DENVER — Bowen Byram and Alex Newhook were toddlers. Cale Makar was 3. Nathan MacKinnon was 6.
That is how long it has been since the Colorado Avalanche last hung a Stanley Cup banner in Denver. Wednesday brought an end to that drought, with the team raising the third championship banner in franchise history at Ball Arena.
Fans rose to their feet when Bernie, the Avalanche’s mascot, skated around the ice while waving a gigantic “Hockey is Back” flag like he has many times over the years. Players and coaches were introduced with all of them receiving strong ovations. The loudest were reserved for Pavel Francouz, Erik Johnson, MacKinnon, Makar and Mikko Rantanen.
Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog, who is on injured reserve, was introduced to the surprise of a number of fans. Landeskog received a standing ovation while skating onto the ice dressed in his full gear.
The players remained on the ice when Blink-182’s bassist and singer Mark Hoppus walked onto the ice to hype up the crowd. Hoppus led the crowd as it sang his band’s 2000 hit, “All The Small Things,” which has become an anthem among Avalanche fans. The crowd sang as the arena video board played a montage of fans celebrating the team’s championship.
Landeskog then grabbed the Stanley Cup, lifted it over his head and then received what might have been the loudest reaction of the evening. He then set the trophy down before joining his teammates so they could get in position to watch the banner go into the rafters.
One player who sat in the distance was Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Jack Johnson. He was a member of last year’s team that won the title. He remained on the bench for the majority of the ceremony before taking his place with his former teammates. They all stood arm in arm to watch the banner take its place next to the team’s previous titles from the 1995-96 and the 2000-01 seasons.
“It’s going to be cool to take it all in,” Newhook said before the game. “But we also know it is the end of celebrations and we know that we have to be ready.”
Every banner-raising ceremony comes with its own level of anticipation. For the Avalanche, it started at morning skate. Players walked into a new dressing room and were instantly met with questions about an evening that had been years in the making. It continued when the players arrived at the arena and then took part in a ceremony that saw them walk down a red carpet surrounded by fans.
That is also around the same time Hoppus arrived at Ball Arena. He drew a few double takes from arena workers and anyone else who was around when he walked throughout the hallways while wearing a blue Los Angeles Rams hoodie. Hoppus then met with the arena’s entertainment and production team who walked him through his part in the ceremony.
Blink-182’s classic hit started becoming an in-game tradition early in the 2019-20 season. It would be played between sequences and eventually, the crowd kept singing long after the song ended and play continued.
Hoppus said he first became aware of it after seeing a tweet from a fan saying he should check out how the Avalanche was using Blink’s iconic song.
“It’s insane. We wrote that song in ’99 and here 23 years later, people are still singing it,” Hoppus said. “People imitate (guitarist/singer Tom DeLonge’s) voice. It’s a whole thing. It’s taken a life of its own beyond us and our band. It fills me with joy.”
Hoppus said he did not get a chance to watch the Avalanche’s entire playoff run. But he was able to watch Game 6 when they clinched the title against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
“We tried to come out at one point during the Stanley Cup finals and our plane had mechanical issues and we weren’t able to take off,” said Hoppus, a day after the band announced they were reuniting and were going to release a new album.
The NHL reached out to Hoppus and asked if he would like to have an active role in the ceremony. Hoppus said he was “overjoyed to be asked” and have a part in what was an important night for the franchise.
Planning the ceremony started shortly after the Avalanche won the Stanley Cup, said Steve Johnston, the executive producer and executive for game presentation for Kroenke Sports & Entertainment.
Johnston said his team immediately went to work after the Avs won the Stanley Cup. They started producing the videos that were played during the ceremony while also working on other details like getting a special winch that allowed them to raise the banner over the netting along the glass and into the rafters next to the other banners.
But there were some details that were sorted out much later. One of them being how active Landeskog would be in the ceremony given he is still recovering from an injury. Another detail was finding time to rehearse the ceremony. Johnston said Ball Arena had such a busy schedule that his team only had one banner-raising rehearsal. They were able to rehearse one more time Wednesday afternoon a few hours after the Blackhawks concluded their morning skate.
“We used the 2001 banner to raise because we didn’t want anyone taking pictures of the new banner just in case,” Johnston said. “The whole summer has gone into planning this special night.”