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American International Yellow Jackets men's ice hockey

The American International Yellow Jackets men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents the American International College. The Yellow Jackets are a member of Atlantic Hockey. They play at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, Massachusetts.[2]

American International Yellow Jackets men's ice hockey
Current season
UniversityAmerican International College
ConferenceAHC
First season1948–49
Head coachEric Lang
8th season, 122–99–24 (.547)
Assistant coaches
  • Patrick Tabb
  • Matthew Woodward
  • Brendan Riley
ArenaMassMutual Center
Springfield, Massachusetts
ColorsBlack, white, and gold[1]
     
NCAA Tournament appearances
2019, 2021, 2022
Conference Tournament championships
2019, 2021, 2022
Conference regular season championships
2019, 2020, 2021, 2022
Current uniform

History edit

AIC began its varsity program in 1948, playing a modest schedule for the first dozen years of its existence, building the program under William Turner before he handed it off to Joe Bucholz. In 1961 the Yellow Jackets joined with 27 other eastern schools (mostly in New England) to form ECAC Hockey.[3] AIC finished near the bottom for three seasons and in 1964 it was decided that the conference was too unwieldy to continue and was split into two divisions. The Yellow Jackets joined the lower division, becoming a founding member of ECAC 2.[4]

American International had some success when Turner returned to take over, winning the conference tournament in 1969,[5] but dipped slightly after his retirement in 1970. When Paul Thornton took over in 1974 AIC saw a resurgence and by the late 1970s had returned to the ECAC 2 Tournament but after his departure in 1978 the program slumped once more.

In 1984 the Division II ice hockey level collapsed and sent almost all teams at that level down to Division III. AIC followed along and when ECAC 2 split the Yellow Jackets stayed with the eastern side, joining the new ECAC East. In all that upheaval it was not lost that the American International had gotten its sixth head coach since 1970 but they were finally able to find someone willing to stick around in Gary Wright.[6]

Wright's time with AIC began fairly successfully with the team earning its first 20-win season in his fourth year. The next season, 1989, saw the Yellow Jackets pace the ECAC East with 20 wins and set a program record with 24 wins overall but they faltered in the conference tournament and failed to make the D-III National championship. The next year the team was able to regain some of their success by winning the ECAC East title, their first conference championship in 21 years, but they were left out of the National Tournament due to a relatively poor overall record (only eight teams made the tournament and league champions did not receive an automatic berth). AIC continued to play well in the mid-90s but in 1995 the program declined sharply, dropping from 14 to 4 wins and remained in the ECAC East cellar for the rest of its time there.

In 1998 the MAAC began sponsoring an ice hockey conference and AIC joined as an affiliate member, returning to the top tier of college hockey.[7] In their first year back the Yellow Jackets posted a decent record, finishing 5th in the 8-team field but bowed out in the first round of the conference playoffs. After that brief glimpse of success, however, AIC fell to the bottom of the conference and remained there for almost the next 20 years. Even with several new teams joining the conference and the division's reworking into Atlantic Hockey AIC could finish no better than 9th from 2000 through 2017 with the lone exception coming in 2006 when Atlantic Hockey had only 8 league members.

AIC made the conference tournament every years because Atlantic Hockey structured its conference tournament to include every team, but even then the Yellow Jackets could only twice win the 9 vs 8 play-in game and lost every other round it participated in. AIC lost 20 games for 13 consecutive seasons and 18 out of 19 years after 1999 but through it all Gary Wright stayed on to hold the program together. He eventually retired in 2016, being the longest-tenured coach at the time of his retirement and held the record for the most career losses with a single program, but his legacy with AIC went beyond wins and losses.[8]

 
American International playing an outdoor game at Pratt & Whitney Stadium at Rentschler Field in 2011

A new era at AIC began in 2016 with Eric Lang as the new head coach. After a poor but familiar first season AIC posted its best record since 1993 with 15 wins, finishing 8th in Atlantic Hockey and winning its first conference tournament round in over a decade. The following year AIC won its first ever conference championship and, after winning its first conference tournament at the Division I level, made its first appearance in an NCAA Championship. As the lowest-seeded team, AIC played against #1 St. Cloud State and, despite being outshot 34-13 in the game, won the match. The Yellow Jackets season ended after losing the next game but they had already produced the best season in the history of program by a mile.

AIC again won the Atlantic Hockey championship in 2020, however, before the team played its first postseason game the NCAA cancelled all remaining contests and tournaments due to the coronavirus pandemic.[9][10]

Season-by-season results edit

[11]

Roster edit

As of September 14, 2023.[12]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
1   Alexandros Aslanadis Senior G 6' 5" (1.96 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2001-01-20 Moorestown, New Jersey Western Michigan (NCHC)
2   Nico Somerville Senior D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1999-04-08 Nanaimo, British Columbia Penticton (BCHL)
3   Logan Jenuwine Graduate F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1998-05-15 Romeo, Michigan Lake Superior State (CCHA)
4   Brett Callahan Graduate D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1998-10-16 Westmont, Illinois Jersey (NCDC)
5   Tomi Leppänen Freshman D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2003-04-07 Heinola, Finland Sioux City (USHL)
6   Matt Rickard Senior D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1999-07-28 Coventry, Rhode Island Lone Star (NAHL)
7   Brian Kramer Senior D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2000-07-20 Wexford, Pennsylvania Robert Morris (AHA)
8   Hunter Jones Freshman F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2002-07-13 Andover, Minnesota Oklahoma (NAHL)
9   Hunter Longhi Freshman F 5' 8" (1.73 m) 174 lb (79 kg) 2002-04-02 Collinsville, Illinois Minot (NAHL)
10   Dustin Manz Graduate F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 188 lb (85 kg) 1999-09-21 Vanderbilt, Michigan Lake Superior State (CCHA)
11   Julius Janhonen Senior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1999-03-05 Espoo, Finland HIFK U20 (Nuorten SM-liiga)
13   Grayson Dietrich Sophomore F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2001-12-18 Calgary, Alberta Drumheller (AJHL)
14   Douglas Andersson Freshman F 6' 6" (1.98 m) 209 lb (95 kg) 2002-04-04 Ängelholm, Sweden Kallinge-Ronneby IF (Hockeyettan)
15   Casper Söderling Sophomore D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2001-06-02 Stockholm, Sweden Nacka J20 (J20 Regional)
16   Andrew Amousse Sophomore F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 2001-07-16 Laval, Quebec Victoria (BCHL)
17   Oscar Geschwind Junior F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2001-02-24 Hällefors, Sweden Northern Michigan (CCHA)
18   Akseli Pennanen Freshman F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 198 lb (90 kg) 2003-01-19 Espoo, Finland Jukurit U20 (U20 SM-sarja)
19   Jordan Biro Senior F 5' 8" (1.73 m) 160 lb (73 kg) 2000-08-10 Sherwood Park, Alberta Colorado College (NCHC)
20   Hunter McCurdy Sophomore D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 2001-08-09 Mokena, Illinois Danbury (NAHL)
21   John Lundy Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 163 lb (74 kg) 2001-04-27 Brooklyn, New York Jamestown (NAHL)
22   Timofei Khokhlachev Sophomore F 6' 4" (1.93 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 2001-11-06 Moscow, Russia Shreveport (NAHL)
23   Theo Angesved Freshman D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 172 lb (78 kg) 2003-06-23 Växjö, Sweden Borås HC (Hockeyettan)
24   Blake Wells Graduate F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 201 lb (91 kg) 1999-08-02 Blackie, Alberta UMass Lowell (HEA)
25   Alexander Malinowski Sophomore F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2001-02-07 Linköping, Sweden Fairbanks (NAHL)
26   Jake Sacratini Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 172 lb (78 kg) 2001-05-19 Pincourt, Quebec Notre Dame (SJHL)
27   Josh Barnes Sophomore F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2002-09-27 Cornwall, Ontario Des Moines (USHL)
28   Alfred Lindberg Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2002-01-28 Hallsberg, Sweden New Mexico (NAHL)
29   Darwin Lakoduk Senior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 2000-01-28 Edmonton, Alberta Penticton (BCHL)
30   Cole Hudson Junior G 6' 1" (1.85 m) 161 lb (73 kg) 2000-03-13 Tonawanda, New York Vermont (HEA)
33   Peyton Grainer Freshman G 6' 1" (1.85 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 2002-03-12 Detroit, Michigan Jersey (NCDC)
34   Nils Wallström Freshman G 6' 3" (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2003-10-15 Skellefteå, Sweden Kenai River (NAHL)
37   Evan Stella Junior D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2001-05-11 Karlstad, Sweden Dubuque (USHL)
39   Dario Beljo Freshman F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2002-08-15 Sudbury, Ontario Brooks (AJHL)
44   Austen Long Graduate F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1998-02-15 Minneapolis, Minnesota Omaha (USHL)
55   Brett Rylance Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 167 lb (76 kg) 2001-08-03 Edmonton, Alberta Chilliwack (BCHL)
61   Casey McDonald Sophomore F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 2001-05-10 Plenty, Saskatchewan Penticton (BCHL)

All-time coaching records edit

As of April 1, 2023

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
2016–present Eric Lang 7 122–99–24 .547
1984–2016 Gary Wright 32 313–605–76 .353
1982–1984 Lincoln Flagg 2 18–32–0 .360
1978–1982 Wayne LaChance 4 46–57–0 .447
1974–1978 Paul Thornton 4 63–33–1 .655
1972–1974 Peter Esdale 2 18–32–3 .368
1970–1972 Wally Barlow 2 17–23–1 .427
1957–1964 Joe Bucholz 7 39–86–0 .312
1948–1957, 1964–1970 William Turner 15 128–118–4 .520
Totals 9 coaches 75 seasons 764–1085–109 .418

Awards and honors edit

NCAA edit

Individual awards edit

All-Americans edit

AHCA First Team All-Americans

AHCA Second Team All-Americans


MAAC edit

Individual awards edit

Coach of the Year

All–Conference edit

First Team [13]

  • 2000–01: Aaron Arnett, D

Second Team

  • 1998–99: Chance Thede, G; Mike Sowa, F

Rookie Team

  • 2000–01: Guillaume Caron, F; Trent Ulmer, F


Atlantic Hockey edit

Individual awards edit

All–Conference edit

First Team

Second Team

  • 2012–13: Ben Meisner, G; Adam Pleskach, F
  • 2019–20: Patrik Demel, D
  • 2020–21: Stefano Durante, G; Elijah Barriga, F; Chris Dodero, F
  • 2021–22: Jake Stella, F
  • 2022–23: Jarrett Fiske, G; Brian Kramer, D

Third Team

  • 2006–07: Jeremr Tendler, F
  • 2007–08: Jeremr Tendler, F
  • 2011–12: Adam Pleskach, F
  • 2012–13: Jeff Ceccacci, D
  • 2013–14: Jon Puksar, F
  • 2017–18: Jānis Jaks, D
  • 2019–20: Martin Mellberg, F; Hugo Reinhardt, F
  • 2021–22: Jake Kucharski, G
  • 2022–23: Jordan Biro, F

Rookie Team

  • 2009–10: Adam Pleskach, F
  • 2012–13: Chris Porter, F
  • 2013–14: David Norris, F
  • 2017–18: Stefano Durante, G; Brennan Kapcheck, D
  • 2020–21: Nico Somerville, D; Aaron Grounds, F; Eric Otto, F
  • 2021–22: Luis Lindner, D

Statistical leaders edit

Source:[14]

Career points leaders edit

Player Years GP G A Pts PIM
Tom Mullen 1974–1978 86 134 114 248
Jeff Arnold 1983–1987 106 83 119 202
Edgar Alejandro 1972–1976 101 64 136 200
Doug Crawford 1985–1988 84 84 103 187
Darryl Frenette 1986–1990 119 57 125 182
Ken Maffia 1987–1991 103 73 108 181
Bill Condon 1973–1977 102 62 114 176
Martin Labonte 1987–1991 112 75 89 164
Vezio Sacratini 1987–1990 70 49 114 163
Steve Hunter 1981–1985 104 66 97 163

Career goaltending leaders edit

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

Minimum 30 games played

Player Years GP Min W L T GA SO SV% GAA
Stefano Durante 2017–2021 66 3651 35 23 3 147 3 .906 2.42
Zackarias Skog 2016–2020 87 4975 37 38 9 219 9 .904 2.64
Ben Meisner 2009–2013 114 6406 30 67 12 361 12 .911 3.38
Frank Novello 2001–2005 81 4644 16 53 7 284 .911 3.67
Tom Fenton 2004–2008 84 4619 15 52 9 289 1 .885 3.75

Statistics current through the start of the 2021–22 season.

Yellow Jackets in the NHL edit

As of July 1, 2022.

Player Position Team(s) Years Games Stanley Cups
Dave Forbes Left Wing BOS, WSH 1973–1979 362 0
Kevin Wortman Defense CGY 1993–1994 5 0

WHA edit

One player was a member of the WHA.

Player Position Team(s) Years Avco Cups
Dave Forbes Left Wing CIN 1978–1979 0

Source:[15]

Olympians edit

This is a list of American International alumni who played on an Olympic team.

Name Position American International Tenure Team Year Finish
Jānis Jaks Defenseman 2016–2020   Latvia 2022 11th

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 28, 2014. Retrieved August 11, 2018.
  2. ^ "American International Yellow Jackets Men's Hockey". U.S. College Hockey Online. Retrieved April 8, 2011.
  3. ^ "History of ECAC Hockey". College Hockey Historical Archives. from the original on April 15, 2012. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  4. ^ "1964-65 NCAA - ECAC - Div. 2 Standings". Hockey DB. Retrieved November 22, 2018.
  5. ^ "NEHC Tournaments". New England Hockey Conference. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  6. ^ "2012–13 Men's Ice Hockey Coaching Staff". AIC Yellow Jackets. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  7. ^ "History of the MAAC". College Hockey Historical Archives. 2013. Retrieved 2013-05-19.
  8. ^ "Longtime AIC hockey coach Gary Wright to resign". Mass Live. March 31, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  9. ^ "NCAA cancels remaining winter and spring championships due to coronavirus concerns". NCAA.com. March 12, 2020. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  10. ^ "Remainder of 2020 Atlantic Hockey Tournament Cancelled". atlantichockeyonline.com. March 12, 2020. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  11. ^ . American INternational Yellow Jackets. Archived from the original on 2018-08-17. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  12. ^ "2023-24 Ice Hockey Roster". American International Yellow Jackets. Retrieved September 14, 2023.
  13. ^ "All-MAAC Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
  14. ^ "Men's Ice Hockey 100 Point Club". American International Yellow Jackets. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
  15. ^ "Alumni report for American International College". Hockey DB. Retrieved August 17, 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website

american, international, yellow, jackets, hockey, team, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, division, college, hockey, program, that, represents, american, international, college, yellow, jackets, member, atlantic, hockey, they, play, massmutual. The American International Yellow Jackets men s ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I college ice hockey program that represents the American International College The Yellow Jackets are a member of Atlantic Hockey They play at the MassMutual Center in Springfield Massachusetts 2 American International Yellow Jackets men s ice hockeyCurrent seasonUniversityAmerican International CollegeConferenceAHCFirst season1948 49Head coachEric Lang8th season 122 99 24 547 Assistant coachesPatrick TabbMatthew WoodwardBrendan RileyArenaMassMutual CenterSpringfield MassachusettsColorsBlack white and gold 1 NCAA Tournament appearances2019 2021 2022Conference Tournament championships2019 2021 2022Conference regular season championships2019 2020 2021 2022Current uniform Contents 1 History 2 Season by season results 3 Roster 4 All time coaching records 5 Awards and honors 5 1 NCAA 5 1 1 Individual awards 5 1 2 All Americans 5 2 MAAC 5 2 1 Individual awards 5 2 2 All Conference 5 3 Atlantic Hockey 5 3 1 Individual awards 5 3 2 All Conference 6 Statistical leaders 6 1 Career points leaders 6 2 Career goaltending leaders 7 Yellow Jackets in the NHL 7 1 WHA 8 Olympians 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editAIC began its varsity program in 1948 playing a modest schedule for the first dozen years of its existence building the program under William Turner before he handed it off to Joe Bucholz In 1961 the Yellow Jackets joined with 27 other eastern schools mostly in New England to form ECAC Hockey 3 AIC finished near the bottom for three seasons and in 1964 it was decided that the conference was too unwieldy to continue and was split into two divisions The Yellow Jackets joined the lower division becoming a founding member of ECAC 2 4 American International had some success when Turner returned to take over winning the conference tournament in 1969 5 but dipped slightly after his retirement in 1970 When Paul Thornton took over in 1974 AIC saw a resurgence and by the late 1970s had returned to the ECAC 2 Tournament but after his departure in 1978 the program slumped once more In 1984 the Division II ice hockey level collapsed and sent almost all teams at that level down to Division III AIC followed along and when ECAC 2 split the Yellow Jackets stayed with the eastern side joining the new ECAC East In all that upheaval it was not lost that the American International had gotten its sixth head coach since 1970 but they were finally able to find someone willing to stick around in Gary Wright 6 Wright s time with AIC began fairly successfully with the team earning its first 20 win season in his fourth year The next season 1989 saw the Yellow Jackets pace the ECAC East with 20 wins and set a program record with 24 wins overall but they faltered in the conference tournament and failed to make the D III National championship The next year the team was able to regain some of their success by winning the ECAC East title their first conference championship in 21 years but they were left out of the National Tournament due to a relatively poor overall record only eight teams made the tournament and league champions did not receive an automatic berth AIC continued to play well in the mid 90s but in 1995 the program declined sharply dropping from 14 to 4 wins and remained in the ECAC East cellar for the rest of its time there In 1998 the MAAC began sponsoring an ice hockey conference and AIC joined as an affiliate member returning to the top tier of college hockey 7 In their first year back the Yellow Jackets posted a decent record finishing 5th in the 8 team field but bowed out in the first round of the conference playoffs After that brief glimpse of success however AIC fell to the bottom of the conference and remained there for almost the next 20 years Even with several new teams joining the conference and the division s reworking into Atlantic Hockey AIC could finish no better than 9th from 2000 through 2017 with the lone exception coming in 2006 when Atlantic Hockey had only 8 league members AIC made the conference tournament every years because Atlantic Hockey structured its conference tournament to include every team but even then the Yellow Jackets could only twice win the 9 vs 8 play in game and lost every other round it participated in AIC lost 20 games for 13 consecutive seasons and 18 out of 19 years after 1999 but through it all Gary Wright stayed on to hold the program together He eventually retired in 2016 being the longest tenured coach at the time of his retirement and held the record for the most career losses with a single program but his legacy with AIC went beyond wins and losses 8 nbsp American International playing an outdoor game at Pratt amp Whitney Stadium at Rentschler Field in 2011A new era at AIC began in 2016 with Eric Lang as the new head coach After a poor but familiar first season AIC posted its best record since 1993 with 15 wins finishing 8th in Atlantic Hockey and winning its first conference tournament round in over a decade The following year AIC won its first ever conference championship and after winning its first conference tournament at the Division I level made its first appearance in an NCAA Championship As the lowest seeded team AIC played against 1 St Cloud State and despite being outshot 34 13 in the game won the match The Yellow Jackets season ended after losing the next game but they had already produced the best season in the history of program by a mile AIC again won the Atlantic Hockey championship in 2020 however before the team played its first postseason game the NCAA cancelled all remaining contests and tournaments due to the coronavirus pandemic 9 10 Season by season results editMain article List of American International Yellow Jackets men s ice hockey seasons 11 Roster editAs of September 14 2023 12 No S P C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights1 nbsp Alexandros Aslanadis Senior G 6 5 1 96 m 205 lb 93 kg 2001 01 20 Moorestown New Jersey Western Michigan NCHC 2 nbsp Nico Somerville Senior D 5 9 1 75 m 185 lb 84 kg 1999 04 08 Nanaimo British Columbia Penticton BCHL 3 nbsp Logan Jenuwine Graduate F 6 3 1 91 m 205 lb 93 kg 1998 05 15 Romeo Michigan Lake Superior State CCHA 4 nbsp Brett Callahan Graduate D 5 10 1 78 m 180 lb 82 kg 1998 10 16 Westmont Illinois Jersey NCDC 5 nbsp Tomi Leppanen Freshman D 6 1 1 85 m 190 lb 86 kg 2003 04 07 Heinola Finland Sioux City USHL 6 nbsp Matt Rickard Senior D 6 0 1 83 m 180 lb 82 kg 1999 07 28 Coventry Rhode Island Lone Star NAHL 7 nbsp Brian Kramer Senior D 5 11 1 8 m 185 lb 84 kg 2000 07 20 Wexford Pennsylvania Robert Morris AHA 8 nbsp Hunter Jones Freshman F 5 10 1 78 m 190 lb 86 kg 2002 07 13 Andover Minnesota Oklahoma NAHL 9 nbsp Hunter Longhi Freshman F 5 8 1 73 m 174 lb 79 kg 2002 04 02 Collinsville Illinois Minot NAHL 10 nbsp Dustin Manz Graduate F 5 10 1 78 m 188 lb 85 kg 1999 09 21 Vanderbilt Michigan Lake Superior State CCHA 11 nbsp Julius Janhonen Senior F 6 1 1 85 m 185 lb 84 kg 1999 03 05 Espoo Finland HIFK U20 Nuorten SM liiga 13 nbsp Grayson Dietrich Sophomore F 6 2 1 88 m 190 lb 86 kg 2001 12 18 Calgary Alberta Drumheller AJHL 14 nbsp Douglas Andersson Freshman F 6 6 1 98 m 209 lb 95 kg 2002 04 04 Angelholm Sweden Kallinge Ronneby IF Hockeyettan 15 nbsp Casper Soderling Sophomore D 6 0 1 83 m 175 lb 79 kg 2001 06 02 Stockholm Sweden Nacka J20 J20 Regional 16 nbsp Andrew Amousse Sophomore F 6 3 1 91 m 215 lb 98 kg 2001 07 16 Laval Quebec Victoria BCHL 17 nbsp Oscar Geschwind Junior F 6 0 1 83 m 195 lb 88 kg 2001 02 24 Hallefors Sweden Northern Michigan CCHA 18 nbsp Akseli Pennanen Freshman F 6 3 1 91 m 198 lb 90 kg 2003 01 19 Espoo Finland Jukurit U20 U20 SM sarja 19 nbsp Jordan Biro Senior F 5 8 1 73 m 160 lb 73 kg 2000 08 10 Sherwood Park Alberta Colorado College NCHC 20 nbsp Hunter McCurdy Sophomore D 6 1 1 85 m 220 lb 100 kg 2001 08 09 Mokena Illinois Danbury NAHL 21 nbsp John Lundy Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 163 lb 74 kg 2001 04 27 Brooklyn New York Jamestown NAHL 22 nbsp Timofei Khokhlachev Sophomore F 6 4 1 93 m 220 lb 100 kg 2001 11 06 Moscow Russia Shreveport NAHL 23 nbsp Theo Angesved Freshman D 5 11 1 8 m 172 lb 78 kg 2003 06 23 Vaxjo Sweden Boras HC Hockeyettan 24 nbsp Blake Wells Graduate F 6 2 1 88 m 201 lb 91 kg 1999 08 02 Blackie Alberta UMass Lowell HEA 25 nbsp Alexander Malinowski Sophomore F 5 11 1 8 m 185 lb 84 kg 2001 02 07 Linkoping Sweden Fairbanks NAHL 26 nbsp Jake Sacratini Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 172 lb 78 kg 2001 05 19 Pincourt Quebec Notre Dame SJHL 27 nbsp Josh Barnes Sophomore F 5 10 1 78 m 175 lb 79 kg 2002 09 27 Cornwall Ontario Des Moines USHL 28 nbsp Alfred Lindberg Freshman F 5 11 1 8 m 185 lb 84 kg 2002 01 28 Hallsberg Sweden New Mexico NAHL 29 nbsp Darwin Lakoduk Senior F 5 10 1 78 m 165 lb 75 kg 2000 01 28 Edmonton Alberta Penticton BCHL 30 nbsp Cole Hudson Junior G 6 1 1 85 m 161 lb 73 kg 2000 03 13 Tonawanda New York Vermont HEA 33 nbsp Peyton Grainer Freshman G 6 1 1 85 m 179 lb 81 kg 2002 03 12 Detroit Michigan Jersey NCDC 34 nbsp Nils Wallstrom Freshman G 6 3 1 91 m 185 lb 84 kg 2003 10 15 Skelleftea Sweden Kenai River NAHL 37 nbsp Evan Stella Junior D 5 11 1 8 m 180 lb 82 kg 2001 05 11 Karlstad Sweden Dubuque USHL 39 nbsp Dario Beljo Freshman F 6 3 1 91 m 190 lb 86 kg 2002 08 15 Sudbury Ontario Brooks AJHL 44 nbsp Austen Long Graduate F 5 11 1 8 m 175 lb 79 kg 1998 02 15 Minneapolis Minnesota Omaha USHL 55 nbsp Brett Rylance Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 167 lb 76 kg 2001 08 03 Edmonton Alberta Chilliwack BCHL 61 nbsp Casey McDonald Sophomore F 6 1 1 85 m 187 lb 85 kg 2001 05 10 Plenty Saskatchewan Penticton BCHL All time coaching records editAs of April 1 2023 Tenure Coach Years Record Pct 2016 present Eric Lang 7 122 99 24 5471984 2016 Gary Wright 32 313 605 76 3531982 1984 Lincoln Flagg 2 18 32 0 3601978 1982 Wayne LaChance 4 46 57 0 4471974 1978 Paul Thornton 4 63 33 1 6551972 1974 Peter Esdale 2 18 32 3 3681970 1972 Wally Barlow 2 17 23 1 4271957 1964 Joe Bucholz 7 39 86 0 3121948 1957 1964 1970 William Turner 15 128 118 4 520Totals 9 coaches 75 seasons 764 1085 109 418Awards and honors editNCAA edit Individual awards edit Derek Hines Unsung Hero Award Jared Pike 2020 All Americans edit AHCA First Team All Americans 2020 21 Brennan Kapcheck D AHCA Second Team All Americans 2018 19 Blake Christensen F MAAC edit Individual awards edit Coach of the YearGary Wright 1999All Conference edit First Team 13 2000 01 Aaron Arnett D Second Team 1998 99 Chance Thede G Mike Sowa F Rookie Team 2000 01 Guillaume Caron F Trent Ulmer F Atlantic Hockey edit Individual awards edit Player of the Year Brennan Kapcheck 2021 Chris Theodore 2022 Rookie of the Year Brennan Kapcheck 2018 Best Defenseman Brennan Kapcheck 2021 Zak Galambos 2022 Best Defensive Forward Chris Dodero 2021 Jake Stella 2022 Individual Sportsmanship Award Justin Cole 2021 Regular Season Scoring Trophy Blake Christensen 2019 Regular Season Goaltending Award Zackarias Skog 2020 Jake Kucharski 2022 Jarrett Fiske 2023 Team Sportsmanship Award 2014 2015 2016 Coach of the Year Eric Lang 2019 2020 2022 Most Valuable Player in Tournament Zackarias Skog 2019 Justin Cole 2021 Blake Bennett 2022 All Conference edit First Team 2003 04 Guillaume Caron F 2004 05 Frank Novello G 2018 19 Brennan Kapcheck D Blake Christensen F 2019 20 Zackarias Skog G Brennan Kapcheck D Blake Christensen F 2020 21 Brennan Kapcheck D Tobias Fladeby F 2021 22 Zak Galambos D Chris Theodore F 2022 23 Blake Bennett F Second Team 2012 13 Ben Meisner G Adam Pleskach F 2019 20 Patrik Demel D 2020 21 Stefano Durante G Elijah Barriga F Chris Dodero F 2021 22 Jake Stella F 2022 23 Jarrett Fiske G Brian Kramer D Third Team 2006 07 Jeremr Tendler F 2007 08 Jeremr Tendler F 2011 12 Adam Pleskach F 2012 13 Jeff Ceccacci D 2013 14 Jon Puksar F 2017 18 Janis Jaks D 2019 20 Martin Mellberg F Hugo Reinhardt F 2021 22 Jake Kucharski G 2022 23 Jordan Biro F Rookie Team 2009 10 Adam Pleskach F 2012 13 Chris Porter F 2013 14 David Norris F 2017 18 Stefano Durante G Brennan Kapcheck D 2020 21 Nico Somerville D Aaron Grounds F Eric Otto F 2021 22 Luis Lindner DStatistical leaders editSource 14 Career points leaders edit Player Years GP G A Pts PIMTom Mullen 1974 1978 86 134 114 248Jeff Arnold 1983 1987 106 83 119 202Edgar Alejandro 1972 1976 101 64 136 200Doug Crawford 1985 1988 84 84 103 187Darryl Frenette 1986 1990 119 57 125 182Ken Maffia 1987 1991 103 73 108 181Bill Condon 1973 1977 102 62 114 176Martin Labonte 1987 1991 112 75 89 164Vezio Sacratini 1987 1990 70 49 114 163Steve Hunter 1981 1985 104 66 97 163Career goaltending leaders edit GP Games played Min Minutes played W Wins L Losses T Ties GA Goals against SO Shutouts SV Save percentage GAA Goals against averageMinimum 30 games played Player Years GP Min W L T GA SO SV GAAStefano Durante 2017 2021 66 3651 35 23 3 147 3 906 2 42Zackarias Skog 2016 2020 87 4975 37 38 9 219 9 904 2 64Ben Meisner 2009 2013 114 6406 30 67 12 361 12 911 3 38Frank Novello 2001 2005 81 4644 16 53 7 284 911 3 67Tom Fenton 2004 2008 84 4619 15 52 9 289 1 885 3 75Statistics current through the start of the 2021 22 season Yellow Jackets in the NHL editAs of July 1 2022 Player Position Team s Years Games Stanley CupsDave Forbes Left Wing BOS WSH 1973 1979 362 0Kevin Wortman Defense CGY 1993 1994 5 0WHA edit One player was a member of the WHA Player Position Team s Years Avco CupsDave Forbes Left Wing CIN 1978 1979 0Source 15 Olympians editThis is a list of American International alumni who played on an Olympic team Name Position American International Tenure Team Year FinishJanis Jaks Defenseman 2016 2020 nbsp Latvia 2022 11thSee also editAmerican International Yellow JacketsReferences edit Logo Usage amp Brand Standards Manual PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 28 2014 Retrieved August 11 2018 American International Yellow Jackets Men s Hockey U S College Hockey Online Retrieved April 8 2011 History of ECAC Hockey College Hockey Historical Archives Archived from the original on April 15 2012 Retrieved January 29 2013 1964 65 NCAA ECAC Div 2 Standings Hockey DB Retrieved November 22 2018 NEHC Tournaments New England Hockey Conference Retrieved 2018 12 28 2012 13 Men s Ice Hockey Coaching Staff AIC Yellow Jackets Retrieved 2014 08 09 History of the MAAC College Hockey Historical Archives 2013 Retrieved 2013 05 19 Longtime AIC hockey coach Gary Wright to resign Mass Live March 31 2016 Retrieved December 28 2018 NCAA cancels remaining winter and spring championships due to coronavirus concerns NCAA com March 12 2020 Retrieved March 12 2020 Remainder of 2020 Atlantic Hockey Tournament Cancelled atlantichockeyonline com March 12 2020 Retrieved March 12 2020 Men s Ice Hockey Year By Year Results American INternational Yellow Jackets Archived from the original on 2018 08 17 Retrieved 2018 08 17 2023 24 Ice Hockey Roster American International Yellow Jackets Retrieved September 14 2023 All MAAC Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved 2013 07 22 Men s Ice Hockey 100 Point Club American International Yellow Jackets Retrieved November 4 2019 Alumni report for American International College Hockey DB Retrieved August 17 2019 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American International Yellow Jackets men 27s ice hockey amp oldid 1175394342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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