Canada News

Get the latest new in Candada

Winnipeg

Bombers QB Zach Collaros and wife find balance between football and family life

Nicole Collaros switches on the Zoom chat, apologizing that husband Zach might join late.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterback is trying to get their oldest daughter to sleep, but Sierra doesn’t like the play call.

“This is our life,” Nicole said with a laugh during the team’s recent bye week. “We don’t sleep, and it just seems to be getting worse. It’s supposed to be getting better, but it’s getting worse.

“Three [children] has been the game-changer. Two, we were good. And then three, it’s like they all end up in bed with us at some point. It’s like we play musical beds. It’s wild.”

Reluctant sleeper Sierra is 4½ years old. Daughter Capri turns three this month and son Dean is seven months.

It’s a busy household similar to many families, but with the added intensity of a six-month stretch of long days as Zach focuses on helping the Blue Bombers get to a fifth consecutive Grey Cup game.

A football quarterback in blue, gold and white throws a ball
Collaros throws a pass against the Montreal Alouettes last weekend as the Bombers locked up first place in the CFL West Division with a nail-biting win. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press)

It hasn’t been a typical season for the CFL team.

The Bombers started 0-4, went to 2-6, won eight straight and then lost to the Toronto Argonauts in a game that would have clinched first place in the West Division.

They only grabbed the top spot in the final regular-season game with a field goal as time expired for a 28-27 victory over the Montreal Alouettes.

Now, Winnipeg is hosting the division final against the Saskatchewan Roughriders on Saturday, with the winner advancing to the Grey Cup in B.C. on Nov. 17.

Despite such a roller-coaster season, Nicole said Zach remained even keel and didn’t show added stress at home.

Her No. 1 concern after a game is his health.

“I’ll say, ‘Are you hurt?’ He’ll say, ‘No’ or ‘I’m just a bit banged up,'” she said.

“[Sometimes] it’s hard for him to get out of bed the next morning. That’s very normal. It sounds so crazy. That’s not normal, but it’s normal in football life.”

She’ll gauge how he’s feeling mentally after a loss by saying it was a rough one and asking if he’s all right. He’ll reply that he’ll be OK, and then it’s back to their routine.

“We order McDonald’s after every home game — a late-night cheat, whatever you want to call it,” she said with a smile. “We listen to music, generally, and go to sleep.

“That’s our hanging time after the game. We rarely actually talk about the game.”

A husband and wife and three young children are seen on a dock, under a setting sun
Zach and Nicole Collaros with (left to right) son Dean, daughter Capri and daughter Sierra are shown in a handout photo. (Submitted by Nicole Collaros/The Canadian Press)

The players’ spouses and girlfriends often get together and talk about the team’s early struggles. They ask each other how their partners were after a loss. The consensus was in a “bad mood.”

“But now, coming up, it’s a totally different end, and we’re going to the West final,” Nicole said.

“I think I can speak for some of the wives, too. We knew they were going to turn it around. Whatever it took, they’re there for each other.”

Becoming a father has made a difference in how Zach handles the inevitable ups and downs in sports.

“We laugh, because I said, ‘If this was a game in 2015, 2016, you would have lost it. You would have been really upset or angry for a few days,”‘ Nicole said. “I truly think having the kids and a family changed the way he looks at things.”

Nicole was a kindergarten teacher in Toronto when they met in 2015 while he played for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. They married in February 2019, a year that also featured his trade from Saskatchewan to Toronto and then to Winnipeg in October.

Although he’s often at the stadium on practice days for up to 12 hours, he’s home for dinner and family time before they tag team the bedtime ritual. Next is a bit of couple time, then a few hours in his office watching more film.

Sometimes she’ll drop by the stadium with the kids to grab daddy time between practice and meetings.

A football player in a blue shirt looks solemn, his chin resting in his hand.
Collaros looks down after the losing to the Montreal Alouettes in last year’s Grey Cup championship game in Hamilton. He’s looking to lead the team back to the big game, and vindication, this year. (Nick Iwanyshyn/The Canadian Press)

Zach tries to watch the girls’ soccer and basketball games, as well as their dance and gymnastic classes. On the team’s off days, he still goes to the stadium for a workout, but they have family outings.

He doesn’t make it for the Zoom call but chats the next day, after seeing the girls play soccer.

“The beginning of the season, [Sierra] was afraid to go out there on the field when it was actually live action,” he said.

“Little by little, she’s gotten better and better. She ran off today and said to her mom, ‘Mommy, I did it! I didn’t cry.”‘

It’s those types of family moments he doesn’t want overshadowed by work, admitting there was some worry during the team’s early skid.

“You try to not let doubts seep in, but that is human nature,” he said. “When things aren’t going your way, you start to question is the process correct?

“But you also have to rely on the foundation of things that got you to where you are. Not just me, but the team in general.”

A football player drinks from a big silver trophy
Collaros drinks from the Grey Cup as the Bombers celebrate winning the 107th Grey Cup against the Hamilton Tiger Cats in 2019, ending a 28-year championship drought for Winnipeg. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Nicole is a “great sounding board” and understands what’s required for him to perform at his best.

“During the week, my wife carries the brunt of our family’s life — is really the captain, so to speak, at home,” Zach said.

“This might come off as a cliché or something, but when I walk in the door at five or six or whatever time it is, any worry or stress I had at work kind of falls off.

“I open the door and my daughters, every single day, they say, ‘Dad!’ and they run to the door. And then you get into dad mode. You’ve got your job and you do your job, but once you get home kind of your second job starts.”

View original article here Source