Category Archives: Inductee – Gender

BERN BROPHY

Born on Aug 9, 1903, Bern Brophy was truly one of Collingwood’s best all-around athletes. His induction into the Sports Hall of Fame was automatic.

In hockey, Bern wore the uniforms of the Detroit Red Wings and the Montreal Maroons and you will find his name on the Stanley Cup with such names as Reg Noble, Clint Benedict, Punch Broadbent, Babe Seibert and Nels Stewart- all of them in the National Hockey Hall of Fame.

The Maroons sold him to Canadians, the Canadians sent him to Providence and Jack Adams brought him to Detroit to team up with a couple of more Collingwood natives-Reg Noble and Jack Herberts. He finished his pro career in the International League with Cleveland, Windsor and London and helped London win the league title in 1936.

Bern was re-instated as an amateur in 1938 and in 1939 he came back to Collingwood, and as a player-coach, led the Shipbuilders to the O.H.A. Intermediate “A” championship.

His athletic prowess was not confined to hockey. Visit the Sports Hall of Fame at Toronto and you will see a picture of the 1922 Queens University Football team, Canadian Intercollegiate champions. Seated in the middle row is Flying Wing B.L. Brophy.

An outstanding baseball player, Bern performed for many Collingwood ball clubs and was a member of Victoria Harbor provincial intermediate champs in the early twenties. His exploits in the realm of track and field are recorded in the archives of the Collingwood Collegiate where he won the junior, intermediate and senior athletic championships in three consecutive years.

He could qualify for Collingwood’s Hall of Fame as a Builder because it was Brophy who revived Intermediate hockey in Collingwood after the game had sunk to a low ebb from 1922 to 1938. It was a fitting climax to a great athletic career. He once said, “Before I hang up my skates, I would like to help Collingwood win another Intermediate Title!” Bern’s wish was granted. He died in his hometown of Collingwood on July 19, 1982.

MIKE BROPHY

Mike Brophy was one of the slickest stick handlers ever to come out of theEast End mill pond.

His hockey career lasted fifteen years, ten of them in the professional ranks. His
athletic ability was not confined to hockey for Mike was a hard hitting football halfback, a softball pitcher and infielder of not and a much better than average golfer.

The size of his hands, like two Maple Leaf hams, always fascinated me. He could
take a football from the centre, wrap his fist around the leather and sail through the line with both arms flailing. Mike played his first organized hockey with the Collingwood juniors in 1924.

In 1925, he was a member of an outstanding Collingwood junior club that
unfortunately ran into the Owen Sound Greys in the first round. The Greys, with
Cooney Weiland, Butch Keeling, Ted Graham and Dutch Cain, went on to win the
Memorial Cup.

Mike went to Owen Sound in 1926 and that club ended up in the O.H.A. Junior finals against Aura Lee. He turned professional with the Chicago Cardinals in 1927 and the next year found him in Hamilton in the old Can-Pro League under the coaching of Hap Holmes. The following year, Holmes moved the whole team to Cleveland in the International Leagues and Mike’s traveling days were over.

He became a hockey landmark in Cleveland and stared with that team for eight years until the end of his active career. During that time he helped Cleveland win the Calder Cup and three times led the league in scoring and made the All-Star team four times.

At one time he played with three other Collingwood born players on the Cleveland team-Reg Noble, Artie Clark and his brother, Bern.

Mike should have had a crack at the N.H.L in 1930 a deal was all set for a trade
with Montreal Canadians but Holmes balked and kept him in Cleveland.

Mike never got the chance again. He organized, managed and played for the Pros in
the first Collingwood Senior Softball League.