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daniel mckitrick feature

The nomadic Nunavummiuq

Born in the North, Daniel McKitrick has gone where the hockey is, a path than has taken him to seven teams in three provinces and a pair of RBC Cup appearances

Jason La Rose
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May 19, 2018
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It is just over 2,800 kilometres from Coral Harbour, Nunavut, to Chilliwack, B.C., give or take a few dozen clicks. For Daniel McKitrick, the road to the 2018 RBC Cup was a whole lot longer than that.

A native of the tiny Inuit community (population 891), the 20-year-old was on the ice in the Fraser Valley this week chasing his second RBC Cup title in as many years, this time with the Steinbach Pistons.

He won’t have a chance to join an exclusive group of players who have won Canada’s National Junior A Championship in consecutive seasons with different teams, but McKitrick’s story isn’t about the result, it’s about the journey.

Coral Harbour, located on Southampton Island at the top of Hudson Bay, isn’t exactly a hockey hotbed. There is no minor hockey association, meaning McKitrick and his friends had to learn the game the old fashioned way.

“There’s nothing else to do so we just played hockey all day,” he says of his northern upbringing. “There’s an arena there, but my dad made a rink in the backyard, so that’s all we did, me and my friends, we played sticks-in-the-middle.”

He finally made the move to organized hockey when he was 11, joining the Thunder Bay Minor Hockey Association and starring for the Thunder Bay Kings program through his Midget AAA season in 2013-14.

From there began a junior hockey sojourn that included stops with seven teams in four leagues over four seasons, along with trips onto the biggest stage in the Junior A game in each of the last two springs.

He played as a 17-year-old with the Thunder Bay North Stars (SIJHL) in 2014-15 before heading west to join the Humboldt Broncos (SJHL) the following season. After 80 games in green and gold, he was sent to the Cobourg Cougars (OJHL) in December 2016.

The 5-foot-6 dynamo averaged more than a point a game with the Cougars, and added one goal in six games to help Cobourg win the RBC Cup on home ice last May.

“We weren’t supposed to win a game because we had a layoff [after being eliminated from the OJHL playoffs], sort of like Chilliwack,” McKitrick says of the Cougars’ run to the title. “But we did a lot of work that month, and we had some good players, too. The semifinal and final were crazy. Being at home, being in front of our fans – getting the win was awesome.”

With his final season of junior on the horizon, it was time for a change. McKitrick wanted another chance at a championship, and was dealt to La Ronge Ice Wolves (SJHL) on July 11 before being sent to the Portage Terriers (MJHL) just 24 days after that.

His stay in Portage wasn’t long; McKitrick played 10 games with the Terriers before an Oct. 17 trade to the Melville Millionaires (SJHL), and 10 days later – without having played a game for the Millionaires – he was shipped to Steinbach.

With his suitcase finally unpacked in southeast Manitoba, McKitrick got to work sharing his big-game knowledge with the Pistons, who were in the midst of running roughshod over the rest of the MJHL.

For the newcomer it wasn’t necessarily what to say, as when to say it.

“You sort of pick your spots as you go,” he says. “We were down in the third period few times and we found out way back, so it’s really just staying consistent no matter the situation. ‘Never get too high, never too low’ is a big one you bring to any game.”

There have been highs and lows aplenty for McKitrick over the last few months.

With Steinbach on track for a league championship, tragedy struck the hockey world when the Humboldt Broncos bus crash on April 6 claimed the lives of 16 people and sent 13 more to hospital.

McKitrick lost friends and former teammates in the accident, and the postponement of Game 2 of the MJHL final offered him the opportunity to return to Humboldt alongside other Broncos alumni and help the community grieve.

“[I went] to see my billets; it was a pretty tough time there,” McKitrick says. “I had a lot of buddies that played on my team that year that had moved on like me, like Chris Van Os-Shaw and my roommate Trevor Posch, that went down there, and they were telling me to go.

“It was nice to get some closure and be with my billets at a pretty bad time.”

As he finishes up his junior career in Chilliwack, McKitrick is excited for the future – not only his, but the future of the game in northern Canada.

Just as Jordin Tootoo was a role model for him growing up (he got a text of congratulations from the NHLer after winning the RBC Cup), McKitrick has young players in Coral Harbour, and across Nunavut, looking to him as an example of what it takes to succeed “down south.”

“I’ve actually heard some stories about some kids going and playing AAA, whether it’s in Thompson or in Winnipeg,” he says. “A lot of the players, now that they see me, especially from a really small town, they see that it is possible to go and play junior if you work hard and have the right mindset.”

For more information:

Esther Madziya
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 284-6484 

[email protected] 

Spencer Sharkey
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 777-4567

[email protected]

Jeremy Knight
Manager, Corporate Communications
Hockey Canada

(647) 251-9738

[email protected]

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