Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Former Flames, challengers, shooting to score big dollars for missing boy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2015 10:17 AM

    Calgary Flames' alumni will suit up against a challenge team next month to raise money in the name of a five-year-old boy who is missing and presumed dead.

    Jennifer and Rod O'Brien, the parents of Nathan O'Brien, have announced the former Flames will take on sponsors, police, politicians, family and friends in a Feb. 5 fun game at the Saddledome.

    Money raised will go to the Nathan O'Brien Children's Foundation and be channelled to a number of charities.

    Rod O'Brien says he hopes the game will become an annual event.

    Nathan and his grandparents, Kathy and Alvin Liknes (LIHK'-ness), disappeared from the grandparents' home in Calgary last July.

    Their bodies have never been found and murder charges have previously been laid in their disappearance.

    O'Brien says some friends came up with the idea of the game to honour Nathan.

    "At that time it was a small charity hockey game. But in the last four weeks it’s been exploding with people signing on to help and just create a once in a lifetime event."

    The event includes a "Timbits" hockey game during one of the intermissions. O'Brien says Nathan's Timbits team took part in a game between the Calgary Flames and Phoenix Coyotes last year.

    "It was a once-in-a-lifetime event to play on the big ice with the scoreboard and the crowd, so we thought we would honour the Timbits program again this year and have a team come out and do exactly what Nathan did. All the kids just loved it. It's just our way of giving back to the program that Nathan loved."

    The foundation was established after an anonymous donor reached out to the O'Brien family in September with $1 million to set up a fund in Nathan's name.

    The family says the generous donation came from an American businessman who was touched by their story. (CHQR, The Canadian Press)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships
    HALIFAX - Jim Kerr says he hadn't imagined that sailing would be the way he renewed his career in international athletics after losing his eyesight.

    Halifax: Blind Sailors Playing Key Role On Crews Competing At Disabled Sailing Championships

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster
    OTTAWA - A train operator's level of fatigue, sleep patterns and "ability to make effective, safe decisions" were among the risk factors singled out in Transport Canada guidelines for single-person train operations — advice that was finalized just months before the Lac-Megantic rail disaster.

    Feds Stressed Fatigue, Workload Concerns Just Before Lac-Megantic Disaster

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs
    OTTAWA - The Canadian military's almost decade-long quest to buy unmanned aerial vehicles has been partly hung up by an internal debate about whether the air forces needs one — or two — different fleets of drones.

    Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election
    OTTAWA - Invading hordes of Liberal and New Democrat MPs will be doing some reconnaissance in Alberta over the next few weeks as their parties prepare plans to storm the Conservative bastion in the next federal election.

    Liberals, NDP Plot To Storm Tories' Fortress Alberta In Next Federal Election

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect
    VANCOUVER - Legal experts say a criminal case involving a polygamous sect in B-C will probably reignite a debate over whether the ban on multiple marriages violates the right to religious freedom.

    Questions remain about polygamy law as charges laid against men from B.C. sect

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest
    MONTREAL - Federal officials closely tracked the fallout of an RCMP raid on a First Nations protest against shale-gas exploration in New Brunswick, at one point raising concerns it could spawn another countrywide movement like Idle No More.

    Feds Worried About Another 'Idle No More' After New Brunswick Fracking Protest