Brian Leetch was just a teenager when he met Jay Grossman in the mid-1980s.
Leetch was a budding star defenseman playing at Avon Old Farms School in Avon, Connecticut, and Grossman was beginning his career as a player agent, scouting for potential clients.
“He was doing kind of those runner jobs like a couple of those agents,” Leetch said this week. “They were just building relationships with the players and the families.”
That was the beginning of a relationship that lasted 40 years, including Grossman representing Leetch throughout his 18 seasons in the NHL with the New York Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins before the defenseman retired in 2006. So, when Grossman died on March 17 at age 60 after a more than two-year battle with lung cancer, Leetch lost more than his former agent.
He lost his friend.
“I had a hard time with it,” said Leetch, who attended the service for Grossman on Martha’s Vineyard on March 20. “It just hits you sometimes. He was my buddy. He was taking care of me. I looked up to him even though I knew we're basically the same age. And I’m like, ‘He's freaking gone.’”
Leetch, a two-time winner of the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman (1991-92, 1996-97) and a 2009 inductee into the Hockey Hall of Fame, was among a host of star players Grossman represented during his more than 40 years as a player agent. His index of retired clients also included defenseman Sergei Zubov, goalies Pekka Rinne and Nikolai Khabibulin, and forwards Ilya Kovalchuk and Alexei Zhamnov.
In recent years, his PuckAgency teamed with the OT Sports Group to represent young players such as Carolina Hurricanes goalie Brandon Bussi, Calgary Flames forward Matt Coronato, Seattle Kraken forward Eeli Tolvanen, Vegas Golden Knights forward prospect Trevor Connelly and Boston Bruins forward prospect James Hagens.
Although Grossman cut back on his work last summer to begin more aggressive treatments, OT Sports Group co-founder John Kofi Osei-Tutu said he remained an important resource, including while negotiating the three-year, $5.7 million contract Bussi signed with Carolina on Feb. 16.
“When he started those treatments, he started to cognitively decline a bit, and that was expected, and he slowed down,” Osei-Tutu said. “But I could tell you every time I was getting on the phone with Jay thinking, ‘Let's talk about whatever just to spend time with him,’ he'd be like, ‘Before anything, where are we at with Bussi? Did you call (Hurricanes general manager Eric) Tulsky? What's Tulsky saying?’ This guy to his last hour was still willing to fight for his players.”





















