Cougars Athletics experience triggered a
career in broadcasting
Looking back on how Dirks’ campus connections started, for a semester he was a Cougar on a men’s hockey team that was so bad it compelled Mount Royal’s administration to disband the squad.
“I had a great time playing for that team briefly, but they were awful,” he says, chuckling. “I think they lost 64 in a row, a record at the time.”
While earning his diploma, Dirks served as the public address announcer for the Jack Kenyon-coached Cougars men’s basketball team and did the play-by-play for broadcasts on Shaw.
After graduation and heading to Montreal to earn an education degree from McGill, Dirks returned to Calgary and the Mount Royal campus to work for Cougars Athletics.
“I was the assistant to Al Bohonus and responsible for marketing the Cougars Athletic teams,” Dirks says. “That’s what spurred my interest in journalism, because part of my job was to promote the teams and players to the Calgary media. It reminded me how much I enjoyed doing the broadcasting when I was a student at Mount Royal.”
Dirks took advantage of his wife, Laura’s, job transfer to Toronto in 1987 to enrol in a one-year certificate program in radio broadcasting at Humber College.
“That Mount Royal connection really triggered things,” Dirks recalls. “In retrospect, had I not worked in the athletic department I probably wouldn’t have gotten the bug that sent me forward into pursuing it as a career.”
Fast forward to the 2000s and Dirks was news anchor of CBC Calgary’s six o’clock television news. He earned a CBC President’s Award for his coverage of the Calgary Flames 2004 Stanley Cup playoff run and was a play-by-play announcer at four Olympic Games for the network.
During that period Dirks served as a member and later as chair of the advisory board for MRU’s journalism and digital media program as it transitioned from a two- to a four-year program.