Canadian ice hockey left winger who played his entire NHL career with Philadelphia Flyers, winning two Stanley Cups and earning Hall of Fame induction in 1990.
William Charles Barber was born in Callander, Ontario in 1952. Philadelphia Flyers selected him seventh overall in the 1972 NHL Draft. His 12-season career — entirely with the Flyers — produced 420 goals and 463 assists for 883 career points. He won two Stanley Cup championships (1974, 1975) as a key member of the Broad Street Bullies alongside Bobby Clarke and Bill Flett. He scored 50 goals once and 40 or more goals in four additional seasons. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1990. He was the most consistent scorer on a team better known for physical intimidation — providing the offensive balance that made Philadelphia dangerous beyond his toughness. He later became head coach and general manager of the Philadelphia Flyers. His combination of competitive edge and scoring consistency across 12 seasons with a single franchise made him one of the more quietly exceptional players of his era. He represented Canada in international competition multiple times.
Being a core member of the Philadelphia Flyers' back-to-back Stanley Cup championship teams in 1974 and 1975.
How They Played
Barber was a skilled left winger with exceptional goal-scoring ability and hockey intelligence. He combined finesse with the physical style that defined the Flyers during their championship era. His accurate shot and ability to find open ice made him a consistent offensive threat throughout his career.
Lasting Impact
Barber established himself as one of the greatest players in Philadelphia Flyers history and helped define the franchise's winning culture during their most successful period.
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup 2x (1974,1975)
- Hall of Fame (1990)
| Team | Period | GP | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia Flyers | 1972–1984 | 903 | 420 |