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Army Black Knights men's ice hockey

The Army Black Knights men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents the United States Military Academy. The Black Knights are a member of Atlantic Hockey and play at the Tate Rink in West Point, New York.

Army Black Knights men's ice hockey
Current season
UniversityUnited States Military Academy
ConferenceAHA
First season1903–04
Head coachBrian Riley
20th season, 232–336–90 (.421)
Assistant coaches
  • Zack McKelvie
  • Chris Azzano
  • Jack Riley
Captain
  • Ricky Lyle
  • Michael Sacco
ArenaTate Rink
West Point, New York
ColorsBlack, gold, and gray[1]
     
Conference regular season championships
AHA: 2007–08
Current uniform

History Edit

The men's ice hockey program at West Point has been in existence since the 1903–04 season. The team played outdoors until 1930 when the Smith Rink opened.[2] The team competed as independent members of NCAA Division I from the inaugural season through the 1960–61 season.[3] In 1961 the program became a founding member of the ECAC.[3] The team, known at the time as the Army Cadets, played as members of the ECAC from 1961 to 1962 season through the 1972–73 season before dropping their program to Division II status when the NCAA instituted numerical divisions. The Cadets would remain there until 1980 when they rejoined the ECAC as an associate member. Army became a full ECAC member in 1984 in the aftermath of the Hockey East schism but the Cadets wouldn't remain for long and left the conference in 1990. The Cadets joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), which began sponsoring men's hockey at the time, in 1999 and in 2001 the team name was changed to Army Black Knights along with the other athletic programs at the Academy.[3] In 2003, the MAAC's ice hockey division split off and became the Atlantic Hockey Association, a hockey-only NCAA Division I conference.[4]

In 2007–08 season the Black Knights won their only conference title to date, the Atlantic Hockey Regular Season Championship. In that season the Knights finished with an overall record of 19 wins, 14 losses, and 4 ties and went 17–8–3 in conference play.[5] Took the No. 1 seed into the Atlantic Hockey playoffs and swept (#10) American Int'l two games to none in the three game first round series.[4] The Black Knight's season came to an end in the semifinal game when they lost to (#5) Mercyhurst 2–4.[6]

Since 1950, the Cadets/Black Knights have been coached by a member of the Riley family. Jack Riley, best known for leading the United States to the gold medal at the 1960 Winter Olympics, coached at West Point from 1950 to 1986. He handed the reins to his son Rob in 1986, who in turn handed coaching duties to his younger brother Brian in 2004.

Army–RMC rivalry Edit

The Army Black Knights have a long-standing rivalry with the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) Paladins. It is considered one of the longest-running annual international sporting events in the world.[7][8]

The tradition originated when the commandant of RMC, Sir Archibald McDonnell, and the superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy, Brigadier General Douglas MacArthur, suggested a game of ice hockey between the two schools in 1921.[9] After two years of exchanging ideas, the first game was played on February 23, 1923, at West Point. The Redmen won that first game 3–0.[10] In 1924 the series moved to Kingston, Ontario (the location of RMC), thus beginning the tradition of rotating venues. This was Army's first away game and up until 1941, the West Point Game was the only time that Army played away from the Academy.[7][8]

From 1923 to 1935 RMC ran up a record of 14–0–1, the only blemish being a 4–4 tie in 1935. 1939 saw Army win its first game, 3–1. As a result of World War II, only one game was played, a 3–1 Army win in 1942, over the next 10 years.[7]

In the 1950s and 1960s Army won 15 of 20 games, bringing the series close with RMC holding a 21–18–1 advantage. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s the teams played fairly closely. In 1986 the record stood at 26–25–4 in favor of RMC.[7]

From 1988 to 1999, Army dominated the rivalry, going undefeated. RMC last won in 2002 by a score of 3–0 and Army won in 2004, 3–2.

The 2006 game was a 3–3 tie in front of 3100 fans in Kingston. Currently Army leads the Series 39–29–7.

The game was played continually after the World War II years, from 1949 until 2007.[11] The 2007 edition of the rivalry was to take place on Saturday Feb 10, at Tate Arena in West Point, New York, but was cancelled due to regular season scheduling conflicts and for 2008 the teams will not play a competitive game but instead the Paladins will travel to New York to spend 3 days practicing, playing and socializing with the West Point cadets. [12]

The series was re-established on February 4, 2011, with Army hosting the Paladins at West Point. This rivalry will continue on an annual basis, counting as an exhibition game for both teams.

Season-by-season results Edit

[13]

All-time coaching records Edit

As of March 7, 2023

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
2004–Present Brian Riley 19 232–336–90 .421
1988–2004 Rob Riley 18 257–288–33 .473
1950–1986 Jack Riley 36 542–343–20 .610
1945–1950 Len Patten 5 33–35–2 .486
1944–1945 Robert Lutz 1 7–2–1 .750
1943–1944 John Hines 1 5–4–0 .556
1923–1943 Ray Marchand 20 76–106–9 .421
1920–1923 Talbot Hunter 3 12–12–2 .500
1918–1920 Philip Day 2 6–4–1 .591
1917–1918 Joseph Viner 1 6–3–0 .667
1914–1917 Frank Purdon 3 9–10–1 .475
1912–1914 Philip Gordon 2 7–6–0 .538
1910–1912 LeRoy Bartlett 2 3–4–1 .438
1907–1910 George Russell 3 5–7–4 .438
1904–1907 Robert Foy 3 15–8–0 .652
1903–1904 Edward Leonard King 1 5–1–0 .833
Totals 16 coaches 120 seasons 1220–1169–164 .510

Awards Edit

U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Edit

The following individuals have been inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.

† As the coach of the 1960 Olympic team.

IIHF Hall of Fame Edit

The following individuals have been inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame.

Army Sports Hall of Fame Edit

The following individuals have been inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame.

Lester Patrick Award Edit

The following individuals have been awarded the Lester Patrick Award.

NCAA Edit

Individual awards Edit

All-Americans Edit

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

MAAC Edit

Individual awards Edit

All–MAAC teams Edit

First Team[14]

  • Brad Roberts (2003)

Second Team

  • Joe Dudek (2003)

Rookie Team[15]

  • Chris Casey (2002)
  • Brad Roberts (2003)

Atlantic Hockey Edit

Individual awards Edit

All-Atlantic Hockey Teams Edit

First Team[18]

  • Josh Kassel (2008)
  • Zach McKelvie (2008, 2009)
  • Luke Flicek (2008)
  • Owen Meyer (2009)
  • Alexander Wilkinson (2018)
  • Trevin Kozlowski (2021)
  • Thomas Farrell (2021)
  • Colin Bilek (2021, 2022)

Second Team

  • Brad Roberts (2006)
  • Tim Manthey (2006, 2007)
  • Josh Kassel (2007)
  • Owen Meyer (2008)
  • Marcel Alvarez (2010, 2011)
  • Cody Omilusik (2010)
  • Parker Gahagen (2016, 2017)
  • Michael Wilson (2018)
  • Dalton MacAfee (2019)
  • Dominic Franco (2020)
  • John Zimmerman (2021)
  • Gavin Abric (2022)
  • Anthony Firriolo (2022)
  • Joey Baez (2023)

Third Team

  • Luke Flicek (2007)
  • Cody Omilusik (2011)
  • John Keranen (2023)

Rookie Team

  • Tim Manthey (2006)
  • Owen Meyer (2007)
  • Marcel Alvarez (2009)
  • Joe Kozlak (2013)
  • C. J. Reuschlein (2014)
  • Tyler Pham (2015)
  • Alexander Wilkinson (2017)
  • Dominic Franco (2017)
  • John Zimmerman (2018)
  • Anthony Firriolo (2020)
  • Lincoln Hatten (2021)
  • Max Itagaki (2023)

Statistical leaders Edit

[19]

Career scoring leaders Edit

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player Years GP G A PTS PIM
Dave Rost 1973–1977 104 226 330
Tom Rost 1976–1980 118 169 287 284
George Clark 1971–1975 153 113 266
Jim Knowlton 1978–1982 90 172 262
David Merhar 1966–1969 112 117 229
Robbie Craig 1980–1984 86 135 221
Ed Collazzo 1979–1983 93 104 197
Frank Keating 1978–1982 65 131 196
Dan Cox 1979–1983 61 133 194
Biff Shea 1981–1985 68 120 188

Career goaltending leaders Edit

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

Minimum 35 games

Player Years GP MIN W L T GA SO SV% GAA
Trevin Kozlowski 2017–2021 65 3865 36 21 6 142 3 .911 2.18
Jack Shepard 1960–1963 .920 2.20
Neil Meiras 1961–1964 .896 2.28
Parker Gahagen 2013–2017 110 6372 41 49 16 255 10 .926 2.40
Josh Kassel 2005–2009 77 4415 37 31 7 181 8 .909 2.46

Statistics current through the start of the 2017-18 season.

Roster Edit

As of September 14, 2023.[20]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
1   Gavin Abric Senior G 6' 3" (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2001-01-11 Hayward, Wisconsin Jersey (NCDC)
2   Mac Gadowsky Freshman D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2002-01-10 Fairbanks, Alaska Fairbanks (NAHL)
3   Easton Zueger Freshman D 5' 8" (1.73 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2003-06-07 Sioux Falls, South Dakota Sioux City (USHL)
4   John Driscoll Sophomore D 6' 4" (1.93 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2001-08-19 Littleton, Colorado Green Bay (USHL)
5   Jon Bell Freshman D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2002-06-22 St. Cloud, Minnesota Wisconsin (NAHL)
6   Pierce Patterson Freshman D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 2002-02-26 Valrico, Florida Amarillo (NAHL)
7   Andrew Gilbert Junior D 6' 5" (1.96 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 2000-05-02 Fairfield, Connecticut Jersey (NCDC)
8   Ricky Lyle (C) Senior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2000-08-21 Duluth, Minnesota Madison (USHL)
9   Nik Hong Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2002-08-27 Minneapolis, Minnesota St. Cloud (NAHL)
10   Jake Felker Senior F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2000-03-19 Omaha, Nebraska Youngstown (USHL)
11   Josh Bohlin Junior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2000-02-10 Wausau, Wisconsin Minnesota Wilderness (NAHL)
12   Jake Hewitt Freshman F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2002-07-05 Ashburnham, Massachusetts Nanaimo (BCHL)
13   Michael Sacco (C) Junior F 5' 8" (1.73 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1999-11-16 Syosset, New York Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (NAHL)
14   Owen Nolan Sophomore D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2000-03-10 Mahopac, New York Lone Star (NAHL)
15   Lucas Kanta Sophomore F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2001-04-20 Grand Forks, North Dakota Minnesota Magicians (NAHL)
16   Hunter McCoy Junior F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2000-08-01 Newburyport, Massachusetts Maryland (NAHL)
17   Vincent Salice Freshman F 5' 7" (1.7 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2003-02-28 Commerce Township, Michigan Omaha (USHL)
18   Dayne Hoyord Freshman F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2002-03-19 Scandinavia, Wisconsin Odessa (NAHL)
19   Max Itagaki Sophomore F 5' 5" (1.65 m) 155 lb (70 kg) 2002-06-18 Glenview, Illinois Nanaimo (BCHL)
20   Sean Vlasich Sophomore D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2001-04-20 Hillsdale, New Jersey North Iowa (NAHL)
21   Stephen Willey Sophomore F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2001-03-26 Shelton, Connecticut New Jersey (NAHL)
22   Jude Brower Sophomore D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2001-06-11 Mahopac, New York Boston Jr. Bruins (NCDC)
23   Joey Baez Junior F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2000-01-12 Tampa, Florida Lone Star (NAHL)
24   Andrew Garby Junior D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 160 lb (73 kg) 2000-09-17 Canton, Michigan Fairbanks (NAHL)
25   Barron Woodring Freshman F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 2002-07-05 Chicago, Illinois Sioux City (USHL)
26   Joey Dosan Sophomore F 6' 6" (1.98 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 2001-03-20 Bloomington, Minnesota Springfield (NAHL)
27   Trevor Smith Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2001-03-02 Raleigh, North Carolina Boston Advantage (NCDC)
28   Brent Keefer Freshman F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2001-09-28 Colorado Springs, Colorado Northeast (NAHL)
29   Eric Huss Senior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1999-03-16 Dallas, Texas Lone Star (NAHL)
31   Evan Szary Junior G 5' 11" (1.8 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2000-02-29 Nashville, Tennessee South Shore (NCDC)
33   Gus Holt Freshman G 6' 3" (1.91 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 2003-02-21 Bowling Green, Ohio Victoria (BCHL)

Olympians Edit

This is a list of Army alumni were a part of an Olympic team.

Name Position Army Tenure Team Year Finish
Larry Palmer Goaltender 1956–1959   USA 1960   Gold

Black Knights in the NHL Edit

As of July 1, 2022.

army, black, knights, hockey, team, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, division, college, hockey, program, that, represents, united, states, military, academy, black, knights, member, atlantic, hockey, play, tate, rink, west, point, york, curre. The Army Black Knights men s ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I college ice hockey program that represents the United States Military Academy The Black Knights are a member of Atlantic Hockey and play at the Tate Rink in West Point New York Army Black Knights men s ice hockeyCurrent seasonUniversityUnited States Military AcademyConferenceAHAFirst season1903 04Head coachBrian Riley20th season 232 336 90 421 Assistant coachesZack McKelvieChris AzzanoJack RileyCaptainRicky LyleMichael SaccoArenaTate RinkWest Point New YorkColorsBlack gold and gray 1 Conference regular season championshipsAHA 2007 08Current uniform Contents 1 History 1 1 Army RMC rivalry 2 Season by season results 3 All time coaching records 4 Awards 4 1 U S Hockey Hall of Fame 4 2 IIHF Hall of Fame 4 3 Army Sports Hall of Fame 4 4 Lester Patrick Award 4 5 NCAA 4 5 1 Individual awards 4 5 2 All Americans 4 6 MAAC 4 6 1 Individual awards 4 6 2 All MAAC teams 4 7 Atlantic Hockey 4 7 1 Individual awards 4 7 2 All Atlantic Hockey Teams 5 Statistical leaders 5 1 Career scoring leaders 5 2 Career goaltending leaders 6 Roster 7 Olympians 8 Black Knights in the NHL 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditThe men s ice hockey program at West Point has been in existence since the 1903 04 season The team played outdoors until 1930 when the Smith Rink opened 2 The team competed as independent members of NCAA Division I from the inaugural season through the 1960 61 season 3 In 1961 the program became a founding member of the ECAC 3 The team known at the time as the Army Cadets played as members of the ECAC from 1961 to 1962 season through the 1972 73 season before dropping their program to Division II status when the NCAA instituted numerical divisions The Cadets would remain there until 1980 when they rejoined the ECAC as an associate member Army became a full ECAC member in 1984 in the aftermath of the Hockey East schism but the Cadets wouldn t remain for long and left the conference in 1990 The Cadets joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference MAAC which began sponsoring men s hockey at the time in 1999 and in 2001 the team name was changed to Army Black Knights along with the other athletic programs at the Academy 3 In 2003 the MAAC s ice hockey division split off and became the Atlantic Hockey Association a hockey only NCAA Division I conference 4 In 2007 08 season the Black Knights won their only conference title to date the Atlantic Hockey Regular Season Championship In that season the Knights finished with an overall record of 19 wins 14 losses and 4 ties and went 17 8 3 in conference play 5 Took the No 1 seed into the Atlantic Hockey playoffs and swept 10 American Int l two games to none in the three game first round series 4 The Black Knight s season came to an end in the semifinal game when they lost to 5 Mercyhurst 2 4 6 Since 1950 the Cadets Black Knights have been coached by a member of the Riley family Jack Riley best known for leading the United States to the gold medal at the 1960 Winter Olympics coached at West Point from 1950 to 1986 He handed the reins to his son Rob in 1986 who in turn handed coaching duties to his younger brother Brian in 2004 Army RMC rivalry Edit See also Royal Military College Paladins West Point Weekend The Army Black Knights have a long standing rivalry with the Royal Military College of Canada RMC Paladins It is considered one of the longest running annual international sporting events in the world 7 8 The tradition originated when the commandant of RMC Sir Archibald McDonnell and the superintendent of the U S Military Academy Brigadier General Douglas MacArthur suggested a game of ice hockey between the two schools in 1921 9 After two years of exchanging ideas the first game was played on February 23 1923 at West Point The Redmen won that first game 3 0 10 In 1924 the series moved to Kingston Ontario the location of RMC thus beginning the tradition of rotating venues This was Army s first away game and up until 1941 the West Point Game was the only time that Army played away from the Academy 7 8 From 1923 to 1935 RMC ran up a record of 14 0 1 the only blemish being a 4 4 tie in 1935 1939 saw Army win its first game 3 1 As a result of World War II only one game was played a 3 1 Army win in 1942 over the next 10 years 7 In the 1950s and 1960s Army won 15 of 20 games bringing the series close with RMC holding a 21 18 1 advantage Throughout the 1970s and 1980s the teams played fairly closely In 1986 the record stood at 26 25 4 in favor of RMC 7 From 1988 to 1999 Army dominated the rivalry going undefeated RMC last won in 2002 by a score of 3 0 and Army won in 2004 3 2 The 2006 game was a 3 3 tie in front of 3100 fans in Kingston Currently Army leads the Series 39 29 7 The game was played continually after the World War II years from 1949 until 2007 11 The 2007 edition of the rivalry was to take place on Saturday Feb 10 at Tate Arena in West Point New York but was cancelled due to regular season scheduling conflicts and for 2008 the teams will not play a competitive game but instead the Paladins will travel to New York to spend 3 days practicing playing and socializing with the West Point cadets 12 The series was re established on February 4 2011 with Army hosting the Paladins at West Point This rivalry will continue on an annual basis counting as an exhibition game for both teams Season by season results EditMain article List of Army Black Knights men s ice hockey seasons 13 All time coaching records EditAs of March 7 2023 Tenure Coach Years Record Pct 2004 Present Brian Riley 19 232 336 90 4211988 2004 Rob Riley 18 257 288 33 4731950 1986 Jack Riley 36 542 343 20 6101945 1950 Len Patten 5 33 35 2 4861944 1945 Robert Lutz 1 7 2 1 7501943 1944 John Hines 1 5 4 0 5561923 1943 Ray Marchand 20 76 106 9 4211920 1923 Talbot Hunter 3 12 12 2 5001918 1920 Philip Day 2 6 4 1 5911917 1918 Joseph Viner 1 6 3 0 6671914 1917 Frank Purdon 3 9 10 1 4751912 1914 Philip Gordon 2 7 6 0 5381910 1912 LeRoy Bartlett 2 3 4 1 4381907 1910 George Russell 3 5 7 4 4381904 1907 Robert Foy 3 15 8 0 6521903 1904 Edward Leonard King 1 5 1 0 833Totals 16 coaches 120 seasons 1220 1169 164 510Awards EditU S Hockey Hall of Fame Edit The following individuals have been inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame Jack Riley 1979 2000 As the coach of the 1960 Olympic team IIHF Hall of Fame Edit The following individuals have been inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame Jack Riley 1998 Army Sports Hall of Fame Edit The following individuals have been inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame Jack Riley 2004 Lester Patrick Award Edit The following individuals have been awarded the Lester Patrick Award Jack Riley 1986 2002 NCAA Edit Individual awards Edit Spencer Penrose Award Jack Riley 1957 1960 Lowes Senior CLASS Award Cheyne Rocha 2013 Derek Hines Unsung Hero Award Chase Podsiad 2008 NCAA Scoring Champion David Merhar 1969 All Americans Edit AHCA Second Team All Americans 2007 08 Josh Kassel G 2020 21 Trevin Kozlowski G Colin Bilek F 2021 22 Colin Bilek FMAAC Edit Individual awards Edit Offensive Player of the Year Chris Casey 2002 Goaltender of the Year Brad Roberts 2003 Defensive Rookie of the Year Brad Roberts 2003 All MAAC teams Edit First Team 14 Brad Roberts 2003 Second Team Joe Dudek 2003 Rookie Team 15 Chris Casey 2002 Brad Roberts 2003 Atlantic Hockey Edit Individual awards Edit Player of the Year 16 Josh Kassel 2008 Rookie of the Year Tyler Pham 2015 Lincoln Hatten 2021 Max Itagaki 2023 Best Defenseman 17 Zach McKelvie 2008 Alexander Wilkinson 2018 Individual Sportsmanship Award Chris Garceau 2005 Zak Zaremba 2015 Ryan Nick 2017 Alex Wilkinson 2020 Daniel Haider 2022 Regular Season Scoring Trophy Colin Bilek 2022 Regular Season Goaltending Award Josh Kassel 2008 Trevin Kozlowski 2021 Coach of the Year Brian Riley 2006 2007 2008 2021 All Atlantic Hockey Teams Edit First Team 18 Josh Kassel 2008 Zach McKelvie 2008 2009 Luke Flicek 2008 Owen Meyer 2009 Alexander Wilkinson 2018 Trevin Kozlowski 2021 Thomas Farrell 2021 Colin Bilek 2021 2022 Second Team Brad Roberts 2006 Tim Manthey 2006 2007 Josh Kassel 2007 Owen Meyer 2008 Marcel Alvarez 2010 2011 Cody Omilusik 2010 Parker Gahagen 2016 2017 Michael Wilson 2018 Dalton MacAfee 2019 Dominic Franco 2020 John Zimmerman 2021 Gavin Abric 2022 Anthony Firriolo 2022 Joey Baez 2023 Third Team Luke Flicek 2007 Cody Omilusik 2011 John Keranen 2023 Rookie Team Tim Manthey 2006 Owen Meyer 2007 Marcel Alvarez 2009 Joe Kozlak 2013 C J Reuschlein 2014 Tyler Pham 2015 Alexander Wilkinson 2017 Dominic Franco 2017 John Zimmerman 2018 Anthony Firriolo 2020 Lincoln Hatten 2021 Max Itagaki 2023 Statistical leaders Edit 19 Career scoring leaders Edit GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points PIM Penalty minutes Player Years GP G A PTS PIMDave Rost 1973 1977 104 226 330Tom Rost 1976 1980 118 169 287 284George Clark 1971 1975 153 113 266Jim Knowlton 1978 1982 90 172 262David Merhar 1966 1969 112 117 229Robbie Craig 1980 1984 86 135 221Ed Collazzo 1979 1983 93 104 197Frank Keating 1978 1982 65 131 196Dan Cox 1979 1983 61 133 194Biff Shea 1981 1985 68 120 188Career goaltending leaders Edit GP Games played Min Minutes played GA Goals against SO Shutouts SV Save percentage GAA Goals against averageMinimum 35 games Player Years GP MIN W L T GA SO SV GAATrevin Kozlowski 2017 2021 65 3865 36 21 6 142 3 911 2 18Jack Shepard 1960 1963 920 2 20Neil Meiras 1961 1964 896 2 28Parker Gahagen 2013 2017 110 6372 41 49 16 255 10 926 2 40Josh Kassel 2005 2009 77 4415 37 31 7 181 8 909 2 46Statistics current through the start of the 2017 18 season Roster EditAs of September 14 2023 20 No S P C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights1 nbsp Gavin Abric Senior G 6 3 1 91 m 185 lb 84 kg 2001 01 11 Hayward Wisconsin Jersey NCDC 2 nbsp Mac Gadowsky Freshman D 6 3 1 91 m 185 lb 84 kg 2002 01 10 Fairbanks Alaska Fairbanks NAHL 3 nbsp Easton Zueger Freshman D 5 8 1 73 m 190 lb 86 kg 2003 06 07 Sioux Falls South Dakota Sioux City USHL 4 nbsp John Driscoll Sophomore D 6 4 1 93 m 205 lb 93 kg 2001 08 19 Littleton Colorado Green Bay USHL 5 nbsp Jon Bell Freshman D 5 10 1 78 m 205 lb 93 kg 2002 06 22 St Cloud Minnesota Wisconsin NAHL 6 nbsp Pierce Patterson Freshman D 5 9 1 75 m 165 lb 75 kg 2002 02 26 Valrico Florida Amarillo NAHL 7 nbsp Andrew Gilbert Junior D 6 5 1 96 m 210 lb 95 kg 2000 05 02 Fairfield Connecticut Jersey NCDC 8 nbsp Ricky Lyle C Senior F 6 1 1 85 m 190 lb 86 kg 2000 08 21 Duluth Minnesota Madison USHL 9 nbsp Nik Hong Freshman F 5 11 1 8 m 185 lb 84 kg 2002 08 27 Minneapolis Minnesota St Cloud NAHL 10 nbsp Jake Felker Senior F 5 11 1 8 m 190 lb 86 kg 2000 03 19 Omaha Nebraska Youngstown USHL 11 nbsp Josh Bohlin Junior F 6 1 1 85 m 190 lb 86 kg 2000 02 10 Wausau Wisconsin Minnesota Wilderness NAHL 12 nbsp Jake Hewitt Freshman F 5 10 1 78 m 180 lb 82 kg 2002 07 05 Ashburnham Massachusetts Nanaimo BCHL 13 nbsp Michael Sacco C Junior F 5 8 1 73 m 175 lb 79 kg 1999 11 16 Syosset New York Wilkes Barre Scranton NAHL 14 nbsp Owen Nolan Sophomore D 6 0 1 83 m 185 lb 84 kg 2000 03 10 Mahopac New York Lone Star NAHL 15 nbsp Lucas Kanta Sophomore F 6 2 1 88 m 195 lb 88 kg 2001 04 20 Grand Forks North Dakota Minnesota Magicians NAHL 16 nbsp Hunter McCoy Junior F 6 0 1 83 m 195 lb 88 kg 2000 08 01 Newburyport Massachusetts Maryland NAHL 17 nbsp Vincent Salice Freshman F 5 7 1 7 m 175 lb 79 kg 2003 02 28 Commerce Township Michigan Omaha USHL 18 nbsp Dayne Hoyord Freshman F 5 10 1 78 m 185 lb 84 kg 2002 03 19 Scandinavia Wisconsin Odessa NAHL 19 nbsp Max Itagaki Sophomore F 5 5 1 65 m 155 lb 70 kg 2002 06 18 Glenview Illinois Nanaimo BCHL 20 nbsp Sean Vlasich Sophomore D 5 9 1 75 m 175 lb 79 kg 2001 04 20 Hillsdale New Jersey North Iowa NAHL 21 nbsp Stephen Willey Sophomore F 6 1 1 85 m 195 lb 88 kg 2001 03 26 Shelton Connecticut New Jersey NAHL 22 nbsp Jude Brower Sophomore D 6 1 1 85 m 180 lb 82 kg 2001 06 11 Mahopac New York Boston Jr Bruins NCDC 23 nbsp Joey Baez Junior F 5 9 1 75 m 175 lb 79 kg 2000 01 12 Tampa Florida Lone Star NAHL 24 nbsp Andrew Garby Junior D 5 9 1 75 m 160 lb 73 kg 2000 09 17 Canton Michigan Fairbanks NAHL 25 nbsp Barron Woodring Freshman F 6 2 1 88 m 200 lb 91 kg 2002 07 05 Chicago Illinois Sioux City USHL 26 nbsp Joey Dosan Sophomore F 6 6 1 98 m 220 lb 100 kg 2001 03 20 Bloomington Minnesota Springfield NAHL 27 nbsp Trevor Smith Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 185 lb 84 kg 2001 03 02 Raleigh North Carolina Boston Advantage NCDC 28 nbsp Brent Keefer Freshman F 6 0 1 83 m 170 lb 77 kg 2001 09 28 Colorado Springs Colorado Northeast NAHL 29 nbsp Eric Huss Senior F 5 10 1 78 m 175 lb 79 kg 1999 03 16 Dallas Texas Lone Star NAHL 31 nbsp Evan Szary Junior G 5 11 1 8 m 175 lb 79 kg 2000 02 29 Nashville Tennessee South Shore NCDC 33 nbsp Gus Holt Freshman G 6 3 1 91 m 206 lb 93 kg 2003 02 21 Bowling Green Ohio Victoria BCHL Olympians EditThis is a list of Army alumni were a part of an Olympic team Name Position Army Tenure Team Year FinishLarry Palmer Goaltender 1956 1959 nbsp USA 1960 nbsp GoldBlack Knights in the NHL EditAs of July 1 2022 Player Position Team s Years Stanley CupsDan Hinote Center COL STL 1999 2009 1 21 nbsp Dan HinoteSee also Edit Army Black KnightsReferences Edit Army Brand Guidelines PDF April 13 2015 Retrieved June 28 2020 West Point Association of Graduates www westpointaog org Archived from the original on 2012 06 10 a b c Army Men s Hockey 2010 2011 History Statistics USCHO com U S College Hockey Online USCHO com October 13 2011 Retrieved on October 22 2011 a b Atlantic Hockey ATLANTIC HOCKEY HISTORY Atlantichockeyonline com Retrieved on October 22 2011 Army Men s Hockey 2007 2008 Team Statistics USCHO com U S College Hockey Online USCHO com October 13 2011 Retrieved on October 22 2011 Welcome to Collegehockeystats net February 12 2005 Retrieved on October 22 2011 a b c d Army RMC Rivalry Go Army Sports com Archived from the original on May 3 2011 Retrieved January 1 2009 a b Crowly R and Guinzburg T West Point Two Centuries of Honor and Tradition ISBN 0 446 53018 2 page 234 Warner Books 2002 The 75th Army RMC Game Set For Saturday Night Black Knights and goalie Brad Roberts go for four in a row Cstv com Retrieved on October 22 2011 Greg Gillespie Go army beat RMC the history of the United States military academy royal military college of Canada hockey rivalry International Journal of the History of Sport Volume 17 Issue March 1 2000 pages 94 112 Top 10 Rivalries College Hockey News Retrieved on October 22 2011 RMC West Point game on ice globesports com Retrieved on October 22 2011 Army Hockey 2017 18 Record Book PDF Army Black Knights Retrieved 2018 08 21 All MAAC Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved 2013 07 22 MAAC All Rookie Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved 2013 07 22 AWARDS NCAA AHA PLAYER OF THE YEAR Elite Prospects Retrieved 2018 04 23 Awards NCAA AHA Best Defenseman Elite Prospects Retrieved 2018 07 09 All Atlantic Hockey Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved 2013 07 20 Army West Point Men s Hockey 2017 2018 Record Book PDF Army West Point 2018 08 21 2023 24 Hockey Roster Army Black Knights Retrieved September 14 2023 Alumni report for Army Hockey DB Retrieved August 23 2020 External links Edit Army Black Knights men s ice hockey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Army Black Knights men 27s ice hockey amp oldid 1175393520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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