So when his son grew up a smallish but driven and talented forward, Patrice could see the parallels between Jordan and his old friend.
"I knew what was going to happen with Jordan because I had been through that with Martin," Patrice said Friday, moments after Jordan was drafted by the Blue Jackets in the third round. "I was there. I lived it with him. I told Jordan when he was getting some of the rankings and stuff like that, he thought that he should have been ranked (better), maybe first or second round, but I always told him, even Marty St. Louis didn't get drafted, so don't worry if you're a third-round or fourth-round pick. It's OK.
"At the end of the day, it starts now. It's the year after the draft you need to work even harder. Marty said that on the stage last night. But yeah, I used the Marty St. Louis example with Jordan a lot."
It's not hard to see the similarities between the two players even if it's two decades or so apart. St. Louis put up comical stat lines as a youngster -- he had 87 points in 31 games his final year of juniors, plus 85 points in 35 games as a junior at the University of Vermont -- but his diminutive stature meant he not only wasn't drafted, he never played in the QMJHL and had to work his way from the minors to the NHL.
Dumais, meanwhile, is a step ahead of where St. Louis was at this point in his career. It might help that hockey has changed -- the increased speed and decreased physicality has made it a lot easier on smaller players than when St. Louis had to skate through the giant sequoia trees of yore -- but Dumais has already taken on a starring role in the Q, placing third in the league last year with 109 points in 68 games for Halifax.
That production did put him on draft boards, and Columbus used the 96th overall pick in the third round to take the high-scoring winger. But even the predraft rankings seemed to stick in Dumais' mind a little bit, as he was rated just 73rd among North American skaters in the final rankings produced by NHL Central Scouting.