Duncan MacPherson explained

Position:Defenceman
Shoots:Left
Height Ft:6
Height In:1
Weight Lb:195
Played For:Springfield Indians
Indianapolis Ice
Birth Date:February 3, 1966
Birth Place:Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Death Place:Stubai Glacier Resort, Austria
Draft:20th overall
Draft Year:1984
Draft Team:New York Islanders
Career Start:1986
Career End:1989

Duncan Alvin MacPherson (February 3, 1966 – August 9, 1989) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player. In 1989 he went on a trip to Austria, and then disappeared. Searches proved fruitless, until in 2003 when his body was found in a melting glacier. His death remains officially unsolved.

Early life and career

MacPherson was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. A standout defenceman for the Saskatoon Blades of the Western Hockey League, he was drafted in the first round, 20th overall, of the 1984 NHL Entry Draft by the New York Islanders. He played minor league hockey for the Springfield Indians of the American Hockey League and the Indianapolis Ice of the International Hockey League.

Disappearance

In the summer of 1989, MacPherson went to Europe. The New York Islanders had bought out and released the often injured MacPherson,[1] who never made it to the NHL.[2] MacPherson had intentions of taking a job as a player-coach for a semi-pro hockey team in Dundee, Scotland, commencing in August 1989. Despite having a bad feeling about the entrepreneur Ron Dixon who was backing the Scottish team, he travelled to central Europe alone in early August 1989. The plan was to visit old friends and see the sights before going on to Scotland.

He was scheduled to arrive in Dundee on August 12. When he did not show up, his family went to look for him. A car he had borrowed from a friend was discovered six weeks later in the parking lot of the Stubaital ski-region resort at the foot of the Stubai Glaciers in the Stubai Alps in Austria, where he had rented a snowboard. His last known contact was with an employee of the ski resort on August 9, who reported that he spoke with MacPherson, and last saw MacPherson departing alone to perhaps squeeze in some final snowboarding and hiking before nightfall.

In 2003, 14 years after MacPherson disappeared, an employee of the Stubai Glacier Resort discovered a glove sticking out of the ice of the melting Schaufelferner Glacier (one of the Stubai Glaciers' arms), in the middle of the ski run, where MacPherson's body had lain frozen.[3]

Theories

According to John Leake, author of Cold a Long Time: An Alpine Mystery, MacPherson’s body was found to have suffered significant trauma, including amputation of arms, hands and legs. The damage is consistent with rotating machinery; his snowboard also had a uniform pattern of damage and was cut apart, which indicates that it too had gone through a machine. Leake’s conclusion was that MacPherson had a snowboard accident and injured his leg, and was lying on the slope waiting for rescue. During that very foggy day, a snowcat driver did not see MacPherson and ran him over by accident, killing him. Instead of reporting it, that driver (or his supervisor) buried MacPherson in the shallow crevasse. His body stayed hidden there for fourteen years, until the glacier melted enough for it to be seen.[4]

Career statistics

  Regular season Playoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
1982–83 Battleford BaronsSJHL5961117215
1982–83Saskatoon BladesWHL52461620000
1983–84Saskatoon BladesWHL450141474
1984–85Saskatoon BladesWHL699263511630004
1985–86Saskatoon BladesWHL7010546414713381138
1986–87Springfield IndiansAHL2610186
1987–88Springfield IndiansAHL7451419213
1988–89Springfield IndiansAHL2415669
1988–89Indianapolis IceIHL3314523
WHL totals189219811935318381142
AHL totals12471926368

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Duncan MacPherson profile . Hockey Draft Central . 2010-09-02.
  2. Web site: Jones . Chris . The man in the ice . Esquire . 2004-12-31 . 2010-09-02.
  3. Web site: Iceman . . 2010-09-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120304231055/http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/iceman/ . March 4, 2012 .
  4. Web site: Duncan MacPherson's Death: Forensics . CreateSpace Publishing . 2023-07-25.