Canadian Olympian Mike Meldrum Retires From Coaching After Winning Lottery In The Summer

Longtime Killarney Swim Club head coach and Canadian Olympian Mike Meldrum retired from coaching on October 31 after a life-changing lottery win this summer.

Meldrum, who resides in Calgary and has been involved in competitive swimming in the city for 49 years, won $5 million (CAD) in the Lotto 6-49 draw on June 18. The news was announced by the Western Canada Lottery Corporation (WCLC), which led to Meldrum realizing he had the winning ticket.

“I saw someone had won in Calgary, but I hadn’t checked my ticket yet,” Meldrum said, according to CTV News. “When I first told my wife, she didn’t believe me. She told me to send her the numbers so she could check online herself.”

Meldrum, 57, said he had been buying Lotto 6-49 tickets weekly for 35 years.

“I always knew I was going to win,” Meldrum jokingly said to SwimSwam. “I often spoke to my athletes about that, ‘this is probably our last workout together because I’m going to win the $20 million tonight,’ and one day I did. Coaches always asked me when I was retiring to New Zealand because that’s where my lovely wife is from, and that’s where I would end up. My response was always, I’m ‘just’ a swim coach and I haven’t won the lottery yet, so you’re still stuck with me.

“The day that I found out that I had won in June, I used the App to check my lotto ticket, realized that I’d won, and the first thing I wrote my wife was, ‘WE’RE OUTTA HERE!’,” he said.

In reality, Meldrum has two daughters and two granddaughters in Calgary, and he and his wife love their home and their neighborhood, so they’re unlikely to leave.

“I retired from coaching on October 31, and I’m looking forward to traveling with my wife and giving back to my family,” he said. “My daughter’s always said, ‘your athletes never knew how great they had it because they always got the best of you and we got the rest’. Now I’m focused on my family and giving them the best of me.”

Meldrum has been a swim coach for 34 years, starting out in the small town of Cochrane, Alberta, where he coached summer club for three years while finishing his degree. He then worked for three years with the Cascade Swim Club (1993-96) before joining Killarney Swim Club, where he’s been since 1996.

On November 11, the Killarney Swim Club sent out a Facebook post honoring Meldrum after his 29-year tenure with the team.

The club said Meldrum grew the team from 50 to 240 swimmers during his time there, and was recently recognized as a Junior National Team Coach in 2024, and received Swim Alberta’s Female Junior Swimmer Coach of the Year award in 2025.

As an athlete, Meldrum swam on the Canadian National Team for seven years. He represented Canada at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, placing 23rd in the men’s 400 IM. He also competed internationally at the 1986 and 1990 Commonwealth Games, the 1987 Pan Am Games, and the 1989 Pan Pacific Games before retiring following the 1991 World University Games.

At the 1987 Pan Ams, he won a silver medal on the Canadian men’s 4×200 free relay and added a bronze in the 400 IM.

Prior to making the National Team, he swam for the Calgary Patriots and the University of Calgary Swim Club before attending the University of Calgary, where he played a prominent role in the Dinos’ dynasty throughout the 1980s.

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Fishhead
6 months ago

Good on him, that’ll buy a lot of Molson!

Admin
Reply to  Fishhead
6 months ago

Fun fact: Budweiser has been the most popular beer in Canada since 2004.

Swim fan
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 months ago

Now that is crazy… Bud isn’t the number one seller even in the states, curious how that happened. Note to Summer McIntosh, drop Red Bull and pick up Molson, could actually make a difference…

Lily
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 months ago

I don’t know anyone up here who drinks that lol.
It’s likely highly dependent on the region.

Gldnbehr
6 months ago

Crazy to quote his own daughter. You didn’t change your behavior after you heard that? Wild.

Not a swimmer
Reply to  Gldnbehr
6 months ago

Seriously, totally agree. That is a crazy quote…

Chris Breedy
Reply to  Not a swimmer
6 months ago

To gldnbehr and not a swimmer- I think that’s unfair to say to him-if you’ve ever swum at a high level and coached afterwards, you’d know that just like your swim years, your coaching years are packed full of training, meets, travel, mentoring swimmers and parents and running the business! The late, great George Haines told me at my first nationals in ’75- “coaches have a high divorce rate’ (due to the time commitment)- I found that to be true also-

Swim fan
Reply to  Chris Breedy
6 months ago

The problem is, I didn’t say it, his daughter did. She would know. I get it, all jobs, especially coaching, take a lot of time and dedication. No doubt. But that comment, come on…

The Original Aquadog
Reply to  Chris Breedy
6 months ago

I’m not going to speak on this coach because to his credit he seems to have kept things in tact despite the sacrifices, kept his post-coaching priorities straight, and deserves this “happily ever after”.

But I will say this — I worked with a guy who talked like this, and we were always at odds over work/life balance. He eventually came home from a meet to find his wife in bed with another guy. Twice. From what I’ve seen, that mindset is why many coaches don’t make it to the happy retirement where they travel the world with their loved one.

Family is always more important. I worked with a pretty famous coach who had an absolutely horrendous personal life,… Read more »

Grampy's Beard
Reply to  Not a swimmer
6 months ago

Don’t read into stuff like that. Just be happy good fortune smiled on an awesome guy. I know him pretty well, he is awesome to his kids and family.

Lily
Reply to  Gldnbehr
6 months ago

Shows how demanding coaching is and the many sacrifices coaches and their families make. Congratulations Coach Meldrum, on your retirement and lottery win!

SwimSteve
Reply to  Gldnbehr
6 months ago

Lol, if you know his daughter at all you would know that is completely in jest. She coaches too you know, so she gets it. Mike’s a great dad and I’m sure he’s a great grandpa.

Jane Dressel's Vertical Leap
Reply to  SwimSteve
6 months ago

That’s a relief! I had lots of questions when I read that quote and was wondering what the context was.

The Original Aquadog
Reply to  SwimSteve
6 months ago

That’s hilarious, and makes it even funnier that people are defending it as a serious comment.

Grampy's Beard
6 months ago

What’s even more touching is some of the things he decided to do with the winnings. A very good man. I am so happy for you Mike, and family. Fortune United with Karma

Awsi Dooger
6 months ago

Buying lottery tickets weekly for 35 years. Nice outlier win. But imagine all the examples, the regressive tax.

BlueSky Flatulence Swim Club
6 months ago

What a wonderful story! Best wishes to him and his family.

If I won the lottery, I’d quit my job and become a full time Swim Swam commentator, just like SN!

jablo
6 months ago

Crazy, because if I won the lottery, I’d quit my office job and go be a coach full time lol

WestCoastRefugee
Reply to  jablo
6 months ago

25 years ago, maybe. In 2025 dealing with out-of-control parents, and all of the other issues coaches face? Not on your life.

Dmswim
Reply to  WestCoastRefugee
6 months ago

Also, you spend evenings and weekends away from your family.

Swimmin’ in the South
Reply to  WestCoastRefugee
6 months ago

They were like that 25 years ago as well.

The Original Aquadog
Reply to  WestCoastRefugee
6 months ago

When you’re rich, you don’t have to put up with out of control parents.

Meeeee
Reply to  jablo
6 months ago

i was thinking the same

Chris Breedy
Reply to  jablo
6 months ago

Good one!!

Coach Michael
6 months ago

Unreal, good for him. Powerball nearly $800 Million tonight…

Logan
6 months ago

What an amazing story! Congrats on your retirement, Coach. Far too often our athletes don’t realize the sacrifices outside the pool! Time to enjoy! 🌞 🏖️

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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