|
ROY BURMISTER
They called him the "Hockey Traveler" and for a very good reason.During the twenty-one years of his active career as an amateur and professional he
performed for no fewer than fourteen teams in six leagues including thee seasons in the National Hockey League with the
old New York Americans.
He was one of the fastest skaters ever turned out of this hockey town of Collingwood. He was
130-pound, five-foot-six, fifteen year-old little rabbit had a tough time making the 1921
Collingwood Junior team, perhaps the greatest junior club to represent Collingwood in O.H.A.
competition. That was the year that the Collingwood Bees almost knocked off the famous
Stratford Midget, led by Howie Morenz. They must have been good! Four members of that team
Burmister, Bern Brophy, Artie Clark and Clyde Dey went on to pro careers.
Roy starred for two more years with Collingwood junior and intermediate teams, went to the
Owen Sound Greys in 1925, to Niagara Falls under the late Gene Fraser in the Senior ranks
in 1926 and that same season Niagara Falls became pat of the newly formed pro International
League. He signed for eight hundred dollars and a job. The New York Americans took him up
to the big time from New Havens in 1929 and for the next three years he drew down N.H.L.
pay while shuffling between the Americans and New Haven. It was a pretty good financial
situation for Roy, as he beat a path between New Haven and New York, but the shuttle service
arrangement cost him a couple of Americans League scoring championships. It seemed that
every time he got up there in the American League scoring lead, the Amerks ran into injuries
and back to the Madison Square Garden went Burmister. In the succeeding years he played for
Boston of the Americans League, London and Windsor in the International, back to the
Americans loop with Philadelphia, Galt in the old Ontario pro league, two championship years
with St. Louis in 1935 and 1936, then to St. Paul and finally closing off his career with
Kansas City.
He came back to the amateur ranks in 1941 and played for Collingwood in the O.H.A. Senior
"B" series. So after two decades and over thousands of hockey games, Roy finally called it
quits. How many goals did he score in that time? We will never know. Roy never kept track
of them and it would take a team of researchers to go back over the books in six leagues.
|
|
|