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Mike Grier

 
Black Biography: Mike Grier

hockey player

Personal Information

Born on January 5, 1975, in Detroit, MI; son of Bobby Grier (a sports executive)
Education: Attended Boston University, 1993-96.

Career

Edmonton Oilers, right winger, 1996-2002; Washington Capitals, right winger, 2002-.

Life's Work

Mike Grier's debut on ice with the Edmunton Oilers made him the first African-American player in National Hockey League (NHL) history. There were a few other minority skaters in professional hockey, but they had either grown up or been trained in Canada. "It doesn't seem strange to me, because I've always been a black hockey player," he told Bergen County Record writer Mark J. Czerwinski. "But I understand what it means, and it makes me proud that I could be a role model."

Became Standout Player Early

Grier was born on January 5, 1975, in Detroit, Michigan, where his father was serving as an assistant coach for the Detroit Lions. Two years later his father took a job with the New England Patriots, and the Griers lived in the suburban Boston area for the next several years. Grier began skating at the age of four, following his older brother onto the ice. Within a few years he had become such a talented player that he earned a Sports Illustrated mention at the age of nine for scoring 227 goals in two seasons with his team, the Holliston Mites. During this era, youth hockey was a largely white, suburban sport, and Grier was almost always the only black player on his team. He had no role models in the professional league to emulate, but that didn't prevent him from dreaming of a future in the sport. "I always knew I wanted to be a hockey player, but I didn't talk about it much," he recalled in a Seattle Times interview.

After a brief attempt at playing football, where his size was deemed too large for the youth league, Grier went on to play hockey at St. Sebastian's Country Day School in Needham, Massachusetts. The school boasted a famously winning hockey team, and Grier was one of its standout players. Still, he sometimes encountered difficulties during his youth career because of his race, when a parent from an opposing team would hurl an occasional slur from the stands. "Parents would yell things like, 'Hey, kid, you're in the wrong sport; you should be playing basketball,'" Grier recalled in an interview with Sports Illustrated writer Gerry Callahan. "But my mom always told me the best way to shut them up was to score a goal."

During his senior year at St. Sebastian's, Grier was drafted by the St. Louis Blues. He opted to play college hockey at Boston University (BU) instead, but arrived for his freshman year weighing 255 pounds, and the coach judged him too heavy to play. He sat out the season, paying his own tuition because he was not eligible for any scholarship money, and shedding 20 pounds. A walk-on with BU's Terriers the next season, he soon proved to be the team's powerhouse. During that sophomore year, he scored 29 goals in 37 games, and helped take BU to a 1994-95 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) hockey championship title. The racial issue surfaced again, during a game against cross-town rival Boston College (BC). The year before, Grier had run into a BC player with what Michael Felger of the Boston Herald termed "a thunderous body check. The hit drew gasps from the Boston Garden crowd and was replayed on sportscasts across the country." Grier took a penalty for it, but during the next year's match-up, the same player uttered a racial epithet at him that went unheard by officials. Grier failed to bring it to their attention but, according to Felger, he replied to the other player, "You are the highlight of my highlight reel."

Joined NHL with the Oilers

While he played college hockey, Grier still retained his option to play in the NHL at a future date. But by the time he finished his junior year, the St. Louis Blues had traded his future rights to the Edmonton Oilers. He decided to join the team, leaving BU prior to his senior year. Initially Grier was not expected to play his first season in the NHL--whose roster is dominated by players who came up in the minor leagues, not college--but he performed so well at training camp that he made his debut during the 1996-97 season, and scored 15 goals as a rookie. He handled the naysayers with his characteristic grace. "Sure, a lot of people had doubts," he told Felger in the Boston Herald interview. "They weren't as optimistic as I was. It's always good to prove people wrong, but I never really listened to that stuff anyway."

During his rookie year, Grier was the NHL's first African-American player. There had been other blacks before him on the ice, beginning with Willie O'Ree in 1958, but they had been born or trained in Canada. At the time, only six out of 600 NHL players were black. Both he and another minority rookie, Calgary Flames' player Jarome Iginla, were soon dubbed the potential "Tiger Woods" of their sport, the standout black athlete who would bring legions of new minority players into youth hockey. Grier gave many interviews that first year due to overwhelming press interest, but tried to downplay his historic first. In an interview, he simply pointed out to St Louis Post-Dispatch writer Dave Luecking, "It was bound to happen--an African-American playing in the NHL. I'm just lucky it happened to me."

During his second season with the Oilers, Grier experienced a rare name-calling from another player, this time from Chris Simon, a player of Ojibwa heritage who played with the Washington Capitals. The incident occurred during a heated exchange between players, and the NHL reaction was swift. Simon was suspended for three games, and Grier went on to heed his mother's advice, scoring his first goal in what had until then been a moribund season. Once again, he earned kudos for handling the situation well, and tried to put the incident behind both of them. "(Simon) showed a lot of heart by doing what he did," Boston Herald writer Karen Guregian quoted Grier as saying on a local radio show. "He came to see me and talk to me man-to-man. He seemed genuinely sorry and he was honest about everything that happened. I forgave him and hopefully now, we can both move on."

Grier played well for the Oilers, scoring a total of 81 goals in six seasons with the team. He even played under the most trying of conditions, with a shoulder dislocated from its socket during a 2001 game. "Those present said they heard the scream all the way up in the press box," reported Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service sportswriter Dan Noxon, of the incident. Grier then headed off the ice to have it reset, "doubled over by pain, knowing another blinding, white-hot flash would rip through his upper body when the trainers reset the joint," Noxon wrote. "Two minutes later, Grier was back on the ice, taking his regular shift."

In October of 2002, the Oilers traded Grier to the Washington Capitals after budget constraints made his $1.3 million contract a financial drain on dwindling team resources. He went on to score 15 goals and 17 assists in 82 games in his first season with his new teammates. Off the ice, he was active in NHL diversity efforts, including the landmark Ice Hockey in Harlem program. Grier knew that his presence and the NHL's work to increase minority involvement in the sport would have a positive impact. "I know if I hadn't been alone all the time growing up," he told Callahan in Sports Illustrated, "it might have been easier for me."

Further Reading

  • Boston Herald, July 19, 1997, p. 31; November 2, 1997, p. B15; November 12, 1997, p. 96; November 15, 1997, p. 43.
  • Buffalo News, November 11, 1997, p. B7.
  • Daily News (Los Angeles, CA), November 17, 1997, p. S27.
  • Denver Post, May 1, 1998, p. D10.
  • Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service, April 13, 2001.
  • Record (Bergen County, NJ), February 13, 1997, p. S1.
  • Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO), May 2, 1997, p. 16H.
  • San Francisco Chronicle, November 11, 1997, p. E7; November 18, 1997, p. D2.
  • Seattle Times, March 9, 1997, p. D7.
  • Sports Illustrated, February 20, 1995, p. 146.
  • Sports Illustrated for Kids, January 1, 1999, p. 44.
  • St. Louis Post-Dispatch, March 9, 1997, p. 1F.
  • Washington Times, November 29, 1996, p. E3; October 8, 2002, p. C7; December 14, 2002, p. C2; April 15, 2003, p. C1.

— Carol Brennan

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Wikipedia: Mike Grier
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Born January 5, 1975 (1975-01-05) (age 34),
Detroit, MI, U.S.
Height
Weight
6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
227 lb (103 kg; 16 st 3 lb)
Position Right wing
Shoots Right
NHL team
F. teams
Buffalo Sabres
San Jose Sharks
Edmonton Oilers
Washington Capitals
NHL Draft 219th overall, 1993
St. Louis Blues
Pro career 1996 – present

Michael Grier (born January 5, 1975 in Detroit, Michigan) is a professional ice hockey forward who currently plays for the Buffalo Sabres of the National Hockey League. He has also played professionally for the Edmonton Oilers, Washington Capitals, and San Jose Sharks.

Contents

Early years

His father is Bobby Grier, former NFL running back coach and current Associate Director of Pro Scouting for the Houston Texans. (The elder Grier is not to be confused with Bobby Grier who broke the color barrier in the 1956 Sugar Bowl.) Mike Grier's uncle is former NFL great Rosey Grier and he is a distant cousin of actress Pam Grier.

Playing career

Grier was originally drafted by the St. Louis Blues in the ninth round of the 1993 NHL Entry Draft, and was considered a long-shot to make an NHL team. He spent his early playing days with Saint Sebastian's School and then later Boston University, culminating in his best amateur season in 1994-1995, where he was named a first team all-star. During his time at BU, Grier's NHL rights were dealt to the Edmonton Oilers along with star goaltender Curtis Joseph in exchange for a pair of first round picks.

After leaving college, Grier immediately cracked the Oilers lineup as a checking-line right-winger, scoring 32 points and bearing a respectable +7 +/- rating. He would go on to play six seasons with the Oiler's organization, including two where he scored twenty goals.

During his time in Edmonton, Grier was best known for provoking Chris Simon of the Washington Capitals in 1997. Grier made derogatory comments about Simon's Ojibwa heritage, and Simon allegedly responded with a racial slur directed at Grier. Although the spoken words were never confirmed, Simon was suspended three games as a result of the incident.[1] The two were later teammates for a brief time in 2002 with the Washington Capitals. He was also known for his toughness, separating his shoulder and having it popped back in on numerous occasions before finally electing for surgery.

On October 2, 2002, Grier was traded to free up roster space to the Washington Capitals for a pair of draft choices.

The Capitals attempted to put a Stanley Cup-caliber team together, primarily built around star forward Jaromír Jágr and goaltender Olaf Kölzig, but the team disappointed on the ice, although Grier remained a reliable checker player. Washington traded him on March 4, 2004 to the Buffalo Sabres for European prospect Jakub Klepis. He finished the season with Buffalo, scoring nine points despite the Sabres failing to make the playoffs. During the 2005-06 NHL Season, Grier set a personal record, scoring 4 game winning goals for the Sabres and contributing during their run to the 2006 Eastern Conference Finals. Grier was then signed to a free agent deal by the San Jose Sharks, where he recorded 16 goals, including 3 shorthanded, in his first season with San Jose. He scored 9 and 10 goals in his next two seasons with the Sharks, respectively.

On August 10th, 2009 Mike Grier signed with the Buffalo Sabres.

Awards

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1989-1993 Holliston High School TVL 44 40 22 102
1993–94 Boston University HE 39 9 9 18 58
1994–95 Boston University HE 37 19 26 45 85
1995–96 Boston University HE 38 21 26 47 82
1996–97 Edmonton Oilers NHL 79 15 17 32 45 12 3 1 4 4
1997–98 Edmonton Oilers NHL 66 9 6 15 73 12 2 2 4 13
1998–99 Edmonton Oilers NHL 82 20 24 44 54 4 1 1 2 6
1999–00 Edmonton Oilers NHL 65 9 22 31 68
2000–01 Edmonton Oilers NHL 74 20 16 36 20 6 0 0 0 8
2001–02 Edmonton Oilers NHL 82 8 17 25 32
2002–03 Washington Capitals NHL 82 15 17 32 36 6 1 1 2 2
2003–04 Washington Capitals NHL 68 8 12 20 32
2003–04 Buffalo Sabres NHL 14 1 8 9 4
2005–06 Buffalo Sabres NHL 81 7 16 23 28 18 3 5 8 2
2006–07 San Jose Sharks NHL 81 16 17 33 43 11 2 2 4 27
2007–08 San Jose Sharks NHL 78 9 13 22 24 13 0 1 1 2
2008–09 San Jose Sharks NHL 62 10 13 23 25 6 0 0 0 6
NHL totals 914 147 198 345 484 88 12 13 25 70

International play

Played for the United States in:

International statistics

Year Team Event GP G A Pts PIM
1995 United States WJC 7 0 2 2 12
2004 United States WC 9 1 2 3 8

References

See also

External links


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