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Facebooking Jiri Bubla

imageI have a confession to make: I’ve become a bit of a Facebook-whore lately. (Not to mention Twitter and various other web 2.0 apps that make me either (1) geeky, or (2) simply a jackass). 

But I’ve been personally conflicted about the whole thing. I’m not the biggest fan of social-networking really, and a friend just asked me the very question I’ve been asking myself lately: “Does anyone really know what the point of Facebook happens to be (other than being an ass, which I was able to do fine before signing up)?”

Excellent question. I was stumped for a while, and then The Light Dawned: The Church of Bubla. (If that link doesn’t work, don’t blame me. You need to get a free Facebook account of your own to check it out. Annoying, I know).

So, yeah, I actually created a Facebook group dedicated to Jiri Bubla. And now Facebook finally has A Higher Purpose for me. 

Sure, there’s only 7 members so far, but the group is only 24 hours old.  Soon we’ll be 1000s strong!  And let’s face it: no one was EVER going to properly step in and remember Jiri Bubla if I didn’t take matters into my own hands. (He’s the only European member of the Canucks Alumni squad, for godsakes, and lives in Tsawassen, BC, to this day).

Note: If you want to be my “friend” or (more importantly) to join the “Church of Bubla”, you can find me on Facebook by searching for “Alanah McGinley” where you’ll eventually find me listed - confusingly—as “Alanah McGinley-Downie.”  (Or just search for “Jiri Bubla.” Believe me, it’s the ONLY group listed!)

Go Bubla! 

(Geezus, I love saying his name.  I recommend saying it three times fast for maximum effect).

Here’s an article from Tony Gallagher of The Province from a few years ago, about Bubla & Son (Jiri Slegr, for those of you who didn’t realize).

  There were times in his life when Jiri Slegr probably never much cared whether he ever saw his father Jiri Bubla.

  But there they were last Sunday night here quietly having dinner together, the Vancouver Canucks newest defenceman and a man once generally considered to be the best defenceman in the world together again, and it was a heartwarming sight.

  The two were separated when Slegr was a young boy in Czechoslovakia, Bubla and his wife splitting up with the now 54-year-old former Canuck essentially losing contact with his son while his life took all sorts of twists and turns in hockey before he retired in ‘86, probably three years too early.

  Married again with two boys, John and Steve, from his second marriage, Bubla seemed to lose his way even further after hockey, falling in with the wrong crowd and eventually serving five years in an Austrian prison for heroin smuggling.

  Afterwards he was able to return to Canada thanks to some help from Pat Quinn and the Canucks at the time and since then he has put his life back together wonderfully well.

  He owns Tofino Transport, a trucking company he shares with Raoul Parara and says he’s a happy man to have a relationship now with his first son, Jiri, who also happens to be very good friends with his two half brothers.

  “I’m very happy and proud of all my boys,” says Bubla, who encouraged Slegr to give the NHL a shot again despite the fact he would make more money in Russia. “Hockey is good over there, but this is the best. I told him if he plays well here and there is no lockout, he could be in good shape. If there is a problem, he can go back.”

  Slegr speaks three languages, including Russian, and as well as taking young Kirill Kotsov as much under his wing as the youngster is willing to go, he also found some time to talk about his often difficult relationship with his dad.

  Difficult childhood

  It wasn’t easy for him growing up, the fact he’s been as forgiving as he is, a stirring tribute to the way his mother and stepfather raised him.

  “I took the name Slegr when I was 10-years-old because when I was living with my mother and stepdad, all the time everyone was Slegr and I was Bubla,” he says. “And really my father wasn’t a part of my life at all. I maybe heard from him three times all the time I was growing up. No birthday cards, nothing, and it was tough.

  “At that point I didn’t want to have anything to do with him. It was tough too because I used to play with Ivan Hlinka’s son and all this time he was a great hockey player, I would hear his stories of what his dad and my dad were doing together, but I would hear nothing from him.”

  When his dad went to prison, it brought a whole new level of suffering for young Slegr.

  “People were really not very nice to you,” he says, mastering the understatement. “When I would be on the ice the other team would ask me if I took bread to my father while he was in there. And there was lots of other stuff. It was not very pleasurable, but you have to move on. My stepdad was a big help to me at that time.”

  Slegr didn’t really get on speaking terms with his father until his first tour as a Canuck in ‘91 after Bubla had returned from prison and was working for his wife’s cleaning company which had the contract for the Pacific Coliseum.

  “They came to me in the dressing room and said ‘your father is right outside’ and I said ‘really?’

  “We saw each other and we started talking and now things are really good between us. I have to say my father now is making all the steps and all the effort so he’s trying to make up for earlier.”

  Hardships behind him

  As a result Slegr is not only healthier mentally these days, his physical ailments (back, knee and hernia) are all behind him. So if you see a return to his ‘98 gold-medal winning Olympic form when he was essentially the best defenceman at Nagano, you’ll know why.

  Some of it is in the genes.

  “I was on three Olympic teams, but ‘76 was my best year, I guess,” says Bubla, who played here with Marc Crawford and tells some of the best Bill LaForge stories.

  “We were second in the Olympics in February, won the world championships in April and then got to the final of the Canada Cup in September.”

  Bubla’s last Olympic appearance was 1980 and he joined the Canucks with Hlinka as the first two players officially released from an eastern bloc country, in part because of the work behind the scenes by the Griffiths family.

  It turned out Vancouver was the place father and son were first reunited.

  With luck, it will be the place they will live happily ever after.

Filed in: dumb stuff, vancouver canucks | Canucks and Beyond | Permalink
 

Comments

Avatar

It should be noted that the CoB is already up to nine members. We’re one of the fastest-growing groups on Facebook, I bet.

Posted by Greg from Atlanta on 07/29/07 at 05:11 PM ET

Alanah McGinley's avatar

Indeed. I think there’s no question that it’s destined to be an internet sensation.

Posted by Alanah McGinley from British Columbia on 07/29/07 at 05:19 PM ET

Avatar

Yeah, I got Facebook a couple of months back.  I’m still lost as to the point of it all as well, but it’s there, and occasionally mildly entertaining.  More than anything, I just wanted to find out what my old high school classmates were up to, since it’s now been seven years since graduation.  (Side note: seeing half the classmates you find are now married and/or with children really makes it clear just how long seven years is.)

Are you in Eric’s Hockey Blogger FB group?  If not, you might as well hop in there.  All the people you’d expect are there, though most aren’t horribly active since…you know, off-season.

Posted by Doogie2K from Calgary (spits) on 07/30/07 at 11:44 AM ET

Alanah McGinley's avatar

Hi Doogie. I’ve been out of highschool far longer than 7 years. Imagine MY trauma at such things!

And yes, I’m in the Hockey Blogger group (actually the reason I decided to sign up, finally). Thanks for mentioning it though.

Posted by Alanah McGinley from British Columbia on 07/30/07 at 06:54 PM ET

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About Canucks & Beyond

Alanah McGinley has been blogging hockey since 2003 (with a notable gap in time through 2010, kicking it with new baby Lucy while living knee-deep in chaos while reading “parenting for complete idiots” during every spare minute) sharing opinions, rants and not-so-deep thoughts with anyone who will listen. 

In addition to writing Canucks & Beyond and helping manage Kukla’s Korner, Alanah was one of the founders and co-hosts of The Crazy Canucks Podcast.  She has contributed pieces to FoxSports.com and the New York Times Slapshot blog, as well as other stray destinations in cyberspace.

So that’s me. Who the hell are you? smile


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