“I live on a really steep hill,” he said. “And I’m sick and tired of beating myself up trying to ride up it on a mountain bike.”
Hughson and his wife, Denise, have a home in the Okanagan Valley, in southern British Columbia, and it was shaping up to be another beautiful day on Tuesday. It was also the first day of Hughson’s life off the air, as he announced he’s leaving the microphone behind after more than 40 years in the business.
He still has the official scorer’s sheet from his first NHL game. It is handwritten, from a night in 1979, when the Canucks visited the Montreal Forum to play the Canadiens. Between that game and his first morning as a retiree, Hughson had been honoured for his work by the Hockey Hall of Fame, and had been named the best play-by-play voice four times at the Canadian Screen Awards.
“This is not a sad decision at all,” he said. “This is a very, very positive move for me. Because I’ve had just a fantastic time.”
The industry was changing, he said, and coupled with the COVID restrictions and protocols, it seemed like the right time to leave. Hughson, 64, also said there were “family considerations” in leaving his job at “Hockey Night in Canada.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMimQFodHRwczovL3RoZWF0aGxldGljLmNvbS8yODQwNzg1LzIwMjEvMDkvMjEvd2h5LWppbS1odWdoc29uLWlzLWxlYXZpbmctaGlzLXNlYXQtb24taG9ja2V5LW5pZ2h0LWluLWNhbmFkYS1pbS1qdXN0LWdvaW5nLXRvLWJlLW9uLXRoZS1vdGhlci1zaWRlLW9mLXRoZS10di_SAZ0BaHR0cHM6Ly90aGVhdGhsZXRpYy5jb20vMjg0MDc4NS8yMDIxLzA5LzIxL3doeS1qaW0taHVnaHNvbi1pcy1sZWF2aW5nLWhpcy1zZWF0LW9uLWhvY2tleS1uaWdodC1pbi1jYW5hZGEtaW0tanVzdC1nb2luZy10by1iZS1vbi10aGUtb3RoZXItc2lkZS1vZi10aGUtdHYvP2FtcA?oc=5
2021-09-22 00:02:56Z
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