While Friday’s NHL trade-deadline day represented the last chance for teams to bring in outside help before the playoffs begin next month, for former goaltender turned broadcaster Kevin Weekes, it was a day much like any other – which is to say extremely busy.
From training camp through to the Stanley Cup final, the self-described “busiest man in the game” is a relentless hockey-content machine, breaking trades, providing game analysis and generally bringing his expertise – gleaned from a 348-game NHL career – to ESPN, TSN and the NHL Network. And when the 48-year-old – who broke a broadcasting barrier by becoming the sport’s first Black analyst in 2009 – is not in front of the camera, he’s focusing on his other business ventures, including real estate and his own media advisory/consulting company.
Are you busier as a broadcaster than you were as a player?
When I was playing, it was 24/7. And now that I’m broadcasting, it’s, I don’t know, can we say 48/7? Literally. It’s a lot just because it’s a 24-hour business, sports, right? I’m on the air I think probably more than any hockey analyst in the world. It’s like 200-plus days, cramped into an NHL season on multiple platforms on multiple networks. So that’s an emphatic yes. I’m much busier than when I played if that’s possible.
Who are your heroes in real life?
I start with my parents, both my mom and dad emigrating from beautiful Barbados to come to Toronto, and then being open minded enough and so supportive of my sister and I for us to chase our dreams and being open minded for me to play hockey and chase that dream. Just a lot of selflessness that way and then in my case playing elite-level youth hockey since I was eight. If you live in Toronto you know the traffic, and I don’t care what anybody says, the traffic was crazy since I grew up ‘til present time. So for my parents to make those sacrifices driving to the rink, getting me new equipment, tournament fees, whatever, drive all over the city, this rink, that rink, that game. It’s just so much. So them, No. 1.