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Burnaby man $6M richer after trip to Ontario store for band-aids

Troy Maulding said he's played regular numbers since he was 19, but it wasn't his normal picks that made him a multi-millionaire.
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Burnaby resident Troy Maulding of Burnaby is $6-million richer after the 55-year-old bought a Lotto 6/49 ticket during a stop at an Ontario store for band-aids.

A union conference in Toronto and some band-aids ended up changing a Burnaby man's life. 

Troy Maulding was in Ontario earlier this month when he went to a store to grab some bandages for a friend and bought some lottery tickets while he was there. 

The 55-year-old is no stranger to the lottery, having played regular numbers since he was 19, and decided to get his usual digits, as well as a Quick Pick. 

"I was having some quiet time in my hotel room when I checked my tickets. The numbers I normally play didn’t win," he said in a news release. 

"Then I started matching the numbers from my Quick Pick. I had to double-check what I was seeing."

Once he realized he'd won, he stood up in his hotel room, looked in the mirror and told himself, "I won!" 

He sent a text to his wife and sister-in-law with a photo of the ticket to have them confirm that what he was seeing was right. He changed his mind and called them instead. 

"Then I heard my sister-in-law say, 'He won!' That's when I asked my wife to pack up and head down to Toronto to be with me.

"I had to hold it together because I had a job to do. When I told my colleagues, they thanked me for my commitment to the work that had to be done and for staying for the entire conference in light of this incredible news. I almost cried.

"I was so humbled by the outpouring of love."

Once he retires from work, Maulding plans to find a home to buy. He says the rest will fall into place after that. 

"It's been a touching experience."