In honor of his late son, Derek Boogaard's father, Len, and his wife, Jody Vail, purchased four Ottawa Senators season tickets and donated them to four military bases in Ottawa.
Each game (44 in all) during a TV timeout, four soldiers that have returned from deployment are honored. During the preseason, it was never announced that the tickets were actually coming from the Boogaards, so if you're an Ottawa fan coming to the games, from now on, you do.
"Derek really got heavily involved in helping the military, and he had talked to me about once he was done playing hockey wanting to participate in the military," said Len Boogaard, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer based in Ottawa. "It seemed to give him a real sense of purpose. I hadn't seen him get so excited about something until he got involved with the military and National Guard with Burnzie [Brent Burns] and Shane Hudella [of Defending the Blue Line]."
Len Boogaard is still painfully grieving the loss of his son. He hasn't worked since Derek died May 13 of a toxic mix of painkillers and alcohol. He said this is another way to preserve his son's memory.
"In light of how people are harping how he died, it's a special way to show people there was more to Derek than that," Len Boogaard said.
Ryan Boogaard, an RCMP officer based in northern Saskatchewan, said, doing this in Derek's memory is something that has really excited his father.
"My dad loves the military and while we were growing up, he always watched military movies, documentaries, read military type novels and took us to the air force base in Moose Jaw to see the annual air shows when we were kids. He is a hard guy to buy for when it came to Christmas, birthday's and Father's Day, but I could never go wrong if I bought him something with the military in it, for example a DVD box set.
"After Derek's passing, Shane Hudella and one of Derek's friends drove to Regina for the service. He gave our family an American flag that was in a glass case with an inscription that it had been flown in the recent Iraqi war and it was dedicated to Derek. ... There was no doubt that my dad was going to be taking it back with him and he is very proud of it."