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St. B’s Winning Record: Meet Bob Irving

They say the best in the game play with heart. Retired broadcaster Bob “Knuckles” Irving also knows a thing or two about what else makes a championship team – even those off the football field. 

Irving is best known in Manitoba as the iconic voice of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on CJOB for more than 45 years. There is, however, another local team that is also near and dear to Irving’s heart (literally). They are his compassionate caregivers from Manitoba’s Cardiac Centre of Excellence at St. Boniface Hospital, who have guided him through a series of cardiac procedures over several decades.  

“To me, St. B is my home when it comes to heart problems. I am thankful for all that the Hospital has done for me and done for many others,” said Irving. 

“I think the Cardiac Sciences Program here at St. B is world-class. We have some of the best doctors you could possibly get, and the cardiac research is fantastic. I think those of us who live in Winnipeg and have access to the care are truly fortunate,” he continued. 

Heart issues kicked off early 

Long before Irving ever called his first of more than 800 CFL games on the radio, he had open-heart surgery as a teenager in Regina to correct an atrial septal defect. His doctors diagnosed him with an irregular heartbeat, or arrhythmia, that he learned to live with. 

“I had the surgery when I was 18. Then, with the irregular heartbeat stuff and all the rest of it, I knew that I was going to have heart issues for the rest of my life. So, I’ve just accepted what I was dealt and have made the best of it,” he said. 

About 25 years ago, Irving started noticing his heart was racing more often. Irving started seeing a cardiologist regularly, who diagnosed him with atrial fibrillation (AFib), the most common form of abnormal heart rhythm, and atrial flutter, a related condition.  

St. B tackles arrhythmias 

The cardiologist, and others after him, told Irving the situation with his heart is complicated. “I kept hearing that over and over, so many times over the years: complicated,” he remembered. 

Irving had ablations in St. B’s Electrophysiology (EP) Lab in 2007 and 2008. An ablation treats AFib surgically by using energy – either burning or freezing – to destroy small areas of heart tissue responsible for the abnormal rhythm. 

He had another ablation at the Hospital in 2015 to correct atrial tachycardia, an abnormal heart rhythm causing a heart rate faster than 100 beats per minute. He had a pacemaker defibrillator installed at that time to help control the risks caused by a rare condition he has called ARVC(arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy). 

Cardiac care is a team sport 

“When you come into St. B for these procedures, the treatment you get is fabulous,” said Irving. “I have nothing but wonderful things to say about the nurses. When you come in to have a cardiac procedure, they put you right in, get you on a on a bed, hook you up to an IV, and let you know what’sgoing on. Eventually, you go into the procedure room or the operating room, and again there, everybody’s positive and trying to make you feel good, as relaxed as you can feel.”  

“As a patient, you couldn’t ask for anything more in my opinion, in terms of care,” he said. I have nothing but good memories about the way they treated me; it was all fantastic.”