MONTREAL — Former teammates joined hundreds of fans and Quebec's premier at the Bell Centre on Sunday to pay tribute to Jean Beliveau, one of the greatest Montreal Canadiens players.
Beliveau, who died Tuesday at 83 after a long illness, lay in a closed casket at center ice. Fans stopped briefly to give their sympathies to Beliveau's wife, Elise — who shook every hand that passed — as well as his daughter and granddaughters Magalie and Mylene.
The casket lay between two giant posters of Beliveau in his prime as an imposing center on the powerhouse Canadiens teams of the 1950s and 1960s. Also on display were the Stanley Cup and three other trophies he won — Hart (MVP), Art Ross (scoring) and Conn Smythe (playoff MVP).
Fans began lining up in the early morning in frigid weather for the public viewing, the first for a Canadiens player since Maurice "Rocket" Richard died in 2000. Many were dressed in the Canadiens' red, white and blue jersey.
"It was wonderful," said former teammate Dickie Moore, who visited Beliveau often during his illness. "I think Jean would love to stand up and say thank you."
Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard recalled getting the autographs of Beliveau and other Canadiens when he was a teenager.
"To me he summarizes elegance, confidence, and the image of what we would like ourselves to be," Couillard said.
Asked what he felt Beliveau's life represented, Couillard said "confidence."