Glebe Upon switching to the professional
New South Wales Rugby Football League, Burge was playing first grade for
Glebe at age 16 and was selected for the state at age 18. After his attempt to enlist in the
Australian Imperial Force was rejected because of a speech impediment, Burge devoted his energies to rugby league. At and equally effective anywhere in the forwards from lock to prop, he had the speed of a back to complement his strength and an anticipation that made him a support player without peer. Burge was a teetotaller who was way ahead of his time in observing a strict diet, he used coaching concepts familiar in modern sports psychology and upheld an all-year training regime that continued right through the long Sydney summer off-season. He debuted for
Australia in the domestic
1914 Ashes series against Great Britain appearing in all three Tests. He is listed on the
Australian Players Register as Kangaroo No. 88. Burge was the
New South Wales Rugby Football League's top try-scorer in
1915,
1916 and
1918 an extremely rare feat in even one year for a forward. 1911 Veteran captain
McKivat centre with ball, 17 year old Burge to his left On the 1919 tour of New Zealand Burge played in all four tests. In the
1920 season, he was the
league's top point scorer. Burge holds the NSWRFL/NSWRL/ARL/NRL record for most tries in a match, scoring eight in a club match for Glebe in 1920. Again in 1920 he appeared in all three Tests of the domestic
Ashes series and then was selected on the
1921–22 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain where he played in all three tests and twenty tour matches scoring 33 tries in 23 matches, more than any touring forward before or since. Burge's representative record shows him appearing in every single Australia Test match played in the war-interrupted eight-year period between 1914 and 1922. He played 16 seasons and a record 148 first grade games for Glebe and was club captain for many years. His career tally of 146 first grade tries stood for eighty years as the highest by a forward until
Manly-Warringah back rower
Steven Menzies broke it in 2004.
St. George Burge moved to
St. George in 1927, retired as a player at the end of that season, and coached the club for a further three seasons. He maintained an average of a try a game for seventeen seasons, scoring 218 tries in 213 senior matches with 146 coming from his 154 Sydney first grade matches. That try-scoring tally today stands at eleventh on an all-time list dominated by backs. ==Coaching career==