Sabres Delivered An Emotional Draft Moment Niagara Hockey Wont Forget

The Buffalo Sabres paid a heartfelt tribute to late Niagara University hockey player Bradly Burden, uniting the community in remembrance during an emotional draft day honor.

Four months after Niagara University Club Hockey player Bradly Burden died in a car accident, his family, teammates and coaches found themselves in the middle of an NHL draft moment they never expected.

On Saturday, Bradly’s sister, Shannon Burden, announced the Buffalo Sabres’ 124th pick, with the people closest to him gathered around her. The team also included a video tribute to the 22-year-old, giving his story a much bigger stage than anyone in his circle imagined.

“It was absolutely surreal,” Bradly’s teammate and roommate, Mario Smith, said. “The Buffalo Sabres reached out to our coaches and said they wanted us to announce one of their draft picks. It was a surprise for his sister, which was pretty cool.”

For Shannon, the experience carried a meaning far beyond the draft itself.

“Never in my wildest dreams did I expect for something like this to happen, I just thought I was going to hang out with his buddies,” Shannon said. “I think I was just so in shock because, as his family, our biggest fear is he’ll be forgotten or people won’t talk about him, so the fact that we were able to share his story … was huge, and the fact that the Sabres did that for us, there’s not even words that can express how much it means to us.”

She said the moment felt like something her brother would have treasured.

“Being there, that would’ve been his, ‘I made it’ moment,” Shannon said.

Smith said the tribute hit hard when it played on the big stage.

“They had a little video tribute,” Smith said. “Watching the video was definitely emotional, cause obviously you want him to be there. The whole world got to see his story and who he was.”

Even in the middle of the spotlight, the people there felt Bradly’s presence.

“I was so nervous, but it was almost like as soon as I walked up on those steps, ‘I know he’s here, he’s jealous that I’m the one saying stuff and he’s not up there talking,'” Shannon said.

“He was definitely there in spirit, and I think you could feel it on the stage,” Smith said.

Niagara University Club Hockey assistant coach Robert Seiler said the group was grateful to honor him in that setting.

“We’ll never forget and we’ll never stop saying his name,” Seiler said. “We haven’t stopped saying his name, and, you know, we were really, really happy to be able to honor him.”

Smith said the chance to talk about Bradly publicly matters because it keeps his memory active.

“We were talking about this at the draft, we still see him in different aspects of our everyday life,” Smith said. “When you see something that reminds you of him, talk about it … it’s important that we keep sharing those stories.”

For Shannon, the support around her brother made one thing clear.

“I know that hockey is so much more than just a sport, it’s a family,” Shannon said. “I’m so grateful that’s what Bradly picked to play was hockey, so we have this community of people rallying behind us … we couldn’t have done it without the hockey community.”

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