Canadian ice hockey player who spent his entire 20-year NHL career with Boston Bruins, winning three Stanley Cups and becoming first player to reach 20 seasons.
Aubrey Victor Clapper was born in Newmarket, Ontario in 1907. He spent his entire 20-season career with the Boston Bruins — the first player in NHL history to play 20 professional seasons. He won three Stanley Cup championships (1929, 1939, 1941). He played the first decade of his career as a right wing and the second decade as a defenceman — producing All-Star selections at both positions. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1947 — before his retirement, making him one of the few active players inducted. His longevity — 20 seasons with a single franchise from 1927 to 1947 — reflects exceptional durability across an era when the game was significantly more physically brutal than the modern version. The Boston Bruins retired his number 5 upon his retirement. He is the archetype of the one-franchise player whose entire identity is bound to a single organisation.
He was the first NHL player to play 20 seasons and the first to have his jersey number retired.
How They Played
Clapper was known for his physical, hard-hitting style of play and exceptional durability throughout his lengthy career. He combined strong defensive positioning with offensive capability, able to contribute at both ends of the ice regardless of whether he was playing forward or defense.
Lasting Impact
Clapper pioneered longevity in professional hockey and became the first player to have his number retired by an NHL team when the Bruins honored his #3 in 1947.
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup 3x (1929,1939,1941)
- Hall of Fame (1947)
- First 20-year player
| Team | Period | GP | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boston Bruins | 1927–1947 | 833 | 228 |