
Death of a Goon Aug. 24, 1992
ON AUG. 8, 1992, police in Quebec City were called to the motel room of a 27-year-old with a history of cocaine and steroid abuse who was causing a disturbance. It took nine officers to subdue the 6'2", 238-pound man and get him into an ambulance. He died shortly after arriving at the hospital. His name was John Kordic, a minor league hockey player who just six years before had lived every Canadian kid's dream by winning a Stanley Cup, with Montreal.
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED made no mention of Kordic's passing in its next issue, but it came back with an investigative piece the following week that explored Kordic's brief and troubled life and the circumstances of his passing. It was called "Death of a Goon." Here, the principals involved with the story—the writer, Jon Scher, now an editor at ESPN.com; hockey editor Paul Fichtenbaum, now the chief content officer of The Athletic; and managing editor Mark Mulvoy, now retired—recount how SI tackled the subject and the controversy caused by the story's headline.
SCHER: I had only been covering hockey for three months. The idea was that I would go and do a reporting file for another writer. I believe it was senior editor Sandy Padwe who said to do all the reporting, but instead of sending them a file, just write the story myself. And so I did.
Kordic made little impact as a player, scoring just 17 goals and 35 points in seven seasons for the Canadiens, Maple Leafs, Capitals and Nordiques. He did, however, have 997 penalty minutes.
SCHER: It's an old story in the NHL: He wanted to be a skater and a scorer, but he wasn't good enough. But he was good with his fists. John's family members believed that part of the reason why he spiraled into alcoholism, depression and drug use was that he was disappointed in himself in part because he portrayed himself and behaved like a goon.
FICHTENBAUM: Everybody had a story about John Kordic. He had demons, and everybody knew it.
The story got attention for reporting that Kordic had told a friend that a Canadiens coach had once witnessed him doing cocaine and had done nothing about it.
SCHER: Today I would have had to defend that on eight different forms of social media. It was a bit of a window into the dark side of the NHL. Everyone was amazingly willing to talk. I started with the motel room, where the incident that led to his death had taken place. I tracked down his fiancée, who was a former nude dancer living in Quebec. Eventually I even flew with his family back to Edmonton.
No one could remember who wrote the headline, but it became the aspect of the story that caused the most regret.
SCHER: I promised the family that I'd do a fair accounting of what happened to John. I believe we did that. When the story came out, I got a call from John's sister, who was devastated by the headline. When I think back, what is most vivid to me is how upset she was by that. I don't think it was wrong, but I wish there had been more sensitivity.
MULVOY: The word goon bothered people, but that's what he was.
FICHTENBAUM:Goon has negative connotations, and given the loss of life, in retrospect it was not an appropriate headline. If I had to do it again, I'd have fought hard to have a different headline.
SCHER: You get into the business to work on stories that matter. This tapped into an aspect of the NHL that a lot of people didn't realize. We were able to shine a light on that. I was proud of the work, but I was always aware that this was a tragedy, somebody's brother, son, fiancé that they tried to save but couldn't.
"When the story came out, I got a call from John's sister, who was devastated by the headline," says Scher. "What is most vivid to me is how upset she was by that."