âPapaâs Last Game: A Tribute to Bruce Daleâ
The news came quietly, like a soft knock on the heart. Bruce Dale, Justin Bieberâs maternal grandfather, passed away peacefully at the Rotary Hospice Stratford Perth on a Thursday morning in April 2025. He was 80. For most people, Bruce was a name tucked into the background of a global superstarâs life. But for Justin, he was the beginning.
âPapa, I always took all your money,â Justin wrote in a heartfelt Instagram post, his words laced with humor and ache. âGramma gave you an allowance of 20 dollars for the week, and Iâd convince you to spend it all on snacks at the hockey game.â Corn nuts. Skittles. Slush puppies. Chuck-a-puck. The memories spilled out like a childhood scrapbook, each one stitched with laughter and love.
Bruce Dale wasnât just a grandfather. He was a fixture in Justinâs early lifeâa steady hand in a whirlwind of fame, a voice of reason when the world grew loud. He made a brief appearance in Justinâs 2011 documentary Never Say Never, but his influence ran deeper than any screen time. He was the man who cheered from the stands, who heckled referees with unapologetic gusto, who believed in his grandson long before the world did.
In the days following Bruceâs death, Justinâs fans flooded social media with condolences. âSending every drop of love I have,â one wrote. âBruce was such a light to be around,â said another. The grief was collective, but the pain was personal. Justin wasnât just mourning a relativeâhe was mourning a piece of his foundation.
The timing couldnât have been worse.
Justin had been facing a difficult year. Rumors swirled about his health, his marriage, his emotional state. Paparazzi photos showed a worn-out figure, eyes heavy, posture slumped. There were whispers of Bellâs palsy, of Coachella controversies, of a man unraveling under the weight of expectation. And now, this. A loss that cut deeper than any headline.
âI will miss you. I will ache,â Justin wrote. âAnd Iâll sit and let myself remember all of the wonderful times weâve had.â It was a rare moment of vulnerability from someone who had spent years building walls. In that post, the boy from Stratford returned. Not the pop icon. Not the tabloid target. Just a grandson, grieving.
Bruce Dale had lived a quiet life.
He wasnât famous. He didnât chase spotlight. But he was known in Stratford for his warmth, his humor, and his fierce loyalty to family. He was the kind of man who showed upâat hockey games, school plays, and late-night phone calls. He gave advice without judgment, love without condition. And when Justinâs star began to rise, Bruce never changed. He remained grounded, reminding his grandson that fame was fleeting, but character was forever.
In interviews, Justin often spoke about his roots. About growing up in a small town, about the people who shaped him. Bruce was always part of that story. âHe was my guy,â Justin once said. âThe one who made me feel safe when everything else felt crazy.â
Now, that anchor was gone.
Grief is strange. It doesnât follow rules. It arrives in wavesâsometimes gentle, sometimes crushing. For Justin, the loss of Bruce was more than a death. It was a shift in the universe. A reminder that time moves forward, even when weâre not ready.
Hailey Bieber, Justinâs wife, shared his tribute on her Instagram story. âLove you Grandpa Bruce,â she wrote, a simple message that carried the weight of shared sorrow. The couple had faced their own challenges, but in this moment, they stood together.
In Stratford, Bruceâs funeral was held quietly, attended by close family and friends. There were no paparazzi, no press releases. Just stories. Laughter. Tears. People remembered the man who gave his grandson twenty dollars for snacks, who yelled at referees with theatrical flair, who believed in kindness above all.
Justin didnât perform that week.
He canceled appearances, retreated from the public eye. He spent time with family, revisiting old photos, old letters, old memories. He walked the streets of Stratford, the town that raised him, the town that Bruce loved. And in those quiet moments, he began to heal.
Grief doesnât disappear. It transforms.
In the months that followed, Justin began writing again. Not for charts or awards, but for himself. Songs about legacy, about love, about the ache of absence. He spoke at a youth center in Ontario, sharing his story, urging kids to cherish their elders. âTell them you love them,â he said. âBefore itâs too late.â
Bruce Daleâs death marked the end of a chapter. But it also lit a new path.
Justin started a foundation in his grandfatherâs nameâfocused on mentorship, community support, and youth empowerment. âPapa believed in second chances,â he said. âSo thatâs what weâre giving.â The foundation launched programs in Stratford, offering scholarships and mental health resources. It was Bruceâs spirit, reborn.
And through it all, Justin kept remembering.
The hockey games. The corn nuts. The heckling. The love.
âI know youâre watching down,â he wrote. âProbably still heckling Beatty or Fagon for missing that cross-check call in the corner.â It was a line that made fans laugh, cry, and nod in recognition. Because that was Bruce. Unfiltered. Unapologetic. Unforgettable.
In the end, grief is love with nowhere to go.
But Justin found a way to give it direction. Through music. Through action. Through memory.
Bruce Dale may be gone, but his legacy lives onâin the boy he raised, in the songs we hear, in the hearts he touched.
And somewhere, in a rink beyond the clouds, heâs still yelling at referees.

