Dunc Munro | |||
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Munro with the Toronto Granites.
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Born |
Moray, Scotland, GBR |
January 19, 1901||
Died | January 3, 1958 Montreal, QC, CAN |
(aged 56)||
Height | 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) | ||
Weight | 190 lb (86 kg; 13 st 8 lb) | ||
Position | Defence | ||
Shot | Left | ||
Played for |
Montreal Maroons Montreal Canadiens |
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National team | Canada | ||
Playing career | 1920–1932 |
Olympic medal record | ||
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Men's ice hockey | ||
Representing Canada | ||
1924 Chamonix | Team competition |
Duncan Brown Munro (January 19, 1901 – January 3, 1958) was a Canadian Olympic ice hockey player who played with and coached the Montreal Maroons. He was born in Moray, Scotland. When he was still a child his family moved to Toronto, Ontario, where he learned to play hockey. In his youth Munro also excelled in track events as a runner. He attended the University of Toronto Schools, where he played on the hockey team that won the first Memorial Cup.
Before the NHL, he played for the Toronto Granites, a team that featured future Hockey Hall of Famer Hooley Smith. This team won the gold medal in the 1924 Winter Olympics. Team Captain Munro scored 18 goals in the Olympic tournament, which saw the Canadians outscore their combined opponents by a total of 110 to 3. As a result of the team's winning the gold medal, there was a scramble to sign players from this elite squad and Munro was quickly snatched up by the newly formed Montreal Maroons.
The Montreal Maroons won the Stanley Cup in their inaugural season. The Maroons had a strong defense, led by the team's captain Munro and featuring Red Dutton and Reg Noble. They gave up few chances to opposition marksmen. The Maroons went on to make the finals in 1928, but lost to the New York Rangers.
The following season Munro suffered a heart attack that hospitalized him, and while in hospital contracted pneumonia. His absence was felt and the Maroons tumbled to the bottom of the Canadian Division of the NHL. It was said of the players of the Maroons that they were as interested in the stock market as they were in hockey and Munro was amongst the most avid of the speculators. He had signed a huge contract (for the times) and was a shrewd investor, but ultimately lost a fortune when the Stock Market crashed.