June 6, 2003
Number 22 is number one with Nunavummiut
Jordin Tootoo becomes
first Inuk signed to NHL team
KIRSTEN MURPHY
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Jordin Tootoo with
a bobblehead replica of himself. On May 29, he became the first Inuk to sign
a contract with an NHL team. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Nunavut's hockey hero, Jordin Tootoo, 20, signed a three-year contract with
the NHL's Nashville Predators on May 29, making him the first Inuk to play professional
hockey.
The call came while the former Rankin Inlet resident was in Iqaluit on a trans-Northern
speaking tour aimed at youth.
"It couldn't have happened in a better place. I'm in the capital of Nunavut,
I'm a Nunavut-born player," said No. 22 with the Brandon Wheat Kings. "It's
an honour to be the first [Inuk player]. At the same time I know there are lots
of talented kids up here who, if they put there mind to it, can attain their
goals. I'm trying to pave the way for aboriginal youth."
He walked a diplomatic line when asked about being a Canadian playing on an
American team.
"I believed in being drafted to an expansion team and I can't think of
a better place to be drafted to," he said.
Tootoo first laced up his skates as a child in Rankin Inlet.
He played peewee Hockey for the Young Bulls in Fort Providence, Northwest Territories
in 1995 at the age of 12. He played for Canada's national under-18 hockey team
in 2000. He was a fourth-round pick for the NHL in 2001, when he was selected
for the Predators.
The hard-hitting, goal-hungry right-winger spent the last two years preparing
for his transition to professional hockey with the Brandon Wheat Kings in the
Junior A Western Hockey League.
His athletic accomplishments earned him a National Aboriginal Achievement Award
in 2002.
Training with Predator teammates starts this summer. Pre-season games begin
in the fall. Tootoo declined to disclose his salary.
"The deal is done, but I don't want to talk figures. I'm happy. I got
what I asked for and I'm honoured that [the managers] believe in me. I'm going
to do whatever it takes to crack the line-up. This is one of the many milestones
I've achieved, and there are bigger and better things to come," Tootoo
said.
Already a household name in Nunavut, the 5-foot 8-inch forward won the hearts
of Canadians in January while playing for Team Canada at the World Junior Championship.
The team brought home a silver medal.
Adding to Tootoo's popularity are products sporting his name, including clothing,
hockey pucks and bobblehead dolls.
"It's supposed to look like me but he needs a tanning bed. He's a little
pale," he said of his miniature lookalike.
Tootoo grew up playing hockey with his older brother Terence. The two were
training in Brandon last September when Terence, apparently distraught over
an impaired driving charge, killed himself.
"I know he's up there looking down on me, giving me a high-five. This
is what he'd love to become one day, a pro player," Tootoo said.
Tootoo will be based in Nashville home of the Country Music Hall of
Fame and anything barbequed.
While in Iqaluit last week, Tootoo, the official spokesperson for the NorTerra
Group of Companies, visited schools and encouraged students to stay in school
and follow their dreams.
Students in turn questioned Tootoo about his hobbies (hunting and camping),
his favourite colour (blue), his favourite animal (polar bear) and his second
choice for a team number.
"Fifty-five. You know why? Because it's 22 backwards when you look in
a mirror," he told Nakasuk school students.
Premier Paul Okalik signed Tootoo as an "official role model" for
the Government of Nunavut's poster campaign. The poster is due out this summer.
After stopping in Rankin Inlet and Yellowknife, Tootoo will head to Nashville.
He said it's too soon to say when he'll be back but added, "there is always
time for home."
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