Education
Upon leaving junior hockey, Busniuk continued his career at the University of Denver (1970–1974) where his team made the Final Four three of the four years he attended the school.
Upon leaving junior hockey, Busniuk continued his career at the University of Denver (1970–1974) where his team made the Final Four three of the four years he attended the school.
He is the younger brother of Ron Busniuk, who played for the Buffalo Sabres. Busniuk was selected 67th overall, in the 5th round of the 1971 National Hockey League Draft, by the Montreal Canadians. His junior career was played in Thunder Bay for the Fort William Canadiens.
Busniuk’s professional hockey career highlights consisted of three seasons with the AHL team, Nova Scotia Voyageurs prior to moving to Maine to play for the very successful, Maine Mariners.
He finished with three goals and 23 assists in 143 games, to go with 297 penalty minutes. Since retiring as an active player, Busniuk moved behind the bench, first as assistant coach for New York Rangers" AHL teams in Binghamton, New York and Hartford, Connecticut, returning to Binghamton to serve with the Ottawa Senators" AHL team
His head-coaching career consisted of one year for the International Hockey League"s Muskegon Fury in 2002-2003, where he posted a 38-29-9 record. Busniuk then served as an assistant coach for the Binghamton Senators of the American Hockey League from 2003 to 2010.
Busniuk then returned home to Thunder Bay, where he served in a similar capacity with the Lakehead Thunderwolves, eventually filling in as an interim coach after Joel Scherban was fired four games into the 2012-2013 season.
He also taught at Dennis Franklin Cromarty High School, an all First Nations school in Thunder Bay. In 2013 Busniuk returned to Europe where he is the head coach of the Italian League, The Human Context Pustertal Wolfe Professional Hockey Team, the same team he played for from 1982-1985.
He is the only player in American Hockey League history to be a member of four consecutive Calder Cup championship teams (1976–1979).