笔辞蝉迟别诲:听February 3, 2026
By: Alison DeLory
Dal alum and former Dal Tigers hockey forward Mike Evelyn O鈥橦iggins (BEng鈥19) is in Cortino d'Ampezzo, representing Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
Speaking from the Toronto airport on his way to Italy, he described what it was like to get the phone call on Jan. 23 that he鈥檇 made the Olympics 2026 roster for .
鈥淵ou have a hunch, but when you get that call and hear those words, it鈥檚 a pretty sweet feeling. It never gets old,鈥 says Evelyn O鈥橦iggins, who, through the RBC Training Ground program, transitioned from hockey to bobsleigh after five years at Dal. While he originally had his sights on skeleton, at 6鈥3鈥 tall and 235 pounds, his body was more suited to bobsleigh and he was made brakeman on the national team. He will compete in both the two-man and four-man events in Italy. He previously competed at the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022 and has been .
Savouring the moment
Balancing engineering and elite sport
Evelyn O鈥橦iggins played hockey for five years at Dal while he was studying engineering. He says it was the busy-ness of those years that most prepared him for his life as it is now.
鈥淚 really enjoyed my time as a Tiger but learned you can鈥檛 please everyone all the time,鈥 he says of the competing demands on his time. Ultimately, he successfully managed both his engineering classes and practice schedule. 鈥淚 had to learn what balance looked like,鈥 he says, adding that鈥檚 been invaluable to him now as a full-time systems engineer and team lead with while also touring the world through his sport.
Evelyn O鈥橦iggins鈥檚聽goals for this tournament, he says, are simply get the best possible result.聽He figures聽his聽best opportunity is in the four-man event happening Feb. 20 and 21.聽He鈥檒l聽also compete in the two-man with his close friend and fellow Ottawa-based engineer Jay Dearborn on Feb. 16 and 17.
We have an outside chance to medal in the four-man. The goals for the two-man are to convince our funders to continue funding the team through to 2030.聽鈥 Mike Evelyn O鈥橦iggins
Mike Evelyn O鈥橦iggins (left) with his four-man bobsled team. (Photo by Dave Holland/COC)
Engineering discipline meets athletic detail
Evelyn O鈥橦iggins and his team get two days of training on the track, then will spend their final pre-competition days watching and analyzing聽racing videos. Bobsleigh聽races聽can be won by聽one-hundredth of a second聽thus making聽the team run and聽entry into the sled of paramount importance. For Evelyn O鈥橦iggins,聽what he calls a聽鈥渇ixation on details鈥澛爄n the sport聽aligns well with his聽life as an engineer.聽
鈥淓ngineers love taking things apart. Dissecting and analyzing them. I take 22 steps during the push聽(downhill, on ice)聽before I get into the sled. A lot of analysis goes into how I do that precisely and effectively,鈥 he says, adding聽鈥淎nd聽I appreciate the engineering of the sled.鈥
Mike Evelyn O鈥橦iggins in action on the bobsleigh track. (Submitted photo)
Troy Ryan鈥檚 leadership behind the bench
Former聽Dal Tigers聽women鈥檚 hockey聽coach聽from 2020 to聽the聽2023-24 season,聽Troy Ryan,聽is also at the Olympics in his role as聽coach聽for聽the Canadian women's hockey team.聽Ryan was behind the bench in Beijing in 2022 when the Canadian women reclaimed hockey gold from the United States in a聽three-two聽final, and聽will be looking to add聽another Olympic gold medal聽to his trophy cabinet after聽the games in聽Milan-Cortina, Italy.
鈥淚t is always an honour and privilege to be in this leadership position as we set our expectations and goals for the Olympics,鈥澛. 鈥淲e have a tremendous coaching staff that is committed to the vision and process, and I am excited for the journey ahead.鈥