Andrew Gilmour is no stranger to Yellowknife, having called the city home since 2015. If you鈥檝e seen him before, you鈥檒l know he鈥檚 worked in the education field, most recently with Yellowknife Education District No. 1.
But he has a new job now and it鈥檚 one he鈥檚 admittedly still getting used to.
Gilmour was hired to be the first executive director for the NWT School Sports Association, a job he started back in January. Since taking on the role, he鈥檚 looked after the Cager basketball tournaments and he鈥檒l be working his first Super Soccer tournament this week.
Before he became the new guy in charge, phys-ed teachers would鈥檝e been the ones to organize this tournament and others.
鈥淚t was a lot of extra work for them and quite overwhelming,鈥 Gilmour said.
The response to being overworked meant school boards getting together and looking into a proper association, Gilmour added. He doesn鈥檛 work for any one school in particular, but rather a territorial sport organization (TSO).
鈥淚t鈥檚 its own society,鈥 as Gilmour described it.
Every TSO has its own society in place, said Gilmour, with boards and executives who steer the direction of their given sport.
When Gilmour was hired, no such society existed for him, he said. He spent most of his first day at work reaching out to gym teachers and school boards superintendents and getting people for the board of directors to get the society up and running.
鈥淭he first month was a lot of relationship building,鈥 said Gilmour.
Despite the milestones, Gilmour seems to have a pretty solid blueprint.
鈥淎 lot of what I鈥檓 doing is based off what the phys-ed teachers have been doing before me for years,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been going to them and learning from them and they鈥檝e been so great.鈥
Because the job is new, it鈥檚 hard for Gilmour to decide on what the coolest part about it is, though there are some things on the horizon.
鈥淭he thing I鈥檓 most excited about is I鈥檓 going to be doing a needs assessment for all of the communities and what they need for their school sports,鈥 he said.
As for Super Soccer, Gilmour said he鈥檚 looking forward to it.
鈥淲e had 53 teams register for junior and 29 register for senior,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be exciting to see how it all works out.鈥
While tournaments are nice, Gilmour is looking to do more in terms of after school programs. He鈥檚 also looking for growth, both for sport and the players involved.
鈥淚 would like to see more events where there鈥檚 less competition and more connection,鈥 he said, using an example of a tournament that also features high-level coaches come up and do seminars with other kids. 鈥淚 see sport as an avenue for connection and growth. I think that would be a great direction to go in with school sports.鈥