Luc Bourdon (February 16,
1987 – May 29, 2008) was a Canadian
professional
ice hockey defenceman who played for the
Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League (NHL) and
their American Hockey League
(AHL) affiliate, the Manitoba Moose,
from 2006 until 2008. After overcoming
childhood arthritis, he was selected
third overall in the 2003
Quebec Major Junior Hockey
League (QMJHL) draft and played for the
Val-d'Or Foreurs,
Moncton Wildcats, and
Cape Breton Screaming Eagles,
spending four seasons in the QMJHL. The Canucks drafted Bourdon
with their first selection, tenth overall, in the
2005 NHL Entry Draft. Noted as a strong
defenceman who could contribute on offence, Bourdon represented
Canada in three
international tournaments, winning two gold medals at the
IIHF World U20 Championship and
a silver medal at the
IIHF
World U18 Championship.
Bourdon died at the age of 21 near his
hometown of Shippagan
, New
Brunswick
, when his
motorcycle collided with a tractor trailer.
Early life
Born on
February 16, 1987, Bourdon was an only child raised by his mother,
Suzanne Boucher, in the small French-speaking community of Shippagan, New
Brunswick
. When he was nine, he was confined to a
wheelchair after being diagnosed with
juvenile arthritis, which he later
overcame. As a teenager, he attended École Marie-Esther Secondary,
where he was a straight-A student. Growing up in a fishing town, he
worked summers on his uncle's crab fishing boat.
He played as a 13- and 14-year-old with the Peninsule Acadien Lynx,
and with the Miramichi Rivermen from ages 15–16, both local
minor ice hockey teams. After
being the third overall choice in the 2003 QMJHL draft, Bourdon
left home when he was 16, returning in the off-season to live with
his mother. Upon turning professional and signing his first
contract, he anonymously donated
C$10,000 to the local minor hockey
association for families who could not afford equipment. His
donation was posthumously revealed by his former bantam hockey
coach, Gilles Cormier, who managed the local arena at the time of
Bourdon's death.
Playing career
Bourdon joined the
Val-d'Or Foreurs
for the
2003–04 season,
registering eight points in 64 regular season games and scoring one
goal in seven playoff games. He appeared in all 70 games with the
Foreurs in
2004–05,
scoring 13 goals and 19 assists, and participated in the
CHL Top Prospects Game, an exhibition
for draft-eligible players. In June 2005, Bourdon was the tenth
pick overall, selected by the Vancouver Canucks, at the
2005 NHL Entry Draft. Ranked sixth
overall for North American skaters coming into the draft, Bourdon
was noted as a physical two-way defenceman with significant
offensive skills and a strong shot, as well as an excellent skater.
He was the second Shippagan-born hockey player to be drafted in the
NHL, after goaltender Yanick Degrace was drafted by the
Philadelphia Flyers in
1991.

Bourdon warming up before a game on
November 16, 2007.
He scored his first NHL goal that night.
Invited to the Canucks training camp, Bourdon almost made the team
as an 18-year-old, but instead was returned to the QMJHL for
further development. He began the
2005–06 season with the
Foreurs, registering 20 points in 20 games, before being traded to
the
Moncton Wildcats, who were
hosting the
2006 Memorial Cup. In
exchange for Bourdon, the Wildcats sent Ian Mathieu-Girard,
Jean-Sébastien Adam, a fourth-round pick, and a first-round
selection in 2008 to Val-d'Or. Shortly after the trade, Bourdon
injured his ankle, suffering a fractured
fibula, high and low sprains, and a second-degree
ligament tear. Although he returned to join
Moncton in the playoffs, doctors told him that it would take two
years to fully recover. He managed a full recovery after one year,
but his turning ability and backwards skating sometimes lagged.
Competing in the Memorial Cup, he reached the
Canadian Hockey League (CHL) final
with the Wildcats, who lost 6–2 to the
Quebec Remparts.
After signing a three-year contract, worth $850,000 per year with
the Canucks on May 4, 2006, Bourdon earned a spot on the team's
2006–07 opening roster.
He played his first NHL game on October 10, 2006 against the
Minnesota Wild, but after playing
nine games and scoring no points, he was sent again to the QMJHL
for further development. On January 8, 2007, Bourdon was again
traded in the QMJHL, with Moncton sending him to the
Cape Breton Screaming Eagles in
exchange for Mark Barberio and a first round selection in the 2007
QMJHL draft. As a Screaming Eagle, Bourdon lost in the QMJHL
semi-final against his former team, Val-d'Or. He finished the
2006–07 QMJHL season
with 20 points in 36 games. When the Canucks did not qualify for
the playoffs, they sent Bourdon to play five games for the
Manitoba Moose, who were in the middle of the
AHL playoffs. He was held pointless through five AHL playoff games.
Including his participation in the
2007 World Junior
Championships, Bourdon played for five different teams
throughout the 2006–07 season.
Initially failing to make the Canucks starting roster out of
training camp, Bourdon began the
2007–08 season with the Manitoba
Moose; however, because of a series of injuries among the Canucks'
defencemen throughout the season, Bourdon was called up on several
occasions. Bourdon scored his first goal on November 16, 2007,
against goaltender
Niklas
Bäckström in a 6–2 win over the Minnesota Wild. Bourdon
finished the season on the Canucks roster, and was sent back to the
Manitoba Moose for the AHL playoffs, playing in six playoff games
for the Moose. He appeared in 27 games for the Canucks over the
season, scoring two goals, as well as scoring 14 points during 41
games with the Moose.
As a young and promising defenceman, Bourdon was regularly
mentioned in rumours of trades for more offence at the forward
positions. Most significantly, he was speculated to be part of a
package in exchange for
Tampa Bay
Lightning forward
Brad Richards.
Although Bourdon had a powerful shot, he did not play defence
responsibly enough to earn a regular spot on the roster. He began
to show signs of improvement and maturity as the Canucks used him
more in the 2007–08 season.
International play
Bourdon
made his international debut representing Team Canada in the
2005 World Under-18
Championships, held in the Czech Republic
, earning one assist in a silver-medal
effort.
In the
2006 World
Junior Ice Hockey Championships in British Columbia
, Bourdon competed in his first of two consecutive
World Junior
Championships. He was named player of the game in
round-robin play after a scoring a goal and an assist in a 4–0 win
against Norway. He finished the tournament leading all defencemen
in scoring with six points in six games and was named to the
tournament's all-star team. Upon winning gold, Bourdon returned to
Shippagan and showcased his medal at the local arena to crowds of
supporters.
At the
2007 World
Junior Championships in Leksand
and Mora
, Sweden
, Bourdon was
awarded a second player of the game distinction after the first
round-robin contest against Sweden, in which he scored the game winning goal in a 2–0 victory.
Later in the tournament, Bourdon scored the game-tying goal in the
third period of a 2–1 shootout win over the United States in the
semi-final. In total, Bourdon picked up two goals and two assists
in six games, helping Canada to a second straight gold medal.
Death
Bourdon
was killed instantly in a motorcycle collision in Lamèque
, New
Brunswick
, near his
hometown of Shippagan on May 29, 2008, when he hit a
tractor-trailer after losing control of his 2009 Suzuki GSX-R1000 and crossing the centre
line. Environment Canada
showed winds gusting to more than 50 km/h (31 mph) in the
area at the time of the accident.
The RCMP
stated that Bourdon's inexperience with motorcycles
may have been a factor in the crash.
Bourdon's agent, Kent Hughes, stated that he never knew about his
client's new hobby (motorcycles).
"I had no idea," he explained to CKNW
in
Vancouver. "Another client of ours,
Kris Letang, said Luc let him know he was riding
his dad's motorcycle with some friends a week or two ago. I have
since been told—though I don't know—that he actually bought a
motorcycle two days ago". Maryse Bourdon, Luc's stepmother, said he
had purchased the motorcycle about three weeks before. Letang,
Bourdon's close friend and former roommate from junior hockey,
planned to buy a motorcycle after Bourdon told him about his;
because of the crash, he decided against it.
The American Hockey League, where Bourdon had played for the
Manitoba Moose, observed a moment of silence in Bourdon's honour
prior to game one of the Calder Cup Finals between the
Chicago Wolves and the
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Penguins just hours after the accident, and on May 31, the
Pittsburgh Penguins and
Detroit Red Wings observed a moment of
silence before game four of the
2008 Stanley Cup Final. During the
2008 NHL Draft, the Canucks'
management wore guitar pins to remember Bourdon, because he was an
avid guitarist.
At the Canucks'
2008–09 NHL
season home opener against the
Calgary Flames, the Canucks honoured Bourdon
with a brief pre-game ceremony. Bourdon's family was presented with
his last game-worn jersey, given by the fan who won the jersey
during an annual charity event the previous season. Afterwards,
Tom Cochrane and Red Rider performed "Big
League" during the video tribute.
Commemorative pins were handed out to
fans attending the game and were worn throughout the season by
General
Motors Place
hosts. The Canucks also wore "LB" on their
helmets that season in memory of Bourdon. At General Motors Place,
the Luc Bourdon Wall of Dreams was established to commemorate
Bourdon.
The Manitoba Moose honoured Bourdon with a video tribute before
their 2008–09 home opener on October 10, 2008. Moose players all
wore #4 Bourdon jerseys during the warmup, and “#4 LB” patches were
worn on the jerseys of players all season. A senior men's ice
hockey team in New Brunswick, the Lameque/Shippagan Pêcheurs, also
honoured him, wearing a "28 Bourdon" patch on their jerseys over
the course of the 2008–09 season. During the
2009 World Junior Ice
Hockey Championships, Team Canada honoured Bourdon by wearing
LB stickers in their opening game. In addition, no Canadian player
wore the jersey number 6, the number Bourdon wore with the national
team, throughout the tournament.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
| Year |
Team |
Event |
GP |
G |
A |
Pts |
PIM |
| 2005 |
Canada |
U18 |
6 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
4 |
| 2006 |
Canada |
WJC |
6 |
1 |
5 |
6 |
4 |
| 2007 |
Canada |
WJC |
6 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
6 |
| Junior int'l totals |
18 |
3 |
8 |
11 |
14 |
- All statistics taken from NHL.com
See also
References
External links