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INDUCTEE 2011 - ATHLETE - Rod Buskas


 


Introductory Comments by Sandra Wright


Sometimes, athletes are just too humble and Rod Buskas is no exception.  When I was writing up Rod’s citation for the program and looking for information for this introduction, I asked Rod if he had any scrapbooks or news clippings.  Well,  I asked the wrong person.

I spent an afternoon with Rod’s biggest fans, his mom & dad, Maxine and Sieg, and was able to peruse all the memorabilia that they had saved and scrapbooked. Rod’s citation in the program doesn’t expound on his achievements in Wetaskiwin so I will do so now.

Once I saw the scrapbooks I found out a lot more about Rod’s participation and achievements.  When he was a youngster it became apparent that Rod was going to excel in sports. He started his hockey on an outdoor rink at his family farm playing with his dad, his brother Wayne and his sister Gail.  He didn’t play organized hockey in the Wetaskiwin minor hockey system until he was eleven years old. Then he played two years of pee-wee, two years of bantam and one year of Midget.

It seems like almost every team Rod played on in Wetaskiwin was a “winner”or a “contender”. During his two years in Bantam hockey, Rod’s Pahal Motors teams were second in Provincials both years.  Rod was Assistant Captain of the 1977 Kinsmen Kings Midget “B” hockey team that won the Provincial Championship.

In tonight’s program it mentions that, as a kid,  Rod was  also involved in fastball and school sports.  As a fastball player Rod was on two Provincial Championship teams.  Rod was also a member of the Wetaskiwin Sport Shop Midget fastball team that won the Western Canadian Championship in 1977. In grade nine he was the top male athlete at Rosebrier School and held junior high records in track and field.  In addition, Rod was the quarterback of the Sabre football team in his Grade 10 year and was named team “Rookie of the Year”.   All in all, Rod, a pretty impressive athletic background!

At the age of 16 Rod moved up to Junior A hockey with the Red Deer Rustlers.  Playing for the  Rustlers meant moving away from home, billeting with a family in Red Deer and attending school there.  That ended Rod’s Sabre football career and once hockey season was over, Rod played junior fastball in Red Deer.  Rod did return to play fastball for the Wetaskiwin Junior Car Capitals in 1979 and was an excellent first base prospect for the Wetaskiwin Fastball Senior Car Capitals. But, it seems hockey won over,  Medicine Hat was further from home and once he was playing for the Tigers, he spent his summers there...probably meeting Debra, his wife-to-be had something to do with him sticking around the ‘Hat".  In his first years of professional hockey and after he married Debra, Rod continued spending his off seasons in Medicine Hat.

In 1982, Rod was named Wetaskiwin’s male athlete of the year along with females Val Greenwall and Brenda Vergette, two other Wetaskiwin and County Sports Hall of Fame inductees!  Rod was the first Wetaskiwin hockey player after Val Fonteyne to make it to the NHL.  Val must have been one of Rod’s idols as in one of the Buskas's scrapbooks there was a saved, Val Fonteyne autograph that was given to Rod when he was a young boy.

When Rod played with the Red Deer Rustlers he was a winger and was one of the leading scorers on the team.  According to Rod, he always hung back so he wouldn’t get out of position,  so when the defense needed reinforcement, the Red Deer coach moved Rod to defense. Throughout his stellar junior hockey career, Rod continued playing as a defenseman.  In his last year of junior he amassed 60 points in 70 games, so he was still pretty offensive minded. 

In the NHL with the Pittsburg Penguins Rod found his niche and became known as a defensive defenseman.  When interviewed, Rod said,

“I’ve always played physical.  Team mates and coaches expect it from me.  Everybody has his role, that’s mine.  I’m not afraid to protect my team mates.  The transition game, from offense to defense is SO important, that for me, goal scoring is secondary.  I enjoy playing an aggressive role in our end of the ice”. 

When traded to LA, Rod wise cracked:

“I don’t think they brought me here for my offensive prowess.”

Rod was the kind of defenseman that goalies love to have in front of them.  He cleaned up in front of the net and excelled at clearing rebounds and moving the enemy out of the goalie’s line of vision with his “in-your-face”, hard hitting, aggressive defensive style.  Rod took pride in keeping the goals against down and having a good plus-minus rating.  One of his NHL coaches was quoted as saying,

“Rod’s not afraid to stick his nose in the game.  You know he is going to give his best every time out.” 

Rod was also described as being a team player, there to do what ever it takes to help his team win - things that go unnoticed on the score sheet, but more times than not, help in the final outcome of the game.

Fans and team mates recognized his value to the team and nicknamed him the ”Bus”.  Another nickname came from fans in Pittsburg's Civic Centre,  a banner hung in the stands lauding “Hot Rod Buskas” # 7.  Probably because Rod was like a hot-rod.  No flash, but lots of muscle!

One of Rod’s quotes was featured when Sports Illustrated ran an article called “Pantheon of Pain” which expounded on how, to hockey players, playing with pain is a badge of honor. When asked why he returned one period after breaking his nose in a game against the Red Wings, Rod answered,

“I don’t skate with my nose.” 

All this from a man with a laid back, easy going personality. 

As a kid, Rod had two goals in life, one was to play hockey in the NHL, the other to be a pilot.  In the off seasons in Medicine Hat, Rod learned how to fly, which led to his second career in aviation.  Rod is now a pilot for Hawaii Airlines.  Kudos to you, Rod, for reaching your aspirations.

In the NHL, the average career length is five years and Rod,  you played eleven years.  You were lucky enough, and good enough, to play alongside Mario Lemieux, Wayne Gretzky, Paul Coffee, Kelly Hrudey, Larry Robinson and Bryan Trottier, all Hall of Famers.  All in all, you had a great hockey career and have been a positive role model for young Wetaskiwin athletes.  Your family is SO proud of you, your friends are proud of you and your community is proud of you and your accomplishments.  It is our pleasure to induct you into the Wetaskiwin and County Sports Hall of Fame


Read Rod's acceptance speech.

Return to Rod Buskas Inductee Page

 






 
 
 

 

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