Manitoba

Winnipeg high school rallies behind trio of former students suiting up for Bombers in Grey Cup

Nic Demski, Andrew Harris and Rhyland Kelly all previously played for the Oak Park Raiders in high school, and students from their alma mater are getting pumped ahead of the Bombers' Grey Cup tilt against the Ti-Cats on Sunday.

'We knew ... they were going to go places,' says Raiders coach of Bombers' Harris, Demski, Oliveira

A few hundred students at Oak Park High School came together for a pep rally heading into Grey Cup Sunday. Three current Bombers graduated from the school between 2005 and 2016. (Deanna Hinson/Oak Park High School)

As excitement builds across Manitoba leading up to the Grey Cup Sunday, staff and students at a Winnipeg high school are rooting extra hard for three Blue Bombers.

Winnipeg's Nic Demski, Andrew Harris and Brady Oliveira all previously played high school ball for the Oak Park Raiders. Students from their alma mater came together for a boisterous but brief pep rally Friday to show the trio some love ahead of the big game.

"It shows that OP has a lot of talent and that the Bombers have a lot of talent as well," said Grade 12 student Ethan Gibson, decked out in the Raiders' mascot outfit for the rally.

Ethan Gibson was one of several Oak Park students to wear the Raiders' mascot costume this fall on the sidelines during the high school season. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Raiders coaches Stu Nixon and Chad MacKay coached all three Bomber players over the course of about a decade. 

"The lesson you can learn from those three guys," Nixon told the crowd of shouting students at the rally, "is that drive was everything. It's more valuable than the talent, and each one of those guys was so incredibly driven."

Demski, Harris and Oliveira all had successful seasons as Raiders.

Harris's high school crew put up a fight but lost the high school championship in 2004, while Demski's 2010 Raiders and Oliveira's in 2015 both won.

Chad MacKay said the three former Raiders were stars before they ever donned Oak Park jerseys. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"We knew right from the start they were going to go places," said MacKay, noting the current Raiders team looks up to the three players.

"They actually had a picture of Brady in that championship team up in the locker room this year, so they know that it's out there, they know the tradition that those guys really helped start."

Brady Oliveira, sporting No. 5 in the first row, and his teammates celebrate their 2015 high school championship win. (Submitted by Oak Park High School)

That tradition resonates with Raiders' cornerback, safety and slotback Rhyland Kelly, as well as receiver Presley Solar MacKay, who feel encouraged by the examples set before them.

Both are getting looks from several Canadian university football programs, their coach said.

"Knowing that I could … be there is pretty cool to think about," said Kelly.

Rhyland Kelly said the fact that Demski, Oliveira and Harris all made it to the CFL gives him hope he, too, might one day make it. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

The East Division champion Hamilton Tiger-Cats downed the Bombers in both meetings this season and are favoured to win the Grey Cup Sunday, but scores of Oak Park students are confident about Winnipeg's chances.

The Raiders didn't win the championship this season. But win or lose, MacKay, 17, has a message for the former Raiders suiting up on Sunday.

Presley Solar MacKay thanked the trio of Bombers from Oak Park for the example of hard work they set for the generations that followed in their foot steps. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"It's just really inspirational for the players that are playing right now," he said. "Thank you for your time at Oak Park." 

 Kickoff is Sunday at 5 p.m. CT in Calgary.

Watch students cheer on Demski, Harris and Oliveira:

'It shows OP has a lot of talent': Oak Park High School cheers on trio of grads playing for Blue and Gold in Grey Cup

5 years ago
Duration 1:38
Nic Demski, Andrew Harris and Brady Oliveira all previously played for the Oak Park Raiders in high school, and students from their alma mater are getting pumped ahead of the Bombers' Grey Cup tilt against the Ticats on Sunday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bryce Hoye

Journalist

Bryce Hoye is a multi-platform journalist covering news, science, justice, health, 2SLGBTQ issues and other community stories. He has a background in wildlife biology and occasionally works for CBC's Quirks & Quarks and Front Burner. He is also Prairie rep for outCBC. He has won a national Radio Television Digital News Association award for a 2017 feature on the history of the fur trade, and a 2023 Prairie region award for an audio documentary about a Chinese-Canadian father passing down his love for hockey to the next generation of Asian Canadians.