Ottawa Senators stage major comeback with return of Sens Gala

New owner Michael Andlauer announces on behalf of hockey club and foundation their $2M pledge to pediatric palliative care in Ottawa-Gatineau

Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk and his wife Emma on stage during the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala with kids from BGC Ottawa. Photo by Caroline Phillips
Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk and his wife Emma on stage during the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala with kids from BGC Ottawa. Photo by Caroline Phillips
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On the same ice surface where the Ottawa Senators beat the Edmonton Oilers the night before, a sold-out crowd of business leaders gathered on Monday for the eagerly awaited return of the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell.

The 550 attendees dined together on the rink at the Canadian Tire Centre, in support of the Senators Community Foundation. The 19,000 fans that had recently packed the place took their loud cheers home with them, but the gala evening was equally a big win — especially for children and youth living in Ottawa and Gatineau.

A sold-out crowd of 550 dined on the Canadian Tire Centre ice during the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips

A commitment to caring for others had been a factor in why Michael Andlauer and a group of local minority partners wanted to buy the Ottawa Senators after the team came up for sale, attendees heard. “Don’t get me wrong, I want to win a Stanley Cup. Don’t we all? I definitely do,” Andlauer quickly clarified. “But, we recognize we are definitely more than just a hockey team.”

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The Sens Community Foundation remains one of Andlauer’s top priorities. He wants to see their charitable arm, now being led by Jacqueline Belsito, become “a pillar of the community” once more. He got a little emotional while announcing a $2 million pledge to help critically ill children and their families in the region. Of that sum, $1 million will go to Roger Neilson House, a pediatric palliative care home in Ottawa, named after a beloved assistant coach who passed away almost 21 years ago, and the other $1 million to Maison Papillon in Outaouais. The new facility will also specialize in pediatric palliative care.

Ottawa Senators owner Michael Andlauer and his  wife, Lucie Andlauer, greeted attendees of the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips

The new owner spoke about the visits the Sens players pay to hospitalized children at CHEO, to underserved youth at BGC Ottawa and of their “countless other initiatives where there are no cameras, but they do it because they truly care,” said Andlauer. “They represent our city so well.”

He took a moment to recognize the players’ wives and girlfriends as “unsung heroes”, and to express his gratitude to Olivia and Anna Melnyk, the daughters of the team’s former owner, the late Eugene Melnyk. “I want to thank you for selling us the team and also staying on as a partner.”

Andlauer, a self-made businessman and lifelong hockey fan, is the CEO of Vaughan-based supply chain management company Andlauer Healthcare Group. He and his wife, Lucie Andlauer, recently put down roots in Ottawa by purchasing a home in the city. She remained supportively at his side throughout his speech and, at one point, he described her as his best friend.

The evening included a cocktail reception prior to gala-goers heading to the rink, which was safely covered with temporary flooring. The evening felt exciting and chic, complemented by the soothing sounds of singer Rebecca Noelle.

 

Michael Andlauer and his wife, Lucie, are joined by their sons Michael Jr. (far left) and Mathew and his wife Alex Andlauer at the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips
Sueling Ching, president and CEO of the Ottawa Board of Trade and a board member with the Senators Community Foundation, and the hockey club’s president and CEO, Cyril Leeder, at the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips
From left, Ginny Sutcliffe and her husband, Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, with Ottawa Senators alternate captain Thomas Chabot and his partner Marion Pandreau at the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips
From left, Ainsley Malhotra, board chair of CHEO Foundation, and Ottawa Senators assistant coach Daniel Alfredsson and his wife, Bibbi Alfredsson, with Sylvie Laplante and head coach Jacques Martin at the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips
From the Senators Community Foundation board are: Jeff Burns (market vice president with CIBC Commercial Banking), Erin Crowe (e
Catherine Clark, president of Catherine Clark Communications and co-host of  The Honest Talk podcast, with her husband, Chad Schella, associate vice-president of government relations for CIBC,
From left, Tammy Scott, senior vice president of communications for Bell, with her colleagues Sandy McDonald, regional director of community affairs, and business sales leader Sam Osman,
From left, James King with his life-long friend Kyle Braatz, CEO and co-founder of Fullscript, and his wife, Rachel Braatz,
Canadian Bank Note Company CEO Craig Bascombe and COO Marilou Robinson Arends,

The Sens gala last took place in late 2019. The four-plus years felt like forever ago once TSN reporter and emcee Claire Hanna reminisced about what was happening in the world back then. Mind you, some things never change, she quipped. “The Leafs were about to lose to the Bruins in the first round.”

Also spotted from the hockey club were the Ottawa Senators’ president and CEO, Cyril Leeder, and Steve Staios, general manager and president of hockey operations, along with head coach Jacques Martin, assistant coach Daniel Alfredsson and such players as team captain Brady Tkachuk, Thomas Chabot and Claude Giroux. Many were introduced on stage with their partners, and joined by representatives from local charities that the Senators Community Foundation supports.

Kyle Braatz, CEO of digital health platform Fullscript, was invited to make some brief remarks on stage as one of the gold sponsors. He’s also part of the group of local minority owners of the Ottawa Senators.

Braatz was effective in motivating the audience to open up their wallets for the live auction, in support of the Senators Community Foundation’s good work. “Fullscript’s mission is to help people get better, and we do that every single day by servicing healthcare practitioners and patients across North America,” he began. “As the company has grown, we’ve realized how important it is to support the community and make an impact in the community we live and work in. 

“And, when I think about opportunities to partner, who’s better than the Sens Foundation, where we get to support families and children who have, quite frankly, been dealt a really shitty hand.

“I look around this room and I think about how fortunate we all are. How fortunate are we to be sitting here, having these fancy nights? How fortunate are we to watch the best hockey players in the world perform on a regular basis, and beat the Devils and the Oilers, and so on, and so on?

“How fortunate are we?” he reiterated, as the audience responded with applause. “But, there are many families, as we know, who aren’t so fortunate.”

Kyle Braatz, co-founder and CEO of Fullscript, alongside local business leaders and emcee Claire Hanna, helped to get the audience in a generous mood prior to the live auction portion of the evening for

Braatz encouraged the “high rollers” and “money bags” in the crowd to be generous, even singling out some of his friends. “Guess what? Nothing feels better than helping others, so let’s do it.”

In less than 15 minutes, more than $100,000 was raised in the auction led by  “Stuntman” Stu Schwartz, a practical household name in Ottawa and PA Announcer for the Ottawa Senators from 2006 to 2018. 

There were five experiential packages to bid on involving the Ottawa Senators. The items all proved popular, especially the opportunity to invite 12 people over for a catered dinner and wine with Sens players, which expanded from Josh Norris and Ridly Greig to also include Shane Pinto, Jake Sanderson and Brady Tkachuk.

The dinner was bought for $50,000 by a group of local Canadian Tire franchise owners, led by Cliff Hammell, who owns the massive store at the Carlingwood Shopping Centre.

“Stuntman” Stu Schwartz raised more than $100,000 in less than 15 minutes during the live auction for
From left, Susannah Staios alongside Lucie Andlauer, Stacey McMillan (KPMG) and Lydia Leeder at
Michael Andlauer, owner of the Ottawa Senators, on stage with his wife, Lucie, during
From left, Ottawa business leaders Ian Sherman, past board chair of the Ottawa Board of Trade, with Calian Group CEO Kevin Ford at dinner during
From CLV Group: Anthony Scaletta and Kari Anne Scaletta, alongside Oz Drewniak and Lysa Drewniak, Jill McGahan and CEO Mike McGahan, and Diane Tucker and Paul Bouzanis at the
The Ottawa Senators’ general manager and president of hockey operations, Steve Staios, and his wife, Susannah, on stage at the
From left, Claridge Homes executive Neil Malhotra, who’s also part of the local minority ownership of the Ottawa Senators, alongside University of Ottawa Heart Institute Foundation president Lianne Laing, and retired NHL player Jason York, who played for the Sens, at the CIBC Senators Black, Red & Gold Gala presented by Bell on Monday, March 25, 2024. Photo by Caroline Phillips
From left, Andrew Newman, office managing partner for KPMG, alongside  Canadian Bank Note owner Doug Arends, and KPMG’s Stacey McMillan and Mahesh Mani at the
Monica Singhal, executive vice president at Richcraft Homes, and her husband, Kevin Yemm, vice president of land development, at the
Ottawa Senators assistant coach Daniel Alfredsson, a long-time advocate for mental health, and his wife, Bibbi, were joined by representatives from DIFD, a youth-driven mental health initiative created after the daughter of former Sens assistant coach Luke Richardson took her life in 2010. Photo by Caroline Phillips
From left, project executive John McCourt and his wife, RBC regional president Marjolaine Hudon, with Denise Carruthers and Dan Carruthers, CEO of Raven Connected, at the
Karen Sparks, executive director of Wesley Clover Parks, and her husband, Andy Sparks, a real estate broker with Royal LePage, at the
From left, Caitlyn Neil and former Ottawa Senators player Chris Neil in conversation with Geoff Publow, CEO of Myers Automotive Group, and his wife, Caroline Kelly, at the
Cliff Hammell led a group of local Canadian Tire franchise owners to buy a private catered dinner with five of the Ottawa Senators players. Photo by Caroline Phillips
Supporting the
Ottawa singer Rebecca Noelle performed at the
“Stuntman” Stu Schwartz and Angie Poirier, who worked together for years hosting morning radio, at the

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