Pat Burns

Coach

Birthday April 4, 1952

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Montreal, Quebec, Canada

DEATH DATE 2010-11-19, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada (58 years old)

Nationality Canada

#49636 Most Popular

1952

Patrick John Joseph Burns (April 4, 1952 – November 19, 2010) was a National Hockey League head coach.

1953

In Burns first year as an NHL coach, the Canadiens finished the 1988–89 NHL season with a division-winning 53-18-9, ultimately losing the Stanley Cup finals in six games to the Calgary Flames.

Burns won the Jack Adams Award for coach of the year, his first of three wins.

1967

He led Toronto in their best playoff run since 1967, making it to the conference finals, losing in seven games to the Kings.

At the NHL Awards, Burns won his second Jack Adams trophy.

1984

He became an assistant coach with Hull in 1984, and worked his way through the ranks, becoming the team's head coach after owner Wayne Gretzky and general manager Charles Henry decided he'd be the best fit.

During his time with the Olympiques, he coached future Hockey Hall of Fame member Luc Robitaille.

1987

Before the start of the 1987–88 NHL season, Montreal Canadiens general manager Serge Savard offered Burns the head coach position for the Sherbrooke Canadiens of the American Hockey League.

Burns held the position for one year before being promoted to head coach of Montreal.

1988

Over 14 seasons between 1988 and 2004, he coached in 1,019 games with the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins, and New Jersey Devils.

1992

A defensive-minded coach, Burns would lead Montreal to the second round of the playoffs in every year as head coach, before making a shocking resignation at the end of the 1992 season where they were swept by the Boston Bruins, citing his frustration with the media.

Following his departure from Montreal, Burns was hired as head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs.

He had also received an offer from the Los Angeles Kings, but he cited the Leafs' history as a factor in his decision, and added "I find myself fortunate to coach two of the greatest franchises in NHL history."

1994

He followed that performance with another trip to the conference finals in 1994, losing in five to the Vancouver Canucks.

1995

The Leafs again made the playoffs in 1995, but following a disappointing losing streak during the 1996 season, Burns was let go.

1997

Burns took a year off from hockey before being hired to coach the Boston Bruins in 1997.

He won the Jack Adams at the end of the season, making him the only coach in history to win the award three separate times.

All three of his wins came in his introductory season with the team.

1999

The Bruins continued to have success until the 1999-2000 season, when they missed the playoffs, the first time in Burns's career where his team missed the playoffs.

2000

Burns was fired eight games into the 2000-01 season, following a disappointing 3-4-1 record.

2003

Burns finished his head coaching career with the New Jersey Devils, leading them to the Stanley Cup in 2003 while winning over 40 games in both seasons as coach of the team.

2004

Burns survived colon cancer in 2004 and liver cancer in 2005, retiring from coaching after the second diagnosis.

2005

Burns retired in 2005 after being diagnosed with recurring cancer, which eventually claimed his life five years later.

He resigned in 2005 in an effort to focus on his health and treatment following a cancer diagnosis in 2004, though he remained with the organisation as a special assignment coach.

Burns was born in Montreal to Geralda "Louise" Girardeau and Alfred Burns.

Pat was the youngest of 6 children, he has 4 older sisters and 1 older brother (Violet, Alfred "Sonny", Lillian, Phyllis and Diane).

The Burns family moved to Gatineau, Quebec, following the death of Alfred in an industrial incident, when Pat was 4 years old.

Before his career in hockey, he was a police officer in Gatineau.

Burns originally studied to be a welder, but became a police officer after hearing they were in need for positions.

Burns had lied about his age to get the job, stating he was 18 when in actuality, he was 17.

He would hold the position for sixteen years.

2009

In 2009 Burns announced that his colon cancer had returned and metastasized to his lungs, was thus inoperable, and therefore he decided to forgo further treatment.

2010

During an April 2010 interview Burns stated "I know my life is nearing its end and I accept that."

Gesturing to a group of local minor hockey players, he said: "A young player could come from Stanstead who plays in an arena named after me. I probably won't see the project to the end, but let's hope I'm looking down on it and see a young Wayne Gretzky or Mario Lemieux."

He was married to Line Burns.

He had two children, a son from a long-term relationship and a daughter from a previous marriage.

2014

In 2014, he was posthumously inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

As a child, Burns had always wanted to play on an NHL team, and win the Stanley Cup.

Realizing he didn't possess the skill set to make it professionally, Burns became a police officer.

He had also worked part-time as a scout for the Hull Olympiques of the QMJHL.