Edmonton·Video

Edmonton Oilers host downtown rally to mark final Rexall Place game

Thousands of hockey fans turned out for a downtown rally Wednesday to mark the Edmonton Oilers final game at Rexall Place.

Mark Messier, Ryan Smyth and Jason Strudwick chosen to speak to thousands of fans

Mark Messier says goodbye to Rexall Place

9 years ago
Duration 0:57
On the eve of the final pro hockey game at Rexall, Mark Messier reminisces about the arena's character and the role it played - and will continue to play - in many Edmontonians' memories.

It was Mark Messier who seemed to sum things up better than anyone.

As he had done so many times during his storied career with the Edmonton Oilers, the hometown hero once again seized the moment before thousands of fans who turned out for a downtown rally Wednesday to mark the Edmonton Oilers final game at Rexall Place.

"It's amazing that a building can actually have a personality," said the man who knows something about personality.

Front and centre in a congregation of more than 100 former players gathered at Sir Winston Churchill Square, Messier talked about growing up with the city and the arena where his number now hangs from the rafters. He talked about the past, about all those wins and all the great memories, and about watching a Fleetwood Mac concert. Then with skill undiminished by the passage of time, he deftly pivoted toward the future.

"We look forward to turning the page to the new Rogers Place arena," he said. "And making more memories and winning more Stanley Cups."

Messier was one of three players chosen to speak to the multitude.

Ryan Smyth told the crowd, "Without you fans, it wouldn't have been the same in that building."

Former player Jason Strudwick, who grew up in Edmonton and played briefly with the Oilers, talked about dreaming as a boy of playing on the ice at Rexall Place, and how that dream came true.

Speaking on behalf of the city, Mayor Don Iveson thanked the hockey heroes lined up behind him. He recalled attending his first game at Rexall Place in 1988.

"It was a magical thing for a little boy to get to go to a hockey game," he said.

That much, at least, seems unlikely to change.