Dave Dryburgh

Dave Dryburgh
Black and white photo of a middle-aged man wearing a bowler hat, tweed overcoat, white dress shirt, and a checkered necktie
Born(1908-11-20)November 20, 1908
Kirkcaldy, Scotland, UK
DiedJuly 11, 1948(1948-07-11) (aged 39)
Echo Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada
OccupationSports journalist
EmployerThe Leader-Post
AwardsCanadian Football Hall of Fame
HonoursDave Dryburgh Memorial Trophy

Dave Dryburgh (November 20, 1908 – July 11, 1948) was a Scotland-born Canadian sports journalist. A native of Kirkcaldy and an immigrant to Regina, he reported on the soccer games in which he played for The Leader-Post. As the newspaper's sports editor from 1932 to 1948, he primarily covered Canadian football and the Regina Roughriders, and ice hockey in Western Canada. His columns "Sport Byways" and "Dryburgh" give a first-hand account of sporting events, and were read widely in Western Canada. As the secretary of the Saskatchewan Amateur Hockey Association during the 1930s and 1940s, he established its registration system including the history of each player. He also served as the official statistician for baseball, softball and hockey leagues in Saskatchewan.

After Dryburgh drowned in a boating accident at age 39, sportswriters in Western Canada established the Dave Dryburgh Memorial Trophy for the top scorer in the Western Interprovincial Football Union. Other trophies named for him include the Dryburgh Memorial Trophy in the Western Canada Senior Hockey League, and the Dryburgh Memorial Trophy in the Southern Saskatchewan Baseball League. He was posthumously inducted to the Football Reporters of Canada section at the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1981.