Thereās plenty happening near Matt Pettingerās downtown Victoria office, where the din of power tools, teetering construction cranes and traffic detours offer signs that things arenāt about to calm down any time soon.
Step outside the View Street headquarters of ās commercial real estate brokerage firm, and youāll walk past a smorgasbord of new restaurants, fashionable boutiques and specialty shops of all shapes and flavours. Stick around for a moment, Pettinger says, and youāre bound to meet a familiar face or two.
Pettinger isnāt one to sit idle. At 15 years of age, he hit the ice for the first time with the Victoria Salsa hockey club. The young left winger rapidly rose through the junior ranks. By the 2000-01 season, heād turned pro and was playing among the worldās best with the National Hockey Leagueās . Pettinger went on to play with the Tampa Bay Lightning and before finishing his career in Europe.
Hockey played a prominent role in molding his strong will, a sense of dedication and unrelenting work ethic. Life in professional hockey, he adds, requires a strong sense of self, a keen resolve and, perhaps surprisingly, strong relationship skills. Nobody likes a bad seed, and bad blood among players can easily sink the most talent-laden teams.
āAt the minor and junior league level, I was usually one of the better players on the team, but at the National Hockey League level there are a lot of guys who can do the same things you can do and so the question becomes: āhow do you differentiate yourself?ā Itās about working hard and not getting discouraged and coming back from adversity. A deal goes south for whatever reason in my line of work now and itās crucial to pick yourself up and be ready for the next opportunity,ā he says.
āIāve only been [in real estate] for two and a half years, but thereās no deal thatās the same, and thatās no different than in hockey. You come in as a rookie and learn from different situations and different environments. You learn constantly, and it translates into the world of commercial real estate. Iām always gaining market knowledge.ā
Pettingerās penchant for taking walks around the neighbourhood, however, is something he credits to his father, Rick Pettinger, a partner and president of NKF Devencore who has established himself as a well-known and top-producing commercial realtor over the past 25 years.
It was Rick who offered his son the pragmatic piece of advice early on in his career.
āMy dad always tells me, āIf youāre ever in the office and have nothing to do, go for a walk, because you never know who youāre going to run into on the street.āā he says. āIāve definitely taken that message and used it. You go for a coffee and, next thing you know, you run into someone who wants to sell a building or is looking for office or retail space to lease.ā
Regardless of your field, itās a smart piece of advice in a town where networking is often as simple as walking down the block. For Pettinger, the opportunity to carry out a rewarding post-hockey career and settle down with his spouse, Chelsea, and the coupleās two young children, is what makes coming back home so sweet.
āThe amount of hotel rooms Iāve stayed in over the years playing hockey is ridiculous,ā he says. āWhere else would you rather live than Victoria, British Columbia? Iāve been to lots of places around the world and been to a lot of beautiful places in Europe but when I tell them where Iām from, whether itās Vancouver or Victoria, they gush about it. Weāre very fortunate on that end. Itās nice to be from Victoria and itās a good spot to call home.ā
He may have spent much of his childhood at the rink, but heād always find time to visit the resort overlooking Tofinoās Cox Bay created by his grandparents Bill and Joan in 1973. The beach has become synonymous with Canadaās gnarly cold-water surfing culture and some of the countryās best hotels, including the and the Resort. The Pettinger family sold their 41-acre in early 2015.
āIt was, and still is, a special piece of property for our family, but my father and his two brothers felt it was the right time to move on.ā
The sale hasnāt weakened Mattās bonds to the region. Firmly settled on the West Coast, far from the worries and headaches associated with uncertainties of looming trade deadlines, moves across the continent and living out of hotel rooms, Pettinger is concentrating on replicating the fond memories of youth for his own children.
He keeps in shape by playing casual drop-in hockey with friends at Esquimaltās and, as an avid golfer, concedes that he enjoys spending time at the links at the when gets a break from dad duty.
āI try to get out and play golf as much as I can but when you have young kids your life revolves around themā he says. āFree time is sort of limited right now, but I enjoy every minute of being a dad .ā
He may no longer be rubbing elbows with Alexander Ovechkin and Roberto Luongo or playing with Canadaās best at the World Junior Championship, but heās glad and proud to be up early to drive his kids to school, get his daughter to dance class on time, accompany the family on the birthday party circuit or just head out for a nice long walk.
- Story by Sean McIntyre/Photographs by Lia Crowe/Boulevard Magazine
Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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