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Montreal Canadians coach Pat Burns reacts to a referee's call during a NHL game in Montreal in this Jan. 30, 1989 photo. (Shaney Komulainen / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Toronto Maple Leafs' coach Pat Burns yells out instructions to his players on the ice during the second period of an NHL game against the Los Angeles Kings in Toronto on March 31, 1993. (THE CANADIAN PRESS) Pat Burns Coach Pat Burns

Famed NHL coach Pat Burns, dead from cancer at 58

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CTV News Video

CTV National News: Genevieve Beauchemin
From a career as a police officer to having his name engraved on the Stanley Cup. Pat Burns, one of NHL's most celebrated coaches, lost his battle against cancer Friday. He was 58 years old. He coached four NHL teams including Montreal and Toronto.
CTV News Channel: Tom Mayenknecht, radio host
A sports radio host in Vancouver says Pat Burns was a special character within the National Hockey League. His career was an interesting one and he accomplished a lot. For 16 years Burns was a police officer and then a couple of decades in the hockey league.
CTV News Channel: Gord Stellick, analyst
A hockey analyst in Toronto says he remembers Pat Burns as a winner. Burns instilled his passion in the team and they took on his personality to be the best players. He also had the complete common sense to be a great coach.
CTV Toronto: Lance Brown on the death of Pat Burns
Former Toronto Maple Leafs coach Pat Burns was as good a hockey coach and as regular a guy as you could ever find, Lance Brown says.
CTV News Channel: Bob McKenzie, TSN
TSN's Bob McKenzie says Pat Burns' accomplishments as a coach are remarkable, and that there will be an unbelievable outpour of emotion and support from fans in the wake of his death.
CTV News Channel: Wendel Clark, former NHLer
A former NHL player who played for the Toronto Maple Leafs under Pat Burns says Pat was well known as tough father figure to the players he coached, and was a friend to them off the ice.

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Montreal Canadians coach Pat Burns reacts to a referee's call during a NHL game in Montreal in this Jan. 30, 1989 photo. (Shaney Komulainen / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Toronto Maple Leafs' coach Pat Burns yells out instructions to his players on the ice during the second period of an NHL game against the Los Angeles Kings in Toronto on March 31, 1993. (THE CANADIAN PRESS) Pat Burns Coach Pat Burns

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Montreal Canadians coach Pat Burns reacts to a referee's call during a NHL game in Montreal in this Jan. 30, 1989 photo. (Shaney Komulainen / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Fri. Nov. 19 2010 10:59 PM ET

Pat Burns, a tough-talking cop turned wildly successful NHL coach, has died after a long battle with cancer. He was 58.

He died Friday, the New Jersey Devils announced.

He was diagnosed with colon and liver cancer in 2004 and 2005, and it was hoped he had beaten it back. But in January 2009, it was found the cancer had spread to his lungs.

Burns initially decided to forego further treatment but eventually tried chemotherapy in an attempt to extend his life.

No matter where he coached -- Montreal, Toronto, Boston, New Jersey -- he turned teams into winners. He guided the 2003 New Jersey Devils to the Stanley Cup and is the only coach in NHL history to win the league's top coaching award with three different teams.

He won the Adams trophy with Montreal in 1989, Toronto in 1993 and Boston in 1998.

"We are all deeply saddened by the loss of Pat Burns," said Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello.

"Pat was a close friend to us all, while dedicating his life to his family and to the game of hockey. . . Today, the hockey world has lost a great friend and ambassador."

His last official public appearance was in early October, when he attended the groundbreaking ceremony for an arena to be named in his honour in Stanstead, Que.

Known as much for his sharp sense of humour as his tough talk behind the bench, Burns made a joke to the media, who had wrongly reported his death a few weeks before.

"I'm not dead yet," he said in a quiet voice. "I'm still alive."

But he said he knew he didn't have long in this world.

"I probably won't see the final ending to this project, but I know one thing, let's hope I am looking down on the next . . . Mario Lemieux or Wayne Gretzky skating on the rink."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper was among the attendees of the groundbreaking of the Pat Burns Arena.

In March, when Burns said he didn't think he would live another year, thousands signed a petition to try to get him into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

He was not inducted in 2010, but Lamoriello says Burns will earn the honour "in the very near future."

Wendel Clark, a former Toronto Maple Leafs captain, told CTV News Channel: "Pat made a huge fight. … It takes a personality and a will like Pat's to be fighting as long as he was."

Clark described Burns as a "tough father figure" to all the players he coached.

"He was one of the gruff taskmasters," but the coaching persona was there to make players stronger and to bind the team together, he said.

"Outside the game, away from the rink, in the summertime, if you ran into him as a player, he was a totally different person. That was the Pat who was the friend to the players," Clark said.

Burns loved the game, life and all the players he coached, he said.

It was while coaching the Devils that Burns learned he had the disease. After the team was eliminated from the 2004 playoffs they announced their coach had colon cancer.

"For those who know me well, I've never backed down from any fight, and I'm not going to back down from this one," Burns said at the time.

As an NHL coach, Burns had a looming, robust figure. At his last public appearance, he was thin and frail, hardly recognizable. His voice, once a bellow that could make an NHL star cringe, was hushed.

"I know my life is nearing its end and I accept that," he said.

Burns was discussing a return to the NHL before his third diagnosis of cancer. But he said he was not bitter.

"As for my career, I always said to my kids, 'you don't cry because it's over, you're happy because it happened.' That's the main thing. I'm happy it happened."

From cop to coach

Burns was the youngest of six kids who grew up near the old Montreal Forum. His father died when he was still a boy and Burns moved with his mother and stepfather to Gatineau, Que.

Burns played hockey but never made it to the NHL, and became a police officer. It was then that he began coaching minor hockey and eventually became head coach for the local major junior team, the Hull Olympiques.

He took the Olympics to the 1986 Memorial cup final and was an assistant on Canada's junior team that year.

As his hockey career started taking off, so did his policing career, as he was promoted to detective.

But he knew he had to make a choice -- and he flew to Edmonton to talk to Gretzky about the decision.

"I flew to Edmonton to see Wayne about it," Burns said in Dick Irvin's book, "Behind The Bench."

"He said, 'Look, you're gonna coach in the NHL one day.'

"I sort of laughed and said, 'Yeah, sure. Easy for you to say.' He says, 'I'm telling you, you're a good coach and someday you'll be in the NHL. So why don't you quit the police force? I'll give you the same salary you're getting as a policeman. Even a bit more if you want. Stay on for three years and I guarantee you someday you'll be in the NHL. You're a good coach.'

"So, I resigned from the police force and signed to work full-time for Wayne."

Burns moved to the Montreal Canadiens' AHL team, and after only one year there, found himself behind the bench of the NHL's most storied franchise.

"Six years before, I had bought scalpers' tickets to watch the Canadiens play at the Forum," recalled Burns. "The first time I walked into the dressing room when the players were there, I was shaking."

But it didn't take him long to find his feet. In his first year he led the Canadiens to the 1988-1989 Stanley Cup Finals, losing to the Calgary Flames.

In four years behind the Canadiens bench, he won more games then any other coach in the league during that period.

However, as all coaches know, you can't stay at the same job forever, and Burns soon found himself coaching the Toronto Maple Leafs, taking them to the conference finals in 1993 and 1994. He was fired after his fourth year in Toronto, but left a big impression in the hockey-mad city.

"I think after you're four or five years in the same town, even if you have a lot of success, and I had a lot of success in Montreal, I think it's time to move on -- unless you win the Stanley Cup every year," he told Irvin.

Burns took a year off before signing with Boston, where he coached for four years.

The veteran coach had won three Jack Adams trophies when his time with Boston ended, but he still had no Stanley Cup ring.

That would come when he moved to New Jersey in 2002, winning hockey's biggest prize in 2003.

"I owe a lot to Lou," Burns said. "I was out of the game for two years and I read a lot of articles saying I was done and I wasn't the style of coach people wanted. He believed in me."

He used the Devils oft-hated defensive style to great effect, even though it earned him his share of critics.

"I coach hard work," he once said.

When he took the Stanley Cup to his cottage in Quebec's Eastern Townships, he held it high while standing in the back of a pickup truck during a parade and held a party at the yacht club with his family and friends.

He said it was one of the best days of his life.

He was known for his gruff, even surly, coaching style. But still, players loved him.

"He definitely was the best coach I had in my career," former goaltender Felix Potvin, who played for Burns in Toronto, said. "He was hard, but honest."

TSN's Bob McKenzie said Burns was beloved by both players and fans.

"I think what you are going to see in the wake of his death is the unbelievable outpouring of emotion and feeling for the man for the kind of guy he was," he told CTV News Channel. "(He coached) with a lot of flair and a lot of colour, and the fans identified with him.

"He was very fiery, very competitive."

In 1,019 games, Burns won 501 games, lost 353, tied 151 and lost 14 in overtime. In the playoffs, he won 78 in 149 games.

He is survived by his wife, a son, and a daughter.

Comments are now closed for this story

Vickie
said
0 0

Shame on the committee for not allowing Pat Burns to celebrate being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame this year. He is going to be there, why not have allowed him one last wonderful glorified moment. He deserved it and it should have happened!!RIP Pat you will be missed by so many fans.


Allan
said
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Rest in Peace Pat. You are a true Canadian.


Spiltbongwater
said
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Would be nice it the NHL would retire the Jack Adams trophy and make a new trophy named after Pat Burns for coach of the year.


Doug in Calgary
said
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The best coach ever, regardless what team you cheered for and everyone knew he was so sic yet the HOF never allowed him in while he was alive to see it..Very Sad and hope the HOF committee is fired for this. Pat was a great man, great coach..RIP


Renata Caughlin
said
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A very sad day for Hockey in Canada... Another great one is gone.... My prayers go out to your family, coach!

Renata, Collingwood, On


val
said
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u were one in a million pat rip

SUDBURY ONT


Peter in BC
said
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Toronto loved you Burns. You'll be sorely missed and your legacy will be forever remembered. Thank you for all the memories and I wish you had made it to the Hockey Hall of Fame this year. I would have been nice to see you accept the greatest honour.


val
said
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may you rest in peace pat u were the best coach toronto has had


Lockerius
said
0 0

And another hockey legend passes.....Rest easy mate.....


mick
said
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Thanks Pat for all the time and effort you put into the game of hockey.You will always be in life's Hall of Fame


LAC
said
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Pat Burns was a great man, not only as a hockey personality but as a human being. He will be missed.


Doug # BC
said
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The hockey world is going to miss this great hockey manEven from the "left coast" his hockey knowledger and his humour will be missed for a very long time. Heart felt condolances to his family and his many,many friends.He has left us far to soon.


John Hogan
said
0 0

My best memory of Pat Burns was in a small shopping center on St.Catherine Street in Montreal one cold and snowy morning. It must have been after the morning skate. Pat was surrounded by half a dozen kids. They asked him question after question about the team. Pat stood there and answered every question and asked a few of his own. What position do you play? Can you skate backwards? How hard is your slapshot? This went on and on and on. I don't know how he did it. As I looked on he lifted his head and looked in my direction and his eyes just twinkled like the night's sky. That's the Pat Burns I will always remember.


Audrey from Guelph,on.
said
0 0

Pat you were the best coach toronto evr had.RIP you will be missed. my prayers go out to you family.Pat Burns may you rest in peace.


David
said
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It's with sadness that I learn of the passing of Mr. Pat Burns. The players,family,friends and fans all share in this loss. Were going to miss you man.


B. Kelley, Ontario
said
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The HHL (Heaven's Hockey League) will now have to add a team because one of the greatest coaches ever has now arrived. Rest in Peace Coach Burns. My prayers are with your family and friends.


RIP Pat Burns
said
0 0

Tomorrow's game will have special meaning. He was coach of both, he had success with both and he is the glue that bonds the two teams, among many. RIP Pat Burns, we won't forget you.


jim from winnipeg
said
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a great hockey hall of famer for sure, rest in peace pat, thanks for the memories.


Mark
said
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He is the only coach that brought us oh so close to a Stanley Cup finals birth. He was a great coach, he knew how to motivate his players. He'll be sadly missed by his family and all the hockey world. RIP Burnsie.


Chuck
said
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Thanks for everything Pat Burns. I have to say, you were the only Bruins and Leafs coach I ever liked!!habs fan....


Merle Terlesky
said
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My condolences go out to the Burns family. He was a legend "Pat Burns" and will be remembered as such by hockey fans across Canda.


niles
said
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the HHOF screwed up big time by not voting him in this year before he died, what a joke. RIP Patty B you are a HOFer in all the fans minds


William
said
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My Condolences to the Burns family..He will be missed deeply...


Elias Nasrallah
said
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Good job Coach Burns.....R.I.P. Hockey fans are going to miss you......


Yolande
said
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So sad to learn of his deathHe will not see the opening of His Arena but will be looking over its construction This colorful man will be missed by manyOur deepest sympathies to his wife and children


DGRoce
said
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So long, Pat, and good work.


Firinn
said
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They don’t make many gunslingers these days. Pat Burns is a rare breed indeed. Not only fun to watch on the bench, but you could really see the fire in his eyes. In hockey and in life, thanks for your Spirit and Heart !


J.S.
said
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R.I.P. The game will miss you. The city of Toronto will miss you.


Luc
said
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A lot of Montreal Canadiens fans have that profound dislike for the Maple Leafs and vice versa. But the loss of Pat Burns is certainly one of the rare occurence where both side will agree on. That he was a great man and a great coach. RIP and you will be missed. In our hearts you are already an Hall of Famer.


Gavin
said
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Pat never backed down from a fight. He will be remembered


DJH
said
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Pat, you are so missed very much and thank you very much for great memories in Montreal. I am so disappointed that he did not get inducted into NHL Hall of Fame recently. :(


Steve Patenaude
said
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A true giant of the game. Godspeed, Pat.


Wayne
said
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Thanks for the memories Pat.


BAW
said
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A decision the selection committee will have to live with every day!


Max in Vancouver
said
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One of hockey's great ones who will be remembered for a long, long time. RIP Pat


Leaf Fan Forever
said
0 0

This is why there is no place for politics in the HOF nominations, and if there is, then he should have been at least on the ballot, if not inducted. That way, he'd have the satisfaction before he died. He will get in the HOF within the next couple of years, and his family will accept graciously on his behalf...but talk about missed opportunities!


Jebus Widowmaker
said
0 0

R.I.P. Pat Burns. You gave us Leaf fans something to cheer about for a few years. My thoughts go to your family and friends. You were the best. The H.H.O.F. blew it big time.


Scott ON
said
0 0

RIP Coach


Paul Beaty
said
0 0

They should have put him in the hall of fame this year.

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