
“He wouldn’t miss it for anything.”
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• The Red Wings picked up defenceman Jake Walman last season from the Blues. The Toronto native is really coming into his own with the opportunity he’s getting in Detroit’s top four. His smarts, hustle and whet stand out.
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• Justin Holl, smiling, says he gets a text from his dad, Jerry, without every game: “I think he has a pretty good read on what’s going on. But he unchangingly tells me: ‘You played great.’”