Truro News

FITTING TRIBUTE

A puck-drop ceremony was a fitting tribute from Julia Schmitt for her late father

- FRAM DINSHAW FRAM DINSHAW/TRURO NEWS

Julia Schmitt was proud to drop the ceremonial puck to kick off a local minor hockey tournament in honour of her late father, Mike.

TRURO, N.S. – Julia Schmitt grew up living a truly Canadian dream: her hockey coach was her dad.

Nearly five years after Mike Schmitt passed away, Julia held on to her childhood dream by dropping a puck in his honour at the tournament bearing her father’s name. She did so in front of scores of people at Truro’s Colchester Legion Stadium on Dec. 27 during opening ceremonies at the Mike Schmitt Memorial Tournament.

“Probably the most important thing he said was: ‘I’m making you not a better hockey player but a better person,’” recalled Julia. “That still sticks with us today.”

Mike taught Julia how to play hockey in the family’s back yard, starting pretty much from when she and her younger brothers Brody and Brayden could first walk.

Her father was a wellknown and liked minor hockey coach in the Truro area, giving many hours to the sport. Off the ice, he was an operations manager for the Tim Hortons warehouse in Debert.

One person who knew Mike and his family well was Krista O’dwyer. Her son looked up to Mike as a hockey role model, even though he was not his coach.

O’dwyer remembered Mike as a “passionate coach” who taught local hockey players many useful skills. She said the whole family bonded around hockey and were deeply knowledgea­ble about the sport.

Her favourite memory of Mike was being at his family home for parties, during which “he made really good drinks,” she said.

“In the last few days before

Mike’s passing, he actually was over at the (rink) watching his son Brody play a final game before they took him to the hospital,” said O’dwyer. “It was very moving.”

Mike passed away from pancreatic cancer on Jan. 10, 2015. Every year since, Truro has hosted the Mike Schmitt Memorial Tournament, bringing together minor hockey teams from across the province.

“Everyone in the hockey community knew my dad, he was an amazing coach,” said Julia. “It was a major part of our lives and for it to live on in his legacy as a hockey tournament is just unbelievab­le.”

Mike’s legacy also lives on in Julia’s own sporting career. She played hockey in both Debert and Truro, as well as in Windsor, N.S., when she attended private school there. As a student at St. Francis Xavier University, Julia currently plays on its hockey team, which involves daily on-ice practice and typically two games every weekend.

Her goal is to become a doctor and Julia figures university will be the high point of her hockey career.

But when asked if she would pass on her love of hockey to any children she may have in future, Julia’s response was straight on-point.

“Definitely,” she said. “It’s such a big part of my family.”

For more from the Mike Schmitt tournament, see page B3.

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 ??  ?? Julia Schmitt, left, and Ewan Mackinnon held a ceremonial puck drop to remember the late Mike Schmitt during opening ceremonies on Dec. 27.
Julia Schmitt, left, and Ewan Mackinnon held a ceremonial puck drop to remember the late Mike Schmitt during opening ceremonies on Dec. 27.

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