A Stain on our Game

Jay Macaulay, whose life was shattered by predator Graham James, dies of overdose

Jeff Hamilton 11 minute read Thursday, Apr. 15, 2021

Jay Macaulay's life was shattered by predator coach Graham James. After decades of silent, shame-filled torment, he told his story to a Free Press reporter who became a trusted friend.

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To know better is to do better

Sheldon Kennedy  6 minute read Preview

To know better is to do better

Sheldon Kennedy  6 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020

After reading “A Stain on our Game” by Jeff Hamilton, I felt that I needed and wanted to share my views on the six-part article. I feel strongly that this story has critical teachings in it from which we all can learn.

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Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Sheldon Kennedy says abuse is not just a hockey issue; it’s a community issue, and we all must do better.

Where is the outrage?

Christy Dzikowicz 6 minute read Preview

Where is the outrage?

Christy Dzikowicz 6 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020

For days now, I have been poring through the incredible work of Jeff Hamilton’s "A Stain on Our Game: The Life and Destructive Legacy of Graham James." This painful chronicle of the path of destruction left by convicted sex offender Graham James has left me wrestling with the same question that has been on my mind for the last 20 years:

Where is the outrage?

It’s always astounded me how blind and numb we can be. Child sexual abuse is a very real and significant problem in our society today, and yet it takes tragic stories like this to raise this into the public consciousness and generate discussion. It takes the victims of these horrors coming forward and exposing their pain and suffering in order for us to pay attention.

How long will they keep our attention this time? It’s comfortable and convenient to just move on and ignore the travesties that take place in secrecy. This is not a hockey problem. This a societal problem. Child sexual abuse makes us uncomfortable, so we don’t give it the sustained focus it demands.

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Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020

A plaque at Innovation Credit Union iPlex in Swift Current commemorating the Broncos' 1989 Memorial Cup win has Graham James' name scratched out. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

In the aftermath of Graham James, sports officials have long promised changes — but observers wonder where they are

Jeff Hamilton 34 minute read Preview

In the aftermath of Graham James, sports officials have long promised changes — but observers wonder where they are

Jeff Hamilton 34 minute read Friday, Dec. 18, 2020

Former junior hockey players' lawsuit, supporting affidavits detail unimaginable sexual, emotional abuse from veteran teammates in team-condoned hazing rituals; critics say resistant sport officials have long turned a blind eye to the rot in their organizations.

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Friday, Dec. 18, 2020

A plaque at Innovation Credit Union iPlex in Swift Current commemorating the Broncos' 1989 Memorial Cup win has Graham James' name scratched out. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Despite suspicion, the hockey community failed to protect the players Graham James was abusing

Jeff Hamilton 43 minute read Preview

Despite suspicion, the hockey community failed to protect the players Graham James was abusing

Jeff Hamilton 43 minute read Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020

Despite opponents' homophobic taunts on the ice and suspicions off it, no one in Manitoba's or Western Canada's hockey community did anything to protect the young players Graham James was sexually abusing. Several decades later, most still won't talk about what they knew about the predator behind the bench.

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Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020

1978 St.James Canadians

Players describe an unravelling Broncos dressing room, reveal emotional scars decades later

Jeff Hamilton 42 minute read Preview

Players describe an unravelling Broncos dressing room, reveal emotional scars decades later

Jeff Hamilton 42 minute read Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020

Graham James preyed on vulnerable, emotionally fragile boys desperate to play pro hockey; he manipulated them into believing he cared about them, so they would return the favour.

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Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020

Memorabilia in the basement at Todd Holt's house in Cochrane. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Graham James wasn't the only predator teaching at Silver Heights Collegiate

Jeff Hamilton 35 minute read Preview

Graham James wasn't the only predator teaching at Silver Heights Collegiate

Jeff Hamilton 35 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020

IT’S an image that came to haunt Ivano Buccini.The longtime teacher at Silver Heights Collegiate recalled being impressed in the early 1980s after watching Graham James help a young hockey player with his homework in a classroom.

“I remember thinking, ‘Wow, what a great coach to take this kind of interest,’” said Buccini, who died of cancer in March.

The youth was Theoren Fleury.

James had recruited Fleury, then 15, to leave Russell and come to Winnipeg for one year to attend school and play for the midget St. James Canadians — the same team James cut his teeth coaching in the late 1970s.

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Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020

James (far right, back row) and Easton (far right, front row) played on a team from Silver Heights in 1977.

Former junior hockey player says pedophile was his Winnipeg billet in 1980s

Jeff Hamilton 8 minute read Preview

Former junior hockey player says pedophile was his Winnipeg billet in 1980s

Jeff Hamilton 8 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020

A young hockey player Graham James recruited to play for the Winnipeg Warriors in the 1980s was placed in the home of a convicted sex offender as his billet.

“I think it is shocking that the team would billet me with a convicted pedophile, chosen by another pedophile and that the team did not believe me when I complained,” the unnamed player said in an affidavit filed last week in Ontario Superior Court.

The affidavit is part of a lawsuit former junior hockey players have filed against the Canadian Hockey League. The lawsuit alleges underaged players were repeatedly subjected to sexual, physical and mental abuse for decades through a toxic environment of hazing and harassment created by the league, its teams and their executives. The allegations have not been proven in court.

Although not named as a defendant in the lawsuit, James was head scout and assistant coach of the 1983-84 Winnipeg Warriors. The team was relocated to Moose Jaw the following season, with James taking over as head coach. It would be more than a decade later before he was convicted of sexually assaulting Sheldon Kennedy and another unnamed player.

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Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020

BRANDON SUN

Graham James as coach for Swift Current Broncos.

Former player launches official complaint with police

Jeff Hamilton 3 minute read Preview

Former player launches official complaint with police

Jeff Hamilton 3 minute read Monday, Dec. 14, 2020

Former junior hockey player Jay Macaulay has launched an official complaint with the Winnipeg Police Service alleging he was sexually abused by disgraced ex-Western Hockey League coach and convicted predator Graham James.

Macaulay, 49, says during stints with the Swift Current Broncos between 1988 and 1990, he was subjected to abusive behaviour by James, including inappropriate touching, oral sex and, on one occasion, anal rape.

He spoke with police just days after his story came to light in the Free Press. Over a period of months in 2019 and throughout 2020, he sat down with the Free Press every two weeks, at times chatting for hours.

With his secret out, and backed by the support of family and friends, Macaulay filed a complaint to the authorities. City police haven’t made a statement about the onset of a formal investigation, although the accusation was only lodged Monday afternoon.

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Monday, Dec. 14, 2020

Jay Macaulay in Brandon on October 2, 2020. (Tim Smith for the Winnipeg Free Press)

Former friends, teammates of Graham James recall odd behaviour, but nothing to portend depravity to come

Jeff Hamilton  27 minute read Preview

Former friends, teammates of Graham James recall odd behaviour, but nothing to portend depravity to come

Jeff Hamilton  27 minute read Monday, Dec. 14, 2020

It was midway through Sheldon Kennedy’s seventh NHL season, and the Calgary newspapers were calling for his head.After discovering Kennedy had collapsed into tears and was unable to suit up for the Calgary Flames’ April 8, 1996 game against the Edmonton Oilers, they published stories he had suffered a nervous breakdown.

The reports weren’t wrong. Kennedy was unravelling by the second, drinking and abusing drugs to dampen the pain of a dark secret. That night, at home, he emptied a box of Kleenex as tears streamed down his face.

Kennedy and his wife Jana had recently welcomed their newborn daughter, Ryan, into the world. With a new life to take care of, Kennedy could no longer live a lie.

After years of harming himself and those around him, and with Jana fearing the worst was yet to come, Kennedy broke his silence. He told her he had been sexually abused by his junior hockey coach.

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Monday, Dec. 14, 2020

Ice rink at 17 Wing (John Woods / Winnipeg Free Press)

A stain on our game: About this project

Jeff Hamilton 4 minute read Preview

A stain on our game: About this project

Jeff Hamilton 4 minute read Friday, Dec. 11, 2020

Disgraced junior hockey coach Graham James has been convicted of sexually assaulting five former players. However, police estimate the true number of victims is between 25 and 100.

In this series, Free Press sports writer Jeff Hamilton investigates James' past -- from his formative years growing up to his time as a substitute teacher, and from his first foray into coaching minor hockey to his ultimate downfall.

Hamilton gives voice to James' victims and talks to dozens of former players, childhood friends, colleagues and officials, asking questions of those who knew -- or ought to have known -- what was happening on their watch.

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Friday, Dec. 11, 2020

Graham James arrives at court for sentencing in Winnipeg on March 20, 2012. (John Woods / The Canadian Press files)

Jay Macaulay was trying to crack the WHL Broncos’ lineup in 1988; instead he became one more of Graham James’ victims

Jeff Hamilton 34 minute read Preview

Jay Macaulay was trying to crack the WHL Broncos’ lineup in 1988; instead he became one more of Graham James’ victims

Jeff Hamilton 34 minute read Friday, Dec. 11, 2020

It’s a warm late-August afternoon and Jay Macaulay is sitting in the empty lobby of Winnipeg’s train station fidgeting with a pen.He just finished putting a check mark in his day planner, indicating another successfully finished workshop he’s required to attend each week as part of his parole conditions.

He says he feels good after the workshop meeting and is in a much better mood than he was earlier in the day; he had an argument with his ex-girlfriend over something he can’t even remember now.

Like him, she battles daily with drug addiction and though he’s been clean for two years, she still has an emotional hold over his life. She knows his triggers, Macaulay says, and when she’s high she can be especially difficult to deal with.

“Now that I’m sober, I can see all these people that used to be in my life struggling with the same problems I had,” says Macaulay, his 6-3 frame filling up his side of a small table. “What they’re dealing with is a death sentence.”

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Friday, Dec. 11, 2020

Jay MacAulay at the Central Community Centre hockey rink in Brandon. (Tim Smith for the Winnipeg Free Press)

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