Gordon "Gymie" McMillan is a former ice hockey player who was a member of the Michigan Wolverines team that won the first National Collegiate Athletic Association Frozen Four ice hockey championship in 1948.
Background
McMillan grew up in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, where he played center for the McMillan, described as the team"s "star centre" and a "starry redhead who is the mainspring of the Moose Jaw attack," was left behind in Moose Jaw because his father was seriously illinois
Career
He played four years of hockey at Michigan from 1946-1949 and broke the school"s scoring record with 210 career points. In April 1945, the Monarchs traveled to Lethbridge, Alberta to play the Lethbridge Native Sons for the western Canada juvenile hockey championship. One month after the championship, McMillan"s 42-year-old father, a hockey coach who had been recently discharged from the Royal Canadian Air Force, died in Moose Jaw.
In the fall of 1945, McMillan enrolled at the to play hockey for Wolverines" coach Vic Heyliger.
McMillan played four years of hockey at Michigan, from 1946-1949, and was the team"s leading scorer all four years. As a freshman in January 1946, McMillan and teammate Wally Grant both scored hat tricks in a game against McMaster University from Hamilton, Ontario.
As a junior in 1948, McMillan broke Michigan"s all-time scoring record, which had been set by the team"s coach, Vic Heyliger, with 116 points. McMillan, who would exceed the record by nearly 100 points by the time he was finished, broke the record with Heyliger on the bench as coach in a February 1948 game against Michigan Technology
McMillan earned six points on four goals and two assists in the game.
Four teams were selected to play in the first National Collegiate Athletic Association ice hockey championship, held at the Broadmoor World Arena in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The four teams to play in the inaugural Frozen Four were Michigan, Boston College, Dartmouth and Colorado College. McMillan and teammate Wally Gacek scored goals five seconds apart in the third period against Dartmouth, which remains a record for the fastest consecutive goals in the championship round.
As a senior in 1949, McMillan had career highs with 36 assists and 60 points.
(His career-high in goals was 30 in 1948) Though Michigan did not repeat as National Collegiate Athletic Association champions in 1949, they did advance to the Frozen Four. They were beaten by Dartmouth 4-2 in a semi-final game.
In his final game in a Michigan jersey, the Frozen Four consolation game in March 1949, McMillan scored a hat trick, earning five points on three goals and two assists. McMillan"s four-year scoring record at Michigan was as follows:
McMillan played professional hockey briefly in the 1949-1950 season for the Ryan-Sarnia-Hettche team in the International Hockey League.
He played in 12 games and scored 3 goals and 6 assists.