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Hall of Fame goalie Roberto Luongo honoured to be recognized by Vancouver Canucks

Dec 1, 2022 | 2:58 PM

VANCOUVER — Roberto Luongo knows there’ll be a lot of emotions when he takes the ice in Vancouver Thursday night. 

After all, Rogers Arena has long held a special place for the former Canucks goalie. 

It’s the rink where he backstopped Team Canada to Olympic gold in 2010 and the spot where he and his Canucks teammates experienced heartbreak in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final in 2011.

Those are among the moments Luongo will be thinking of when he’s honoured Thursday in a ceremony ahead of a tilt between Vancouver and the Florida Panthers. His former teammates, Daniel and Henrik Sedin, will also be recognized after all three were inducted to the Hockey Hall of Fame last month. 

“Those playoff runs, those were the best moments of my career,” Luongo told reporters. “So I want to be able to kind of relive them a little bit here, the next little while and take it in and thank the fans for everything. I think it’s a nice way to cap it all off.”

It won’t be the last time the 43-year-old Montreal native is recognized before a Vancouver crowd. The Canucks announced Wednesday that he’ll join the team’s Ring of Honour next season. 

“It’s a great honour. I’m really excited about it,” said Luongo, who now serves as Florida’s director of goaltending and as a special adviser to general manager Bill Zito. “It’s nice to see that the work that I put in here for eight years is going to get recognized and I’m very grateful to be able to go up there with those guys.”

Originally drafted fourth overall by the New York Islanders in 1997, Luongo spent eight seasons with the Canucks, leading the team to the Stanley Cup finals in 2010-11.

During his time in Vancouver, the team made the playoffs five seasons in a row. It was a special group that made that run, the netminder said. 

“It was unbelievable,” he said. “And sometimes when you’re in it, you don’t kind of realize it. But then you move on, you play for other teams, teams change. And now that you look back, it’s like you realize how special the group was and it was a unique group, right? 

“We had different types of personalities in the locker room. And I think that’s what made us so good.”

Luongo closed out his career with the Panthers, spending five seasons in Florida’s crease before announcing his retirement after the 2019-19 season.

He remains the Canucks’ franchise leader in wins (252) and shutouts (38), and tops the list in save percentage (. 919) and goals-against average (2.36) among goalies who played at least 100 games. 

That success has prompted many in Vancouver to muse about whether his jersey should be retired — a decision Luongo said is out of his control.

“That’s not up to me to decide, right? But either way, it’s a tremendous honour. And I’m very grateful to be honoured anyway,” he said. “So I was happy when I got the call yesterday, and I’m looking forward to next season.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 1, 2022.

Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press

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