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1965–66 Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey season

The 1965–66 Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey team represented Michigan State University in college ice hockey. In its 15th year under head coach Amo Bessone the team compiled a 16–13–0 record and reached the NCAA tournament for the second time in its history. The Spartans defeated Clarkson 6–1 in the championship game at the Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota. as of 2018, the 1965–66 Michigan State team has the worst record of any national champion for Division I (or equivalent) ice hockey.

1965–66 Michigan State Spartans
men's ice hockey season
National champion
WCHA Tournament, co-champion
1966 NCAA Tournament, champion
Conference6th WCHA / 2nd Big Ten
Home iceDemonstration Hall
Record
Overall16–13–0
Conference9–11, 4–4
Home8–5
Road5–8
Neutral3–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachAmo Bessone
Captain(s)Mike Coppo[1]
Alternate captain(s)Don Heaphy
Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey seasons
« 1964–65 1966–67 »

Season edit

Coming off of their first winning season in 3 years, Michigan State began the 1965–66 season on a sour note, losing both games at Colorado College and then continued their losing streak with the first two games of a three-game series against ECAC Hockey opponents. The Spartans finally earned a win against St. Lawrence to finish their road trip 1–4. State opened their home schedule against North Dakota with a split which continued with the succeeding two series against Denver and CC. MSU met their first Big Ten opponent when Minnesota arrived in mid-January but after the Golden Gophers handed Amo Bessone's team two losses the Spartans were wallowing near the bottom of their conference with a 3–7 record.

The only bright spot for MSU was that the WCHA had accepted Minnesota–Duluth into the conference and, as a result, changed the playoff format so all 8 teams would be included regardless of their records. MSU got back in the win column the following weekend against the Bulldogs, taking both games before travelling to Minneapolis to earn a split with the Gophers. MSU continued to slowly climb out of the cellar with two wins in their first home-and-home series with arch-rival Michigan and then extended their winning streak with two more wins against Wisconsin, bringing their all-time record against the Badgers to 6–0.[1]

With a home playoff game in sight Michigan State was stopped dead in their tracks by defending national champion Michigan Tech who took two contests from the Spartans. MSU ended their regular season against Michigan with another home-and-home series but could only manage a split, finishing the season in 6th-place in the WCHA standings. Part of the rearrangement of the playoff system for the WCHA came with dividing the eight teams into two regions (east and west) with MSU being joined by Minnesota–Duluth, Michigan and Michigan Tech. Because Michigan had finished ahead of the Spartans (due to winning the final regular season game 1–0 in overtime), Michigan State had to open the conference tournament on the road. Despite the hostile crowd MSU was able to win the game against the 5th-place Wolverines and, because of an odd arrangement for the second round, headed back home for a match against top-seeded Michigan Tech. With the Spartan faithful cheering them on, Michigan State upset the Huskies 4–3, winning their first WCHA Tournament (shared with Denver) and advanced to their second NCAA Tournament.

Despite having a worse record than Denver, Michigan State was slated to play lower-seeded Boston University in the opening round, a team who was only in the tournament because ECAC runner-up Cornell declined the invitation.[2] Michigan State's showed up in full force against the Terriers, holding BU to a single goal and winning a nail-biter 2–1 to advance to the title game. They met Clarkson for the championship, but unusually for an east-vs.-west matchup the two teams were familiar with one another with Clarkson having won a game early in the season. However, past was not prologue in this case and team captain Mike Coppo opened the scoring in the fifteenth minute of the opening frame. Clarkson tied the score just over three minutes later but that was the only goal they could get past Gaye Cooley and MSU began a string of five uninterrupted goals late in the second to win their first National championship.

Brian McAndrew, Mike Coppo, Don Heaphy and Gaye Cooley were all named to the All-Tournament first team while Bob Brawley and Tom Mikkola made the second team. Cooley was named Tournament Most Outstanding Player and, because of his job shepherding the Spartans through early-season injury and ice trouble, Amo Bessone shared the Spencer Penrose Award for national coach of the year with Clakrson's Len Ceglarski, the only time in history the award was split (as of 2018). The team's leading scorer, Doug Volmar was the only Spartan to be named to the AHCA All-American West Team or the All-WCHA First Team while none made it onto the WCHA Second Team.[3]

Standings edit

Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Minnesota 8 5 3 0 10 34 29 27 16 11 0 117 94
Michigan State 8 4 4 0 8 34 32 29 16 13 0 123 111
Michigan 8 3 5 0 6 25 32 28 14 14 0 125 109
indicates conference regular season champion
Conference Overall
GP W L T PCT GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Michigan Tech 20 15 4 1 .775 77 48 30 23 6 1 141 82
North Dakota 22 13 9 0 .591 97 85 30 17 12 1 135 115
Minnesota 22 13 9 0 .591 92 76 27 16 11 0 117 94
Denver* 20 10 7 3 .575 81 61 32 18 11 3 137 100
Michigan 18 9 9 0 .500 74 72 28 14 14 0 125 109
Michigan State* 20 9 11 0 .450 88 85 29 16 13 0 123 111
Colorado College 18 4 12 2 .278 51 93 29 9 18 2 98 147
Minnesota-Duluth 20 3 15 2 .200 60 100 28 7 19 2 96 137
Championship: Michigan State, Denver
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion

Schedule edit

Date Opponent# Rank# Site Result Record
Regular Season
November 19 at Colorado College Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado L 0–4  0–1 (0–1)
November 20 at Colorado College Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado L 3–4 OT 0–2 (0–2)
November 25 at St. Lawrence* Appleton ArenaCanton, New York L 3–5  0–3 (0–2)
November 26 at Clarkson* Walker ArenaPotsdam, New York L 3–6  0–4 (0–2)
November 27 at St. Lawrence* Appleton ArenaCanton, New York W 6–4  1–4 (0–2)
December 3 vs. North Dakota Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 11–5  2–4 (1–2)
December 4 vs. North Dakota Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan L 3–5  2–5 (1–3)
December 10 vs. Denver Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan L 6–8  2–6 (1–4)
December 11 vs. Denver Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 4–1  3–6 (2–4)
January 7 vs. Colorado College Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan L 4–5 OT 3–7 (2–5)
January 8 vs. Colorado College Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 6–2  4–7 (3–5)
January 14 vs. Minnesota Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan L 5–7  4–8 (3–6, 0–1)
January 15 vs. Minnesota Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan L 1–5  4–9 (3–7, 0–2)
January 21 vs. Minnesota–Duluth Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 6–5 OT 5–9 (4–7, 0–2)
January 22 vs. Minnesota–Duluth Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 5–2  6–9 (5–7, 0–2)
January 28 vs. Minnesota Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota L 5–6 OT 6–10 (5–8, 0–3)
January 29 vs. Minnesota Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota W 4–3  7–10 (6–8, 1–3)
February 4 vs. Michigan Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 8–7  8–10 (7–8, 2–3)
February 5 at Michigan Weinberg ColiseumAnn Arbor, Michigan W 4–2  9–10 (8–8, 3–3)
February 11 vs. Wisconsin* Milwaukee ArenaMilwaukee, Wisconsin W 3–1  10–10 (8–8, 3–3)
February 12 at Wisconsin* Hartmeyer Ice ArenaMadison, Wisconsin W 5–3  11–10 (8–8, 3–3)
February 18 at Michigan Tech Dee StadiumHoughton, Michigan L 4–8  11–11 (8–9, 3–3)
February 19 at Michigan Tech Dee StadiumHoughton, Michigan L 2–4  11–12 (8–10, 3–3)
February 25 vs. Michigan Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan W 7–1  12–12 (9–10, 4–3)
February 26 at Michigan Weinberg ColiseumAnn Arbor, Michigan L 0–1 OT 12–13 (9–11, 4–4)
WCHA Tournament
March 3 at Michigan* Weinberg ColiseumAnn Arbor, Michigan (WCHA First Round) W 3–2  13–13 (9–11, 4–4)
March 5 vs. Michigan Tech* Demonstration HallEast Lansing, Michigan (WCHA Second Round) W 6–4  14–13 (9–11, 4–4)
NCAA Tournament
March 18 vs. Boston University* Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota (National Semifinal) W 2–1  15–13 (9–11, 4–4)
March 19 vs. Clarkson* Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota (National championship) W 6–1  16–13 (9–11, 4–4)
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll.
Source:

[1]

Roster and scoring statistics edit

No. Name Year Position Hometown S/P/C Games Goals Assists Pts PIM
9 Doug Volmar Junior F Cleveland Heights, OH   29 26 28 54 57
7 Mike Coppo Senior F Hancock, MI   29 21 21 42 32
12 Brian McAndrew Junior F Copper Cliff, ON   29 14 23 37 20
20 Tom Mikkola Junior F Copper Cliff, ON   29 10 23 33 18
8 Bill Faunt Junior F Sault Ste. Marie, ON   29 8 23 31 6
10 Mike Jacobson Junior F Copper Cliff, ON   24 13 9 22 22
16 Bob Fallat Sophomore F Espanola, ON   29 11 5 16 36
4 Don Heaphy Senior D Copper Cliff, ON   29 3 10 13 44
15 Wayne Duffett Sophomore F Kirkland Lake, ON   29 5 7 12 14
14 Nino Cristofoli Sophomore F Trail, BC   29 5 7 12 12
5 Tom Purdo Junior D Detroit, MI   28 1 7 8 57
3 Dick Bois Sophomore D Espanola, ON   27 2 3 5 50
11 Matt Mulcahy Senior F Dearborn, MI   29 2 3 5 4
2 Bob Brawley Junior D Sault Ste. Marie, ON   22 1 4 5 46
6 Doug French Sophomore D Espanola, ON   22 1 4 5 20
21 John Schuster Junior F Wyandotte, MI   23 0 1 1 0
18 Ron Roth Junior D Saint Paul, MN   7 0 1 1 4
22 Larry Roche Sophomore G Houghton, MI   2 0 0 0 0
1 Jerry Fisher Junior G Detroit, MI   12 0 0 0 2
23 Gaye Cooley Sophomore G North Bay, ON   18 0 0 0 0
19 Dainis Vedejs Senior D Grand Rapids, MI   0 - - - -
Total 123 179 302 454

[1]

Goaltending statistics edit

No. Name Games Minutes Wins Losses Ties Goals Against Saves Shut Outs SV % GAA
22 Larry Roche 2 0 .889 2.5
23 Gaye Cooley 18 0 .903 3.1
1 Jerry Fisher 12 0 .868 4.0
Total 29 16 13 0 111 0

1966 championship game edit

(E2) Clarkson vs. (W2) Michigan State edit

March 19[4] Clarkson 1 – 6 Michigan State Williams Arena


Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st MSU Mike Coppo Heaphy 14:31 1–0 MSU
CLK Andrew Hamilton McLennan and Hurley 17:54 1–1
2nd MSU Bob Brawley – GW McAndrew and Heaphy 34:31 2–1 MSU
3rd MSU Mike Coppo Faunt 40:17 3–1 MSU
MSU Bob Fallat McAndrew 43:38 4–1 MSU
MSU Doug Volmar Faunt 52:12 5–1 MSU
MSU Bill Faunt unassisted 59:32 6–1 MSU

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Michigan State Spartans 2018-19 Hockey Media Guide" (PDF). Michigan State Spartans. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  2. ^ "Cornell Men's Hockey Media Guide Pages 59-88 (History and Records)" (PDF). Cornell Big Red. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  3. ^ "WCHA All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  4. ^ (PDF). Michigan State Spartans. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2016. Retrieved February 11, 2017.

1965, michigan, state, spartans, hockey, season, 1965, michigan, state, spartans, hockey, team, represented, michigan, state, university, college, hockey, 15th, year, under, head, coach, bessone, team, compiled, record, reached, ncaa, tournament, second, time,. The 1965 66 Michigan State Spartans men s ice hockey team represented Michigan State University in college ice hockey In its 15th year under head coach Amo Bessone the team compiled a 16 13 0 record and reached the NCAA tournament for the second time in its history The Spartans defeated Clarkson 6 1 in the championship game at the Williams Arena in Minneapolis Minnesota as of 2018 the 1965 66 Michigan State team has the worst record of any national champion for Division I or equivalent ice hockey 1965 66 Michigan State Spartans men s ice hockey seasonNational championWCHA Tournament co champion1966 NCAA Tournament championConference6th WCHA 2nd Big TenHome iceDemonstration HallRecordOverall16 13 0Conference9 11 4 4Home8 5Road5 8Neutral3 0Coaches and captainsHead coachAmo BessoneCaptain s Mike Coppo 1 Alternate captain s Don HeaphyMichigan State Spartans men s ice hockey seasons 1964 65 1966 67 Contents 1 Season 2 Standings 3 Schedule 4 Roster and scoring statistics 5 Goaltending statistics 6 1966 championship game 6 1 E2 Clarkson vs W2 Michigan State 7 ReferencesSeason editComing off of their first winning season in 3 years Michigan State began the 1965 66 season on a sour note losing both games at Colorado College and then continued their losing streak with the first two games of a three game series against ECAC Hockey opponents The Spartans finally earned a win against St Lawrence to finish their road trip 1 4 State opened their home schedule against North Dakota with a split which continued with the succeeding two series against Denver and CC MSU met their first Big Ten opponent when Minnesota arrived in mid January but after the Golden Gophers handed Amo Bessone s team two losses the Spartans were wallowing near the bottom of their conference with a 3 7 record The only bright spot for MSU was that the WCHA had accepted Minnesota Duluth into the conference and as a result changed the playoff format so all 8 teams would be included regardless of their records MSU got back in the win column the following weekend against the Bulldogs taking both games before travelling to Minneapolis to earn a split with the Gophers MSU continued to slowly climb out of the cellar with two wins in their first home and home series with arch rival Michigan and then extended their winning streak with two more wins against Wisconsin bringing their all time record against the Badgers to 6 0 1 With a home playoff game in sight Michigan State was stopped dead in their tracks by defending national champion Michigan Tech who took two contests from the Spartans MSU ended their regular season against Michigan with another home and home series but could only manage a split finishing the season in 6th place in the WCHA standings Part of the rearrangement of the playoff system for the WCHA came with dividing the eight teams into two regions east and west with MSU being joined by Minnesota Duluth Michigan and Michigan Tech Because Michigan had finished ahead of the Spartans due to winning the final regular season game 1 0 in overtime Michigan State had to open the conference tournament on the road Despite the hostile crowd MSU was able to win the game against the 5th place Wolverines and because of an odd arrangement for the second round headed back home for a match against top seeded Michigan Tech With the Spartan faithful cheering them on Michigan State upset the Huskies 4 3 winning their first WCHA Tournament shared with Denver and advanced to their second NCAA Tournament Despite having a worse record than Denver Michigan State was slated to play lower seeded Boston University in the opening round a team who was only in the tournament because ECAC runner up Cornell declined the invitation 2 Michigan State s showed up in full force against the Terriers holding BU to a single goal and winning a nail biter 2 1 to advance to the title game They met Clarkson for the championship but unusually for an east vs west matchup the two teams were familiar with one another with Clarkson having won a game early in the season However past was not prologue in this case and team captain Mike Coppo opened the scoring in the fifteenth minute of the opening frame Clarkson tied the score just over three minutes later but that was the only goal they could get past Gaye Cooley and MSU began a string of five uninterrupted goals late in the second to win their first National championship Brian McAndrew Mike Coppo Don Heaphy and Gaye Cooley were all named to the All Tournament first team while Bob Brawley and Tom Mikkola made the second team Cooley was named Tournament Most Outstanding Player and because of his job shepherding the Spartans through early season injury and ice trouble Amo Bessone shared the Spencer Penrose Award for national coach of the year with Clakrson s Len Ceglarski the only time in history the award was split as of 2018 The team s leading scorer Doug Volmar was the only Spartan to be named to the AHCA All American West Team or the All WCHA First Team while none made it onto the WCHA Second Team 3 Standings edit1965 66 Big Ten standingsvte Conference Overall GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA Minnesota 8 5 3 0 10 34 29 27 16 11 0 117 94 Michigan State 8 4 4 0 8 34 32 29 16 13 0 123 111 Michigan 8 3 5 0 6 25 32 28 14 14 0 125 109 indicates conference regular season champion 1965 66 Western Collegiate Hockey Association standingsvte Conference Overall GP W L T PCT GF GA GP W L T GF GA Michigan Tech 20 15 4 1 775 77 48 30 23 6 1 141 82 North Dakota 22 13 9 0 591 97 85 30 17 12 1 135 115 Minnesota 22 13 9 0 591 92 76 27 16 11 0 117 94 Denver 20 10 7 3 575 81 61 32 18 11 3 137 100 Michigan 18 9 9 0 500 74 72 28 14 14 0 125 109 Michigan State 20 9 11 0 450 88 85 29 16 13 0 123 111 Colorado College 18 4 12 2 278 51 93 29 9 18 2 98 147 Minnesota Duluth 20 3 15 2 200 60 100 28 7 19 2 96 137 Championship Michigan State Denver indicates conference regular season champion indicates conference tournament championSchedule editDate Opponent Rank Site Result Record Regular Season November 19 at Colorado College Broadmoor World Arena Colorado Springs Colorado L 0 4 0 1 0 1 November 20 at Colorado College Broadmoor World Arena Colorado Springs Colorado L 3 4 OT 0 2 0 2 November 25 at St Lawrence Appleton Arena Canton New York L 3 5 0 3 0 2 November 26 at Clarkson Walker Arena Potsdam New York L 3 6 0 4 0 2 November 27 at St Lawrence Appleton Arena Canton New York W 6 4 1 4 0 2 December 3 vs North Dakota Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 11 5 2 4 1 2 December 4 vs North Dakota Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan L 3 5 2 5 1 3 December 10 vs Denver Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan L 6 8 2 6 1 4 December 11 vs Denver Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 4 1 3 6 2 4 January 7 vs Colorado College Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan L 4 5 OT 3 7 2 5 January 8 vs Colorado College Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 6 2 4 7 3 5 January 14 vs Minnesota Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan L 5 7 4 8 3 6 0 1 January 15 vs Minnesota Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan L 1 5 4 9 3 7 0 2 January 21 vs Minnesota Duluth Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 6 5 OT 5 9 4 7 0 2 January 22 vs Minnesota Duluth Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 5 2 6 9 5 7 0 2 January 28 vs Minnesota Williams Arena Minneapolis Minnesota L 5 6 OT 6 10 5 8 0 3 January 29 vs Minnesota Williams Arena Minneapolis Minnesota W 4 3 7 10 6 8 1 3 February 4 vs Michigan Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 8 7 8 10 7 8 2 3 February 5 at Michigan Weinberg Coliseum Ann Arbor Michigan W 4 2 9 10 8 8 3 3 February 11 vs Wisconsin Milwaukee Arena Milwaukee Wisconsin W 3 1 10 10 8 8 3 3 February 12 at Wisconsin Hartmeyer Ice Arena Madison Wisconsin W 5 3 11 10 8 8 3 3 February 18 at Michigan Tech Dee Stadium Houghton Michigan L 4 8 11 11 8 9 3 3 February 19 at Michigan Tech Dee Stadium Houghton Michigan L 2 4 11 12 8 10 3 3 February 25 vs Michigan Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan W 7 1 12 12 9 10 4 3 February 26 at Michigan Weinberg Coliseum Ann Arbor Michigan L 0 1 OT 12 13 9 11 4 4 WCHA Tournament March 3 at Michigan Weinberg Coliseum Ann Arbor Michigan WCHA First Round W 3 2 13 13 9 11 4 4 March 5 vs Michigan Tech Demonstration Hall East Lansing Michigan WCHA Second Round W 6 4 14 13 9 11 4 4 NCAA Tournament March 18 vs Boston University Williams Arena Minneapolis Minnesota National Semifinal W 2 1 15 13 9 11 4 4 March 19 vs Clarkson Williams Arena Minneapolis Minnesota National championship W 6 1 16 13 9 11 4 4 Non conference game Rankings from USCHO com Poll Source 1 Roster and scoring statistics editNo Name Year Position Hometown S P C Games Goals Assists Pts PIM 9 Doug Volmar Junior F Cleveland Heights OH nbsp 29 26 28 54 57 7 Mike Coppo Senior F Hancock MI nbsp 29 21 21 42 32 12 Brian McAndrew Junior F Copper Cliff ON nbsp 29 14 23 37 20 20 Tom Mikkola Junior F Copper Cliff ON nbsp 29 10 23 33 18 8 Bill Faunt Junior F Sault Ste Marie ON nbsp 29 8 23 31 6 10 Mike Jacobson Junior F Copper Cliff ON nbsp 24 13 9 22 22 16 Bob Fallat Sophomore F Espanola ON nbsp 29 11 5 16 36 4 Don Heaphy Senior D Copper Cliff ON nbsp 29 3 10 13 44 15 Wayne Duffett Sophomore F Kirkland Lake ON nbsp 29 5 7 12 14 14 Nino Cristofoli Sophomore F Trail BC nbsp 29 5 7 12 12 5 Tom Purdo Junior D Detroit MI nbsp 28 1 7 8 57 3 Dick Bois Sophomore D Espanola ON nbsp 27 2 3 5 50 11 Matt Mulcahy Senior F Dearborn MI nbsp 29 2 3 5 4 2 Bob Brawley Junior D Sault Ste Marie ON nbsp 22 1 4 5 46 6 Doug French Sophomore D Espanola ON nbsp 22 1 4 5 20 21 John Schuster Junior F Wyandotte MI nbsp 23 0 1 1 0 18 Ron Roth Junior D Saint Paul MN nbsp 7 0 1 1 4 22 Larry Roche Sophomore G Houghton MI nbsp 2 0 0 0 0 1 Jerry Fisher Junior G Detroit MI nbsp 12 0 0 0 2 23 Gaye Cooley Sophomore G North Bay ON nbsp 18 0 0 0 0 19 Dainis Vedejs Senior D Grand Rapids MI nbsp 0 Total 123 179 302 454 1 Goaltending statistics editNo Name Games Minutes Wins Losses Ties Goals Against Saves Shut Outs SV GAA 22 Larry Roche 2 0 889 2 5 23 Gaye Cooley 18 0 903 3 1 1 Jerry Fisher 12 0 868 4 0 Total 29 16 13 0 111 0 1966 championship game edit E2 Clarkson vs W2 Michigan State edit March 19 4 Clarkson 1 6 Michigan State Williams Arena Scoring summary Period Team Goal Assist s Time Score 1st MSU Mike Coppo Heaphy 14 31 1 0 MSU CLK Andrew Hamilton McLennan and Hurley 17 54 1 1 2nd MSU Bob Brawley GW McAndrew and Heaphy 34 31 2 1 MSU 3rd MSU Mike Coppo Faunt 40 17 3 1 MSU MSU Bob Fallat McAndrew 43 38 4 1 MSU MSU Doug Volmar Faunt 52 12 5 1 MSU MSU Bill Faunt unassisted 59 32 6 1 MSU Shots by period Team 1 2 3 T Clarkson 24 Michigan State 20 50 Goaltenders Team Name Saves Goals against Time on ice CLK Terry Yurkiewicz 44 6 MSU Gaye Cooley 23 1References edit a b c d Michigan State Spartans 2018 19 Hockey Media Guide PDF Michigan State Spartans Retrieved March 18 2019 Cornell Men s Hockey Media Guide Pages 59 88 History and Records PDF Cornell Big Red Retrieved October 16 2018 WCHA All Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved May 19 2013 Michigan State 2013 14 Hockey History PDF Michigan State Spartans Archived from the original PDF on March 22 2016 Retrieved February 11 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1965 66 Michigan State Spartans men 27s ice hockey season amp oldid 1187476108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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