ON THIS DAY: January 24, 2006, Mario Lemieux announces second retirement from NHL play
By Matt Simmons
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — Mario Lemieux announced his second and final retirement as a professional hockey player at the age of 40, on Jan. 24, 2006.
Lemieux mounted a successful comeback as an owner-player in the National Hockey League in 2000, after three years in retirement. In the meantime, he had become the majority owner of the team by leveraging his unpaid salary into equity and saving the team from bankruptcy.
The team won back-to-back Stanley Cups in the 1991 and 1992 seasons. The road from laughing-stock team to champions was largely attributable to Lemieux, and the team’s chances at a three-peat were shattered when he announced in early 1993 that he had been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
As he battled cancer, he founded the Mario Lemieux Foundation, which has raised and donated more than $30 million to cancer research and patient care initiatives since its inception.
After a season and a half off, Lemieux returned to the Penguins on the day he completed his last radiation treatment, flying straight to Philadelphia where he received a standing ovation from the usually hostile Flyers’ fans when he took the ice.
Penguins coach Eddie Johnston was asked what Lemieux’s return meant to the team. He looked skyward, made the sign of the cross and said, “I thank God for him every day.”