NHL: Fentanyl, cocaine involved in former Bruin Jimmy Hayes’ death

Date:

Share post:


Former NHL forward Jimmy Hayes, who passed away at age 31 in August, had fentanyl and cocaine in his system at the time of his death, family members told the Boston Globe.

Hayes had a seven-year NHL career with the Chicago Blackhawks, Florida Panthers, Boston Bruins and New Jersey Devils. His brother, Kevin Hayes, currently plays for the Philadelphia Flyers.

A Boston area native, Jimmy Hayes also won an NCAA hockey championship with Boston College in 2010.

He was pronounced dead at his home in Milton, Mass., on Aug. 23. A cause of death was not available at that time, but Hayes’ family recently received the toxicology report.

His family remembered Jimmy as a young husband and father who always looked to do good deeds for others.

“I hope getting Jimmy’s story out there can save someone’s life. If this can save someone from the pain, great,” Kevin Hayes told the Globe. “It’s just so sad. I pride myself on being pretty mentally strong. I’m a street guy. But there’s just no formula for this.”

The Devils and Blackhawks held a pregame tribute for Hayes before New Jersey’s season opener Friday.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NHL: Victor Olofsson’s late goal lifts Golden Knights over Canucks

Victor Olofsson scored the go-ahead goal with 3:14 remaining to lead the visiting Vegas Golden Knights to a...

NHL: NHL roundup: Caps’ Alexander Ovechkin tops Gretzky’s goals mark

Despite Alexander Ovechkin scoring career goal No. 895 to surpass Wayne Gretzky and become the all-time goals leader...

NHL: Flames try to stay in wild-card race vs. Sharks

The Calgary Flames will look to make the most of a road clash with the cellar-dwelling San Jose...

NHL: Canadiens scored twice in 2nd to push past Predators

The Montreal Canadiens strengthened their hold on the Eastern Conference's second wild-card spot with a 2-1 road victory...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.