Some dressed in suits, many in hockey sweaters. From young to old, they shared many laughs and a few tears. On Sunday, they all gathered at South St. Paul High School for a celebration of life for a man affectionately called "The Wooger.''
Doug Woog, the standout player and highly successful coach for both the Gophers men's hockey team and South St. Paul who died Dec. 14 at 75 after battling Parkinson's disease and other ailments, received a touching send-off. Teammates, friends, family and a former governor saluted the man with the engaging personality and a fierce loyalty to Minnesota and his hometown.
A day after the Gophers honored their coach from 1985-99 by wearing gold sweaters with "Wooger'' on every player's nameplate during the Mariucci Classic, it was South St. Paul's turn to salute him. A stream of hockey community members — including former Gophers coaches Don Lucia and Brad Buetow and current coach Bob Motzko — mingled and traded memories of Woog.
Then came an informal program. Emcee Frank Mazzocco, Woog's partner on Fox Sports Net's Gophers broadcasts, said what he remembers the most is that Woog was interesting, was interested, he cared and was vulnerable.
"What I remember the second most, however,'' Mazzocco said, "is how he scrambled my brain on a regular basis every Friday and Saturday night during the hockey season on live television.''
Dave Metzen, a longtime friend since childhood in South St. Paul and teammate with the Gophers and on U.S. national teams, remembered Woog the person.
"Doug Woog, you did win the big one,'' Metzen said, referencing criticism Woog faced for not winning an NCAA championship with the Gophers. "Every person and student you ever coached, you treated with dignity and respect. That, my friend, is winning the big one in life.''
More than hockey
Metzen also raved about Woog's versatility as a coach. When South St. Paul began a soccer program, Woog was the coach even though he had no experience coaching the sport. Woog bought a book about coaching soccer, and five years later, the Packers were in the state championship game, "in spite of having Timmy Pawlenty on the team,'' Metzen said, drawing laughter.