Great Journalism: The New York Times Series on Derek Boogaard and NHL Enforcers
The story of Derek Boogaard’s short life in the NHL is summarized tidily halfway through the 15,000-word tome that the New York Times just unspooled:
“Boogaard went nearly five years between N.H.L. goals and scored three times in 277 games. He spent 1,411 minutes on the ice and 589 minutes in the penalty box.”
That’s not an athlete, that’s a problem inmate. Yet by the end of John Branch’s stories, you’ll have a profound respect for hockey enforcers. Rarely have goons been treated so nobly.
It would be close to say that the Times gave Boogaard the royal treatment, except that a king would count himself fortunate to receive the same. Here’s the first part, “A Boy Learns to Brawl.” Here’s the second, “Blood on the Ice.” The third is “A Brain ‘Going Bad.’” For those more audio-videotorially inclined, here’s the corresponding video series by Shayla Harris. The takeaways here are that the Times, which has sicced John Branch on the sports head-trauma beat for a while now, and before him Alan Schwarz, has sunk vast resources into the topic (a practice that usually pays off in awards-season hardware for the Gray Lady and, quite possibly for the rest of us, societal change); and that there really is a difference between living and dying in New York vs. anywhere else. Traded Signed from the Minnesota Wild in 2010, Boogaard’s novella-length obituary and half-hour documentary would have been less likely if he were not, at the time of his demise, a New York Ranger.
The contrast with another longform piece on Derek Boogaard, by Kevin Hoffman for City Pages in Minneapolis, is unmistakable. Hoffman deployed the term “Boogeyman” 83 times in a 3,585-word story. If Hoffman overemphasizes the enforcer’s monstrous nickname, it’s due in part to fanboy awe. When Boogaard was traded to the Rangers, the City Pages editor noted in a blog post (headline: “Bye Bye Boogeyman”) that New York had decried Boogaard’s remarkable lack of scoring, “which just goes to show that the Boogeyman is way too manly for the effete Manhattanites.” That could be tongue-in-cheek with a wired-shut jaw, but it’s also a fair summary of the attitudes that keep ass-kickings enshrined in sports, and keep ass-kickers employed unless they die in a miasma of concussions and painkillers at age 28. ‘Cause that’s what men do, you know. We beat the shit out of each other and leave goal-scoring to babies and pre-teen girls.
Already Gabriel Sherman at that selfsame New York has hailed the Times series as exemplifying sports journalism’s turn from boys’ club yuksterism to a department bent on cleaning up the games. Here, head trauma, painkillers and hockey’s culture of bloodsport here join a line of recent targets that include steroid abuse, NCAA cronyism, agent sleaze, booster sleaze, child-rape coverup sleaze, et al. You don’t leave the Boogaard stories hating hockey any more than you finish Fast Food Nation hating the taste of beef and potatoes. But it should make sports fans reflect on their cheers for on-ice bare-knuckle boxing. Hells yeah! Fuck him up, early onset dementia!
Because certain things stick in your mind once you learn them. The image of Boogaard’s knuckles beaten back into his hand and up toward his wrist, from punching skulls, for instance. The plastic Easter eggs full of narcotics that he would hide around his apartment, to keep himself from devouring them too quickly. The nearly 14,000 texts he sent last February as he became lonely and isolated, sidelined with concussions and addiction. The Boogaard bobblehead with bobblefists that his minor-league team in Houston produced. The sad, late practices that the gentle young Boogaard would undertake to improve his skills, in hopes he could make his way with scoring, with talent, instead of as a charging lummox. Boogaard plugging fries through a missing-tooth smile when he spent a summer with his jaw wired shut. The concussion test in which he couldn’t think of a single word that begins with the letter “R.” That happened in 2009, before he was traded to signed with the Rangers. But still. That one should be easy.
The NHL seems less than impressed with the findings of Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, the disease that Boogaard’s and three other NHL players’ brains have evinced (out of four the center has posthumously examined). If you want to get to the brain goods, start at the 7:00 mark of the third video and stick around to watch Commissioner Gary Bettman dodge those findings like a thrown wrench.
Longer Bettman: “Part of the issue is the handful of samples that they have, you don’t know whether or not people would ever suffer effects because some of the preliminary stages were there. And you don’t know that if they looked inside of your brain or mine right now what they would find. I think while their work is worthwhile, the people we talk to think that their tendency to reach conclusions at a very preliminary stage is great for headlines but not necessarily advancing the research.”
Shorter Bettman: If you think the NHL’s gonna yank fighting out of hockey, get your head checked.

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27 Responses to “Great Journalism: The New York Times Series on Derek Boogaard and NHL Enforcers”
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December 12th, 2011 at 10:59 AM
He was not traded.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:03 AM
nitpicker. go punch some meth and snort a skull, mole
December 12th, 2011 at 11:10 AM
Hope a portion of Boogaard’s legacy is the removal of super-heavyweights from the game as a whole.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:12 AM
Disagree.
Boogaard’s reputation came with him from juniors up to the NHL. Popplewell’s piece back in October illustrated that pretty clearly. There’s been a similar emphasis on Bob Probert and his death. He played in Chicago and Detroit.
That said, the NYT did a great job showing the types of trials these players go through.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:13 AM
Boogaard signed with NYR as a free agent. Was never traded.
Also, that Times series was fantastic. As fast as the game is nowadays, one dimensional guys like Boogaard are becoming far less common.
Of bigger concern, at least to me as a hockey fan, are how head injuries are handled once they do occur. That’s the part, I think, the NHL (and the NFL) has the biggest problem with.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:14 AM
Which makes this:
Seem almost disingenuous. I was moved to take fighting out of hockey after reading about all the Boogaard stuff. I even wrote about it (/waves). But at the end of it all, I just want staged and orchestrated fights out of the game between two guys with no discernible hockey talent. There’s still room for fights in the heat of a game. When they have purpose in the greater scheme of the game.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:15 AM
That’s the part, I think, the NHL (and the NFL) has the biggest problem with.
They’re far from perfect, but I think the NHL is on the right track.
For example, Cody Hodgson was bambi on ice after a hit vs the Senators on Saturday, he wanted back into the game, but the doctors said no.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:16 AM
Thanks for the catch on the traded/free agency point. Apparently the Wild had shopped him as trade fodder but found no takers.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:17 AM
I just want staged and orchestrated fights out of the game between two guys with no discernible hockey talent.
Moi aussi. I have no issue when guys like Iginla and Lecavalier throw down in the heat of the game.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:17 AM
If they keep fighting in the game, it can’t be one dimensional guys like Boogey or Jody Shelley or Colton Orr.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:18 AM
or john scott
December 12th, 2011 at 11:18 AM
As bad as it sounds, in the heat of competition, you really have to save these guys from themselves sometimes.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:20 AM
We could probably fill out a full 23 man roster with players that fit the description we’ve given. There’s not a whole lot of teams without a Cam Janssen now-a-days. Wish the Hawks would get rid of their guy.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:20 AM
I think most hockey fans will agree with that. It’s the scheduled fights between two heavyweights that makes the NHL look bad.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:21 AM
That was brutal to see, and I’m glad they kept him out. You just can’t allow him back on the ice until you’re sure.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:21 AM
Apparently the Wild had shopped him as trade fodder but found no takers.
And yet Sather (even after dealing with Fleury’s off ice issues) felt it prudent to sign him to a 4 year $6.5M deal.
Until the majority of GM’s change their stance on the value of a carrying a heavyweight on their roster, things will not change.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:22 AM
The amount of money that Sather gave Boogaard didn’t help matters either. It legitimized his presence on the roster.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:22 AM
i think everyone iss dping a pretty good job checking for concussions, and going through the right process for returning
/except the browns
December 12th, 2011 at 11:22 AM
If I think about the cap hit the Flyers took with Jody Shelley, it makes me angry.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:23 AM
because here’s the deal, as soon as there is a written policy and public pronouncements of caring and renewed emphasis on keeping guys safe, then there can be legal issues if they neglect
/not a lawyer
//minor lawbreaker
December 12th, 2011 at 11:25 AM
I’m also getting tired of coaches preaching the value of having ‘toughness’ on the roster.
As an example, Renney sat Paajarvi vs. the Flames in order to get Hordichuk into the lineup, then played him a total of 2:56. What a waste.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:25 AM
Shelley is one of those guys that misses games because of stupid decision making too. Scott’s cap hit doesn’t bother me. He doesn’t take runs at guys either. It’s just dressing him when you’ve got better alternatives that irks me.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:27 AM
todd haley fired
December 12th, 2011 at 11:31 AM
Or radio hosts and fans. Can’t stop talking about it here because of the way the SCF went down and the fact guys are getting injured. It’s such a stupid argument.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:33 AM
Obligatory lack of toughness GIF. But otherwise I agree with your premise.
December 12th, 2011 at 11:37 AM
Don’t have to open it to know what you’re referring to. Thing is, he retaliates and then everyone starts talking about how undisciplined they were. What hurt them is the 1 for 33 powerplay record in the final.
What the Canucks have is a guy like Weise – not very tough really, but tough enough and can be called upon to play more minutes when injuries knock other guys out (and he scores a pretty goal)
December 12th, 2011 at 11:39 AM
Note for the record, last week I called Terry Murray the darkhorse in the race to be the next coach fired.