The Dominator - Canadian Writers Group
Transcription
The Dominator - Canadian Writers Group
Sports The alleged affair, the apoplectic wife, the ridiculed attempt to become a TV commentator. It’s been a miserable year for Tie Domi. Story of my life, he says. Next question By Lynn Crosbie The Dominator “IT’S TIE. WHO DID YOU TALK TO? What did they say?” In the course of my strange, rousing encounter with Tie Domi (which began with a phone call last November and continued for four months), I would receive numerous similar calls, throughout the day or into the night, each one seeking the same things: information and reassurance. He’d ask me if I liked the “schnitzel joke” he extemporized on Win, Lose and Tie, his and James Duthie’s lively intermission segment on TSN’s Wednesday broadcasts, if I had talked to a certain hateful so-andso (any number of his detractors), or if, when the phone rang, I thought it was “a booty call.” And every time I would hear the same commixture of defiance, menace (“I will lose it if you start quoting unnamed sources”), and plaintive hope that someone, somewhere, will speak well of him. The recently retired Leafs enforcer is, ultimately, both combative and needy, a paradox that is not unusual in anyone who has ever had to fight for a living. “Will you talk about, you know, how I look?” he asked me several times, until I told him he looked all right. Which is true: he is leaner and taller than I had been led to believe (although, at five foot 10, he is small in the world of giant goons), and is firmly possessed of that ineffable quality, charisma. Domi’s allure is like a blast of Axe body spray. He is an expert flirt, but that is not his greatest talent. Given to leaning back, then forward, suddenly, in conversation, he is spectacularly adept at making one lose one’s composure. Anyone who watched Domi play understands it was the element of surprise that served him best: when he’d attack, he would smile; when nailed for a fi ght, or simply furious, he might, for example, condescendingly toss an autographed stick at the opposing team. When someone once threw a banana at the “ape,” he ate it, and when a Flyers fan heckled him in the penalty box, Domi sprayed him with his water bottle until the man lunged at the Plexiglas divider with such force that it finally gave way, sending him down into the box, where he looked remarkably like a gerbil in a cobra’s terrarium. MAY 2007 | TORONTOLIFE.COM | TORONTO LIFE 31 PHOTOGRAPH BY MACKENZIE STROH CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: Hanging tough: former Leaf Tie Domi is full of contradictions—combative yet charming, a fighter whose favourite song is Elton John’s “Candle in the Wind” AC T0507_031 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports “In the back of everybody’s mind, I’m just a tough guy,” Domi says. And no wonder. With a career total of 3,515 penalty minutes, the former star of such goon Web sites as NHL Bad Boys once began a friendly interview with the Toronto Sun’s Bill Lankhof by stating, “I don’t give people too many opportunities. I’m a pretty honest, respectful guy. If you screw me, then usually I don’t give you the chance to screw me again.” But if interviewers are nervous approaching Domi (when I was given his cell number, my contact said, “He’ll probably tell you to fuck off”), he’s just as distrustful of them. His retirement last September was eclipsed by prurient speculation about his love life. After months Lover boy: Tie of jabs, virtually every and Leanne Domi Canadian paper’s year- at a Leafs event end roundup men- in 2003; with Belinda Stronach tioned “Bel-omi” or the at a hockey game man who went “from in January 2006 enforcer to divorcer.” “Bel-omi,” of course, is a reference to Domi’s alleged love affair with Liberal MP Belinda Stronach, a story that Domi’s soonto-be ex-wife Leanne broke, while claiming he was a “bully” whose sexual misconduct also extended to Relic Hunter Tia Carrere. His once perfect hockey wife also publicly accused her husband of coming home very late at night “reeking of alcohol and smoke.” And when Domi was quickly pulled from his first TSN job as a panellist and a new role was carved out for him as a blunt commentator on Win, Lose and Tie, the move was widely characterized as a demotion until TSN started forcing retractions. All in all, it’s been a miserable year for Domi. Once considered a devout family man and a gold-hearted athlete—his charitable acts include his yearly Santa on Wheels program, the Variety Village Sport Training and Fitness Centre, and Rose Cherry’s Home—the newly retired hockey player’s career ended with fanfare of a rather unexpected sort. TIE DOMI LOOKS UNCOMFORTABLE. “You like, what, art and books and stuff?” he replies when I ask if he’s ever read Sun Tzu’s Art of War. We’re sitting at a conference table at Tie Domi Enterprises International, or TDE, located near Yonge and York Mills, across from the blue neon-signed Evan- y l l a u Virtry paper eve ntioned r me l-omi” oho “Be man w the t from o wenforcer t “en orcer” div gel Temple and an arc of sepulchral commercial buildings. The office is a mixture of art and sports: a plasma TV plays TSN continuously, a florid work of modern art dominates the adjacent wall, and Olive, the teacup poodle belonging to Domi’s loyal assistant Shelley Bunda, whirls around like she owns the place. TDE is a company that, as Bunda tersely puts it, is “the results-oriented authority in importing and exporting, distribution, corporate acquisitions and business consulting.” When pressed to describe it in more detail, Domi says, “I am an entrepreneur,” but he refuses to elaborate on what, precisely, he imports, exports or acquires. Within TDE’s high-tech confines, Domi is dressed in deceptively casual wear: impeccable jeans and a striped dress shirt. The long boardroom table is flanked by 32 TORONTO LIFE | TORONTOLIFE.COM | MAY 2007 CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: large photographs of pipework and a scarlet Russian freighter. “I like art that means something personal,” he says. Since his hockey retirement, he has focused on building his business and learning the ropes as a TV commentator. He spends one afternoon a week at TSN’s Scarborough studio, where he is slowly becoming an expert at the art of the sound bite. Both his co-host Duthie and TSN’s senior VP of programming and production, Rick Chisholm, express admiration at his willingness to learn, and surprise at the lack of attitude from the man many expected to be “the textbook hockey guy.” He plays tennis every Wednesday at the May- fair, with the club’s co-owner, Garry Zentil, who beats him on a regular basis (“I won my first game last week!” Domi exults). He also plays chess and table tennis with his 12-year-old son, Max, and surrounds himself with a coterie of friends and family; he is particularly close to his mother, Meryem, and sister, Trish, and he cites Mario Lemieux and Mats Sundin as good friends. Before meeting with me, he hammered out the legalities of the conversation: his private life is taboo, thanks in part to a mutually agreed upon court order between him and Leanne. A well-trained celebrity, he is always on message, but loosens up enough to speak with great affection about his children: about Avery (his eight-yearold daughter) and the arts and crafts she makes for him, about 13-year-old Carlin’s love of horses, about Max’s astonishing athletic talents. His children are what he values above anything, he tells me. But Domi is determined to carve out a successful second career in business, something that is proving increasingly difPHOTOGRAPHS FROM CP AC T0507_032 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports ficult in light of his personal circumstances. In court documents filed recently, he laid out how the negative press was damaging his reputation and, in turn, affecting his bottom line by jeopardizing his various endorsement contracts. According to an affidavit, Domi claims his monthly expenses total $52,000, while his monthly salary is only $18,270 after taxes and withholdings. Like many retired players, he may be struggling to maintain the lavish lifestyle afforded by a steady hockey income. HOW DOES DOMI FEEL ABOUT attracting hate, love and nothing in between? “Story of my life,” he says. This life resembles the trajectory of an errant rocket. He was born in 1969 in Windsor, Ontario, the youngest child of Albanian immigrants. (His brother, Dash, is quite a bit older, so they weren’t as close as he and his sister.) Growing up in and around Windsor, Domi excelled at virtually every sport, including soccer, baseball and football. (He claims he can still kick a 45-foot field goal “in my sleep.”) But, “like every Canadian kid,” he dreamed of hockey fame. In 1986, at age 16, he left home to play for the OHL’s Peterborough Petes, where he quickly distinguished himself as a fighter and fan favourite. He recalls that in his first game, he was surreptitiously asked to go after an infamous thug—which he did with surprising success. Shaky footage shows the very young and slight player improbably pulling his opponent to the ice and whaling on him to the delight of the fans. A pragmatist, he pressed harder at hockey after spending one summer as a teenager loading watermelons for his cousin at the Ontario Food Terminal. He realized he would have to apply himself as an athlete or risk spending the rest of his life schlepping fruit in and out of a truck. He finished high school in Peterborough, hating every subject but math and phys ed, as he lacked the ability to sit still. Well known for his muscularity, he never had to lock his locker. When asked if he was a school heartthrob, he demurs, “I was a jock, so…” (I take that as a yes.) In a 2000 documentary about Domi called What It Takes, Trish remarked that she was pleased her little brother chose sports, as she couldn’t imagine his boundless energy serving him better in any other vocation. In 1988, Domi was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs, but because of his age, he would play another year in Peterborough before joining the Leafs’ farm team CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: AC in Newmarket. A year after that, he was traded to the Rangers. It was following a game in New York 16 years ago that Domi was informed of his father’s death from heart failure at age 62. He’d collapsed while playing cards. It was a huge blow. “I think of him every day,” he says of the man he cleaved to for advice growing up, whose counsel he still misses. Not a fan of hockey fighting, John Domi would caution his son, “Just play the game, Bubby.” After New York, Domi did a three-year stint with the Winnipeg Jets, where he was as popular with fans as the then-captain, Teemu Selänne—a fact often remarked upon by the media. (“What do you want me to do?” a baffled Domi asked his detractors, “Tell the fans to stop cheering for me?”) When he returned to Toronto in 1995, the same was true here. As Don Cherry observes, on any given night, the Gardens or ACC crowds were equally decked out in Sundin and Domi jerseys. “People like to see some action,” Cherry says, in a succinct summary of the hockey violence most commentators abhor. Yet Domi was more than just a fighter. He was a talented player who, by most accounts, was the fastest skater on the team. And yet, like all perceived goons, he played T0507_034 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports mainly when there was a score to settle. In the 2002–03 season, Domi scored a careerhigh 15 goals, yet for the next two years, to Cherry’s outrage and Domi’s frustration, coach Pat Quinn rarely let him play. When Domi turned down an offer to join the Penguins two years ago—he said he didn’t want to let his Leafs teammates down—Cherry thought he was “nuts.” If he’d gone with Pittsburgh, Cherry says, “he’d still be playing today.” Leafs GM John Ferguson also speaks highly of him, citing, beyond his “pugilistic prowess,” his “remarkable stature” as a player. “He performed such a tough job for this club. He’s one of the few guys who could do it for as long as he did.” It’s a sentiment echoed by Leafs star forward Mats Sundin. Domi’s greatest contribution to the team, Sundin notes, was “looking after the marquee players,” while remaining “absolutely an on-line athlete. I miss him. He makes me laugh. He makes me cry.” Remarkably, barring her attendance at his landmark 1,000th game last March— where she stayed for only one period— Domi’s mother has never watched him play. “She sees me as her youngest child, not a player,” he says. “She sees me as her baby and doesn’t like people touching or picking on me.” As for him picking on or touching others, she doesn’t like that either. IN THE MIDST OF HIS ASCENT in the NHL, while playing with the Rangers, Domi married Leanne Coker, a Scarborough girl with Barbie doll looks. Four years older than Domi, Coker worked, at the time, in clothing sales, and the two were introduced by a mutual friend. They had three children in fairly quick succession, the last of whom, Avery Rose, is named after Don Cherry’s deceased wife, Rose. They went on to become hockey family royalty, overseeing the construction of a stone Tudor mansion on Oxbow Road and (in Leanne’s case) feeding the media loving spoonfuls of their idyllic family life. “Tie’s sweet,” she told the Toronto Sun in 2004. “He’s a lot different than people expect. He’s not loud, he’s not obnoxious. He’s got a great sense of humour, very dry, and he makes me laugh.” Nowadays, everything in Domi-land is public, and it’s pretty clear that Leanne’s no longer laughing. Every time she or her husband files court documents, the gory details are splattered across the papers. In searing one-liners, Leanne has accused Domi of lying through “a full mouth of veneers,” while her credit card—which she’d been using to cover the family’s expenses— is maxed out at $100,000. She’s filed documents that suggest Domi’s children fear him. She alleges that their daughter Carlin has been the subject of “vicious verbal attacks,” and that Max, a Triple A star, has been coached, by his father, to fight, and to be “disrespectful of [his] coach.” None of her allegations have been proven in court. Meanwhile, the Sun and National Post published grainy paparazzi-style photos of Domi kissing “a woman who resembles Belinda Stronach” outside Yorkville’s posh Minto Suites, where Domi’s wife claims he is residing under the name “Feldman.” Hockey players, in spite of appearances, are not permitted to act like rock stars. The odd scattering of teeth or blood on the ice notwithstanding, it’s a family game, and its participants are expected to live like the Osmonds, not the Osbournes. When Leanne Domi went public with Tie’s alleged infidelity, a priggish media responded as though he were televangelist Jim Bakker. Domi won’t comment on any of his wife’s accusations. He is as fearsome defending his personal life as he is shedding his gloves and talking the kind of “You’re dead” trash that led countless players to tear off their tie-downs and take him on. Still, as Don Suzy $195. One of over 20 styles exclusive to Ron White in Ontario. Bloor Manulife Centre Bayview Village Sherway Gardens Downtown Oakville Yonge & Eglinton www.RonWhite.ca CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: AC T0507_037 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports Cherry says, the media is either “at your feet or throat. They can break your heart.” He has told Domi, whom he calls “a friend for life,” the same thing. “He came up the hard way,” he says, “fighting for everything he achieved, and he will battle this out, too.” LAST OCTOBER, the Rick Mercer Report “Celebrity Tip” featured Tie Domi. As the hockey player appeared in heroic silhouette, a booming voice introduced him thusly: “A member of the NHL’s elite 1,000-game club, activist, community leader, recipient of the third most penalty minutes in NHL history, Maple Leafs icon and table decorating guru, Mr. Tie Domi.” The audience laughed, of course, at the end of this little curriculum vitae, while Domi made his way over to a perfectly set dinner table and proceeded to arrange pussy willows into a centrepiece and fold napkins into flowers. Funny though it was, the Mercer piece is not entirely ironic. In truth, Domi might be the precise person to ask if the oyster fork rests to the right or left of the napkin. Not only is he surprisingly concerned with his appearance, he is also attuned to the finer things in life. He loves good wine, gourmet food and Cuban cigars. There’s a kind of Batman/Bruce Wayne duality to the man. His favourite movie is Goodfellas, and the character he identifies most closely with is Jimmy “The Gent” Conway (played by Robert De Niro)—one of the most beloved and feared of the New York mafia, “the kind of guy who rooted for the bad guys in the movies.” And yet, the gorilla-on-skates whose athletic felonies were greeted with howls of execration (“Neanderthal!” and, naturally, “Dummy!”) cites as his favourite song Elton John’s saccharine anthem “Candle in the Wind.” Some of the people I spoke to, informally, were critical of both his skill as a player and his skill as a “player”—i.e., his membership among a moneyed elite that the average goon rarely has access to. Indeed, he’s managed to parlay his hockey fame into business friendships with the likes of Onex’s Gerry Schwartz, steel magnate Alex Shnaider, and his former boss, Leafs’ chair Larry Tanenbaum. Some characterized him as a social climber, cherry-picking illustrious associates throughout his career. The Globe and Mail’s Stephen Brunt, for example, wrote a piece last September about Domi’s retirement party at Centro, which made the hockey player look like a cavalier arriviste and claimed that he had an uncanny talent for placing himself “at the right hand of power.” There are also rumours that Domi EUROPEAN JEWELLERY E AT O N C E N T R E u YO R K D A L E u S H E R WAY G A R D E N S u T D C E N T R E u S Q UA R E O N E 416-254-1184 MAY 2007 | TORONTOLIFE.COM | TORONTO LIFE 39 CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: AC T0507_039 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports was given to waving personal e-mails from Larry Tanenbaum around the dressing room, a site he is also reported to have once, in front of his teammates, staked with the following claim: “This is my room.” During the protracted 2004–05 hockey lockout, Domi organized a formidable sitdown at Harbour Sixty Steak House with representatives of both sides of the dispute. At the table were Tanenbaum, Bill Daly, the league’s executive VP and chief legal officer, and Mario Lemieux, as well as players’ union president Trevor Linden, the union’s senior director of business affairs, Ted Saskin, and Domi himself. The lockout continued for another seven months, much to the dismay of observers, who felt the dinner provided a rare opportunity to settle the dispute. But the more salient question was how Domi had acquired enough clout to call a meeting reminiscent of the Five Family sit-down in The Godfather. By many accounts, he has a talent for making friends and influencing people that would make Dale Carnegie flush with pride. And yet, his friendship with the hockey elite is simply explained. When Domi was a Ranger, Lemieux, who was visiting New York, sought him out to get him on the guest list for the trendy China Club. Tanenbaum and Domi met at a Christmas party and bonded on the spot: “From that moment on,” says Domi, “we were family.” Why? “Maybe because I’m not an ass-kisser. But people are jealous of this stuff, even though it has no relevance to anything. Story of my life.” EUROPEAN JEWELLERY E AT O N C E N T R E u YO R K D A L E u S H E R WAY G A R D E N S u T D C E N T R E u S Q UA R E O N E 416-254-1184 Make A Grand Entrance! THE CONSTELLATION OF SCAR tissue on Domi’s face and hands is a testament to his violent past. One weal in particular, caused by a hockey stick, bisects his mouth; the cut split his lip open like a radish in water. He tells me this as we’re sitting at a table lush with lavender pansies in the Four Seasons’ Studio Café. On the way in, a phalanx of fans had interrupted him, offering good wishes and listing with awe. He greeted them pleasantly, then sat down and ordered a green tea. What fazes him isn’t the admiring attention, or the men and ladies in hats who stare and whisper. It’s the fact that I order a mimosa at 11 a.m. “I’ve never seen anyone do that before noon,” he says, as his surprisingly delicate fingers manipulate the cup’s tiny handle. He is stared at because of who he is, and because he radiates style, atypical of hockey players, who tend to gravitate to cheap leather and variations on the theme of taupe. On this day he’s again dressed casually, yet the brown velvet blazer is, on clos- with Hinkley Outdoor Lighting on Sale Now! Great homes boast great outdoor lighting. Make your home the talk of the neighbourhood with Hinkleyʼs newest styles for 2007. 1549 Avenue Road (North of Lawrence) 416.782.1129 • www.royallighting.com MAY 2007 | TORONTOLIFE.COM | TORONTO LIFE 41 CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: AC T0507_041 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK Sports er examination, a Hugo Boss; the discreetly psychedelic shirt is a Paul Smith; the jeans are clearly not Levi’s; and the nondescript brown loafers are Prada. To break the ice, I fire off some lightweight questions: why he chose to elbow Devils defenceman Scott Niedermayer in a 2001 playoff game, with 7.4 seconds left on the clock (“I made a mistake”). Occasionally, I throw in something about his personal habits, including what cologne he wears. He stares back at me, as though searching for the right answer. “Brut,” he eventually says, jokingly. (In fact, it’s Armani.) He tells me about his regrets, one of which is having beaten an ailing John Kordic “pretty badly,” not having known what condition the drug-addicted player was in. I had hoped to meet him for a beer, which I discover he hates. I had hoped to get him to admit to a recent night of carousing, perhaps one that caused him to come home “reeking of alcohol and smoke,” as his wife alleged, but he reports that he spent his just-passed birthday quietly, with friends. From one of them, he received a gift of a blown-glass lion, which is possessed of such apparent beauty, he closes his eyes remembering it. I had hoped to find in him Al Purdy’s confluence of “ballet and murder,” and in this, I wasn’t disappointed. Domi’s style of fighting is known as “the spin cycle,” a strategy wherein the modestly sized fighter shoves his opponent to make him lose equilibrium. As the opponent struggles to catch his balance, the southpaw, who hits with his right hand, disables him in a cannonade of blows. “You have no idea what it’s like,” he tells me, “preparing each day for a possible fight. It’s an exhausting mental process.” This morning at the Four Seasons will be the last time I see Domi. “Make me look like a star,” he commands, after walking the gauntlet of smiling, apprehensive fans in the lobby. Outside, he flags a cab for me, and says to the driver (who will almost run me over in his haste to pick up the famous hockey player), “Take care of my friend.” He also, though hesitantly, signs an autograph for my dog (“To Frank, from your friend…”). He tells me he trusts me. Then he jumps into his Mercedes and peels out of the Four Seasons lot. I have some idea, after my tumble in the spin cycle, that he doesn’t need me to do a thing. Domi will be remembered as he pleases—a man who played hard on the ice, leaving there the occasional heaving, near-comatose victim, one hundred goals, and a trail of blood that marks him, still, as a true blue warrior. E EUROPEAN JEWELLERY E AT O N C E N T R E u YO R K D A L E u S H E R WAY G A R D E N S u T D C E N T R E u S Q UA R E O N E 416-254-1184 MAY 2007 | TORONTOLIFE.COM | TORONTO LIFE 43 CLIENT: St. Joseph Media DESCRIPTION: Toronto Life - MAY 2007 DOCKET: 37552 REVISION: 0 SIZE: 8” x 10.75” DATE: 23/03/2007 OPER: AC T0507_043 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK