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30 Sharks: T.J. Galiardi

An instinctive playmaker with great on-ice vision, T.J. Galiardi and his work ethic helped the San Jose Sharks competitive force in his season-plus with the organization.

One of the few to play at the U.S. collegiate level and at the Canadian junior level, Galiardi was drafted 55th overall in 2007 by the Colorado Avalanche. After developing within the organization, though, Galiardi would be involved in a five-player trade to San Jose in February 2012.

In a continuation of our “30 Sharks”, we speak with T.J. Galiardi, who shares his experiences in being traded to the Sharks, his relationship with the club’s then-head coach Todd McLellan and how his time in San Jose helped him in his future business career.

Ditching the Skis for the Surfboard

On February 27, 2012, the Avs had sent T.J. Galiardi and Daniel Winnik to the Sharks in exchange for Jamie McGinn, Mike Connolly and Michael Sgarbossa. For Galiardi, it was a new start but, at the same time, a sad time leaving the team that had drafted him.

“Mixed feelings,” the Calgary native said of the trade. “I was ready to move on and go somewhere new after Colorado. I think my time there just– it had kind of been washed up. I was ready to have a new challenge and the coach and I there, we weren’t seeing eye to eye a little. It worked out well.”

While he was joining a team more ready to compete for a Stanley Cup, though, there was something missing in that first season in San Jose for the former winger.

“[The Avalanche] moved me to San Jose and it was a real Cup-contending team,” Galiardi started. “But unfortunately, we didn’t really gel the way we needed to gel in that first year there and had a first-round exit.

Things, however, got better.

“But, after that, the group really seemed to kind of shift and everyone got along really well and it was an awesome experience.”

Playing for Todd McLellan

One of the more promising aspects of the Sharks during this time was the impact of head coach Todd McLellan.

After spending three seasons as an assistant coach with the Detroit Red Wings — the last of which ended in winning the Stanley Cup — the Sharks hired McLellan as their new head coach in 2008. Already in his fourth season with the club when Galiardi arrived, the latter expressed his pleasure in working for the bench boss.

“I really loved Todd,” beamed Galiardi. “I thought he was an amazing coach. He had his unique style in the sense that he had a real open-door policy, which was really the first time I had that from a coach at that point.”

In spite of the closeness of their relationship, though, Galiardi admitted that being on the same page with McLellan was a work-in-progress.

“I thought him and I had a slow start to our coach-player relationship,” the 32-year-old admitted. “He didn’t really trust my game early but as things went on, he started to have that trust for me.” 

And the rest, as they say, was history.

“You know, it’s fun how it developed,” Galiardi fondly reflected. “The last while that I played there, I was playing on the first line, playing on the penalty kill, second power-play unit, so I had a great opportunity there. And McLellan, you know, I thought he was the most prepared coach that I ever had: his whole staff, everything they did was really well done. So, nothing but good experiences with him.”

Post-Playing Career

After San Jose, Galiardi made stops in Calgary and Winnipeg before taking his game to Sweden and then the KHL before retiring in 2018.

Since then, the Calgary native has co-founded the Halifax-based Outcast Foods with Dr. Darren Burke.
As the CMO of Outcast Foods, Galiardi and his team are on a mission to solve Canada’s food waste problem by “rescuing misfit produce from ending up in a landfill”.

I asked the former NHLer whether anything from his tenure with the Sharks — or any of his stops — had inspired him in his business career.

“I don’t know if anything inspired it but there are tons of things that I learned in my playing career that have helped me in my business career,” Galiardi said. “Certainly, relationships are important. When you’re on a hockey team, you have 25, 30 other personalities that you have to find a way to gel with in order to succeed in a common goal. Same thing in business: you’re working with people for a common goal and that’s definitely worked. Hard work, commitment and the cliches that are all translated as well into the business world.”

If you’d like to learn more about Outcast Foods, I strongly encourage you to visit their website: https://outcastfoods.com/blogs/news/outcast-foods-partners-with-farms-to-stop-waste

In 50 games with the Sharks, T.J. Galiardi scored six goals and nine assists while adding another goal and assist in 14 playoff games.

During his brief time with the club, Galiardi helped the Sharks to some success and had a great time along the way.

Now, in his post-playing career, Galiardi is helping to make Canada — and the world — a better place, showing a strong, unwavering commitment to end food waste.

As we look back on 30 years of the San Jose Sharks, we celebrate the contributions of T.J. Galiardi: a gentleman whose current-day contributions should make the Sharks — and frankly every other organization and individual — very proud.

 

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