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Cornell Big Red men's ice hockey

The Cornell Big Red men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Cornell University. Cornell competes in the ECAC Hockey conference and plays its home games at Lynah Rink in Ithaca, New York. Six of the eight Ivy League schools sponsor men's hockey and all six teams play in the 12-team ECAC. The Ivy League crowns a champion based on the results of the games played between its members during the ECAC season.

Cornell Big Red men's ice hockey
Current season
UniversityCornell University
ConferenceECAC
First season1899–1900
Head coachMike Schafer
28th season, 520–282–105 (.631)
Assistant coaches
  • Ben Syer
  • Sean Flanagan
ArenaLynah Rink
Ithaca, New York
ColorsCarnelian and white
   
NCAA Tournament championships
1967, 1970
NCAA Tournament Runner-up
1969, 1972
NCAA Tournament Frozen Four
1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1980, 2003
NCAA Tournament appearances
1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1980, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023, 2024
Conference Tournament championships
1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1980, 1986, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2005, 2010, 2024
Conference regular season championships
1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2018, 2019, 2020
Current uniform

Cornell has won the ECAC Championship a record 13 times and since the formal creation of the Ivy League athletic conference in 1956 has won the Ivy League title a record 26 times (22 outright, four tied),[1] two more than Harvard's 24 (20 outright, four tied).

The 1970 Cornell Hockey team, coached by Ned Harkness was the first (and currently only team) in NCAA hockey history to win a national title while being undefeated and untied with a perfect 29–0–0 record.[2]

The Big Red's archrival is the Harvard Crimson. The teams meet at least twice each season for installments of the historic Cornell–Harvard hockey rivalry.

History edit

Background edit

During Christmas break of 1894–95, Yale University student Malcolm Greene Chace, later known as the "father of hockey in the United States,"[3] invited Alexander Meiklejohn, along with a team of men from Yale, Brown, Harvard, and Columbia to tour Canada with the goal of learning the Canadian game of ice hockey, which differed from the game of ice polo normally played by American college students.[4][3] Upon their return, the students established hockey clubs at their respective schools.[4] Meiklejohn promoted the game at Cornell, where he was a graduate student.[5][6][7]

Early years edit

Early Years
 
Cornell University team in 1900–01. Top to bottom row from left: Erwin Armstrong, Ezra Whitman, Albert Ellis, Charles Brown, John Lee, Herbert Wood, G. A. Smith, Roger Roberts, Charles Day, Joseph Straus.
 

Cornell's history with ice hockey begins at the dawn of the 20th century, with the first organized game being played in February 1901 at the Philadelphia Ice Palace. The ice hockey squad played a total of three games over a four-day period, winning each contest. That first weekend Cornell employed G. A. Smith as the team's coach but for the next eight years would go without. That was perhaps just as well as Cornell played four games over a three-year period, with each match being held at the St. Nicholas Rink in New York City, and was then mothballed for two years. The newly rechristened Big Red[8] returned in February 1907, playing a two-game set on campus for the first time. With no indoor or even artificial facility available all home games were played on Beebe Lake. This ended up being a rather poor arrangement since the ice hockey team would have to rely on good weather for their games until the second half of the century.

In 1909 Talbot Hunter arrived to be the first full-time head coach for the Big Red and was able to lead the ice hockey team to a perfect 10–0 record in 1910–11 with none of the games played in Ithaca. Talbot would leave after 1912 but after one win in two seasons he returned as joint ice hockey, lacrosse and soccer coach, heading the squads for two years before moving on. 1916 was also the last year for the ice hockey team as it was shut down due to World War I and lack of available facilities. Up to 1916 Cornell had only played 6 games at their 'home' rink and the team wouldn't return to the ice until 1921. When they did their new head coach was former NHA-er Nick Bawlf, who would lead the program until 1947. Cornell would play as much as it was able over the next 27 years, frequently eschewing Beebe Lake when it wasn't cold enough to skate on safely. After 1931 Cornell could manage no more than two home games each season but, despite the inconvenience, the university continued to support the program. Cornell was one of the few teams to continue playing throughout the duration of World War II but after Bawlf died in the summer of 1947[9] the drive behind keeping the team alive diminished. Cornell would play one more hockey season under Bud Boeringer but after so much difficulty with the weather the program was suspended indefinitely.[10]

Return of the program edit

In March 1957 Cornell opened its first on-campus arena, the Lynah Rink.[11] The following winter Cornell restarted its ice hockey program with a convincing 16–3 win over the Lehigh club team. While the Big Red wouldn't win many more games over the succeeding three seasons head coach Paul Patten slowly rebuilt the program until it was a respectable squad. Cornell was one of 28 schools who were founding members of ECAC Hockey in 1961 and commemorated the occasion by posting their first winning season since returning. The Big Red finished eighth in the conference but weren't ranked highly enough to receive a bid into the 8-team postseason tournament.[12]

Patten resigned in 1963 and was replaced by former Rensselaer head coach Ned Harkness. That move was a major turning point in the history of the program. Within two seasons Harkness turned the Big Red into a powerhouse, leading them to a 19–7 record, their first of 11 consecutive .700+ records. though they lost their first playoff game to Brown they improved to 22–5 the next year and reached the ECAC championship game. Cornell received the second eastern bid for finishing as the conference runner-up but because of a disagreement between the NCAA and the Ivy League over postseason participation Cornell declined the invitation.[7]

Championship years edit

In November 1966 the Cornell faithful were able to get their first taste of Ken Dryden, a goaltender who had made waves on the freshman team the year before, and were overjoyed when the Big Red got off to an 11–0 start. A big game was held between the nation's top two teams[13] on December 30 when Cornell met Boston University in the championship game of the Boston Arena Christmas Tournament. The two teams fought to a 3–3 tie through regulation and continued to battle on into the night. After two extra periods neither Dryden nor his counterpart had relinquished another goal and the head coaches for both squads agreed to declare the game a draw with both teams claiming the championship. The following weekend senior David Quarrie was in net for Cornell's first defeat of the season but the 3–4 home loss to Yale lit a fire under the Big Red. Cornell would not lose another game at the Lynah Rink until February 1972, setting a record that stands today of 63 consecutive home wins.[7] The Big Red, led by Dryden, Mike Doran, Harry Orr and Doug Ferguson dominated their competition the rest of the year, surrendering only 12 goals in the next 11 games (all victories) finishing the regular season with a 22–1–1 record. The Big Red were not, however, able to claim the ECAC title as Boston University had finished with a 19–0–1 record in conference play. Cornell turned its second-place finish into an 11–2 trouncing of Brown in the quarterfinals followed up by demolishing third-place Boston College 12–2 in the semifinal. The Big Red met BU in the ECAC championship game for their much-awaited rematch but this time no overtime was needed as Cornell took the title 4–3.

Despite the championship win Boston University received the top eastern seed and were able to play 15–14–1 Michigan State while Cornell was forced to take on the best team in the west, North Dakota. Cornell was able to defeat the powerful but low-scoring[14] Fighting Sioux in a nail-biter, winning 1–0 before meeting Boston University for the third time in the championship game. Cornell got off to a quick start, scoring less than two minutes into the game, and never looked back, taking their first national title by a score of 4–1. Aside from it being the first championship for the Big Red, it was the first crown for any eastern squad since head coach Ned Harkness won his championship with Rensselaer in 1954.

Ken Dryden would continue to post gaudy records for the Big Red for the next two seasons, winning both the ECAC regular season and tournament championships both years, but faltered in the NCAA tournament, finishing third and second, respectively. Dryden left the school with an astonishing 76–4–1 career record, setting a host of new NCAA records including for career wins, save percentage (.939) and goals against average (1.59). While most of his records have since been broken, his career winning percentage of .944 will likely remain untouched.[7]

When Dryden graduated in 1969, leaving Cornell without the best player in program history, the Big Red were expected to take a step back but team captains Dick Bertrand, Dan Lodboa and John Hughes weren't about to let that happen. After an early-season scare against Brown the team ran through the competition, going 24–0 in the regular season, outscoring opponents 156–43. After eviscerating St. Lawrence 8–1 in the quarterfinals Cornell finally got some pushback with a close 6–5 win over Harvard in the semifinals. In the championship game the Big Red faced off against Clarkson for the first time that season with the Golden Knights top goaltender Bruce Bullock being seen as the only thing that could stop the Big Red from continuing their undefeated season. While Bullock did his job the rest of the Clarkson team couldn't and Cornell claimed its fourth consecutive ECAC tournament championship (a record they hold with Boston University).

In the NCAA tournament Cornell faced off against Wisconsin for the first time in team history[7] and were stifled by the Badgers, being held to less than three goals for the first time all season. Wisconsin, however, wasn't able to solve the oppressive Big Red defense and Cornell won the game 2–1. In the championship match Cornell was again set against Clarkson and the Golden Knights got an early jump with a goal 20 seconds into the contest. The Big Red built a 2–1 lead before Clarkson tied the game late in the first period then retook the advantage by the midpoint of the second period. Cornell knotted the score just over four minutes later and sent the game into the third tied at 3-all. In the final frame the offensive onslaught from Cornell finally broke down Clarkson and Lodboa scored a natural hat trick with a goal at even strength, on the power-play and shorthanded. The stellar individual performance allowed Cornell to win the game 6–4, claim their second national title, and post the first (and only, as of 2020) undefeated and untied championship season in NCAA Division I history.

Continuing success edit

After the undefeated season Ned Harkness left the school to take over the Detroit Red Wings, becoming the first college coach to jump directly into the NHL. His successor was named shortly thereafter as Dick Bertrand. When Bertrand took over he hadn't yet graduated and thus became the first undergraduate to be named as head coach of a program in NCAA history.[15] The Big Red hardly lost a step under their new bench boss, going 22–5 in his first season but Cornell faltered in the conference playoffs and finished in fourth place, missing the NCAA tournament for the first time in five years. The team made up for it the following two seasons by winning back-to-back ECAC crowns and reaching the conference title game both times, winning in 1973. The Big Red reached the championship game in 1972 but this time they were no match for Boston University and each of the 39 shots they fired at silver-medalist Tim Regan was turned aside and they lost the match 0–4. They followed up that disappointment by getting their worst tournament result in program history, finishing fourth in 1973. Cornell would continue to produce stellar results for the remainder of the 1970s, posting .700+ records each season except for 1976 (.638) but the team failed to win another regular season crown in any of those years. In addition they lost every ECAC semifinal game they played and were thus left out of the NCAA tournament.

Slow decline edit

 
Cornell plays Clarkson in 1987

In 1980 Cornell finished with the worst record since before Ned Harkness arrived, but squeaked into the postseason as the 8th seed. The Big Red went on to a surprise run through the conference tournament, taking the title over Dartmouth and making the NCAA tournament. Despite a strong showing Cornell lost their game against Northern Michigan and once again finished in 4th place. The following season Cornell won the West Region, taking their only ECAC division title, but, more importantly, reached the ECAC title game. Though the NCAA had expanded the tournament to 8 teams for that season and discarded the assumed bids for conference runners-up, Cornell had a strong enough record to warrant a #3 seed and get a rematch against Northern Michigan. The quarterfinal was set as a two-game total-goal series, and when the Wildcats took the first game 7–3 the Big Red were behind the eight ball. Cornell fought back valiantly, winning the second game 4–3 but it wasn't enough to keep them alive in the tournament.

The next season saw Cornell produce a losing record and miss the ECAC playoff for the first time since 1964 soon thereafter Bertrand resigned and turned over head coaching duties to his assistant Lou Reycroft. It took three years before the Big Red returned to the ECAC postseason, doing so the year after 7 teams left to form Hockey East. The year after saw Cornell win 20 games for the first time in seven seasons and win the ECAC title but they were once again bounced in the quarterfinals, losing by 1 goal to Championship-era nemesis Denver. After the team dropped to 9th in the conference the following year and missed the playoffs Reycroft was out and replaced by Brian McCutcheon who had played on the Big Red's 1970 championship team. McCutcheon was able to get Cornell back to a winning record and keep them there for five seasons but could only manage to reach one NCAA tournament and one conference championship game in that time. After that the Big Red declined sharply, tying the team record for most loses in a season (19) in 1993. After two more years of futility McCutcheon was ousted and replaced by another Cornell grad, Mike Schafer.[16]

Return to prominence edit

 
The team saluting fans in Lynah Rink after a game

The Schafer-era began with a bang as Cornell got its first 20-plus-win season in a decade as well as claiming the 1996 ECAC tournament. He followed that up with a second ECAC championship and got Cornell to win its first NCAA tournament round in 25 years. Cornell went through a short lull for the four years after that initial success but won the ECAC regular season title in 2002, their first in 29 years, and the following year posted their most successful season since 1970 by winning the ECAC regular season championship, the conference tournament and reaching their first frozen four since 1980. During that season David LeNeveu broke the 45-year-old NCAA record for lowest single-season goals against average with a 1.20 mark (since broken)[17] as he helped the Big Red post their first 30-win season.

Cornell would continue to produce good results under Schafer for the next several years, winning both conference titles in 2005 with David McKee breaking Ken Dryden's team record for lowest single-season save percentage (.947). The following year the team finished as ECAC tournament runners-up and though they failed to make it out of the regionals they did play in the longest scoreless tie in NCAA history. While Wisconsin outshot, outskated and out-chanced the Big Red all game long McKee kept the Badgers off the board until 5 second remained in the third overtime period, nearly two full games worth of action. After a down year the following season Cornell would finish in the top three in the ECAC championship for five consecutive seasons, winning the title in 2010 but then went into a four-year slump where their highest finish was 4th place in the conference.

 
Coach Mike Schafer with members of the #1 ranked 2019–2020 team

In 2017 the team notched 20 wins for the first time since 2010 and finished as conference runners-up. They followed that season up with an ECAC regular season title and while they made the NCAA tournament both years they flamed out in the first round both times.

In 2019–2020 the team finished 23–2–4 and ranked #1 in the nation in the USCHO.com poll.[18] Cornell had the best record in the ECAC Hockey League play and received the Cleary Cup for the third straight year. The 2020 ECAC and NCAA tournaments were cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.[19]

Season-by-season results edit

Coaches edit

 
Mike Schafer in 2019

As of the end of the 2022–23 season[7]

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1899–1900 No Coach 1 0–1–0 .000
1900–1901 G. A. Smith 1 3–0–0 1.000
1901–1904, 1906–1909 No Coach 6 9–7–1 .559
1909–1912, 1914–1916 Talbot Hunter 5 18–15–0 .545
1912–1913 Edmund Magner 1 0–7–0 .000
1913–1914 E. J. Sawyer 1 1–4–0 .200
1920–1931, 1933–1947 Nick Bawlf 25 45–76–4 .376
1947–1948 Bud Boeringer 1 0–4–0 .000
1957–1963 Paul Patten 6 38–68–3 .362
1963–1970 Ned Harkness 7 163–27–2 .854
1970–1982 Dick Bertrand 12 230–103–9 .686
1982–1987 Lou Reycroft 5 74–58–9 .557
1987–1995 Brian McCutcheon 8 108–105–21 .506
1995–Present Mike Schafer 27 520–282–105 .631
Totals 12 coaches 106 seasons 1209–757–154 .607

Awards and honors edit

NCAA edit

Individual awards edit

All-Americans edit

First Team

Second Team

ECAC Hockey edit

Individual awards edit

All-Conference edit

First Team All-ECAC Hockey

Second Team All-ECAC Hockey

Third Team All-ECAC Hockey

ECAC Hockey All-Rookie Team

Retired numbers edit

 
Ken
Dryden

Goaltender
Retired February 25, 2010
 
Joe
Nieuwendyk

Forward
Retired February 25, 2010

Cornell hockey began the practice of retiring numbers on February 25, 2010. The Big Red retired the numbers of Ken Dryden, who played 1965–69, and Joe Nieuwendyk, who played 1984–87.

Olympians edit

This is a list of Cornell alumni who have played on an Olympic team.[7]

Name Position Cornell Tenure Team Year Finish
Darren Eliot Goaltender 1979–1983   Canada 1984 4th
Joe Nieuwendyk Center 1984–1987   Canada 1998, 2002 4th,   Gold
Dan Ratushny Defenseman 1988–1991   Canada 1992   Silver
Kent Manderville Center 1989–1991   Canada 1992   Silver
Ben Scrivens Goaltender 2006–2010   Canada 2018   Bronze

Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame edit

The following is a list of people associated with the Cornell men's ice hockey program who were elected into the Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame (induction date in parentheses).[7]

Championships edit

* indicates shared title

Statistical leaders edit

Career points leaders edit

Player[23] Years GP G A Pts PIM
Lance Nethery 1975–1979 111 91 180 271
Brock Tredway 1977–1981 113 113 94 207
Roy Kerling 1977–1982 100 93 107 200
Doug Ferguson 1964–1967 82 91 96 187
Duanne Moeser 1982–1986 106 81 96 177
Larry Fullan 1969–1972 85 57 108 165
Peter Tufford 1966–1969 86 68 92 160
Gary Cullen 1981–1985 103 54 105 159
Jim Vaughan 1974–1977 82 71 83 154
Doug Derraugh 1987–1991 119 66 87 153

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

Player Years GP Min W L T GA SO SV% GAA
David LeNeveu 2001–2003 46 2788 39 5 2 60 11 .938 1.29
Ken Dryden 1966–1969 83 4844 76 4 1 128 13 .939 1.59
David McKee 2003–2006 102 6193 65 24 13 177 18 .926 1.74
Ben Scrivens 2006–2010 117 6710 65 37 13 216 19 .930 1.93
Brian Cropper 1968–1971 59 3325 50 5 0 117 7 .920 2.11

Statistics current through the start of the 2018–19 season.

Current roster edit

As of July 10, 2023.[24]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
2   Liam Steele Freshman D 6' 4" (1.93 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 2004-04-21 Cobham, England Salmon Arm (BCHL)
3   Jack O'Brien Sophomore D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2003-03-07 White Rock, British Columbia Nanaimo (BCHL)
4   Hank Kempf Junior D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 2002-04-15 Wilmette, Illinois Muskegon (USHL) NYR, 208th overall 2021
5   Hoyt Stanley Freshman D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 2005-02-04 West Vancouver, British Columbia Victoria (BCHL) OTT, 108th overall 2023
6   George Fegaras Freshman D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2004-04-26 Richmond Hill, Ontario Muskegon (USHL) DAL, 83rd overall 2022
7   Jimmy Rayhill Junior D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2001-03-17 New Hartford, New York Odessa (NAHL)
8   Luke Devlin Freshman F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 2004-03-12 Toronto, Ontario West Kelowna (BCHL) PIT, 182nd overall 2022
9   Jack O'Leary Senior F 5' 7" (1.7 m) 162 lb (73 kg) 2000-03-28 St. James, New York Lincoln (USHL)
10   Jacob Kraft Freshman F 5' 8" (1.73 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2003-04-26 Churchville, New York Cedar Rapids (USHL)
11   Sean Donaldson Sophomore F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2001-03-28 Vancouver, British Columbia Nanaimo (BCHL)
12   Tim Rego Senior D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 172 lb (78 kg) 2000-10-31 Mansfield, Massachusetts Brooks (AJHL)
13   Marián Moško Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2004-05-11 Visolaje, Slovakia Fargo (USHL)
14   Ryan Walsh Freshman F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2003-08-25 Rochester, New York Cedar Rapids (USHL) BOS, 188th overall 2023
15   Tyler Catalano Freshman F 6' 4" (1.93 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 2004-02-26 St. Louis, Missouri Youngstown (USHL)
16   Gabriel Seger Senior F 6' 4" (1.93 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1999-11-15 Uppsala, Sweden Union (ECAC)
17   Dalton Bancroft Sophomore F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 2001-02-26 Madoc, Ontario Trenton (OJHL)
18   Kyler Kovich Junior F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 182 lb (83 kg) 2002-01-31 Coquitlam, British Columbia Tri-City (USHL)
19   Sullivan Mack Junior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 189 lb (86 kg) 2000-07-05 Anchorage, Alaska Salmon Arm (BCHL)
21   Ben Robertson Freshman D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 181 lb (82 kg) 2004-09-18 Potomac Falls, Virginia Waterloo (USHL)
22   Kyle Penney Senior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 204 lb (93 kg) 2000-07-18 Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia Chilliwack (BCHL)
23   Winter Wallace Sophomore F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 2002-01-21 Boulder, Colorado Youngstown (USHL)
26   Ondřej Pšenička Junior F 6' 6" (1.98 m) 211 lb (96 kg) 2001-01-07 Prague, Czech Republic Waterloo (USHL)
27   Michael Suda Junior D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2002-07-03 Cheektowaga, New York Fargo (USHL)
28   Nick DeSantis Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 155 lb (70 kg) 2002-05-02 Collegeville, Pennsylvania Madison (USHL)
30   Ian Shane Junior G 6' 0" (1.83 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2000-09-24 Manhattan Beach, California Bismarck (USHL)
33   Remington Keopple Sophomore G 6' 2" (1.88 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2002-03-21 New Richmond, Wisconsin Des Moines (USHL)
34   Ryan McInchak Senior G 6' 0" (1.83 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1999-02-28 Trenton, Michigan American International (AHA)
38   Jonathan Castagna Freshman F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2005-04-20 Etobicoke, Ontario St. Andrew's College (CISAA) ARI, 70th overall 2023

Big Red players in the NHL edit

As of July 1, 2023.

† Tredway played in 1 playoff game in 1982.

[26]

See also edit

External links edit

  • Official Athletics Website

References edit

  1. ^ "Cornell Seals Ivy League Men's Ice Hockey Title".
  2. ^ "Home | Cornell Chronicle".
  3. ^ a b "MALCOLM CHACE, FINANCIER, DIES". The New York Times. 17 July 1955. p. 61. Retrieved 28 October 2019. credited with being the father of hockey in the United States
  4. ^ a b "Malcolm Greene Chace Memorial Trophy". Rhode Island Hall of Fame. Rhode Island Hall of Fame. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  5. ^ Hanlon, John (17 April 1967). "When Harvard Met Brown It Wasn't Ice Polo". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 23 February 2020. A lot of weird games between a lot of scrub teams probably were played on ice before Jan. 19, 1898, but on that day modern intercollegiate hockey competition was officially born
  6. ^ Nelson, Adam R. (2009). Education and Democracy: The Meaning of Alexander Meiklejohn, 1872–1964. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 29. ISBN 9780299171445. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h (PDF). Cornell Big Red. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 27, 2021. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  8. ^ Cornell Athletics – Frequently Asked Questions
  9. ^ "Nicholas Bawlf - 2007 - General".
  10. ^ "After Ten Years… Hockey Returns to Cornell". Cornell Daily Sun. December 11, 1957. p. 7.
  11. ^ "James Lynah Rink". Cornell Big Red. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  12. ^ "ECAC Tournament". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  13. ^ "Cornell, Boston U. Justify High Rating". New York Times. December 19, 1966. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  14. ^ "2009-10 WCHA Yearbook 97-112" (PDF). WCHA. Retrieved 2014-06-01.
  15. ^ "Dick Bertrand - 2007 General". Cornell Big Red. Retrieved 2016-05-28.
  16. ^ "Morris, Clarkson Move On". USCHO.com. 2003-08-06. Retrieved 2016-05-29.
  17. ^ "NCAA - All-time season". Elite Prospects. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  18. ^ "USCHO.com Men's Division I Poll | Rankings - College Hockey | USCHO.com".
  19. ^ "NCAA cancels remaining winter and spring championships due to coronavirus concerns". NCAA. NCAA. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  20. ^ . Hockey Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 2018-10-16. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
  21. ^ "United States Hockey Hall of Fame". Hockey Central.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-04-21.
  22. ^ "Cornell Postseason Games". The Big Red What. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  23. ^ "TOP 10 ALL-TIME LEADERS" (PDF). Cornell Big Red. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  24. ^ "2023–24 Men's Ice Hockey Roster". Cornell University. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  25. ^ a b Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.
  26. ^ "Alumni report for Cornell University". Internet Hockey Database. Retrieved May 11, 2022.

cornell, hockey, team, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, division, college, hockey, program, that, represents, cornell, university, cornell, competes, ecac, hockey, conference, plays, home, games, lynah, rink, ithaca, york, eight, league, scho. The Cornell Big Red men s ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I college ice hockey program that represents Cornell University Cornell competes in the ECAC Hockey conference and plays its home games at Lynah Rink in Ithaca New York Six of the eight Ivy League schools sponsor men s hockey and all six teams play in the 12 team ECAC The Ivy League crowns a champion based on the results of the games played between its members during the ECAC season Cornell Big Red men s ice hockeyCurrent seasonUniversityCornell UniversityConferenceECACFirst season1899 1900Head coachMike Schafer28th season 520 282 105 631 Assistant coachesBen SyerSean FlanaganArenaLynah RinkIthaca New YorkColorsCarnelian and white NCAA Tournament championships1967 1970NCAA Tournament Runner up1969 1972NCAA Tournament Frozen Four1967 1968 1969 1970 1972 1973 1980 2003NCAA Tournament appearances1967 1968 1969 1970 1972 1973 1980 1981 1986 1991 1996 1997 2002 2003 2005 2006 2009 2010 2012 2017 2018 2019 2023 2024Conference Tournament championships1967 1968 1969 1970 1973 1980 1986 1996 1997 2003 2005 2010 2024Conference regular season championships1968 1969 1970 1972 1973 2002 2003 2005 2018 2019 2020Current uniform Cornell has won the ECAC Championship a record 13 times and since the formal creation of the Ivy League athletic conference in 1956 has won the Ivy League title a record 26 times 22 outright four tied 1 two more than Harvard s 24 20 outright four tied The 1970 Cornell Hockey team coached by Ned Harkness was the first and currently only team in NCAA hockey history to win a national title while being undefeated and untied with a perfect 29 0 0 record 2 The Big Red s archrival is the Harvard Crimson The teams meet at least twice each season for installments of the historic Cornell Harvard hockey rivalry Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Early years 1 3 Return of the program 1 4 Championship years 1 5 Continuing success 1 6 Slow decline 1 7 Return to prominence 2 Season by season results 3 Coaches 4 Awards and honors 4 1 Hockey Hall of Fame 4 2 US Hockey Hall of Fame 4 3 NCAA 4 3 1 Individual awards 4 3 2 All Americans 4 4 ECAC Hockey 4 4 1 Individual awards 4 4 2 All Conference 5 Retired numbers 6 Olympians 7 Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame 8 Championships 9 Statistical leaders 9 1 Career points leaders 9 2 Career goaltending leaders 10 Current roster 11 Big Red players in the NHL 12 See also 13 External links 14 ReferencesHistory editBackground edit During Christmas break of 1894 95 Yale University student Malcolm Greene Chace later known as the father of hockey in the United States 3 invited Alexander Meiklejohn along with a team of men from Yale Brown Harvard and Columbia to tour Canada with the goal of learning the Canadian game of ice hockey which differed from the game of ice polo normally played by American college students 4 3 Upon their return the students established hockey clubs at their respective schools 4 Meiklejohn promoted the game at Cornell where he was a graduate student 5 6 7 Early years edit Early Years nbsp Cornell University team in 1900 01 Top to bottom row from left Erwin Armstrong Ezra Whitman Albert Ellis Charles Brown John Lee Herbert Wood G A Smith Roger Roberts Charles Day Joseph Straus nbsp 1922 game on Beebe Lake Cornell s history with ice hockey begins at the dawn of the 20th century with the first organized game being played in February 1901 at the Philadelphia Ice Palace The ice hockey squad played a total of three games over a four day period winning each contest That first weekend Cornell employed G A Smith as the team s coach but for the next eight years would go without That was perhaps just as well as Cornell played four games over a three year period with each match being held at the St Nicholas Rink in New York City and was then mothballed for two years The newly rechristened Big Red 8 returned in February 1907 playing a two game set on campus for the first time With no indoor or even artificial facility available all home games were played on Beebe Lake This ended up being a rather poor arrangement since the ice hockey team would have to rely on good weather for their games until the second half of the century In 1909 Talbot Hunter arrived to be the first full time head coach for the Big Red and was able to lead the ice hockey team to a perfect 10 0 record in 1910 11 with none of the games played in Ithaca Talbot would leave after 1912 but after one win in two seasons he returned as joint ice hockey lacrosse and soccer coach heading the squads for two years before moving on 1916 was also the last year for the ice hockey team as it was shut down due to World War I and lack of available facilities Up to 1916 Cornell had only played 6 games at their home rink and the team wouldn t return to the ice until 1921 When they did their new head coach was former NHA er Nick Bawlf who would lead the program until 1947 Cornell would play as much as it was able over the next 27 years frequently eschewing Beebe Lake when it wasn t cold enough to skate on safely After 1931 Cornell could manage no more than two home games each season but despite the inconvenience the university continued to support the program Cornell was one of the few teams to continue playing throughout the duration of World War II but after Bawlf died in the summer of 1947 9 the drive behind keeping the team alive diminished Cornell would play one more hockey season under Bud Boeringer but after so much difficulty with the weather the program was suspended indefinitely 10 Return of the program edit In March 1957 Cornell opened its first on campus arena the Lynah Rink 11 The following winter Cornell restarted its ice hockey program with a convincing 16 3 win over the Lehigh club team While the Big Red wouldn t win many more games over the succeeding three seasons head coach Paul Patten slowly rebuilt the program until it was a respectable squad Cornell was one of 28 schools who were founding members of ECAC Hockey in 1961 and commemorated the occasion by posting their first winning season since returning The Big Red finished eighth in the conference but weren t ranked highly enough to receive a bid into the 8 team postseason tournament 12 Patten resigned in 1963 and was replaced by former Rensselaer head coach Ned Harkness That move was a major turning point in the history of the program Within two seasons Harkness turned the Big Red into a powerhouse leading them to a 19 7 record their first of 11 consecutive 700 records though they lost their first playoff game to Brown they improved to 22 5 the next year and reached the ECAC championship game Cornell received the second eastern bid for finishing as the conference runner up but because of a disagreement between the NCAA and the Ivy League over postseason participation Cornell declined the invitation 7 Championship years edit In November 1966 the Cornell faithful were able to get their first taste of Ken Dryden a goaltender who had made waves on the freshman team the year before and were overjoyed when the Big Red got off to an 11 0 start A big game was held between the nation s top two teams 13 on December 30 when Cornell met Boston University in the championship game of the Boston Arena Christmas Tournament The two teams fought to a 3 3 tie through regulation and continued to battle on into the night After two extra periods neither Dryden nor his counterpart had relinquished another goal and the head coaches for both squads agreed to declare the game a draw with both teams claiming the championship The following weekend senior David Quarrie was in net for Cornell s first defeat of the season but the 3 4 home loss to Yale lit a fire under the Big Red Cornell would not lose another game at the Lynah Rink until February 1972 setting a record that stands today of 63 consecutive home wins 7 The Big Red led by Dryden Mike Doran Harry Orr and Doug Ferguson dominated their competition the rest of the year surrendering only 12 goals in the next 11 games all victories finishing the regular season with a 22 1 1 record The Big Red were not however able to claim the ECAC title as Boston University had finished with a 19 0 1 record in conference play Cornell turned its second place finish into an 11 2 trouncing of Brown in the quarterfinals followed up by demolishing third place Boston College 12 2 in the semifinal The Big Red met BU in the ECAC championship game for their much awaited rematch but this time no overtime was needed as Cornell took the title 4 3 Despite the championship win Boston University received the top eastern seed and were able to play 15 14 1 Michigan State while Cornell was forced to take on the best team in the west North Dakota Cornell was able to defeat the powerful but low scoring 14 Fighting Sioux in a nail biter winning 1 0 before meeting Boston University for the third time in the championship game Cornell got off to a quick start scoring less than two minutes into the game and never looked back taking their first national title by a score of 4 1 Aside from it being the first championship for the Big Red it was the first crown for any eastern squad since head coach Ned Harkness won his championship with Rensselaer in 1954 Ken Dryden would continue to post gaudy records for the Big Red for the next two seasons winning both the ECAC regular season and tournament championships both years but faltered in the NCAA tournament finishing third and second respectively Dryden left the school with an astonishing 76 4 1 career record setting a host of new NCAA records including for career wins save percentage 939 and goals against average 1 59 While most of his records have since been broken his career winning percentage of 944 will likely remain untouched 7 When Dryden graduated in 1969 leaving Cornell without the best player in program history the Big Red were expected to take a step back but team captains Dick Bertrand Dan Lodboa and John Hughes weren t about to let that happen After an early season scare against Brown the team ran through the competition going 24 0 in the regular season outscoring opponents 156 43 After eviscerating St Lawrence 8 1 in the quarterfinals Cornell finally got some pushback with a close 6 5 win over Harvard in the semifinals In the championship game the Big Red faced off against Clarkson for the first time that season with the Golden Knights top goaltender Bruce Bullock being seen as the only thing that could stop the Big Red from continuing their undefeated season While Bullock did his job the rest of the Clarkson team couldn t and Cornell claimed its fourth consecutive ECAC tournament championship a record they hold with Boston University In the NCAA tournament Cornell faced off against Wisconsin for the first time in team history 7 and were stifled by the Badgers being held to less than three goals for the first time all season Wisconsin however wasn t able to solve the oppressive Big Red defense and Cornell won the game 2 1 In the championship match Cornell was again set against Clarkson and the Golden Knights got an early jump with a goal 20 seconds into the contest The Big Red built a 2 1 lead before Clarkson tied the game late in the first period then retook the advantage by the midpoint of the second period Cornell knotted the score just over four minutes later and sent the game into the third tied at 3 all In the final frame the offensive onslaught from Cornell finally broke down Clarkson and Lodboa scored a natural hat trick with a goal at even strength on the power play and shorthanded The stellar individual performance allowed Cornell to win the game 6 4 claim their second national title and post the first and only as of 2020 undefeated and untied championship season in NCAA Division I history Continuing success edit After the undefeated season Ned Harkness left the school to take over the Detroit Red Wings becoming the first college coach to jump directly into the NHL His successor was named shortly thereafter as Dick Bertrand When Bertrand took over he hadn t yet graduated and thus became the first undergraduate to be named as head coach of a program in NCAA history 15 The Big Red hardly lost a step under their new bench boss going 22 5 in his first season but Cornell faltered in the conference playoffs and finished in fourth place missing the NCAA tournament for the first time in five years The team made up for it the following two seasons by winning back to back ECAC crowns and reaching the conference title game both times winning in 1973 The Big Red reached the championship game in 1972 but this time they were no match for Boston University and each of the 39 shots they fired at silver medalist Tim Regan was turned aside and they lost the match 0 4 They followed up that disappointment by getting their worst tournament result in program history finishing fourth in 1973 Cornell would continue to produce stellar results for the remainder of the 1970s posting 700 records each season except for 1976 638 but the team failed to win another regular season crown in any of those years In addition they lost every ECAC semifinal game they played and were thus left out of the NCAA tournament Slow decline edit nbsp Cornell plays Clarkson in 1987 In 1980 Cornell finished with the worst record since before Ned Harkness arrived but squeaked into the postseason as the 8th seed The Big Red went on to a surprise run through the conference tournament taking the title over Dartmouth and making the NCAA tournament Despite a strong showing Cornell lost their game against Northern Michigan and once again finished in 4th place The following season Cornell won the West Region taking their only ECAC division title but more importantly reached the ECAC title game Though the NCAA had expanded the tournament to 8 teams for that season and discarded the assumed bids for conference runners up Cornell had a strong enough record to warrant a 3 seed and get a rematch against Northern Michigan The quarterfinal was set as a two game total goal series and when the Wildcats took the first game 7 3 the Big Red were behind the eight ball Cornell fought back valiantly winning the second game 4 3 but it wasn t enough to keep them alive in the tournament The next season saw Cornell produce a losing record and miss the ECAC playoff for the first time since 1964 soon thereafter Bertrand resigned and turned over head coaching duties to his assistant Lou Reycroft It took three years before the Big Red returned to the ECAC postseason doing so the year after 7 teams left to form Hockey East The year after saw Cornell win 20 games for the first time in seven seasons and win the ECAC title but they were once again bounced in the quarterfinals losing by 1 goal to Championship era nemesis Denver After the team dropped to 9th in the conference the following year and missed the playoffs Reycroft was out and replaced by Brian McCutcheon who had played on the Big Red s 1970 championship team McCutcheon was able to get Cornell back to a winning record and keep them there for five seasons but could only manage to reach one NCAA tournament and one conference championship game in that time After that the Big Red declined sharply tying the team record for most loses in a season 19 in 1993 After two more years of futility McCutcheon was ousted and replaced by another Cornell grad Mike Schafer 16 Return to prominence edit nbsp The team saluting fans in Lynah Rink after a game The Schafer era began with a bang as Cornell got its first 20 plus win season in a decade as well as claiming the 1996 ECAC tournament He followed that up with a second ECAC championship and got Cornell to win its first NCAA tournament round in 25 years Cornell went through a short lull for the four years after that initial success but won the ECAC regular season title in 2002 their first in 29 years and the following year posted their most successful season since 1970 by winning the ECAC regular season championship the conference tournament and reaching their first frozen four since 1980 During that season David LeNeveu broke the 45 year old NCAA record for lowest single season goals against average with a 1 20 mark since broken 17 as he helped the Big Red post their first 30 win season Cornell would continue to produce good results under Schafer for the next several years winning both conference titles in 2005 with David McKee breaking Ken Dryden s team record for lowest single season save percentage 947 The following year the team finished as ECAC tournament runners up and though they failed to make it out of the regionals they did play in the longest scoreless tie in NCAA history While Wisconsin outshot outskated and out chanced the Big Red all game long McKee kept the Badgers off the board until 5 second remained in the third overtime period nearly two full games worth of action After a down year the following season Cornell would finish in the top three in the ECAC championship for five consecutive seasons winning the title in 2010 but then went into a four year slump where their highest finish was 4th place in the conference nbsp Coach Mike Schafer with members of the 1 ranked 2019 2020 team In 2017 the team notched 20 wins for the first time since 2010 and finished as conference runners up They followed that season up with an ECAC regular season title and while they made the NCAA tournament both years they flamed out in the first round both times In 2019 2020 the team finished 23 2 4 and ranked 1 in the nation in the USCHO com poll 18 Cornell had the best record in the ECAC Hockey League play and received the Cleary Cup for the third straight year The 2020 ECAC and NCAA tournaments were cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic 19 Season by season results editMain article List of Cornell Big Red men s ice hockey seasonsCoaches edit nbsp Mike Schafer in 2019 As of the end of the 2022 23 season 7 Tenure Coach Years Record Pct 1899 1900 No Coach 1 0 1 0 000 1900 1901 G A Smith 1 3 0 0 1 000 1901 1904 1906 1909 No Coach 6 9 7 1 559 1909 1912 1914 1916 Talbot Hunter 5 18 15 0 545 1912 1913 Edmund Magner 1 0 7 0 000 1913 1914 E J Sawyer 1 1 4 0 200 1920 1931 1933 1947 Nick Bawlf 25 45 76 4 376 1947 1948 Bud Boeringer 1 0 4 0 000 1957 1963 Paul Patten 6 38 68 3 362 1963 1970 Ned Harkness 7 163 27 2 854 1970 1982 Dick Bertrand 12 230 103 9 686 1982 1987 Lou Reycroft 5 74 58 9 557 1987 1995 Brian McCutcheon 8 108 105 21 506 1995 Present Mike Schafer 27 520 282 105 631 Totals 12 coaches 106 seasons 1209 757 154 607Awards and honors editHockey Hall of Fame edit Ken Dryden 1983 20 Joe Nieuwendyk 2011 US Hockey Hall of Fame edit Ned Harkness 1994 21 NCAA edit Individual awards edit Spencer Penrose Award Ned Harkness 1968 Mike Schafer 2020 co winner NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Scoring Champion Doug Ferguson C 1966 Tournament Most Outstanding Player Skip Stanowski D 1967 Dan Lodboa D 1970 All Americans edit First Team 1965 66 Doug Ferguson D 1966 67 Ken Dryden D Harry Orr D Doug Ferguson F 1967 68 Ken Dryden D Bruce Pattison D Skip Stanowski D Brian Cornell F 1968 69 Ken Dryden D Bruce Pattison D Brian Cornell F Peter Tufford F 1969 70 Dan Lodboa D 1970 71 Kevin Pettit F 1971 72 Larry Fullan F 1973 74 George Kuzmicz D 1977 78 Peter Shier D Lance Nethery F 1978 79 Lance Nethery F 1981 82 Brian Hayward G 1982 83 Darren Eliot G 1985 86 Doug Dadswell G Joe Nieuwendyk F 1986 87 Joe Nieuwendyk F 1990 91 Dan Ratushny D 1991 92 Parris Duffus G 2001 02 Matt Underhill G Douglas Murray D 2002 03 David LeNeveu G Douglas Murray D 2004 05 David McKee G 2009 10 Ben Scrivens G Brendon Nash D 2017 18 Matthew Galajda G 2019 20 Morgan Barron F Second Team 1989 90 Dan Ratushny D 2002 03 Stephen Baby F 2004 05 Charlie Cook D Matt Moulson F 2019 20 Yanni Kaldis D 2022 23 Sam Malinski D 2023 24 Ian Shane G ECAC Hockey edit Individual awards edit ECAC Hockey Player of the Year Doug Ferguson D 1966 67 Ken Dryden 1968 69 Lance Nethery 1977 78 Joe Nieuwendyk 1986 87 David LeNeveu 2002 03 David McKee 2004 05 Morgan Barron 2019 20 ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Year Doug Ferguson 1964 65 Joe Nieuwendyk 1984 85 Trent Andison 1987 88 Kent Manderville 1989 90 Kyle Knopp 1995 96 David McKee 2003 04 Riley Nash 2007 08 Brian Ferlin 2011 12 Matthew Galajda 2017 18 ECAC Hockey Best Defensive Forward Brad Chartrand 1995 96 Doug Stienstra 1999 00 Stephen Baby 2001 02 2002 03 Tyler Mugford 2008 09 Greg Miller 2012 13 Cole Bardreau 2014 15 Jake Weidner 2016 17 Tim Taylor Award Mike Schafer 5 2002 2003 2005 2018 2020 ECAC Hockey Student Athlete of the Year Colin Greening 2009 10 Keir Ross 2011 12 Andy Iles 2013 14 Kyle Betts 2020 21 Gabriel Seger 2023 24 ECAC Hockey Outstanding Defenseman Harry Orr 1966 67 ECAC Hockey Best Defensive Defenseman Jeff Burgoyne 1997 98 Brian McMeekin 2001 02 Douglas Murray 2002 03 Justin Krueger 2009 10 Alec McCrea 2017 18 Matt Nuttle 2018 19 Alex Green 2019 20 Ken Dryden Award Matt Underhill 2001 02 David LeNeveu 2002 03 David McKee 2004 05 Ben Scrivens 2009 10 Matthew Galajda 2017 18 Ian Shane 2023 24 ECAC Hockey Most Outstanding Player in Tournament Doug Ferguson 1967 Ken Dryden 1968 1969 Carlo Ugolini 1973 Darren Eliot 1980 Doug Dadswell 1986 Jason Elliott 1996 1997 David LeNeveu 2003 Charlie Cook 2005 Ben Scrivens 2010 Jonathan Castagna 2024 All Conference edit First Team All ECAC Hockey 1965 66 Harry Orr D Doug Ferguson F 1966 67 Ken Dryden G Harry Orr D Doug Ferguson F 1967 68 Ken Dryden G Skip Stanowski D Bruce Pattison D Peter Tufford F 1968 69 Ken Dryden G Bruce Pattison D Brian Cornell F 1969 70 Brian Cropper G Dan Lodboa D 1971 72 Larry Fullan F 1972 73 Carlo Ugolini F 1973 74 George Kuzmicz D 1977 78 Peter Shier D Lance Nethery F 1978 79 Lance Nethery F 1981 82 Brian Hayward G 1982 83 Darren Eliot G 1985 86 Joe Nieuwendyk F 1986 87 Joe Nieuwendyk F 1989 90 Dan Ratushny D 1990 91 Dan Ratushny D 1995 96 Steve Wilson D 1996 97 Steve Wilson D 1998 99 Jeff Burgoyne D 2001 02 Matt Underhill G Douglas Murray D 2002 03 David LeNeveu G Douglas Murray D 2004 05 David McKee G Matt Moulson F 2008 09 Riley Nash F 2009 10 Ben Scrivens G Brendon Nash F 2014 15 Joakim Ryan D 2017 18 Matthew Galajda G 2018 19 Morgan Barron F 2019 20 Yanni Kaldis D Morgan Barron F 2021 22 Sam Malinski D 2022 23 Sam Malinski D 2023 24 Ian Shane G Gabriel Seger F Second Team All ECAC Hockey 1961 62 Laing Kennedy G 1962 63 Laing Kennedy G 1964 65 Doug Ferguson F 1965 66 Mike Doran F 1966 67 Mike Doran F 1967 68 Brian Cornell F 1968 69 Peter Tufford F 1969 70 John Hughes F 1970 71 Brian Cropper G Brian McCutcheon F Kevin Pettit F 1971 72 Jim Higgs D 1972 73 Bill Murray D 1974 75 Dave Peace F 1976 77 Lance Nethery F 1978 79 Brock Tredway F 1984 85 Duanne Moeser F Peter Natyshak F 1985 86 Doug Dadswell G Chris Norton D 1987 88 Chris Norton D 1991 92 Parris Duffus G 1997 98 Jason Elliott G 2001 02 Mark McRae D Stephen Baby F 2002 03 Ryan Vesce F Stephen Baby F 2004 05 Charlie Cook D 2005 06 Matt Moulson F 2007 08 Colin Greening F 2008 09 Ben Scrivens G Brendon Nash D Colin Greening F 2009 10 Colin Greening F 2010 11 Joe Devin F 2011 12 Andy Iles G Nick D Agostino D 2013 14 Andy Iles G Joakim Ryan D 2018 19 Yanni Kaldis D 2021 22 Matt Stienburg F Third Team All ECAC Hockey 2005 06 Ryan O Byrne D 2006 07 Byron Bitz F 2009 10 Riley Nash D 2010 11 Mike Devin D 2012 13 Greg Miller F 2013 14 Brian Ferlin F 2014 15 Cole Bardreau F 2015 16 Joakim Ryan D 2017 18 Yanni Kaldis D 2018 19 Matthew Galajda G Cam Donaldson F 2019 20 Matthew Galajda G Alex Green D 2021 22 Max Andreev F 2023 24 Ben Robertson D ECAC Hockey All Rookie Team 1987 88 Corrie D Alessio G Trent Andison F 1988 89 Dan Ratushny D 1989 90 Ryan Hughes F Kent Manderville F 1993 94 Steve Wilson D Vince Auger F 1994 95 Ryan Smart F 1995 96 Kyle Knopp F 1996 97 Ryan Moynihan F 1998 99 Denis Ladouceur F 1999 00 Mark McRae D Matt McRae F 2001 02 David LeNeveu G 2003 04 David McKee G 2004 05 Sasha Pokulok D 2006 07 Brendon Nash D 2007 08 Mike Devin D Riley Nash F 2008 09 Keir Ross D 2009 10 Nick D Agostino D 2010 11 Andy Iles G 2011 12 Brian Ferlin F 2016 17 Yanni Kaldis D 2017 18 Matthew Galajda G 2021 22 Hank Kempf D 2023 24 Ben Robertson D Jonathan Castagna FRetired numbers edit nbsp KenDrydenGoaltenderRetired February 25 2010 nbsp JoeNieuwendykForwardRetired February 25 2010 Cornell hockey began the practice of retiring numbers on February 25 2010 The Big Red retired the numbers of Ken Dryden who played 1965 69 and Joe Nieuwendyk who played 1984 87 Olympians editThis is a list of Cornell alumni who have played on an Olympic team 7 Name Position Cornell Tenure Team Year Finish Darren Eliot Goaltender 1979 1983 nbsp Canada 1984 4th Joe Nieuwendyk Center 1984 1987 nbsp Canada 1998 2002 4th nbsp Gold Dan Ratushny Defenseman 1988 1991 nbsp Canada 1992 nbsp Silver Kent Manderville Center 1989 1991 nbsp Canada 1992 nbsp Silver Ben Scrivens Goaltender 2006 2010 nbsp Canada 2018 nbsp BronzeCornell Athletic Hall of Fame editThe following is a list of people associated with the Cornell men s ice hockey program who were elected into the Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame induction date in parentheses 7 Stephen Baby 2014 Nick Bawlf 1980 Dick Bertrand 1989 Brian Cornell 1982 Brian Cropper 1985 Doug Dadswell 2000 Mike Doran 1998 Ken Dryden 1978 Darren Eliot 1996 Doug Ferguson 1979 Larry Fullan 1997 Ned Harkness 1981 Brian Hayward 1991 John Hughes 1981 Frank Hunter 1979 Laing Kennedy 1980 Roy Kerling 1999 Dan Lodboa 1978 Brian McCutcheon 1986 Duane Moeser 2003 Matt Moulson 2016 Bill Murray 1988 Douglas Murray 2013 Lance Nethery 1984 Joe Nieuwendyk 1994 Harry Orr 1984 Bruce Pattison 1983 Dan Ratushny 2018 Bob Rule 1986 Peter Shier 1990 Skip Stanowski 2001 Mike Teeter 2005 Brock Tredway 1989 Peter Tufford 1978 Matt Underhill 2012 James Vaughan 2007 Bob Wiggans 1986 Steve Wilson 2010 Championships editNCAA champions 1967 1970 22 NCAA runners up 1969 1972 ECAC Champions 13 1967 1968 1969 1970 1973 1980 1986 1996 1997 2003 2005 2010 2024 ECAC regular season champions 11 1968 1969 1970 1972 1973 2002 2003 2005 2018 2019 2020 Ivy League Champions 26 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1977 1978 1983 1984 1985 1996 1997 2002 2003 2004 2005 2012 2014 2018 2019 2020 2023 2024 Ned Harkness Cup 2003 2005 2008 2013 indicates shared titleStatistical leaders editCareer points leaders edit Player 23 Years GP G A Pts PIM Lance Nethery 1975 1979 111 91 180 271 Brock Tredway 1977 1981 113 113 94 207 Roy Kerling 1977 1982 100 93 107 200 Doug Ferguson 1964 1967 82 91 96 187 Duanne Moeser 1982 1986 106 81 96 177 Larry Fullan 1969 1972 85 57 108 165 Peter Tufford 1966 1969 86 68 92 160 Gary Cullen 1981 1985 103 54 105 159 Jim Vaughan 1974 1977 82 71 83 154 Doug Derraugh 1987 1991 119 66 87 153 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 averageMinimum 30 games Player Years GP Min W L T GA SO SV GAA David LeNeveu 2001 2003 46 2788 39 5 2 60 11 938 1 29 Ken Dryden 1966 1969 83 4844 76 4 1 128 13 939 1 59 David McKee 2003 2006 102 6193 65 24 13 177 18 926 1 74 Ben Scrivens 2006 2010 117 6710 65 37 13 216 19 930 1 93 Brian Cropper 1968 1971 59 3325 50 5 0 117 7 920 2 11 Statistics current through the start of the 2018 19 season Current roster editAs of July 10 2023 24 No S P C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights 2 nbsp Liam Steele Freshman D 6 4 1 93 m 225 lb 102 kg 2004 04 21 Cobham England Salmon Arm BCHL 3 nbsp Jack O Brien Sophomore D 6 0 1 83 m 170 lb 77 kg 2003 03 07 White Rock British Columbia Nanaimo BCHL 4 nbsp Hank Kempf Junior D 6 2 1 88 m 200 lb 91 kg 2002 04 15 Wilmette Illinois Muskegon USHL NYR 208th overall 2021 5 nbsp Hoyt Stanley Freshman D 6 3 1 91 m 200 lb 91 kg 2005 02 04 West Vancouver British Columbia Victoria BCHL OTT 108th overall 2023 6 nbsp George Fegaras Freshman D 6 2 1 88 m 205 lb 93 kg 2004 04 26 Richmond Hill Ontario Muskegon USHL DAL 83rd overall 2022 7 nbsp Jimmy Rayhill Junior D 5 9 1 75 m 175 lb 79 kg 2001 03 17 New Hartford New York Odessa NAHL 8 nbsp Luke Devlin Freshman F 6 3 1 91 m 187 lb 85 kg 2004 03 12 Toronto Ontario West Kelowna BCHL PIT 182nd overall 2022 9 nbsp Jack O Leary Senior F 5 7 1 7 m 162 lb 73 kg 2000 03 28 St James New York Lincoln USHL 10 nbsp Jacob Kraft Freshman F 5 8 1 73 m 170 lb 77 kg 2003 04 26 Churchville New York Cedar Rapids USHL 11 nbsp Sean Donaldson Sophomore F 5 11 1 8 m 180 lb 82 kg 2001 03 28 Vancouver British Columbia Nanaimo BCHL 12 nbsp Tim Rego Senior D 6 0 1 83 m 172 lb 78 kg 2000 10 31 Mansfield Massachusetts Brooks AJHL 13 nbsp Marian Mosko Freshman F 5 11 1 8 m 185 lb 84 kg 2004 05 11 Visolaje Slovakia Fargo USHL 14 nbsp Ryan Walsh Freshman F 6 1 1 85 m 180 lb 82 kg 2003 08 25 Rochester New York Cedar Rapids USHL BOS 188th overall 2023 15 nbsp Tyler Catalano Freshman F 6 4 1 93 m 225 lb 102 kg 2004 02 26 St Louis Missouri Youngstown USHL 16 nbsp Gabriel Seger Senior F 6 4 1 93 m 210 lb 95 kg 1999 11 15 Uppsala Sweden Union ECAC 17 nbsp Dalton Bancroft Sophomore F 6 3 1 91 m 200 lb 91 kg 2001 02 26 Madoc Ontario Trenton OJHL 18 nbsp Kyler Kovich Junior F 6 2 1 88 m 182 lb 83 kg 2002 01 31 Coquitlam British Columbia Tri City USHL 19 nbsp Sullivan Mack Junior F 6 1 1 85 m 189 lb 86 kg 2000 07 05 Anchorage Alaska Salmon Arm BCHL 21 nbsp Ben Robertson Freshman D 5 11 1 8 m 181 lb 82 kg 2004 09 18 Potomac Falls Virginia Waterloo USHL 22 nbsp Kyle Penney Senior F 6 1 1 85 m 204 lb 93 kg 2000 07 18 Lawrencetown Nova Scotia Chilliwack BCHL 23 nbsp Winter Wallace Sophomore F 6 3 1 91 m 215 lb 98 kg 2002 01 21 Boulder Colorado Youngstown USHL 26 nbsp Ondrej Psenicka Junior F 6 6 1 98 m 211 lb 96 kg 2001 01 07 Prague Czech Republic Waterloo USHL 27 nbsp Michael Suda Junior D 6 1 1 85 m 180 lb 82 kg 2002 07 03 Cheektowaga New York Fargo USHL 28 nbsp Nick DeSantis Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 155 lb 70 kg 2002 05 02 Collegeville Pennsylvania Madison USHL 30 nbsp Ian Shane Junior G 6 0 1 83 m 170 lb 77 kg 2000 09 24 Manhattan Beach California Bismarck USHL 33 nbsp Remington Keopple Sophomore G 6 2 1 88 m 190 lb 86 kg 2002 03 21 New Richmond Wisconsin Des Moines USHL 34 nbsp Ryan McInchak Senior G 6 0 1 83 m 175 lb 79 kg 1999 02 28 Trenton Michigan American International AHA 38 nbsp Jonathan Castagna Freshman F 6 2 1 88 m 185 lb 84 kg 2005 04 20 Etobicoke Ontario St Andrew s College CISAA ARI 70th overall 2023Big Red players in the NHL editAs of July 1 2023 NHL All Star team NHL All Star 25 NHL All Star 25 and NHL All Star team Hall of Famers Player Position Team s Years Games Stanley Cups Anthony Angello Center PIT 2019 2022 31 0 Cole Bardreau Center NYI 2019 Present 11 0 Morgan Barron Center NYR WPG 2020 Present 102 0 Byron Bitz Right Wing BOS FLA VAN 2008 2012 97 0 Brad Chartrand Right Wing VAN 1999 2004 215 0 Sean Collins Center CBJ WAS 2012 2016 21 0 Corrie D Alessio Goaltender HFD 1992 1993 1 0 Doug Dadswell Goaltender CGY 1986 1990 28 0 P C Drouin Left Wing BOS 1996 1997 3 0 Ken Dryden Goaltender MTL 1970 1979 397 6 Parris Duffus Goaltender PHO 1996 1997 1 0 Darren Eliot Goaltender LAK DET BUF 1984 1989 89 0 Brian Ferlin Right Wing BOS 2014 2015 7 0 Larry Fullan Forward WAS 1974 1975 4 0 Colin Greening Center OTT TOR 2010 2016 286 0 Brian Hayward Goaltender WPG MTL MIN SJS 1982 1993 357 0 Ryan Hughes Center BOS 1995 1996 3 0 Mike Iggulden Center SJS NYI 2007 2009 12 0 David LeNeveu Goaltender PHO CBJ 2005 2011 22 0 Player Position Team s Years Games Stanley Cups Jacob MacDonald Defenseman FLA COL SJS 2018 Present 101 0 Jeff Malott Left Wing WPG 2021 2022 47 0 Kent Manderville Center TOR EDM HFD CAR PHI PIT 1991 2002 646 0 Brian McCutcheon Forward DET 1974 1977 37 0 Matt Moulson Left Wing LAK NYI BUF MIN 2007 2018 650 0 Douglas Murray Defenseman SJS PIT MTL 2005 2014 518 0 Brendon Nash Defenseman MTL 2010 2011 2 0 Riley Nash Center CAR BOS CBJ TOR WPG TBL ARI 2011 2022 627 0 Lance Nethery Forward NYR EDM 1980 1982 41 0 Joe Nieuwendyk Center CGY DAL NJD TOR FLA 1986 2007 1 257 3 Ryan O Byrne Defenseman MTL COL TOR 2007 2013 308 0 Jean Marc Pelletier Goaltender PHI PHO 1998 2004 7 0 Dan Ratushny Defenseman VAN 1992 1993 1 0 Joakim Ryan Defenseman SJS LAK CAR 2017 2021 145 0 Raymond Sawada Right Wing DAL 2008 2011 11 0 Ben Scrivens Goaltender TOR LAK EDM MTL 2011 2016 144 0 Brock Tredway Wing LAK 1981 1982 0 0 Matt Underhill Goaltender CHI 2003 2004 1 0 Ryan Vesce Right Wing SJS 2008 2010 19 0 Tredway played in 1 playoff game in 1982 nbsp Byron Bitz nbsp Sean Collins nbsp Colin Greening nbsp Matt Moulson nbsp Douglas Murray nbsp Joe Nieuwendyk nbsp Riley Nash 26 See also editCornell Big Red women s ice hockey Cornell Big Red Cornell UniversityExternal links editOfficial Athletics WebsiteReferences edit Cornell Seals Ivy League Men s Ice Hockey Title Home Cornell Chronicle a b MALCOLM CHACE FINANCIER DIES The New York Times 17 July 1955 p 61 Retrieved 28 October 2019 credited with being the father of hockey in the United States a b Malcolm Greene Chace Memorial Trophy Rhode Island Hall of Fame Rhode Island Hall of Fame Retrieved 29 October 2019 Hanlon John 17 April 1967 When Harvard Met Brown It Wasn t Ice Polo Sports Illustrated Retrieved 23 February 2020 A lot of weird games between a lot of scrub teams probably were played on ice before Jan 19 1898 but on that day modern intercollegiate hockey competition was officially born Nelson Adam R 2009 Education and Democracy The Meaning of Alexander Meiklejohn 1872 1964 Univ of Wisconsin Press p 29 ISBN 9780299171445 Retrieved 23 February 2020 a b c d e f g h Cornell Men s Hockey Media Guide Pages 59 88 History and Records PDF Cornell Big Red Archived from the original PDF on October 27 2021 Retrieved October 16 2018 Cornell Athletics Frequently Asked Questions Nicholas Bawlf 2007 General After Ten Years Hockey Returns to Cornell Cornell Daily Sun December 11 1957 p 7 James Lynah Rink Cornell Big Red Retrieved October 16 2018 ECAC Tournament College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved April 23 2014 Cornell Boston U Justify High Rating New York Times December 19 1966 Retrieved October 17 2018 2009 10 WCHA Yearbook 97 112 PDF WCHA Retrieved 2014 06 01 Dick Bertrand 2007 General Cornell Big Red Retrieved 2016 05 28 Morris Clarkson Move On USCHO com 2003 08 06 Retrieved 2016 05 29 NCAA All time season Elite Prospects Retrieved October 18 2018 USCHO com Men s Division I Poll Rankings College Hockey USCHO com NCAA cancels remaining winter and spring championships due to coronavirus concerns NCAA NCAA Retrieved 25 May 2020 Legends of Hockey Hockey Hall of Fame Archived from the original on 2018 10 16 Retrieved 2018 10 07 United States Hockey Hall of Fame Hockey Central co uk Retrieved 2010 04 21 Cornell Postseason Games The Big Red What Retrieved 2009 09 13 TOP 10 ALL TIME LEADERS PDF Cornell Big Red Retrieved October 19 2018 2023 24 Men s Ice Hockey Roster Cornell University Retrieved July 10 2018 a b Players are identified as an All Star if they were selected for the All Star game at any time in their career Alumni report for Cornell University Internet Hockey Database Retrieved May 11 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cornell Big Red men 27s ice hockey amp oldid 1218800458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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