Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

‘You still see the skid marks’: Steinbach Pistons stop at Humboldt Broncos crash site

The Steinbach Pistons visited the site of the crash that claimed the lives of 16 people on the Humboldt Broncos bus last month. Steinbach Pistons/Twitter

As the Steinbach Pistons — the 2018 Manitoba Junior Hockey League champions — headed to Nipawin for Game 3 of the ANAVET Cup, they made a special stop along the way.

Story continues below advertisement

“I don’t think we really understood the magnitude of how powerful visiting the crash site was going to be,” Pistons coach Paul Dyck said, describing how the team made their way to the scene of the collision where 16 people in the Humboldt Broncos organization lost their lives last month.

READ MORE: Five Humboldt Broncos remain in hospital; none in critical condition

“As we neared it, 10, 15 kilometres prior to that intersection, there was a different anticipation. The bus was very quiet, the guys were all looking forward through the windshield,” he continued. “And then the moment we arrived, it was really something I hadn’t ever experienced before — it was incredibly sobering.”

“You still see the skid marks, and the soil’s been disrupted in the ditch and you can still smell the diesel fuel and oil. It made it very real,” Dyck said.

The Steinbach Pistons at the site of the crash. Steinbach Pistons/Twitter

The Pistons are battling the Nipawin Hawks for the right to go to Chilliwack for the RBC Cup, Canada’s National Junior A Championship. The Hawks were in a series with the Broncos during the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League playoffs when the crash took place on April 6.

Story continues below advertisement

READ MORE: Humboldt Broncos player Matthieu Gomercic given standing ovation at Winnipeg Jets game

Many of the Steinbach Pistons knew players on the Broncos. One of the people injured in the crash was former Steinbach Piston, Matthieu Gomercic, who was traded to the Broncos in 2016.

“I thought initially it might be five minutes that we would be [at the crash site], but we were probably there for 20, 25 minutes,” Dyck recounted, saying being at the site was an important step in the healing process for many of his players.

“We wanted to make sure that everybody had enough time to pay their respects.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article