Education
University of Otago.
University of Otago.
He played 41 times for Canterbury between 1955 and 1962, in the back row. He played for the All Blacks on the 1960 tour of South Africa. Despite a groin injury he played 11 games, scoring 8 tries, but played in no tests.
He did not play for the All Blacks until 1960, because of the demands of medical studies and practice.
He was a general practitioner in New Brighton, Christchurch from 1957 to 1965, then a medical registrar at Christchurch Hospital. Next he went to London until 1976, working at Guy’s Hospital and lecturing at London University.
But he could not get his views on the dangers of scrums and of potentially life-threatening injuries from poor scrum techniques accepted until he published them in the British Medical Journal. He retired to Hanmer Springs in North Canterbury, where he conducted research for the Administrative Committee on Company-ordination, and was a consultant on rheumatology and rehabilitative medicine until 2000.
He died in 2013. Burry"s son Mark is an architect, best known for his role as executive architect and researcher for the Sagrada Família.
Later he was a member of the Institutional Review Board’s medical advisory committee, and oversaw medical services for the first Rugby World Cup in 1987.