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Pitt Meadows coaching legend Rich Goulet dies

Basketball community mourns passing of longtime high school hoops coach
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Rich Goulet passed away on Sunday. (The News files)

Renowned Pitt Meadows secondary basketball coach Rich Goulet passed away on Sunday night, at the age of 74.

Tributes to the longtime high school hoops bench boss have been posted in social media non-stop. They show he was respected as much for being a mentor and builder in the sport as he was a competitor.

Goulet was a high school boys basketball coach for more than 50 years, including 39 at Pitt Meadows. Along the way he earned a spot in the Basketball B.C. Hall of Fame and won the Prime Minister鈥檚 Volunteer award. He also won five provincial championships, including three at Pitt Meadows.

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Ken Dockendorf, his longtime friend and rival from the Maple Ridge Ramblers, said Goulet鈥檚 commitment was unmatched. Dockendorf also lived in Pitt Meadows. When he walked his dog at 10:30 p.m., he could go past the high school and always find Goulet鈥檚 office lights were still on.

鈥淗e was the most dedicated coach in the history of this province,鈥 stated Dockendorf.

Dockendorf is the president of the BC High School Boys Basketball Association, which tweeted about Goulet鈥檚 passing late on Sunday, calling him 鈥渁n amazing mentor to all his players and to young coaches all around B.C.鈥

Goulet came to Pitt Meadows in 1979 when it was an unremarkable farm school in need of some school spirit. Just four years later he had built a program and won a provincial Double A basketball championship.

Both men ran elite programs, and Dockendorf remembers the best years were 1985 to 1991. When the Marauders played the Ramblers, it was tough to find a seat in the gym. They met in the provincial championships in 1989, and Goulet鈥檚 team won by a single point.

鈥淚t was basically the high school basketball capital of the province,鈥 remembers Dockendorf.

Ron Wallsmith also started at the school in 1979, coming over from Westview, where he had coached the Wildcats. He was the vice principal, and also Goulet鈥檚 assistant coach. They would spend most of 40 years in gyms together.

鈥淚 thought I knew some basketball before I met him. He taught me a lot,鈥 he said. 鈥淩ich鈥檚 passion was unbelievable.鈥

Pitt Meadows鈥 former players describe Goulet as a classic basketball coach, who ran his teams with old-school intensity. He had a love-hate relationship with some of his players. Those throwback coaches are unapologetic.

鈥淲e were all hollerers, and we tried to make the kids as good as we could make them,鈥 said Dockendorf.

These coaches were 鈥渟tern鈥 and 鈥渄emanding,鈥 he said, and they made sure their kids made good grades, and were good citizens, said Dockendorf.

Wallsmith said the players loved Goulet. His longtime assistant went to visit him in hospital in Abbotsford, and two players from the last B.C. championship team showed up while he was there. Then a third Marauders alumnus appeared. They went outside the hospital to visit, sitting in the sunshine and telling stories.

鈥淭he admiration the kids had for him was unbelievable,鈥 said Wallsmith.

Goulet is the godfather of Wallsmith鈥檚 son Kevin, who has gone on to become a junior boys basketball coach at Holy Cross.

Goulet never married or had children, but he had a basketball family.

Bruce Duthie started young in Goulet鈥檚 Little Dribblers program in 1983, and was coached by him until a dream season in 1992, when they made it to the provincial championships. They were beaten by a Victoria team led by Steve Nash in the final.

鈥淗e pushed us hard because he believed in us, and he taught us to believe in ourselves,鈥 said Duthie. 鈥淏ut to believe in yourself, you have to do the work.鈥

Duthie is an executive with a national bank. He said the life lessons he learned from Goulet were more important than what he got from university.

鈥淗e is going to be dearly missed. He really did make a difference in many lives, for the better.鈥

Scott Walton was the big centre on that 1992 team, and followed in his mentor鈥檚 footsteps to become a high school basketball coach. He said Goulet鈥檚 teams were always competitive because he got the most out of his players. Some seasons the program was blessed with some real athletic talent, and would contend for a provincial championship. But every season, Pitt Meadows was going to be a tough team.

鈥淚鈥檝e been coaching 20 years, and I know how hard it is to have that success,鈥 said Walton. 鈥淗is standards were extremely high, and there was no compromise.鈥

He said Goulet held his players accountable in a way that is missing in modern high school sports.

As he raises his daughters, he found 鈥淎 lot of that stuff translated to parenting.鈥

The outpouring of respect for the man when he was asked to stop coaching at Pitt Meadows in 2017 was unprecedented. Even two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash, whom Goulet had coached with Team B.C., tweeted 鈥淟ucky I got to play for Coach Goulet!鈥 Former LA Laker Robert Sacre and Miami Heat Kelly Olynyk tweeted out similar sentiments.

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Goulet had suffered poor health in recent years, had strokes, was on dialysis, needed a leg amputation, and had circulation problems. He had been in hospital, was released back into his seniors home in Abbotsford, and passed there.

Wallsmith had a virtual visit with Goulet the weekend before his death, as they facetimed, and talked basketball.

鈥淗e was in his room watching March Madness, and I was home watching March Madness. It was like old times,鈥 he said.

Wallsmith said the basketball community is honouring him in social media.

鈥淭hat word 鈥榣egend鈥 is a corny one, but he really was a legend,鈥 said Dockendorf. 鈥淭he impact he had on high school basketball was enormous.鈥


Have a story tip? Email: ncorbett@mapleridgenews.com
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Neil Corbett

About the Author: Neil Corbett

I have been a journalist for more than 30 years, the past decade with the Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows News.
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