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Collin McKinney Sees Life Through Hockey [Part II]


[Miss Part I? Click here.]

What kind of job does a suddenly blind-in-the-middle-of-his-life man perform? For two years Collin McKinney didn’t see anything at all. Eventually, he could see out of his left eye an area “about the size of a 50-cent piece.” His medical remedies more or less exhausted, McKinney contacted the Virginia Department of the Blind and Visually Impaired. The work options offered him there -- “moving paperclips” was how he described the meager administrative listings -- were a poor fit for his broad and varied educational background and work experience.

But back in his Fairfax neighborhood, McKinney had developed an affinity for taking care of dogs belonging to his neighbors. He’d walk them during business hours, care for them during neighbors' vacations. He developed a reputation for being something of a “dog whisperer,” effectively training unruly canine rascals on his block. Dogs and a blind man, working well together. Who knew?

Post- NHL lockout, and now fairly a fixture at Caps’ games, McKinney was enjoying himself and the friends he was making from the experience. Except for one set of fans: Buffalo’s.

“Buffalo fans are the worst,” McKinney told me. “They actually stole my blind stick one time from me at a game.”

Now you’re certainly reacting as I did as those words arrived on my ear -- Buffalo Sabres’ fans . . . did . . . what?

It was two seasons ago, during the final game of the 2006-07 campaign, at Verizon Center, the one that was sold out, lamentably largely due to wave after wave of belligerent Buffaloan.

“Thank God I could see a little bit, because they decided to play keep away with my stick, and I managed to grab it back, which surprised them, I think,” McKinney related. “I couldn’t believe people would do that. They were so obnoxious and so foul-mouthed.”

As shocking as this story is, having been in Verizon Center that day (Washington’s hockey bloggers hosted an end-of-season party at the Chinatown Clyde’s after the game), I look back and think that something like this monstrosity was entirely plausible amid so large an ornery and inebriated set of visiting fans. Not all Buffalo fans in Verizon Center behaved badly that day, of course, but a striking and surly subset most certainly did.

“Collin,” I told my dinner partner, “there really was something about that day that was distinctive in a very bad way. A lot of people had a bad experience that day, although what you describe is off the charts -- sub-human, really. Our team was lousy, theirs was in first [place], and the scene was just unruly and altogether unpleasant.”

Wanted: One Hockey-Loving Ocularist

In early 2008, as Collin McKinney grappled with the reality of having his right eye removed and replaced with a prosthetic, his “twisted" sense of humor set upon a novel idea. He was fitted with a standard prosthetic eye, but he again wanted to summon his passion for hockey to help alleviate his trauma. He had been in contact with an area ocularist to try and get the Capitals’ logo etched on a second prosthetic eye. In other words, when you looked Collin McKinney in his replacement eye, he wanted you to see his passion. But first he needed the team’s permission.

“I have a twisted sense of humor,” he told me. “If something horrible like this is going to happen to you, you better have a sense of humor about it at some point, because if you can’t laugh, you end up sitting around doing nothing, wasting away.”

“I just thought it would be funny and cool, ‘cause it kinda shows what I’m into.

“I don’t get tattoos,” he added with a laugh.

McKinney wrote Capitals’ owner Ted Leonsis, seeking permission to use the team’s trademarked logo on a prosthetic eye. He sent the owner his request in a letter. And the owner replied.

“‘Wow,’ I think was his very first reaction,” McKinney noted. “‘You really want to do this?’”

“I think he thought I was a kook at first,” McKinney said with a laugh.

The request, McKinney pointed out, required more than just the owner’s blessing -- that of lawyers, as you might imagine. Capitals’ attorneys were consulted, but also ones from the NHL’s league offices. Ultimately, McKinney got the team’s permission, and that of the league. He also received an invitation from Leonsis to take in a game in the owner’s box, where he could model his passion-prosthetic.

Now comes the hard part. The personalized prosthetic comes with a $3,000 sticker price. McKinney, an early recipient of Social Security due to his disability, subsists on $12,000 annually and some additional, modest money from helping out his Fairfax neighbors by walking their dogs and performing odd jobs.

“There’s no way I can afford that,” McKinney noted. “But now I know that there’s an ocularist in town who’ll do it. That’s what is important to me. If he had turned me down I had already Googled the entire country for others [ocularists]. I’d have contacted every one of them. It’s not something I’m going to give up on.”

At this point I wanted to reach into my back pocket, pull out my fraying black leather wallet, open it and turn it upside down and empty out all of its contents in this cause. Problem there is that that wouldn’t have purchased McKinney a temporary tattoo.

“Things are thrown your way in life,” Collin McKinney told me over our final sips of Monday night beer. “You just have to find a way to move on.

“This idea I have for ultimately winning over  . . .  getting the better of, my misfortune, it’ll happen one day. I believe that.”

In my nearly 35 years as a Caps’ fan I thought I had terrific reason on top of terrific reason to support this city’s pro hockey team, and to champion its cause. Over the years it had hockey heroes -- Rod Langway, Dale Hunter, Olie Kolzig, Peter Bondra, now Alexander Ovechkin -- wear its sweater. It had endured, in searing and endearing fashion, a brush with death, a thrilling run to a Stanley Cup finals, a sale to a hockey-town-constructing-committed owner. And the drafting of a franchise-altering and anchoring talent. But in September 2008 I found the best possible reason yet to be a Caps’ fan: Collin McKinney wears our team’s colors, and life can’t attack his hockey heart. There's a life-long, no-trade clause in Collin McKinney's allegiance to the Caps. He belongs to us.

BallHype: hype it up!


Discussion

11 Comments on "Collin McKinney Sees Life Through Hockey [Part II]"

#1

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Posted by I Rock the Red, October 7, 2008 2:14 PM

This guy is just awesome! :)

He has a great sense of humor, takes his lot in life, and runs with it. He's an inspiration to those who have lost their sight, and to those who have not as well. If everyone took life in stride the way Collin McKinney does, the world would be a better place.

The a**hattery displayed by the Sabres fans is abysmal; glad to hear he got some of his own back and caught the stick, 'cause that had to have them dropping their teeth. Whattabuncha!

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#2

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Posted by Dezlboy, October 7, 2008 3:00 PM

Is it possible to set up a link to Paypal to donate for Collin's eye inscription? Checks to a PO Box, etc? Maybe each local CAPS blog would participate?

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#3

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Posted by pucksandbooks, October 7, 2008 3:23 PM

The sentiments targeting support for Collin's dream don't surprise me in the least from this fanbase. I confess, I don't know how best to marshall them into a durable movement. The end goal is quite significant, but then again, it's also true that readers here and of other Caps' blogs responded to a single fundraiser for Wilson High hockey to the tune of more than $3,000. Here in the opening hours of informing you of this special man, I wonder if we ought not spend the next few days and weeks trying to conceive of a season-long plan to try and help Collin out.

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#4

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Posted by Capital Spirit, October 7, 2008 4:02 PM

First off, incredible story. I wish there were more I were capable of saying here, but words fail. Thank you--this was special.

If such a fund were set up--and this is only an idea--one could perhaps announce it as a fundraiser for Mr. McKinney's benefit, with any excess going to a charity that helps the blind live better lives. Again, just an idea.

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#5

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Posted by pepper, October 7, 2008 4:24 PM

The spirit of community amongst the fan base is one of the major reasons that I'm a Caps fan.

This story fits right into last year's game 7, and now media guide cover photo, theme "Proud to be a Caps fan."

Proud to have a man with such courage like Collin in our midst, and to have one with such heart as pucks to put in the effort to craft such a vivid story for us.

I agree that the fund should try to encompass a broader goal for the benefit of the blind, once Collin's goal is reached. I think that would make him even happier, to see his passion translate to quality of life benefits for many.

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#6

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Posted by Sombrero Guy, October 7, 2008 5:36 PM

Glad to see others had the same thought. I routinely waste $21 on beer during friday or saturday night games while sitting in section 404. It's not exactly a sacrifice to skip the beer for a game or two. If a paypal link is put up, I'd gladly donate $20, $40 whatever.

We shouldn't look at is as $3,000. We should look at it as 150 fans donating $20. I'm sure other Caps Bloggers would be happy to post the paypal link if it gets set up.

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#7

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Posted by Gustafsson, October 7, 2008 7:15 PM

Or better yet, set up a Revolution Money Exchange where all money goes to the recipient (i.e. no fees).

Revolution Money Exchange

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#8

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Posted by Sombrero Guy, October 7, 2008 7:53 PM

Good call Gus. I gotta re train my thinkin.

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#9

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Posted by DC Sports Chick, October 7, 2008 10:15 PM

Buffalo fans are the lowest of the low. I knew they were despicable, but that's even worse than I thought they could be. To go back to the ref insults post and quote Philly fans, "I hope they die in a fire."

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#10

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Posted by Whiter Mage, October 8, 2008 6:35 AM

I would like Mr. McKinney to know he's not alone.

I've been a Caps fan as long as I can remember, and this last April, I was diagnosed with an eye condition that, in the long run, basically shows the same traits as detached retinas. After two injections, my vision in my right eye is stable, and I have lost part of the vision in that eye. I will occasionally just lose bits of vision here and there until I either die or go completely blind.

When I was diagnosed, I had similar fears. My first thought was, will I be able to work? My second was if I'd be able to have a family, and my third was if I'd be able to watch hockey.

I can't play anymore, but I still watch on TV and listen to Joe and Craig. My central vision is more or less there at this point, and so between what wavy images I get and the cues from Joe B and Craig, I put it together. I'm also now very mediocre at NHL games on XBox.

This guy is an inspiration to me. I hope he can read (or hear) that he has inspired me to do what I can to be a fan and a person, and just definitely made me feel better, knowing I'm not alone.

Thanks for posting this, pucksandbooks.

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#11

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Posted by Matt, October 8, 2008 5:30 PM

Since Mr. Leonsis said in his interview that he reads this blog everyday, maybe he will read the comments about the stories as well. This was such a tragic and uplifting story at the same time, I have another reason to hate the sabres now too. It seems to me as if it would free promotion for the Capitals to pay for Mr. McKinney's licensing fees and cover whatever cost it is. In the long run, everywhere Mr. McKinney goes it's a nice advertisement. And since Mr. McKinney is such a die hard Caps fan, it just makes that much more sense that he would want to pick up the tab, since its obvious Mr. McKinney's income cannot cover such expenses. Just my two shiny Lincoln's on the subject. Thanks again guys for sharing this story, I really appreciate it.

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