Gordon Burness
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | J. Gordon Burness | ||
Place of birth | Montrose, Angus, Scotland | ||
Date of death | July 20, 1989 | ||
Place of death | Needham, Massachusetts, United States | ||
Playing position | Wing Forward | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
Forfar Athletic | |||
Brechin City | |||
Toronto Scottish | |||
1925-1927 | Brooklyn Wanderers | 24 | (5) |
1927-1929 | Boston Wonder Workers | 98 | (11) |
1929 | New Bedford Whalers | 10 | (1) |
1930 | Pawtucket Rangers | 20 | (1) |
Fall 1930 | Fall River Marksmen | 6 | (2) |
Spring 1931 | → New York Yankees | 12 | (3) |
Fall 1931 | Boston Bears | 10 | (2) |
National team | |||
1925 | Canada | 1 | (1) |
1926 | United States | 1 | (0) |
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Gordon Burness (born Montrose, Angus, Scotland; died June 20, 1989 in Needham, Massachusetts) was a Scottish-Canadian-U.S. soccer wing forward who earned a cap with both the Canadian and U.S. national teams.[1] He began his career in Scotland before moving to Canada and then the United States where he spent six seasons in the American Soccer League.
Club career
Burness began playing with Forfar Athletic in the Scottish Football League. At some point, he transferred to Brechin City. He then left Scotland for Canada where he played for Toronto Scottish. In 1925, he signed with the Brooklyn Wanderers of the American Soccer League.[2] After two season, he transferred to the Boston Wonder Workers, winning the 1927-1928 league title with them. Burness began the 1929-1930 season with Boston, but moved to the New Bedford Whalers after only four games. He played ten with the Whalers, then transferred to the Pawtucket Rangers for one game in the 1929-1930 season. He then played nineteen games of the 1930 fall season in Pawtucket, before transferring to the Fall River Marksmen for the final six league games. The Marksmen merged with the New York Soccer Club in 1931 to form the New York Yankees. Burness remained with the renamed team for the 1931 spring season. However, the team had already begun games in the National Challenge Cup under the name Marksmen, so Burness and his team mates won the National Cup as the Fall River Marksmen. That cup went to three games and Burness scored one of the two Fall River goals in the 2-0 final game victory.[3] He then finished his professional career with the Boston Bears in the 1931 fall season.[4]
National team
Burness earned his first cap, with Canada, in a 6-1 loss to the United States on November 8, 1925. He scored the lone Canadian goal in the loss. A year later, he became one of a handful of players to earn a cap with two countries when he played for the U.S. in a 6-2 win over Canada on November 6, 1926.[5]
Post soccer career
Burness later worked as a traffic controller of ocean shipping for Exxon Oil Company.[6]
References
- ↑ "Players Appearing for Two or More Countries". RSSSF. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
- ↑ December 24, 1925 The Globe article at the Wayback Machine (archived October 21, 2009)
- ↑ The Year in American Soccer - 1931
- ↑ Jose, Colin (1998). American Soccer League, 1921-1931 (Hardback). The Scarecrow Press. (ISBN 0-8108-3429-4).
- ↑ RSSSF
- ↑ J. GORDON BURNESS WAS SHIPPING CONTROLLER; AT 82 Boston Globe - Sunday, July 23, 1989