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The hockey world is mourning a beloved legend after heartbreaking news is confirmed: Punch McLean passes away

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Skyler Walker
May 9, 2026  (7:46)
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Hockey memorial arena photo
Photo credit: Facebook

Ernie Punch McLean, the hard-edged head coach who helped define Western junior hockey, has passed away at 93.

That news lands heavy across the sport because McLean wasn't just another old-school bench boss.

He was one of the names that still carried weight in rinks, alumni rooms, and hockey conversations long after his last game.

What makes this one sting even more is the timing.

Just 2 days earlier, McLean was being celebrated at Queens Park Arena, and people around him had the chance to tell him exactly what he meant.

"Two days ago we celebrated Ernie Punch McLean. Today Punch has passed away. Even at 93 years of age I'm stunned by this news. I'm happy he got to hear how people felt about him on Wednesday at QPA, even though I'm sure he heard it regularly."

That matters.

Hockey doesn't always slow down long enough to give its builders their flowers while they can still hear them.

Farhan Lalji's post captured that gut-punch feeling.

The tribute had barely settled in when the sport was hit with word that McLean was gone.

The timing turned a celebration into a farewell, and that's why this loss feels bigger than one family, one team, or one city.

A giant figure in junior hockey: Ernie McLean

McLean built his name behind the bench with the Estevan Bruins and later the New Westminster Bruins.

In New Westminster, he coached 4 straight league champions and led the club to Memorial Cup titles in 1977 and 1978.

That kind of run doesn't fade.

It becomes part of the sport's backbone, especially in Western Canada, where junior hockey history still lives from one generation to the next.

He was never sold as polished.

McLean's reputation was forceful, demanding, and larger than life, and that edge became part of his legend.

But beneath that old-school image was a hockey mind that shaped careers.

More than 100 players who came through his teams went on to reach the NHL, which tells the real story of his reach.

For many, McLean represented a version of hockey that felt raw, direct, and deeply tied to community rinks.

He belonged to an era when a coach could become the face of a franchise and the memory of a city.

Now the tributes will keep coming, and they should.

This is one of those losses that reminds the hockey world how much of its identity was built by men who stood behind the bench, pushed hard, and left marks that never really disappear.

McLean heard the applause on Wednesday. By Saturday, the game was mourning one of its builders.