In Search Of Excellence - Luc Robitaille: From "Too Slow" To NHL Hall Of Fame | E89
Episode Date: November 28, 2023Welcome to another episode of In Search for Excellence! My guest today is my good friend Luc Robitaille! Luc is an NHL Hall of Famer who as a 19-year-old teenager went from being drafted in the 9th ro...und (171st overall) to becoming the highest-scoring left winger in NHL history, with 668 goals over his 19-season career.In his first year in the league, Luc won the Calder Trophy as Rookie of the Year and then went on to become the only left wing in NHL history to record 8 consecutive 40-goal seasons. Luc played 8 all-star games, won a Stanley Cup as a player with the awesome Detroit Red Wings in 2002, and two more Stanley Cups as an executive with the Los Angeles Kings. He is giving back to his community through his Echoes of Hope Foundation.Time stamps:01:23 Luc Robitaille’s family and backgroundHe had a great life but not a lot of moneyWorked at his dad’s scrap yardThe value of manual labor07:44 Earliest memories playing hockeyA tennis ball was goldMade their own equipment for hockeyHis first memory holding a stick11:13 The difference from other kidsPracticing all the time to be betterHis mentality was all about hard workSense of a game is hard to teach14:57 Goals, dreams, and hard workWanted to play Junior MajorThat was what they could afford to watchHe was up at 4:30 am to go to practiceNo one needed to ever push him for the next practice19:50 Getting into the World Junior ChampionshipOnly 40 players were invited to make the teamHe wasn’t calledOne of the players got injured and he got inThat changed his life permanently22:35 Getting drafted by the LA KingsNHL draftProjected to be a late-round draft pickThe scouts said he was too small, didn't skate well, lacked hand-eye coordinationHe became the 171st pickThe story about the draft and the pin29:38 Moving to LAHe wanted to focus on playing hockey onlyStayed in the boarding house with Marcel DionneDid nothing except trainingThe nickname Lucky35:18 The first gameWanted to be a part of making the LA Kings greatRecalling the first game experienceThe excitement of his first score39:17 The Rookie of the YearHow did it feel to receive the award?Didn’t think he was going to winHe was overwhelmed but moved on41:18 A special bond with Jimmy CarsonJimmy came from a different backgroundThey had a special bond and practiced all the timeThe secret signal helped them score 15-20 goalsStaying in the middle of the bench45:30 Playing with Wayne GretzkyAs a kid, he admired Wayne GretzkyWanted to impress him more than to winWhen he came to the Kings, it was hard because he was his heroThe coach took him from Wayne’s line because he was distractedSponsors:Sandee | Bliss: BeachesWant to Connect? Reach out to us online!Website | Instagram | LinkedIn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I was willing to get better at whatever I did.
But I remember playing hockey and practicing things that no one else would practice.
So if I would go to the park when we had ice, like all the older kids would go home to dinner, I was still there.
I was up at 4.30.
When it was a practice, I was up and I would wake my dad up.
Dad, we got to go.
You know what I mean?
No one needed to ever push me for the next practice. You got to be willing to do better than everyone around you every single day to have a chance to make it pro. But if you're not working harder,, venture capitalist, and the host of In Search of Excellence,
which I started to motivate and inspire us to achieve excellence in our lives.
My guest today is my good friend, Luke Robitaille.
Luke is an NHL Hall of Famer who is a 19-year-old teenager, went from being drafted in the ninth round,
171st overall to becoming the highest scoring left winger in NHL history with 668 goals over his 19
season career. In his first year in the league, Luke won the Calder Trophy as Rookie of the Year
and then went on to become the only left wing in NHL history to record eight consecutive 40 goal
seasons. Luke played in eight All-Star games, won a Stanley Cup as a player with the awesome
Detroit Red Wings in 2002, and won two more Stanley Cups as an executive with the Los Angeles Kings.
Luke, along with his wife, Stacia, are actively involved in giving back to our community through their Echoes of Hope Foundation,
which has helped thousands of at-risk and emaciated foster youth succeed by providing the resources, love, and support they deserve.
Luke, it's a true pleasure to have you on my show. Welcome to In Search of Excellence.
Thank you. Thank you. It's great to see you.
Great to see you. You were born and raised in Montreal in a blue-collar family. Your dad,
Claude, worked at a scrapyard and worked hard to eventually become an owner
of two used car parts yards. Your mom, Madeline, was a stay-at-home mom.
Can you tell us about the values they instilled in you
as a kid? And as part of that, can you tell us about your dad's office in his Volkswagen and
what the $200 to $300 it cost to send you to hockey school meant to him and how both of your
parents coming to every practice and every game helped you develop at a young age?
Yeah. It's funny. That's a great memory. It's great for me to think about that.
You know, I think the biggest thing is like, we didn't realize then that we didn't have a lot of
money. We just didn't miss anything. We, we, we had a great life, you know, for me as a kid,
I just would go outside and in the summer, I'd play baseball, play lacrosse and in the winter I play in hockey and whatever we needed, we seemed to have it.
I think I remember later talking to my mom and her explaining to me like, oh, she would do the
grocery and she'd get the Friday and she would run out of food. And then she'd have like a little
bit of oatmeal left and some bread. So she'd make for dinner, like oatmeal and toast. And
we thought it was the greatest meal. Like she said, you guys would celebrate.
She goes, I'd be crying in the back that we didn't have enough food.
And it's kind of funny how that goes.
But we appreciated like the way our life was.
And we never heard any complaint or anything like that.
And I remember seeing my dad where he would work late at night.
One of his thing, like in the middle of the
winter, it was really cold. He would fix these windshield wipers motors of anything like,
you know, and we'd have hundreds in the little cabanas and he would fix them every night to
make a little bit of extra money to help us. And it was probably just to help us in hockey or me
and my brother and, or, or other things and and yeah his first uh like business
that he was able to to get his first office was a volkswagen car and they had like a phone book in
it and then a phone line and it wasn't a car one of those it was one of those classic volkswagen
and it was just parked in there no tires it was there and then i think the next year he was
all happy they they bought the back of a van and that was the office so that lasted maybe 10 years
where we would go there and in the scrapyard like that that's what i remember being like
11 12 years old and we would drive some of the cars would start so we drive them down the alley
we'd get in trouble when
we'd hit another car because they were selling those parts you know but it funny enough it was
great memories but we didn't realize that we really didn't have much but we never seemed to
miss anything you worked in the scrapyard when you were 13 to 16 years old 16 years old during
the summer what was that like how much were you making what did old during the summer. What was that like? How much were you making?
What did you do with the money?
And is that really a bunch of manual labor?
It was mostly, for me, it was mostly manual.
It was in the summer and it was 150 bucks a week,
I remember.
And then I would calculate,
like my whole thing was calculating
like how much I could do when the canteen stopped by,
which it would stop twice a day at 9.30 a.m.
and it would stop at 1.30 after lunch.
So I would try to get a little bit of cash to buy.
It wasn't a coffee.
It was maybe a drink and a donut in the morning
and then a bag of chips and a Coke at 1.30
and then would go to McDonald's or Burger King every lunch.
I had my money for the week and the rest I tried to save it because I want to buy a car when I when I turned 16 that was my my big thing and
but it was uh it was mostly manual labor and and I remember I got upgraded at at 13 or 14
where they would give me a card and whenever so the the way the scrapyard works in the in that
world is you buy as many cars you can but they're mostly smashed and you sell the parts that are
good to garage mostly but when a car they've sold most of the part there's only four five or ten
parts left they would bring them up the yard and then they would they would give me the card of
what they want to keep my dad and his partner. Then I got to dismantle the whole car and keep just the good parts.
But it was kind of fun when you're a kid because you could smash the windows.
They don't want them.
You could do whatever you want with it.
But it was, so that was my job for one summer.
And then the next summer was my grandpa worked with my dad and we had to build racks.
And he was a welder. So my job was to hold everything for him.
And I had a good eye on measuring.
So before he would level it, he would ask me, and then he would tack it.
But I did learn quickly that after a night that it rained,
you don't put your two feet on the ground and hold the two poles this way.
And he tacked it there.
It would wake me up
every day but that was my job there it was a it was actually great memory but it was definitely manual labor i worked construction one summer summer before college i dug ditches for the world
headquarters weight watchers headquarters building and on telegraph road in michigan and i i know
you've been to det Detroit a bunch of times.
And I remember thinking, I had my shirt off.
I thought, oh, it's this little scrawny kid.
I'm with the guys.
I made six bucks an hour's cash.
And I'd come home filthy each day.
I'd have to hose off my clothes before I went inside the house.
But it taught me the value.
I think the value of manual labor is very important for us.
And it taught me also, I knew as I looked around,
these were construction workers. They did this day in, day out for living. And I thought that was really cool. These were tough guys. They were all really nice, you know, treated me well.
But I also realized I definitely didn't want to do that, but it was a great lesson.
Yeah. It was hard when you see a lot of these guys, they, you know, they, they go paycheck
to paycheck and they're, but, but you realize like you realize like how how much it takes to work and you know to do it right and with my grandpa we
had to do it right it had to be very precise because they were racked to hold like front end
of cars and doors and and they were you know they were a couple hundred yards long so but we got to
make sure like it was done right to start let's talk about your earliest
memories playing hockey which you were playing on the street in the schoolyard not on the ice but
with a tennis ball can you tell us about cutting the seats of old cars using foam and rubber bands
while using worn tennis balls were better than new tennis balls why you didn't step on cracks
in the sidewalk and how the local firemen helped you go from the streets to the ice yeah and that's uh those are great memories to have but for us like i said we didn't
have a lot of money so we like one tennis ball was was gold so you couldn't lose it so we would
chase it whenever we couldn't afford to lose it so the more you played with at some point the fur on it like would wear out so when
that would wear out and some it would lose a little bit of air it didn't bounce as much
so it was more fun to play with that ball and so that that was the thing like as far as the
tennis ball but my my dad being from the scrapyard he would cut like seeds that he wasn't going to
sell and inside of it like under this on top
of the springs there was a a cushion of air foam about you know a couple inches thick so he would
bring him home we would roll him in two three and we'd we'd throw a couple rubber bands that was our
goalie pads and we'd have a hockey gloves and a mitt and that's that's how you were a goalie i
i actually loved to play goalie so i was always wanted to be a goalie as a kid and but that was our equipment and we just played all day in a school yard and and uh on
you know but we made sure we didn't lose that ball because we didn't have two so you made sure
you chased it wherever it went you know if you if you missed a shot and they went somewhere and you
you couldn't find it we we'd literally chase that ball what's
the first memory you have holding a stick in your hand and actually taking the stick and getting out
onto the ice i think the first memory i have is uh well what what you were talking about the firemen
is uh in my neighborhood like about a block from us there was a park and when it when it got to a
point where it was really cold the firemen would
come at night and and just hose off like an area that they had actually put little boards
before and then you'd wake up the next morning and it'd be ice and it'd be ice for a couple months
so because it's canada and people play hockey and you play hockey and in the park everybody
every kid around the neighborhood will go there and play. For me, I was really young, so I would always play with older kids. That was good for me from that standpoint. But it was a great
experience just to be able to get out of bed. And we'd put our skates, and then we'd literally walk
on the cement all the way there. And I remember five, six years old going there. I don't remember
the first time I grabbed the hockey stick, but I remember the first time old like going there I I don't remember the first time I grabbed the
hockey stick but I remember the first time we were going to play hockey for real I think I was
four and my dad had bought my brother my brother was a year older my brother and I an equipment set
and we were so excited and then the next morning when we were going to go they got a call that
the machine had the rink had broken down so
that it took three days to fix it and then we started again so and that was my first experience
of playing for a team but for some reason I have that memory of being so excited in the morning and
looking at my equipment and then being disappointed and not go then a few days later I got to play and
from then on I just i love to play
the game but started as a defenseman and you know it took a while for me to kind of get to the next
level what were you like as a kid from the time you were 5 to 15 years old and in terms of the
hockey when did you realize that you were better than most kids your own age and what was i like as a kid i think as a kid i didn't know then
but you know if you read the book um i think it's uh was at the tipping point 10 000 hours
i was willing to get better at whatever i did you know i think school i was okay but i remember
playing hockey and practicing things that no one else would practice.
So if I would go to the park when we had ice,
like all the older kids would go home to dinner.
I was still there.
I was still playing more than the other one.
I remember playing lacrosse, and I would go to the schoolyard, and I would shoot the ball against the wall over and over and over again.
Like I had seen someone switching hands,
and I just had this mentality of just,
like it wasn't work.
I was just trying to get better.
I remember when the first pair of rollerblades came out and I saw this one kid skating on the streets
and my dad knew the guy that was selling them
and we bought a pair of rollerblades.
He said, there was two kinds of wheels.
He said, there's the hard wheels that you'll go faster and there's a shorter and a softer wheels that you'll work
harder so i told my dad i want the softer wheel it's funny like my mentality at 12 or 13 was
i want the the harder work so my mentality was i'll skate with these skates all the time so it
get me better on the ice and i I just, I was always that way.
Like, I remember playing baseball
and practicing over and over,
putting, like, on the school wall,
like, with some type of clay,
like a target, and I was a pitcher,
so I just kept throwing over and over again
and going to, before every game,
to the batting cage and
and you know he put a quarter and picking the the hardest one that would throw i think 80 miles an
hour but we were kids because i knew if i could hit a few going to play the pitcher was probably
pitching 65 miles an hour so the ball would be this big i just had all these things to get better
every day that no one ever pushed me it was just for some reason I was trying to get better at whatever I did.
You had a natural drive to succeed and be the best you can be.
But were you born as a gift with hand-eye coordination?
You watch these guys skating on the ice.
They're skating as fast as they can.
They've got all kinds of gear on them.
They've got people checking them.
And you're flying on the ice
and putting these laser precision passes on someone else's stick and then you got to shoot
it i think hand-eye coordination if you think about football yeah you need it basketball you
need but this is a whole nother level i think i think there's some uh the hand-eye coordination
i'm a big believer that's something you can work on. You know, I think I probably had it, but I worked on it every day.
I mean, talking about when a tennis ball was brand new,
I would go against the wall and play tennis with a hockey stick.
You know, it's kind of funny.
Like when my friends were somewhere else on a Sunday,
that's what I would do all afternoon.
So there's some things that, you know, sense of a game,
of where to be at the right time
that's hard to teach whether it's football or the sense of like taking the pressure away and
on a 3-2 call in the ninth inning when your team is down in baseball and that's hard to teach
because that's something inner that you're able to absorb the the pressure but things like hand
eye coordination and getting stronger and more powerful you're born to absorb the pressure, but things like hand-eye coordination and getting stronger and more powerful,
you're born with something,
but there's a lot of it I think athletes can improve that,
you know, like anyone.
I want to talk about dreams that many of us have when we're kids,
dreams to become professional athletes when we're older,
and I want to start with some statistics.
According to a Gallup poll
in 2021, about 34% of kids ages 10 through 12 in the U.S. say they have a dream of becoming a
professional athlete someday. Another survey from 2018 found that 61% of kids ages 6 through 17
have aspirations of becoming professional athletes. Other estimates suggest that playing in the NFL, NBA, MLB, or NHL is their
dream career choice for 25 to 30 percent of kids in the United States. These dreams are awesome,
but the dreams don't usually become reality. The reality is that less than one percent of high
school athletes end up playing professional sports. Here are some specific stats about hockey.
There are 32 teams in the NHL, and each team can have 23 players,
which means that there are only 736 active NHL players at any one time.
Before making it to the NHL, more than 95% of players have to play in junior hockey leagues first,
usually for a couple of years, with guys like Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid being the exception to the rule.
What are the odds of playing junior hockey?
There's significantly less than that.
Only 1 in 625 hockey players make it to the junior leagues,
which is 0.0016 or 0.16%.
Of this number, well under 10% of players from top-tier junior leagues,
like the Canadian Hockey League or the United States Hockey League,
make it to the NHL.
The number who make it to the NHL is under 1% for the lower tier leagues.
In other words, the odds of playing in the NHL are incredibly low. You weren't like most kids.
When you were growing up, you didn't dream about making it to the NHL. Your dream was to play
junior hockey. Can you tell us how that goal changed when a guy named Stefan Richter got hurt?
Yeah, it's funny.
Like my goal, because it goes back to what you can afford to go.
So we couldn't afford to ever go see the Montreal Canadiens. I think I saw one game growing up because it seemed so far away.
It was so big.
How far away was it geographically?
It was downtown
montreal so we're on the island but it just seemed you know to get to the nhl goal like that wasn't
even part of my my thinking and then and they won the stanley cup every year when i was on the time
i was 10 to 14 they won four years in a row we thought that was normal you know it's kind of
funny like oh they just went all the time and hard to do yeah it's really hard now You know, it's kind of funny. Like, oh, they just win all the time. It's hard to do.
Yeah, it's really hard.
No, I know.
But it's interesting.
Like, I wanted to play junior major because that was what we can afford to go watch.
My dad and I, we would go watch every game locally.
And Mario Lemieux played.
And then we had other players that we knew.
And I was hoping I would get a chance to go to go there but
I kind of I would think I I lived more each moment like I like I remember being in band time I'm like
I'm going to try to make band time double A but I didn't think if I could make band time double A
I could play junior major or in the NHL I was more trying to make that team then be the best player on that team
and tomorrow I gotta have the best game and then tomorrow the best practice and I was living
moments to moment and that's really how I think I looked at it this way and it like I said I was
always trying to get better but it was never work it's funny like sometimes we talk about dreams or kids and
we see a lot of kids we we manage numerous hockey rinks here in southern california and sometimes
i'll be there and a dad will come to me and they'll say look at my son like he's you know
what do you think and then you look and the kid can really fly out there and i'll be like yeah
how old is he like 11 i go how hard is it to wake him up to go to 6
a.m practice and if he says uh oh it's really hard that's really tough I'm always like just
just make sure he has fun because like I know I was up at 4 30 when it was a practice I was up and
I would wake my dad up like dad we gotta go you I mean? No one needed to ever push me for the
next practice. It was just me. So if you have to be pushed to work harder at 12, you know, even
though you might be really good, you might make it pro, but you might not be happy because it's
really, like you said, the percentage is so minimal. You got to be willing to do better than everyone around you every single day
to have a chance to make it pro.
It's hard.
And work harder than everybody.
Yeah, every single day.
Even though you're better, you got to still work harder than everybody.
Because you might make it pro if you're better than everybody,
but if you're not working harder, you won't last in the pro.
And then you got to start your life again at 26.
You know what I mean? That's even harder. so your dream changed stefan richter gets hurt tell us what happened there so what
happened is i was playing junior major and uh and i had a my first year i get drafted and then my
second year i get cut from the la kings and and i had a really good year led my team in scoring and this is when you're playing
junior junior hockey and what happens in the summer there was a one of biggest tournament
in junior hockey is the world junior championship and to play for team canada was the ultimate
dream and uh so in the summer i didn't get invited to the camp even though i had like 150 points
there was they were inviting 40 players to make a team that would play during the holiday and Christmas.
So they had a one-week camp.
And a day and a half before the camp, Pat Burns, that was my coach and junior, ended up coaching in the NHL.
He's in the Hall of Fame.
Called me.
He says, are you in shape?
And I said, yes, no matter what.
I was never going to say no, and he says,
one of the guys from Quebec, the province, his name was Stéphane Richer, got invited to go to
camp, and he hurt his shoulder, and he can't go, he says, they want one more guy from Quebec,
and you're the guy, he says, you want to go, I go, yeah, we'll go. So I flew to Toronto the next day.
I didn't speak much English.
And I remember sitting in that room,
and there was a lot of first-round draft choice on that roster.
And they made two teams, and we played seven days in a row,
seven scrimmages, a couple practices along the way, two a day.
But it was really about the scrimmages.
And after the seven games, I was leading the whole group in scoring.
It kind of forced them to invite me for the holiday, and I made the team.
And that really changed my life.
And the reason was that tournament was closer to the NHL.
I still didn't know if I could make the NHL, but I knew my name was on the list at the time,
and it was up to me.
But playing for the World Junior Championship,
the speed of the game was faster than my league.
So when I came back in my league after playing in that tournament,
it just seemed like everything slowed down even more,
and I had probably the best second half in the history of my career for sure.
I think we had like something
like 50 or 60 games left and I got like 130 points. I think I averaged like three points
a game or something like that. Four points a game to be exact. Yeah, four points a game. Okay.
This episode of In Search of Excellence is brought to you by Sandy.com. S-A-N-D-E-E.com.
We're a Yelp for beaches and have created the world's most
comprehensive beach resource by cataloging more than a hundred categories of information
for every beach in the world more than a hundred thousand beaches in 212 countries
sandy.com provides beach goers around the world with detailed comprehensive and easy to use
information to help them plan their perfect beach getaway at home and
abroad and to make sure you're never disappointed by a beach visit again plan the perfect beach
trip today by visiting sandy.com that's www.sandee.com the link is in our show notes stay sandy my friends
so at this point you're killing it you You're 18 years old, and then comes the NHL draft.
And despite all of your incredible success,
you were projected to be a late-round draft pick.
I remember being at a retirement party at the Ritz-Carlton,
and Marina Del Rey was having for a hockey guy like me
to see Mark Messia in the hallway and being able to say hello to him.
And I remember Marty McSordley reading our scouting report
and the effect it had on me and all the others in the room.
The scouts said you were too small, couldn't skate well,
lacked hand-eye coordination.
One of the scouts even said that you were slower than a Zamboni.
The draft was at the Montreal Forum that year.
You knew what the scouts were saying.
You didn't really want to go there in person,
but you went with your dad anyway.
You got there at 10 a.m., and you had to sit there and listen as the players got called one by one in the fourth round the kings drafted future hall of fame baseball
player tom glavin which is odd you don't see a baseball player getting drafted into nhl too much
finally 100 picks later and the ninth round at 7 p.m., after nine hours of torture sitting there, they called your name as 171st pick.
Take us through that night with your dad sitting in the nosebleed seats, the khaki pants you were wearing, your interaction with the policeman, a guy named Alex Smart and John Wolf, and the pin John gave you.
And what was the feeling inside of you at that
exact moment when your name got called on the loudspeaker it's uh before that it's kind of
funny because time went and had other teammates that were ranked higher than me you know the
people rank you on they rank a player on what the expectations are like they don't rank strictly on
what you just did you know like scouts look at
okay can he be in the nhl in three years i'm assuming every scout says they didn't know
internally how much drive i had because it's impossible for them to know they probably look
at him well this guy can't skate he won't be able to skate in five years you know and i think that's
why i was ranked so low but for me i do in the third round, in the break and so forth,
seeing some of my teammates and trying to talk them up because they were down.
Let's say a guy was ranked in the second round.
He didn't come out.
So then because I was the leader of our team, I'd be like,
don't worry about it.
You'll be okay.
And then one of my friends didn't come out to like the fifth round,
and he was down.
So every round I was sitting or seeing him,
and I'd go, don't worry about it, we'll be okay.
So it kind of made me forget about me.
In a way, it was good.
But I do recall every time LA came, I was nervous.
I thought it was going to be me
because that was the only team that talked to me
the entire year before and it
was only one scholar his name was alex smart like you said and uh so every time i i went to la i
would i would go oh maybe that's it and then they would go and then in the eighth round rogy vachon
speaks french so my my even though everybody in the u.s calls me luke in in quebec they call me
luke that's how you pronounce it. So Rogi goes to the stage,
and he goes, and anybody
that would know Rogi Vachon, he smoked a ton
of cigars. He was always coughing,
so he'd be like,
the LA Kings are happy
to draft, and he goes, Luc.
And I go, and this was the
eighth round, and then a scout, someone
from the LA Kings go to the podium
and said no and they
give him another name i never asked rogie but i do recall hearing my name so they name another guy
his name was shannon deegan i had played against so that's how i remember the name and then then
we went in a whole round and then the ninth round then he said my name so i never asked rogie about
about it but i remember hearing my name and i just
jumped i was so happy and the old forum and there was like the the bottom section was all red the
second section was white and the third section the 300 let's say was blue so i sat in the white
because you know i just by that time there was no one left you know in the building so
i ran all the way down it was very steep and when i got to go in the ice there was no one left in the building. So I ran all the way down.
It was very steep.
And when I got to go in the ice, there was a policeman, and he blocked me.
And I said, no, I just got drafted by the LA Kings.
And the policeman, he's looking at me.
He's not believing that there's anyone left.
So Pierre Laquada was a well-known agent at at the time who became a gm for calvado
um he recognized me he goes hey look he goes like congratulations and he told the policeman he goes
it's okay it's okay he just got drafted by the l.a kings he goes let him on let him go to the table
so he points me to where the table is and i run to the table and i and by the time i got there for summary la was
either on a break or something there was no one in the table there was one man his name was john wolf
and his he was the assistant gm so he goes he goes yeah hello like i'm just standing there
like i said my english wasn't really good so he goes may i help you i go yeah you drafted me he
goes oh really he goes what's your name? And I go,
Luke Rodin. He looks at his list and he sees my name. He goes, congratulations, young man. He
goes, welcome aboard. And then he looks and he pulls a box underneath the table. He goes,
we don't have any hats or anything left. He goes, I can't give you any, but here you go. And he
pulls out his pin from his jacket and gives it to me. And I remember I got that little pin.
I was so proud, you know.
And then he says, do you have an agent?
I'll call your agent for training.
I go, I don't have an agent.
Because my uncle, who kind of knew the GM of Montreal,
Serge Chavard, he says, should he have an agent?
My Serge Chavard says, you don't need to waste that money on an agent.
Just if he ever gets drafted, I'll help you.
I'll tell you what to do. So I said, I don't have an agent have an agent he said okay and he gives me a piece of paper and a pencil it
wasn't a pen he says write down your name and your address and I'll send you the information
for training camp so I write down my name the address and then he you know I shake his hand
and I leave and I go with my dad we took subway back home, and I remember I had my pin. I was so happy that I was on. My whole thinking as a kid then, I'm like, okay, I'm on the list.
They have to look at me. For some reason, that's the way I thought. I'm on the list.
They got to look at me, and now it's up to me, no one else. That was my thinking going home,
and I still got the pin, by the way, kind of cool yeah I got in my office and but
that's kind of like that's how it started for me and going home I remember we went to an ice cream
shop and this guy looks at me he goes you you got drafted I go yeah he goes what round I go
nine to go oh that'll never happen for you but that was my thinking just as long as my name is on the list now it's up to me
so you get drafted you play a couple years in the minors kings wanted you to develop more
then you're 20 years old when you finally make it to the bigs jimmy carson uh came up with you
you guys moved to los angeles together he's told me he's like a deer in the headlights out here.
The guys are out there partying,
going to nightclubs every night.
They're drinking.
You guys weren't doing that.
People said, what was it like when you moved to LA?
So talk to us about where you lived,
English, who you drove to the stadium with,
and then what you did for fun well we we
didn't do anything for fun we just we played hockey I think Jimmy Carson myself and there
was Steve Duchesne uh but Jimmy was really focused like me and our main goals we were going there to
play hockey we weren't going there for anything else so at the time Marcel Dion was my roommate during training
camp and Dave Taylor which they were two veterans two all-star on the team that was Jimmy Carson's
roommate and I remember Dave was a 10th round pick by the way yeah I know crazy and and I remember
Marcel Dion asking me during camp he goes hey if you, if you make a team, kid, where do you want to live?
What do you want to do?
And I remember without a thought, just because I knew that was my focus.
I said, well, I want to live in a boarding house.
He said, really, why?
I said, because I don't want to have to worry about anything.
I just want to play, you know, and I know it's going to be hard.
Like I knew that for some reason and
I knew what I meant by that like you know we were making 50 bucks a week in junior major and you
know we'd never I had opened one bank account in my life you know like I had a car but my dad had
helped me and that was it there was no other worry about life so I knew that coming to the U.S. was going to be a lot of stuff and I wanted to just focus
on hockey so Marcel came to me and I think he had talked to Dave Taylor and talked to a few people
and he said why don't you come at near the end of camp he goes why don't you come and stay in my
house he goes you can help my kids to learn to speak French and And then he told Jimmy, he had like a neighbor that he knew,
this lady. So he asked her if Jimmy could stay there. And she said, yes. And then he found
another boarding house for Steve Duchesne. So all three of us stayed in a boarding house. So
it was an easy transition. We went from staying in a hotel during training camp to go to his house
where we had no worries. I think he was charging us 400 bucks a month.
It was like nothing.
Food included, by the way.
His wife's a good cook, I heard.
Yeah, she's a great cook.
Carol is a great cook.
She cooked some good meals.
So it really made our life easy
where we would just focus on hockey.
And he lived in Palos Verdes,
so we never got out of that bubble until Christmas.
So we started in september i never
went anywhere and we went to the practice the games once in a while we'd go to dinner with
marcel somewhere and that was it and we just slept all the time as it turned out his kids helped me
speak to learn to speak english i didn't help the poor kids speak french at all but we got along
really good but that that was it really
helped our transition but Marcel told me he had asked those questions to many draft kids
draft picks for the Kings over the years and every one of them would be like I want to live in
Hollywood I want to have fun I want to I want to enjoy the city that was always their answer
and we were the first one to say, I want to play hockey.
So I want to, I don't want to be focused on anything else, but just that.
And that's why he took it upon himself to help us.
Are you looking for your next great gift to surprise a friend, colleague, or loved one?
Bliss Beaches makes the perfect gift.
This best-selling bright and beautiful coffee table book by Randall Kaplan features stunning drone photography from exotic beach locations around the world.
It's the perfect housewarming gift,
a great addition to any home or office,
and a fun and creative alternative
to bringing a bottle of wine to somebody's house for dinner.
Bliss Beaches is available for purchase on Amazon,
where it has glowing reviews and a five-star rating.
Get your next amazing gift
and order a copy of Bliss Beaches
by clicking the link in our show notes.
And Marcel, for those viewers and listeners who don't know,
Marcel was a big deal.
I mean, for free to drive with him to a game.
He was one of the greatest players of all time.
700 plus goals.
He was a superstar in LA.
He was a superstar in Detroit.
I mean, he's just one of the greatest players to ever play the game.
And you're living with him and you're driving with him to the game.
That must have been so inspirational just to spend all that time with him well he had
a mercedes i'd never been in a mercedes so it was kind of fun to drive there to practice in a mercedes
actually we that's all my nickname over the years was lucky and but we had a player that year his
name was morris lukowicz and guys would call call me Luke so whenever they'd be in the locker room for the first couple games they someone would say Luke would both turn around so
Tiger Williams I was a revered tough guy in the NHL and I had heard he didn't like French guys
so I was really nervous around him but he got to I think he got to liking me or something I had
beaten him in a push-up test in the training camp so he was very
surprised by that and uh he come in after game two and he had a kind of a funny way to talk his
nose was broken like 17 times probably and he started calling me hey lucky hey lucky and he
and the guys are like well why are you calling him Lucky? And I remember he says, well, he scored on his first shot
and his first shift on the ice.
Like, I scored.
I jumped on the ice in the NHL, and my first shot on goal, I scored.
And it was like, you know, three minutes to the game.
That was my first shift.
And then he says, he drives to practice in a Mercedes, the nicest car,
because he was driving Marcel Dion. And he goes, and he lives in the biggest house,
Marcelli goes, that's lucky to me.
So then all the guys got into calling me lucky the rest of my career.
It just stayed.
That's amazing.
What was the feeling as you're sitting on that bed?
You're in the locker room.
It's your first game.
You know, you make the team and you're sitting there and you're're are you just out of your mind anxious or is it more excitement and then what you know you touch the puck for the first time you got it you wind
up you flick it in and you see the red light yeah but i mean what what were you feeling at that
moment uh i think it's there's a few fall like that day when when i knew i made the team and i
stepped on the ice for the
practice I think might have been the day before I remember looking I'm going this is my team I'm
going to make a difference there because there's a challenge too like I remember going to hall my
junior team they had never been past the first round when I got there and I remember thinking
okay we're going to make a difference here. And we
ended up winning the championship three years later. And I remember in my mind, that was my
goal. You know, you have individual goals, but I wanted my team to make a dent, you know, to change
the culture of that franchise. And we did. And that franchise won to have success for the next
30 years, but we started it. So I remember getting to LA and saying, I want to make a dent.
I want it.
This team has never won.
I want to be part of this.
That was my thinking.
So then you go to the first game, and now suddenly becomes the moment,
and I'm dressing, and I'm like flying, you know, in the warm-up.
I'm like, you're so light.
The adrenaline is going.
And then what happened is when we started the game,
Bernie Nichols was like a really good center.
Marcel was 35, 36 at the time.
He was near the tail end of his career,
so he was technically a second-line center.
And Jimmy was playing with Dave Taylor on the third line.
So the coach started with Bernie Nichols' lines,
and I was playing with
Marcel and he stayed they stayed for a minute then he went with I think he went with Jimmy Carson
with Dave Taylor's line and then he went with the the other line like the yeah I think the fourth
line was more of a checking line and he put him on and I'm like on the bench and my legs are and
I remember Marcel Dion kind of grabbed my leg. He goes,
hold on kids.
We're going to be there.
We're going to get going.
We're going to get going.
And,
and,
um,
as he went on the ice,
Marcel won,
B took the center and the left winger that was,
had the puck in our zone,
got to the red line,
dumped it in and it went behind. And then the goalie went behind the net and then the left
winger came and I jumped I mean I jumped I mean I didn't feel anything even though they said I
wasn't scared I know I was flying and the goalie made a mistake I saw from the red line that the
goalie made a mistake he rimmed it around and I could see Marcel was going so I sprinted as fast
as I could to the front of the net and typical my type of goal I yell sprinted as fast as I could to the front of the net. And typical my type of goal, I yell in French as much as I could.
I go, Marcel, because that's how you pronounce it in French.
I go, Marcel.
And he kind of looked up.
And Marcel had a big kind of curve.
And he had great hands.
He grabbed the puck almost without stopping.
And he just swooped it towards me.
And the goalie wasn't there.
He was still behind the net.
I just tipped it in the empty net.
And there's a clip somewhere where you see't there. He was still behind the net. I just tipped in the empty net.
And there's a clip somewhere where you see me jump.
And I'm like,
so excited.
That's,
that was it.
I went from the bench to the front of the net,
tipped it in.
It's like,
it took like three seconds.
That was my first ship.
If only it was that easy.
I know.
Yeah,
exactly.
Yeah. The dream,
the dream came true.
Do you still have the puck?
Yeah. Yeah. Funny enough. I had given it Do you still have the puck? Yeah, yeah.
Funny enough, I had given it to a friend that had a museum in Newport Beach.
And when he passed away, his wife sent it back to me.
That's awesome.
That's awesome.
So you're 20 years old at this point.
And the guy who the experts said was too slow and lacked hand-eye coordination
ends up that year with 45 goals and 39 assists, 84 points.
You win the Calder Memorial Trophy for the Rookie of the Year, which is a little factoid,
is named after Frank Calder, the first president of the league, which has been awarded since the
1936-1937 season. From the 171st pick, the Rookie of the Year, on a scale of one to a thousand,
how fucking good did that feel uh how good did that feel i remember i i didn't think i was gonna win like the rookie of the year
because i went to the awards and ron hextall and jimmy carson were the other two that were
nominated and ron hextall i had seen that got nominated to be on the first all-star team so i was on the second all-star team for the whole year
as a left winger so yeah and i was a rookie but that's the whole all-star team and so when i saw
he was on the first all-star team i'm like oh i'm not gonna. You know, it doesn't make sense. So I was really relaxed at the award, and then they named me.
I was kind of working on a speech, but I stopped because I'm like,
I'm not going to win.
And then they named my name.
I'm not sure I felt good.
It was more like it happened.
I was overwhelmed by it, And then I had, I moved on. I think I was always in my
career moving on to the next thing. So, okay, I got to get better. I got to get a little faster.
I got to work on it. I think later in life, you're like, oh, that was pretty cool. I want it.
But I didn't really stop it at the time and think, okay, I just know i showed everyone i wasn't about that i still had
that fear i better be good or i'm not gonna be here your rookie year you play with another
incredible rookie my good friend jimmy carson one of your closest friends as well who was one of the
first guests on my podcast and who introduced us 20 years ago like you he was a superstar from the
second he stepped on the ice he He scored 79 points his first season.
You guys were both new to LA, lived next door to each other,
drove with Marcel to games, became great friends,
and future hockey stars together.
I think chemistry is underrated as a part of our success,
how well we get along with others and bond with them
in both our personal lives and our professional lives.
You guys had that special bond. Yeah. Tell us about the importance and strategy about staying close to the middle of the bench during games. Yeah. And also as part of that,
what it meant when you guys were on the ice and one of you yelled mario to the other yeah so we
we were we were really good it's kind of funny we were totally different background like jimmy
his dad was a like very successful businessman he was a he was a tax man i can't remember what
he jimmy was aware of different things reading He was reading different things in me. So I was very intrigued.
He was teaching me a lot.
He was two years younger than me and way smarter.
And so we, but the one thing we share,
we share a bond on the ice to get better.
And we would practice constantly.
It wasn't something that we push each other to practice.
We just did it.
It was fun.
You know, we were kids. And we just did it it was fun you know we were kids we
and we constantly whenever we was off the air we would still be practicing shots and everything
then our second year in the summer in september there was the world cup of hockey it was called
canada cup at the time and mario muir and wayne gretzky you know played together and wayne led
the tournament in scoring and Mario had the most
goals and they had a way to do a two-on-one where Wayne would kind of wait off of it a little bit
and Mario would just kind of turn the other way and one time it and kind of wait long enough for
the goalie not to go so him and I would pick that up we're like I think we're probably both
thinking we're not as good as these guys, but we could do that.
So we started practicing it.
So in game, when we would end up on a kind of a now number 10,
we would just yell Mary.
We'd know we'd both flip-flop on our offhand,
and whoever had the puck would wait,
and then the other guy would, instead of crashing the net
or doing a thing, we would literally wait.
And then there was a time for some unknown reason
when the defenseman's stick would change so the lane would become open.
And we literally, we must have scored 15 or 20 goals together that year
with that trick that we would literally yell at each other,
Mario, and that was our signal.
What about not moving to the end of the bench just
hanging out in the middle yeah we would hang out about we would hang out in the middle of the bench
so the coach would see us because we always want to get back on the ice so he told me that you made
him do that oh yeah because Jimmy would would sit at the end of bench and and what happens is
there's four lines in hockey and you go every minute. But coaches get caught up.
There's a penalty, there's a power play, and they shift guys.
And so you better be really good to be at the end of the bench
so the coach is looking for you.
That was my thinking.
So I was like, let's sit in the middle of the bench so he sees us.
So the longer you're there, it's close. It's easy for him to tap you. When he taps you in the middle of the bench so he sees us. So the longer you're there, he's going to, it's close.
It's easy for him to tap you.
When he taps you in the back, you just jump.
So I'd be like, Jimmy, let's stay in the middle of the bench.
So like we might get an extra shift every game.
That was my idea.
He would just look at me like, you're nuts.
I'm like, yeah, yeah.
We might score goals with an extra shift.
And it worked.
It did.
It worked.
Like the coach would just,
like he'd see us,
we were going on a good game and we were always in the middle of the bench.
So he would just tap our back and we'd go.
Thanks for listening to part one
of my amazing conversation with Luke Robitaille,
one of the greatest hockey players
in the history of the NHL
and the president of the Los Angeles Kings.
Be sure to tune in next week
to part two of my awesome conversation with Luke.