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Moncton Wildcats coach Gardiner MacDougall reflects on family tragedy at Memorial Cup

Moncton Wildcats coach Gardiner MacDougall reflects on family tragedy at Memorial Cup

National Post28-05-2025
Taylor MacDougall was expecting to see his team hit the ice at the Memorial Cup on Monday when he received a devastating phone call.
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Instead of watching his Moncton Wildcats take on the Medicine Hat Tigers, the hockey club's general manager met with the RCMP to identify his father-in-law, who had died suddenly of a heart attack.
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Gardiner MacDougall, Taylor's father and Moncton's head coach, reflected on the tragedy on Wednesday.
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'You never want that phone call,' he said. 'My son, as a general manager, this is the highlight of his career. This should be the most joy he's ever had. He gets a call that will change his life 20 minutes before (that game).
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'You don't have a manual or manuscript for that type of thing. He's handled it amazingly.'
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Patrick Buckley had arrived in Rimouski from Fredericton that afternoon and checked into his hotel with Taylor MacDougall's help. His son-in-law was the last family member to see him.
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Buckley drove to a nearby golf course for a round ahead of Moncton's game and was later found in his car.
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'That day (Buckley) was in Fredericton. So Taylor's daughter, Lily, is four years old. He drove her to daycare that day. He kissed her goodbye, and she loved her granddad,' Gardiner MacDougall said. 'That's the last time she'll ever kiss her granddad, so it puts things in perspective.
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'And then he drove, and he probably wasn't feeling 100 per cent, but he was so excited to come watch us. He came to all our playoff games.'
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The veteran coach held back tears when he announced the news of Buckley's death during a news conference after Monday's 3-1 loss to Medicine Hat, calling it the most difficult game he'd ever coached.
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Taylor flew home to Fredericton after the game to be with his wife's family. Gardiner, meanwhile, began preparing for Wednesday's must-win matchup against the Rimouski Oceanic.
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It was Moncton's most important game of the season. But hockey, in many ways, took a back seat.
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He also recalled a life-changing moment of his own from 1997.
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At the time, Gardiner MacDougall was coaching the OCN Blizzard of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League. He was behind the bench for a game in Portage la Prairie, Man., when he learned his sister's husband — a military member stationed in Petawawa, Ont. _ had been in a serious accident.
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Over 1,000 participants swim, cycle and run at Ironman 70.3 west of Calgary

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