Round | Overall |
5 | 68 |
Year | Team | League | GP | G | A | TP | PIM |
1967-68 | Northwood | Prep | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
1968-69 | BC Freshmen | ECAC | 17 | 9 | 10 | 19 | 12 |
1969-70 | Boston College | ECAC | 26 | 21 | 23 | 44 | 40 |
First contract: | June 18, 1973 |
Debut: | October 10, 1973 (Detroit at N.Y. Rangers) |
Final NHL game: | December 31, 1974 (Detroit vs. California) |
Retired: | 1977 |
Stanley Cup: | Never won |
Numbers worn: | 25, 24 |
Team: Detroit
Years: 1973-1974. Playoffs:
None
Regular Season | |||||
GP | G | A | TP | PIM | |
2 years | 26 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 25 |
Stanley Cup Playoffs | |||||
GP | G | A | TP | PIM | |
0 years | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Complete statistics available at NHL.com |
Led Boston College with 30 assists in 1970-71. ... Named to ECAC All-Star Second Team with Boston College in 1970-71. ...
Named to All-New England team in 1970-71. ... Won Norman F. Dailey Memorial Award as Boston College team MVP in 1970-71.
... Led all NCAA players with 45 assists for Boston College as a senior in
1972-73. ... Named to NCAA All-America East First Team with Boston College
in 1972-73. ... Named ECAC Player of Year with Boston College in 1972-73.
... Won the Walter Brown Award as New England's Player of Year in 1972-73. ... Named to ECAC All-Star First Team with Boston College in 1972-73. ... Named
to All-New England team with Boston College in 1972-73. ... Won
Norman F. Dailey Memorial Award as Boston College team MVP in 1972-73. ...
Left Boston College with career record for points by a defenseman (135
points, record since broken). ... Led IHL playoffs with 17
assists for Toledo in 1977. ... Won IHL James Gatschene Memorial Trophy as
league MVP and IHL Governors' Trophy as league's best defenseman with Toledo
in 1976-77. ... Named to IHL All-Star First Team with Toledo in 1976-77. ...
Inducted into the Boston Varsity Club Athletic Hall of Fame in 1980. ...
Inducted into the Massachusetts Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000 along with his
teammates from the 1972 U.S. Olympic team. ... Named one of the ECAC's
All-Time Top 50 players by the conference during 2010-11 season.
Full Name: Thomas
Robert Mellor
Other Post-Draft Teams: Boston College (ECAC); Team USA; Virginia (AHL); London (Great Britain); Gothenburg (Sweden); Toledo (IHL)
Education: Graduated from
Boston College in 1973.
Career Beyond Hockey: Moved back to
the Boston area after his retirement to pursue a new career in the
financial services sector and worked for many years with Kidder Peabody.
In 1990, he founded
Windham
Capital Group in Boston, and remains the company's president.
Family: Son of Don Mellor, who
played a key role in developing the youth hockey program in Cranston, R.I.,
into a legitimate pipeline for NHL talent. In 2013, the Mellors were honored by the Rhode
Island Reds Heritage Society with the RI Native-Born Hockey Achievement
Award.
Eight years before the "Miracle on Ice" at Lake Placid, the 1972 U.S. Olympic team made some history of its own by winning the silver medal at the Winter Games in Sapporo, Japan. Because that team was sandwiched between gold medalists in 1960 and 1980, it is somewhat forgotten in USA Hockey history. In addition to winning silver, the team could boast that it had the first U.S. Olympian ever drafted by an NHL team. Tom Mellor, then 22, delayed his senior year at Boston College to spend the entire 1971-72 season touring with Team USA in the months leading up to the Olympics. He had gotten his first taste of Team USA at the 1971 IIHF World Championship tournament in Switzerland, where the Americans finished sixth. All of the time he put in with the national team paid off in the first U.S. hockey medal since 1960. Mellor, a defenseman, did not record a point in his six games at Sapporo. The following year, Mellor returned to BC to complete his education and then rejoined Team USA for the 1973 World Group B tournament in Austria, helping the team to another second-place finish in the event. He was particularly outstanding in the 1973 tournament, scoring four goals and 12 points in seven games.
Selected by New England Whalers in 1972 WHA Draft, the first WHA Draft, February 1972. | Scored hat trick for Boston College om 13-6 win on Feb. 6, 1970, vs. Rensselaer. | Was the first player born in the state of Rhode Island to be drafted by an NHL team. | Was the first NHL draft pick ever selected from the Boston College roster. |
Childhood friend of fellow 1972 U.S. Olympic hockey team member Tim Regan. | Loaned by Detroit to London Lions (Great Britain) for 1973 Ahearne Cup tournament. | Member of the Cranston League for Cranston's Future Sports Hall of Fame. | Ranked No. 34 in Sports Illustrated list of 50 greatest 20th Century Rhode Island athletes. |
SNAPSHOT '70 | |
Total Selected: | 115 |
Forwards: | 67 |
Defense: | 36 |
Goaltenders: | 12 |
Major Junior: | 87 |
College Players: | 18 |
Canadian: | 109 |
Euro-Canadian: | 0 |
American: | 6 |
European: | 0 |
Reached NHL: | 62 |
Won Stanley Cup: | 12 |
Hall of Fame: | 3 |
All-Star Game: | 11 |
Year-end All-Star: | 4 |
Olympians: | 2 |
Picks Traded: | 13 |
1970 PICKS BY TEAM | ||
Boston | Buffalo | Chicago |
Detroit | Los Angeles | Minnesota |
Montreal | New York | Oakland |
Philadelphia | Pittsburgh | St. Louis |
Toronto | Vancouver |
OTHERS DRAFTED IN 1970