After 48 years, Yellowknife goalie says goodbye to net after surgery - Action News
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After 48 years, Yellowknife goalie says goodbye to net after surgery

Tom Williams strapped up his goalie pads for the last time on Saturday night after a 48 year stint in net. On Monday, he had a hip replacement surgery.

Tom Williams had a hip replacement surgery but plans to return as a goal scorer

Tom Williams poses with a puck at his last game on Feb. 22 before his hip surgery. (Loren McGinnis/CBC)

Tom Williams didn'tplan to be a goalie when he first started playing hockey as a child.

But lastSaturday night,the Yellowknife man strapped up his goalie pads for the final timeafter a 48-year stint in net.Williams had hip replacement surgery on Monday morning.

Williamsremembered watching an NHL game on TV as a kid and wanting to become a player himself.

He has lived and played all over the North. When thearena in Inuvik, N.W.T.,was still under construction, Williams played hockey on the streets andon his friend's 'L' shaped backyard rink nearby.

Williams pictured in 1976 when he played on Team N.W.T. The team won gold at the Arctic Winter Games in Schefferville, Que. (Submitted by Tom Williams)

"You [would] go on a breakaway, stop, and then you had to go the other direction," he said."It was fun times."

In 1972 when he was ten years old, he switched over to goalkeeping after starting out on defence.

At 15 years old, he helped backstop the team that won the last commercial league championship in Yellowknife.

"The old Gerry Murphy [arena]was packed," he said."I can't recall the score but I'll remember the pandemonium when we won, because it was the last time to have the Commercial League."

Williams went on to playjunior hockey in Alberta'sMedicine Hat and Drumheller.

'It's getting harder and harder'

But the years have taken a toll on his body.

Hockey's it. And I'm going to miss it.- Tom Williams

Williams hashad knee surgery four times in the past six years. And while he said it seems to finally be better, it's now his hip that can no longer take the strain.

Williams played in Hay River in 1972. He's the one with the #1 on his blocker. It was his first year playing in net. (Submitted by Tom Williams)

"I tell people to shoot on the right side, not on the left side, that's the bad hip," he said jokingly.

He said it hurts at times while playing, but more often the adrenaline keeps him from feeling the pain until after a game.

"It's getting harder and harder," he said.It takes two days to recover after a game now, he added.

Family comes to cheer at last game

He won't be leaving the game forever though. Williams plans to come back as a goal scorer.

"The love of the game, that's what it's all about and the people in the dressing room.It's fun," he said."It's a big part of my life and my kids' life and my grandkids' life. Hockey's it. And I'm going to miss it."

Williams had hip replacement surgery on Monday. (Submitted by Tom Williams)

Williams is also considering coaching since his grandchildren are getting older and more competitive in the game.

"Maybe [I]will have to put on the skates and be a coach and grab a whistle," he said.

During his last game as goalie on Saturday, his family came out to cheer him on.

His daughter, Aurora Kotokak, said her father attends the games she plays inthe women's league and watching her kids' games.

Williams as goalie on Saturday before his surgery. (Loren McGinnis/CBC)

"He's really passionate about it," she said. "Especially when the kids were smaller, he would play hockey with them in the living room. He loved to pass on his knowledge."

Kotokak said she started as a goalie as a kid when her dad coached her, then moved to a defence role.

Williams's family on Saturday night when he played his last game as a goalie before hip surgery. (Loren McGinnis/CBC)

Williams said he'll be passing on his goalie gear to his daughter's two-year-old son who said he wants to become a goalie one day.

"This will be it," Williams said, just before his last gameon the weekend ahead of his surgery."But I'm coming back, look out."

Written by Amy Tucker, with files from Loren McGinnis