Elsipogtog player with Titan brings Memorial Cup to First Nation community - Action News
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New Brunswick

Elsipogtog player with Titan brings Memorial Cup to First Nation community

Elijah Francis, an offensive defender who helped Acadie-Bathurst Tital win the Memorial Cup this year, hopes to get into the NHL or coach younger kids someday. Lately, he's been posing with the cup in Elsipogtog First Nation.

Elijah Francis credits his success on Memorial Cup-winning hockey team to support back home

Elijah Francis continued his celebration of the victory with friends and family at the Elsipogtog Community Centre.

The Elsipogtog First Nation community is celebrating one of itsown.

Elijah Francis wasan offensive defender for the Acadie-Bathurst Titan when the team brought home the Memorial Cup this year after winning the championship game in Regina.

Now, the cup stands proudly on display at the community centre in Elsipogtog, about 150 kilometres south of Bathurst.

You just gotta put the time and effort into it so you can be really great.- Elijah Francis

Francis credits much of his success on the team to his support system back home in Elsipogtoghis family and friends.

"In communities like this, like in reserves, you get a lot of support, family support," Francis said. "But some kids, they don't really get that support. For me, I was really fortunate."

Support for the 20-year-old Francis was evident in the large number of people who came to celebrate his victory. Local kids were delighted when Francis posed with them with the cup.

This is the second time the Memorial Cup has taken up real estate at the ElsipogtogCommunity Centre. Trey Lewis, the captain of the Halifax Mooseheads, brought the cup onits first visit back in 2013.

Biggest fan

Sylvia Jadis, Elijah Francis's grandmother, says she tried to go to as many of his games as possible. She says being at the winning game was her proudest moment.

Sylvia Jadis, Francis's grandmother, is considered Elijah's "biggest fan," and hastravelled around the country to be at every game he plays.

The second the buzzer went off to end the Memorial Cup final in late May, she ran onto the ice to share in the victory.

"I was really proud," Jadis said. "I think I cried I don't know how many times. Once I got on the ice, it was like, the way he was going. He just grabbed me. It was really the proudest moment."

Francis says the win isa blur, but he does remember his family onthe ice celebrating alongside him.

What's next

The Acadie-Bathurst Titan won the Memorial Cup at a championship game in Regina in late May.

He's hoping to be drafted to the NHL while he completes his university studies.

But if that doesn't happen, he said, he plans on coaching the younger kids in Elsipogtog and helping them chase their dreams.

"You just really gotta work hard and and really know what you want in life," Francis said.

"And once you find that one thing that you really want in life for me it was hockey and going to the rink everyday and practising and working hard and just getting really better at the game you just gotta put the time and effort into it so you can be really great."