Living the dream with Winnipeg’s Scott Oake
Advertisement
Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 24/07/2013 (4694 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Canada’s first televised hockey game was broadcast by the CBC from Montreal on Oct. 11, 1952.
After 60 seasons of Hockey Night in Canada (HNIC), many different faces have brought viewers the story of our national game on television. Winnipeg sports broadcaster Scott Oake was destined to become one of them.
Oake grew up in Sydney, N.S., listening on Saturday evenings to Danny Gallivan describe the Montreal Canadiens games across Eastern Canada in colourful language. Gallivan also lived in Sydney.
“I wondered how he talked like that as it was very descriptive,” Oake said. “I thought how great it would be to have that kind of job.”
The Oake family moved to St. John’s, N.L., when he was 14 and, while attending Memorial University, he began working at the school radio station. When a summer relief job came open at CBC, he applied.
“After two weeks, I hadn’t heard anything, so I called the station,” Oake said. “They said I was the only person to apply, so I had the job and worked there for two summers.”
Oake was hired full time by the station’s sports director, Howie Meeker, who was busy working as an analyst on the national broadcasts.
In 1975, Oake moved to Winnipeg to work on CBWT sports.
When the Winnipeg Jets entered the NHL in 1979-80, Oake began doing reports and features. He continued to do local sports while his work on HNIC and the network expanded. Eventually HNIC became his major role.
He is now the host/reporter for the Saturday night late game broadcast from the west. The post-game show, After Hours, which he and Kevin Weekes host, has become a favourite of his.
“Not only do you get a reaction to the game from the player who is the guest, but you hear great stories and get to tell the viewers more about what he is like,” Oake said.
During the Stanley Cup final, Oake conducted end-of-period and post-game interviews with players. Talking to them just before and after the Stanley Cup is presented has become another highlight.
“That’s when they really speak from the heart and the words come spilling out,” he said. “Often they are celebrating with family on the ice. It’s a real slice of Canadiana.”
A versatile broadcaster, Oake has worked on more than a dozen Olympic and Pan-Am Games and expects to be at the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia next February. Downhill skiing is one of his specialities, so that’s a likely assignment.
Memories of Sport will appear every second week in the Canstar Community News weeklies. Contact Kent Morgan at toastandcoffee@canstarnews.com or phone 204-489-6641.
T. Kent Morgan
Memories of Sport
Memories of Sport appears every second week in the Canstar Community News weeklies. Kent Morgan can be contacted at 204-489-6641 or email: sportsmemories@canstarnews.com
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

