Art Berglund (born
September 4 1940 in
Fort Frances,
Ontario,
Canada) was an
American ice hockey coach and executive. He won the
Lester Patrick Trophy in 1992, and is scheduled to be inducted into the
IIHF Hall of Fame in 2008. His international hockey career spanned around five decades; during that time, he was mostly a manager or part of the administrative staff of over 30 teams from the United States.
Career
Berglund graduated from
Colorado College in 1963, where he was the leading scorer. He then had a brief playing career in
Austria and
Switzerland, after which he permanently moved to the United States. At the advice of
William Thayer Tutt, Berglund decided to become a hockey executive, rather than player. He became the manager of the
United States National Team from 1973 to 1975. In 1976, he was the general manager of the U.S. Olympic ice hockey team. He became general manager of the team again in 1988. He was the general manager of the U.S. Men's National Team from 1985 to 1991. In 1992, Berglund won the
Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding contributions to ice hockey in the United Sates. He was named senior director of international administration for
USA Hockey in 1996. Berglund was mostly retired from the hockey scene by 2005, but he still serves as a consultant for USA Hockey.
Personal life
Berglund currently resides in
Colorado Springs, Colorado with his wife Char. He enjoys ice skating, hockey and
golf as pastimes. After he retired, Berglund admitted to being worried about what to do with his
memorabilia, which includes a functional Canadian Hockey Foundation letter opener, a 1957
Detroit Red Wings poster signed by
Gordie Howe,
Al Arbour and
Terry Sawchuk, a poster made for the 1969 ice hockey world championship tournament, which was to be held in
Prague but was canceled because of the
Soviet invasion, and a
Nagano Olympics puck.
References
General