Kent Angus

He later earned his pilot's license, worked in the Air Canada terminal at Toronto Pearson International Airport, and assisted with travel plans for the Canadian national ice hockey teams.

[2] When National Hockey League (NHL) players participated in the Olympics, he was on call to produce replacement jerseys by the next day for last-minute roster changes due to injuries.

[6] For ice hockey at the 2002 Winter Olympics, Angus oversaw a stitching site in Utah where 12 seamstress prepared more than 1,450 uniforms with numbers and players' names.

[6] Angus felt that the "discovery pieces" which were national motifs and symbols sewn into the jersey design, noticeable at a close distance, was his favourite work.

He also produced additional jerseys for each NHL player to contribute to charities, which included disaster relief fundraising and the "Hockey for Haiti" program, and online auctions for Olympic memorabilia.