The show must go on!
Flirting with a half century legacy, The Canadian Progress Club – Halifax, is proud to announce the 49th running of the annual Desjardins Sports Celebrity Dinner, an event proudly supported by Q104.
It’s being done with a twist for the times - a virtual edition - hosted once again by CTV/TSNs, Rod Black, who always delivers an unforgettable evening of entertainment with engaging interviews of some of the biggest names in sport along with other special touches that he is known to sprinkle in, as only he can!
Our Headliner is something incredibly special this year - the Super Bowl Champ turned Covid Frontline Worker, Laurent Duverney-Tardif!
All net proceeds go to deserving charities, but instead of selling tickets to a big event like in past years, the Progress Club is switching its fundraising gears for this 2021 edition by doing a BIG raffle for the chance to win $10,000, which will also include the link to watch the virtual event on Thursday, March 18th.
In addition, The Progress Club is also hosting an impressive, online auction of signed sports memorabilia with the who’s-who of professional sports, past and present!
Net proceeds support the following organizations: The King’s Meadow Home, The Club Inclusion, Special Olympics Nova Scotia, and the IWK Foundation.
About Laurent Duverney-Tardif:
His meteoric rise has been so remarkable that the Kansas City Star called him “the most interesting man in the NFL.” And for good reason: not only does Laurent Duvernay-Tardif play for the Kansas City Chiefs, he is also studying medicine at McGill University. In May 2018, he graduated with his doctorate in medicine, earning one of the biggest accomplishments of his life.
In May 2014, at the age of only 23, the Mont-Saint-Hilaire native became the 10th Canadian to be drafted by an NFL team from a Canadian university. In his second season in Kansas City, the six-foot-five-inch 320-pound player earned the position of right guard on the team.
Passionate about both football and medicine, Laurent turned a deaf ear when counsellors and family members advised him to choose between sports and studies. And it proved to be the right choice! “It’s all about balance. Don’t give up on your passions!” he tells the young people he meets at the many talks he gives at schools.
Duvernay-Tardif played university football with McGill University (2010 to 2013) after his college career with the Phénix at Collège André-Grasset (2008-2009). Previously, he played three seasons with the Richelieu Pirates in Beloeil.
From the beginning of his career, he has been honoured with awards, both athletic and academic. In February 2020, he was an integral part of the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl winning team.
During the spring of 2020, Laurent lent a helping hand during the Covid-19 pandemic by working as an orderly at a long term care facility in the Montreal area. In July 2020, Laurent announced that he was opting out of the 2020 NFL season due to Covid-19, becoming the 1st player of the 2020 NFL season to announce his decision to opt-out. In 2020, he was named co- recipients of the Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year award as well as the co-winner for the 2020 Lou Marsh Trophy.
Already very involved in his community despite his grueling schedule, Laurent is driven by the desire to get young people excited about physical activity and art as well as promoting balance between sports, arts and studies. In 2017, his longtime girlfriend Florence and him cofounded the Laurent Duvernay-Tardif Foundation, its mission being to encourage sports, arts and studies for kids.
An avid sailor—he spent many summers as a camp counselor—and fan of contemporary art, Laurent Duvernay-Tardif is as charismatic as he is physically imposing, and his future holds great promise.