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Farewell to a First-Class Hockey Father

by | Feb 25, 2011 | Uncategorized | 0 comments

February 25, 2011

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Whenever I talk to a high school
coach who quit, they always say the kids were great, but the parents
drove them crazy. Doesn’t matter what sport.  

But when I coached the Ann
Arbor Huron high school hockey team, I was lucky. Yes, getting
to know the players was the best part, and now, seven years after I
stepped down, I’m going to their weddings. What I didn’t expect,
though, was becoming lifelong friends with their parents, too.  

The team we took over hadn’t
won many games, but after we had a decent first season, three hot shots
showed up at our door. They had all been coached by Fred Fragner,
who once played for the Junior Red Wings.  

Whenever these boys blew a
great scoring chance, or received a bad call or got whacked with a stick,
Fred always told them, with a grin, “Three words: Be a man.” 
By the time they came to Huron, all three were just that.   

Fred’s son, Chris, had more
talent than I could have hoped for. Even better, no one worked
harder, which solves a lot of problems if you’re the coach. 
He got that from his father. The only real differences between
them were matters of style, not substance.  Fred’s character,
was Chris’s character.  

Another problem we didn’t
have was Fred Fragner butting his nose into our business. He was
a much better player than I ever was, and he did a great job coaching
our fall conditioning team, but he left us alone each winter, which
is a great gift for any coach.  He never had a bad word for anyone
– with the possible exception of a few referees, who, I must say,
richly deserved it.  Fred Fragner knew a rotten ref when he saw
one.  

Chris had become so good his
senior year, only one guy could keep him from being named the state’s
top player – me. Other coaches would have played Chris in big
blow-outs to pad his stats, but I never did – and Chris never complained. 
Neither did his parents. Those of you who’ve coached kids sports
can appreciate what a gift that is, too.  

It was only after I stepped
down that a friend of mine pointed out what great families we had on
our team.  I hadn’t considered that as a separate factor before,
but I soon realized that was the foundation of everything we had accomplished
– and Fred Fragner was smack-dab in the middle of it all.     

After Chris graduated, he became
the first player from our high school to make Michigan’s team in two
decades.  He didn’t play much, but he never complained. 
Now he’s using his business degree to pursue a career in finance,
and playing with washed-up skaters like me on Tuesday nights.  

Along the way, I’d become
close friends with all the Fragners, and especially Fred, who always
flashed his big rack of white teeth whenever he let loose his booming
laugh. I saw that rack of white teeth and heard that laugh for the last
time on Monday.  After a year-long battle with an aggressive form
of cancer, Fred Fragner took his last breath that night.  

He was a great husband to Patty,
his wife of 37 years, a great father to his daughter Jessi and to Chris,
and a great friend to many more, including me.

The year had been filled with
physical pain and heartbreaking setbacks, but I never heard Fred complain. He savored everything he could – including the weddings of his two
children last year. Faced with a diagnosis he knew was bad news,
he followed the advice he had so often given to his son.  “Three
words: Be a man.”

Fred Fragner was a man –
one of the best I have ever known. 



Copyright© 2011, Michigan Radio

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