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Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey

The Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents the University of Denver. They play at Magness Arena in Denver, Colorado. The Pioneers are a member of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference (NCHC). Previously, they were members of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA), from its creation in 1959 to the end of its men's hockey competition in 2013.

Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey
Current season
UniversityUniversity of Denver
ConferenceNCHC
First season1949–50
Head coachDavid Carle
6th season, 116–53–13 (.673)
ArenaMagness Arena
Capacity: 6,315[1]
Surface: 200' x 85'
LocationDenver, Colorado
ColorsCrimson and gold[2]
   
NCAA Tournament championships
1958, 1960, 1961, 1968, 1969, 2004, 2005, 2017, 2022
NCAA Tournament Runner-up
1963, 1964, 1973
NCAA Tournament Frozen Four
1958, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1986, 2004, 2005, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2022
NCAA Tournament appearances
1958, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1986, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023
Conference Tournament championships
1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1986, 1999, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2014, 2018
Conference regular season championships
1957–58, 1959–60, 1960–61, 1962–63, 1963–64, 1967–68, 1971–72, 1972–73, 1977–78, 1985–86, 2001–02, 2004–05, 2009–10, 2016–17, 2021-22, 2022-23
Current uniform

The Pioneers are tied with the Michigan Wolverines for the most all-time NCAA National Hockey Championships with nine (1958, 1960, 1961, 1968, 1969, 2004, 2005, 2017, 2022). The Pioneers have won 15 Regular Season Conference Championships (13 WCHA, 2 NCHC) and 14 Conference Playoff Championships (15 WCHA, 2 NCHC).

About 75 Pioneers have gone on to play in the National Hockey League, including Keith Magnuson, Kevin Dineen, Matt Carle (2006 Hobey Baker Award winner), Paul Stastny and Will Butcher (2017 Hobey Baker Award winner).

History

Source:[3]

Early years

In 1949 the DU Arena, a former WWII surplus drill hall from Idaho was reassembled in Denver with an ice plant, giving the university the ability to properly field an ice hockey team for the first time. Before the end of the year Vern Turner, the rink manager for the Broadmoor Ice Palace and a former semi-professional goaltender was hired as the team's first coach and the Pioneers hit the ice for their first game in December, losing to the University of Saskatchewan, 17–0. Denver would, unsurprisingly, lose its first 9 games before recording the first victory against Wyoming on January 27. The following season saw much improvement with the team as it finished with an 11–11–1 record and when Turner stepped down after the year it gave Neil Celley the opportunity to build the program. When Celley assumed the reins he was the youngest head coach in the history of college ice hockey at 24[3] and had won a national title with Michigan the year before, as a player.[4] The team responded to Celley by raising their record to 18–6–1 and finishing tied for second in the inaugural MCHL standings. Unfortunately, Celley's old team was selected ahead of Denver for the NCAA tournament due to a better overall record. The Pioneers would continue to play well under Celley but their winning percentage dropped every year until 1956 when they finished just a hair above .500. Celley resigned after that season and turned the team over to ex-NHLer Murray Armstrong.

Armstrong era

Armstrong came to DU and guaranteed an NCAA title within three years, and did it in his second year. The team, using Armstrong's coaching pipeline to ex-Junior players in Canada, took a year to get going, but by 1958 the DU team started firing on all cylinders. Denver won its first conference title (tying with North Dakota) and received the second western seed for its first NCAA tournament bid. Denver did not let the bright lights stun them as they rolled through the competition, winning both games 6–2 and taking their first NCAA National Title in Minneapolis. The next season, an argument between conference members over the recruitment of Canadian players who had played junior hockey, caused the WIHL to collapse and left Denver without a conference.[5] Denver struggled to fill out its schedule and though DU finished with the best record of any western team (22–5–1) their competition was so paltry that the Pioneers were passed over in favor of North Dakota (who had taken three of four matches between them) for the NCAA tournament with Big Ten champion Michigan State receiving the other bid. After that disaster, all teams that had been in the WIHL restarted the conference under a new name (WCHA) and instituted a playoff among other reforms. Because the matter of recruitment was left unchanged, Denver was able to take full advantage and build their program into the dominant power for the duration of the decade.

Early 60s

Denver kicked off its first season in the WCHA by winning the regular season title and being WCHA tournament co-champions along with Michigan Tech. The WCHA had arranged its tournament to take advantage of the NCAA bid policy that would give automatic bids to tournament champions and because there was no rival western conference the WCHA could guarantee that both of its co-champions would make the frozen four. Denver won both of its NCAA games and captured the 1960 National Title. The Tournament MOP was split for the first time that year and while it was given to three separate players, none of them wore Denver sweaters. The Pioneers followed up their second championship by thoroughly dominating the competition in 1961. In what is typically ranked among the best seasons ever,[6] the squad began with five victories before dropping a match to Michigan Tech on the road and then never lost another game. The '61 Pioneers scored 242 times in only 32 contests for a rate of just over 7.5 goals per game. Additionally, they allowed just 59 goals against in that time (1.84). While neither marks were records, the average scoring differential of +5.72 is still an NCAA record. Denver had the second-and third-leading scoring in the nation who were only topped by Phil Latreille scoring an all-time NCAA record of 80 goals in 21 games. Not only did the Pioneers post the first 30-win season in NCAA history but, by playing in every game, George Kirkwood set an NCAA record for wins in a season (30). Denver made sure they also did their damage when it counted the most; in the four playoff games they played (2 conference, 2 NCAA) the Pioneers won each by at least 5 goals and won all four matches by a total of 35–6. In the NCAA championship game against St. Lawrence, Denver surrendered the first goal but ended the night by scoring the final nine (an NCAA record) and won the game by 10 goals, 12-2 (also an NCAA record) and were one short of tying the NCAA record of 13 in the championship game.[7] Denver tied the record by placing 5 players on the All-Tournament Team[8] and set the record with 5 players on the All-WCHA First Team[9] as well as the AHCA All-American Team[10] and swept all 5 individual awards offered that year. Three of the players from that team eventually played in the NHL, a rare occurrence for NCAA teams at the time.[11]

After such unparalleled dominance, it was expected that Denver would decline the following year, especially with so many of the players graduating, but the team still finished 3rd in the WCHA. One year later they won both WCHA conference titles and again made the NCAA tournament. After dropping Clarkson in a relatively easy 6–2 semifinal match Denver faced off against North Dakota for a rematch of it first title in 1958. The Fighting Sioux scored three times before 8 minutes had elapsed and, while Denver responded with two quick goals, North Dakota tacked on two more in the first to finish with a 5–2 lead. When they added another 5 minutes into the second it looked as if they were going to walk to a national title but the Pioneers did npt quit and scored twice to cut the lead in half entering the third. North Dakota closed ranks and set up a wall in front of Rudy Unis in the final frame but still could not stop Denver from scoring, however, the Pioneers could only notch one goal and lost their first NCAA tournament game, 5–6.[12] The team's streak of seven consecutive tournament wins from the start is still an NCAA record.

Denver followed up that disappointment with a second-place finish despite playing only 10 games and a WCHA tournament championship over Michigan. In the NCAA tournament DU produced a very similar result to the year before by dropping their semifinal opponent easily, then allowing the team they defeated in the WCHA championship to score the first three goals. This time it was the Wolverines who would take the title and send the Pioneers home disappointed.[13] The next season Denver finished with a record of 18–8–2, one of the best in the nation, but because they only played 12 conference games and won only 4 matches they finished 6th in the WCHA and were left out of the conference playoffs. The following season Denver increased their conference schedule to 20 games but because the WCHA added Minnesota–Duluth as a member, the conference tournament now included all 8 teams. Denver was given a regional matchup against the dismal Colorado College Tigers and took the game easily to give them a shot against arch-nemesis North Dakota for an entry to the NCAA tournament. Despite being the lower seed the game was played in Denver's home stadium due in part to a terrible blizzard that dropped more than two feet around Grand Forks.[14] The home game may have given Denver just enough of an advantage and the Pioneers edged UND, 5–4 in overtime to return to the NCAA tournament. Once there Denver faced Clarkson for the third time in the semifinal but the Golden Knights were able to avenge their earlier losses and send DU to its first consolation game. Though they won the match the Pioneers and their fans were far from satisfied with the result. The following season Denver rose to 2nd in the conference but because the WCHA tournament was still arranged for regional matchups the Pioneers had to play top seed North Dakota in the second round and the Fighting Sioux were able to redeem themselves with a win.

Late 60s

While many programs may have been happy with the results Denver achieved in '66 and '67 the Pioneers were decidedly nonplussed. When the team began 1968 season slowly, losing three out of their first five games, they were taken to task and responded by winning every remaining game except for a stretch in late December when they played four Olympic squads. Denver finished the season atop the WCHA and with the regional restrictions abolished they were able to take full advantage of their top seed and demolish their competition 27–7 in the three games. In the NCAA tournament Denver faced Boston College for the first time[15] and swatted the Eagles away with a 4–1 victory despite sloppy play. The final brought North Dakota and DU together for a rubber match and the two teams fought a tough defensive battle through two periods before the floodgates opened and Denver scored four times in the final frame while Gerry Powers earned the first shutout in a championship game.[3] The next season was much the same; after a slow start the Pioneers ran through most of their competition, finishing second in the WCHA and taking down much weaker opponents in the conference tournament to return to the NCAA playoff. For this 1969 championship they beat Harvard 9–2 in the opening match before facing Ken Dryden-led Cornell. The Pioneers did not have any problems scoring against the seemingly impregnable Big Red defense, building leads three times while the final one stuck and Denver won its fifth NCAA national title, 4–3.

Dynasty's end

Despite losing many players from the dual national title teams due to graduations Denver did not lose much footing and finished second in the WCHA but lost to new entry Wisconsin in the conference tournament. The next season, Denver finished second for the third straight year and were able to win another league co-championship and receive the top western seed. The Pioneers had to settle for a third place NCAA finish after losing only their second semifinal game in nine opportunities. The next season, Denver won both conference titles for the fifth time in their history but were stunned by a 2–7 loss to Cornell in the semifinal, the team's worst loss to a college team in over six years.[3] As if their recent tournament collapses needed a concrete symbol, the DU Arena roof failed in 1972 and forced the team to play most of their remaining home games at the Denver Coliseum.[16] While the Pioneers were able to overcome that difficulty and win the WCHA yet again and finish as the NCAA runner-up it was a battle off the ice that would eventually cost them dearly.

Throughout the 1960s, the matter of recruiting Canadian major junior players was becoming an issue again, and by the 1970s, Minnesota coach John Mariucci was pushing the NCAA for change. Mariucci did not like his teenage American players, who grew up playing locally in Minnesota, playing against older Canadian players that Denver recruited, due to Denver's lack of local players to recruit. Minnesota even refused to schedule the Pioneers for years in the 1960s, which spurred the NCAA to support Minnesota's position. In 1974, the NCAA asked all schools that rostered major junior Canadian players to declare these students ineligible and in recompense, the current players would have their NCAA eligibility restored as a grandfathering ploy, with all future major junior players remaining ineligible.[16] While most universities acceded to the NCAA demand, Denver did not. The school refused to call its own players 'cheaters', and ended up paying the price. The university had its trip to the 1973 tournament vacated and with its pipeline from Canada cut, the team began to falter in the standings. 1974–75 saw Denver post its first losing season since Armstrong's first year and while the team was slowly recovering, DU would not make another tournament appearance until long after his retirement in 1977.

Decline

Armstrong's assistant Marshall Johnston took over and the team jumped up in the standings as the nation's top-ranked team, winning the WCHA regular season crown and breaking the school record for wins with 33 (albeit in 40 games) but DU was stopped in the WCHA second round by an upstart Colorado College team, after finding out that Denver's appeal to be eligible for the 1978 NCAA tournament was denied by the NCAA. After declining to 6th place the following season. Denver ended 1979–80 dead last in the WCHA and missed the playoffs entirely. The team rebounded the next season but afterwards, Johnston returned to the NHL and the program was given to a third-straight former pro, Ralph Backstrom. Backstrom's entry coincided with four WCHA members bolting for the CCHA leaving the conference with only 6 schools. The co-championship format was abolished and though Denver provided some glimpse of hope in Backstrom's first season, the team slipped towards the bottom of the division for three seasons. By the end of the 1984–85 season Denver had lost eight consecutive playoff games and was in danger of becoming an afterthought in the WCHA. The 1985–86 team provided a surprising start the following campaign, winning seven of their first eight-game en route to the WCHA regular season and playoff championships over Michigan Tech, Minnesota-Duluth and Minnesota, followed by a home NCAA 7–6 total goal series win over Cornell to make it to the Frozen Four. Denver played a school record 48 games that year, and won 34 contests (also a DU record) despite losing in the NCAA semifinal, 5–2 to Harvard in Providence. The stark turnaround garnered Backstrom the Spencer Penrose Award. The highlights were short-lived, however and over the succeeding four years Denver returned to being a middling team in the WCHA.

Backstrom left in 1990 and was replaced by Frank Serratore. While he would later achieve a great deal of success with Air Force Serratore's time in Denver was the darkest period in the history of the program. In his first season, the Pioneers won only 6 games, losing a school record 30 of 38 matches. The following season brought only marginal improvements but when the team rose above .500 in 1992–93 it looked like Serratore's job may be saved, but after slipping back to 9th in the conference the year after he was out as coach and replaced by Wisconsin alumnus George Gwozdecky.

Gwozdecky era

When Denver hired Gwozdecky, they hoped they were getting the same coach that had won back-to-back CCHA Coach of the Year awards at Miami (Ohio). In his first season in 1995, he delivered by getting the Pioneers to win 10 more games than they had the year before, and jump from 9th in the conference, to a tie for second place and an NCAA win over New Hampshire. After a disappointing opening round loss in the WCHA playoffs the following year, Denver returned to the NCAA tournament in 1997 and beat a very strong Vermont squad in the first round. In 1999 the Pioneers were able to defeat a dominant North Dakota to take their first conference championship in thirteen years, but lost their first NCAA tournament game to Michigan in the first meeting between the two since the Wolverines left the WCHA.[17] Denver stumbled over the next two years before winning their first WCHA regular season title under Gwozdecky, as well as a second conference championship. Unfortunately, the Pioneers found themselves pitted against Michigan in the first game, and lost to the Maize and Blue yet again. The Pioneers lost in the first round of the WCHA tournament each of the next two years, but their record in 2004 was good enough to snag the #2 seed despite the loss.[18]

Back-to-back titles

DU was able to defeat Gwozdecky's previous team, Miami, in a close game before advancing to face North Dakota in the West Regional Final. The top team in the nation held Denver off the scoresheet and out shot the Pioneers 23–13 in the opening two periods but the Fighting Sioux could not get the puck past Adam Berkhoel. The two teams remained scoreless until just 2:29 remained in regulation when Luke Fulghum deflected a puck into the net and sent the Pioneers into the Frozen Four for the first time in 18 years.[19] Denver met Minnesota–Duluth in the semifinal and looked like were outmatched when the Bulldogs scored twice in the first five minutes of the game. Even when Denver cut the lead in half a second power play goal by 2004 Hobey Baker winner Junior Lessard followed soon thereafter. The Pioneers, however, were not deterred and came out firing in the third, tying the score in less than four minutes and adding another two goals before the period was half over. Duluth was so stunned by the comeback that they could only muster 6 shots in the period as Denver took the game to make their first national championship since their vacated appearance in 1973.[20] With Maine as the only obstacle left in their path, Denver put up in front of Adam Berkhoel and allowed only 24 shots to reach their goalie, including none during a 6-on-3 power play advantage in the last minute and a half of the game. Berkhoel earned the shutout, making the lone goal from Gabe Gauthier in the first as the winner.[21]

After winning their first title in 35 years Denver raised their game, tying Colorado College for the WCHA crown and producing the #2 offense in the country. In the WCHA tournament, however, it was their defense that led the way. With rookie goaltender Peter Mannino standing on his head for two shutouts, the Pioneers allowed only two goals in four games, winning three one-goal games to take the conference championship. DU earned the #2 overall seed and had to survive a scare from Bemidji State in their first game. After allowing 3 to the much weaker Beavers, Glenn Fisher was benched in favor of Mannino for the remaining three games and the Pioneers cruised to the championship game with 4–2 and 6–2 wins. In the Final Denver met North Dakota for the fourth time, matching the record for championship meetings with Michigan and Colorado College. The two teams exchanged goals in the first but future NHLer Paul Stastny put the Pioneers into the lead with a power play marker just after the midpoint. With their season on the line North Dakota began an onslaught on the DU net, firing 23 shots in the third but Mannino was equal to the take and kept everything out. The Pioneers scored twice in the third to put the game away and take their seventh national championship.[22]

Playoff disappointments

The next season brought Denver its first Hobey Baker winner in Matt Carle but the team floundered in the first round of the WCHA tournament and this time their record was not good enough to get them into the championship. After another first round exit the following year Denver righted the ship and won the WCHA tournament in 2008. In the first round they found themselves facing conference rival Wisconsin, only the second time in NCAA history that two teams from the same conference met in the opening round. Despite being favored in the game the Pioneers were beaten 2–6 and sent home disappointed. The Pioneers would return to the tournament each of the next five seasons, but the results were much the same, losing in the first round four times and thoroughly dismissed by North Dakota in the 2011 regionals. Despite the regular season success the early playoff exits, coupled with a contract structure dispute, these results led Denver to fire their head coach in 2013, only 17 wins away from tying Murray Armstrong's program record.[23]

New coach, new conference

 
A game between Denver and Omaha in 2017

Gwozdecky's firing coincided with the founding of the NCHC, a power conference that was created due to Wisconsin and Minnesota leaving to restart the Big Ten hockey division. Denver was accompanied by all of its traditional rivals and began its tenure under Jim Montgomery but finishing 6th in the 8-team conference. Despite their lackluster start the Pioneers were provided with an opportunity by facing weaker-than-expected opposition in the final two games and were able to win the inaugural championship, as they had done with the WCHA 54 years earlier. The Pioneer's NCAA run was predictably short-lived but the team seemed to have found new life under Montgomery's watch which they demonstrated by increasing their win total in each of the next three years. In addition they won progressively more tournament games, reaching the Frozen Four in 2016 before winning the National Championship in 2017 along with getting their second Hobey Baker Award, this one going to Will Butcher. After the team won its second NCHC tournament title in 2018, Montgomery left to join the Dallas Stars as head coach. DU replaced Montgomery with his Denver assistant, 28-year-old David Carle. Carle took Denver to the 2019 Frozen Four in his rookie season, after first and second-round NCAA wins over Ohio State and American International, but the Pioneers fell in the Frozen Four semi-finals to Massachusetts, 4–3 in overtime in Buffalo, New York.

9th National Championship

In 2022, following wins against UMass Lowell and Minnesota Duluth, David Carle and the Denver Pioneers entered the Frozen Four for the 18th time in school history. In the semi-finals, Denver played the University of Michigan. Carter Savoie scored in overtime to secure a 3-2 victory, and advance the Pioneers to the National Championship game for their 12th time in program history. In the National Championship game, Denver failed to score until the third period against Minnesota State. However, Denver finally broke through adding 5 goals to clinch their 9th National Championship in program history.[24]

Season-by-season results

Source:[25]

Denver/Colorado College rivalry

 
Game between the Denver Pioneers and Colorado College Tigers (Magness Arena – December 2016)

Of all the rivals that the Denver Pioneer's hockey program play against the most intense rivalry is that from Colorado College. Since Denver's hockey program started in 1949 the two schools have played at least four times a season. In the 1993–94 season a gold pan trophy was added as a reward for the winning team thus the rivalry has been dubbed the Battle for the Gold Pan.[26]

Head coaches

David Carle is the current head coach of Denver hockey, hired in May 2018.

As of the end of the 2022–23 season[17]

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1949–1951 Vern Turner 2 15–24–1 .388
1951–1956 Neil Celley 6 81–43–6 .646
1956–1977 Murray Armstrong 21 460–215–31 .674
1977–1981 Marshall Johnston 4 89–63–7 .582
1981–1990 Ralph Backstrom 9 182–174–14 .511
1990–1994 Frank Serratore 4 49–92–9 .357
1994–2013 George Gwozdecky 19 443–267–64 .614
2013–2018 Jim Montgomery 5 125–57–26 .663
2018–Present David Carle 5 116–53–13 .673
Totals 9 coaches 74 seasons 1,560–1007–171 .601

Awards and honors

NCAA

Individual awards

All-Americans

AHCA First Team All-Americans

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

MCHL/WIHL/WCHA

Individual awards

All-Conference

First Team All-MCHL/WIHL/WCHA

Second Team All-MCHL/WIHL/WCHA

Third Team All-WCHA

WCHA All-Rookie Team

NCHC

Individual awards

All-Conference

First Team All-NCHC

Second Team All-NCHC

NCHC All-Rookie Team

Olympians

This is a list of Denver hockey alumni who were a part of an Olympic team.[29]

Name Position Denver Tenure Team Year Finish
Glenn Anderson Right Wing 1978–1979   Canada 1980 6th
Ken Berry Right Wing 1978–1979, 1980–1981   Canada 1980 1988 6th, 4th
Kevin Dineen Right Wing 1981–1983   Canada 1984, 2014* 4th,   Gold
Marshall Johnston Defenseman 1960–1963   Canada 1964 1968 4th,   Bronze
Antti Laaksonen Forward 1993–1997   Finland 2006   Silver
Derek Mayer Defenseman 1985–1988   Canada 1994   Silver
Ronald Naslund Forward 1962–1965   USA 1972   Silver
Craig Patrick Right Wing 1966–1970   USA 1980, 2002   Gold,   Silver
Craig Redmond Defenseman 1982–1983   Canada 1984 4th
Nick Shore Center 2010–2013   USA 2022 5th
Paul Stastny Center 2004–2006   USA 2010, 2014   Silver, 4th
Troy Terry Right Wing 2015–2018   USA 2018 7th
David Tomassoni Forward 1972–1975   ITA 1984 9th

† Craig Patrick was an assistant coach for the 1980 team and the general manager for the 2002 team.
* Kevin Dineen was head coach of the Gold Medal Winning Canadian women's team at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.

Statistical leaders

Source:[17]

Career points leaders

Player Years GP G A Pts PIM
Dallas Gaume 1982–1986 145 78 188 266
Dwight Mathiasen 1983–1986 123 90 108 198
John McMillan 1983–1987 152 69 127 196
Bill Masterton 1958–1961 89 66 130 196
Rick Berens 1987–1991 159 94 86 180
Doug Berry 1975–1978 119 65 115 180
Dave Shields 1986–1990 146 71 108 179
Ed Hayes 1969–1973 140 74 103 177
Greg Woods 1975–1979 161 51 125 176
Peter McNab 1970–1973 105 78 92 170

Career goaltending leaders

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
Devin Cooley 2017–2020 32 1,708 15 9 4 55 6 .927 1.93
Tanner Jaillet 2014–2018 135 7,560 82 27 16 257 9 .925 1.94
Evan Cowley 2013–2017 52 2,469 23 15 3 79 6 .933 2.04
Wade Dubielewicz 1999–2003 85 4,629 44 26 6 170 8 .923 2.20
George Kirkwood 1959–1961 66 57 5 4 6 .904 2.20
Magnus Chrona 2019–2023 114 6,686 73 34 5 245 13 .914 2.20

Statistics current through the end of the 2022–23 season.

Denver Athletic Hall of Fame

The following is a list of people associated with the Denver men's ice hockey program who were elected into the Denver Athletic Hall of Fame (induction date in parenthesis).[30]

Current roster

As of August 26, 2022.[31]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
2   Sean Behrens Sophomore D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 178 lb (81 kg) 2003-03-31 Barrington, Illinois NTDP (USHL) COL, 61st overall 2021
4   Jack Devine Sophomore F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2003-10-02 Glencoe, Illinois NTDP (USHL) FLA, 221st overall 2022
6   McKade Webster Junior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2000-07-28 St. Louis, Missouri Green Bay (USHL) TBL, 213th overall 2019
7   Aidan Thompson Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2002-02-18 Fort Collins, Colorado Lincoln (USHL) CHI, 90th overall 2022
9   Owen Ozar Sophomore F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 156 lb (71 kg) 2000-04-05 Prince Albert, Saskatchewan Waterloo (USHL)
11   Lucas Ölvestad Freshman D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2002-03-19 Stockholm, Sweden Dubuque (USHL)
13   Massimo Rizzo Sophomore F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 178 lb (81 kg) 2001-06-13 Burnaby, British Columbia Coquitlam (BCHL) CAR, 216th overall 2019
14   Rieger Lorenz Freshman F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 2004-03-30 Calgary, Alberta Okotoks (AJHL) MIN, 56th overall 2022
15   Carter King Junior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2001-08-30 Calgary, Alberta Surrey (BCHL)
16   Tristan Broz Sophomore F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 183 lb (83 kg) 2002-10-10 Bloomington, Minnesota Minnesota (Big Ten) PIT, 58th overall 2021
17   Casey Dornbach Graduate F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 183 lb (83 kg) 1997-07-07 Edina, Minnesota Harvard (ECAC)
18   Jared Wright Freshman F 6' 2" (1.88 m) 176 lb (80 kg) 2002-11-22 Burnsville, Minnesota Omaha (USHL) LAK, 169th overall 2022
19   Tyler Haskins Freshman F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2003-07-07 Rochester, Minnesota Madison (USHL)
20   Michael Benning Junior D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 178 lb (81 kg) 2002-01-05 St. Albert, Alberta Sherwood Park (AJHL) FLA, 95th overall 2020
21   Kent Anderson Freshman D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2003-11-13 Calgary, Alberta Green Bay (USHL)
22   Connor Caponi Junior F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 186 lb (84 kg) 2000-03-20 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Waterloo (USHL)
23   Lane Krenzen Senior D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 188 lb (85 kg) 1998-02-21 Twig, Minnesota Austin (NAHL)
26   Shai Buium Sophomore D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 2003-03-26 San Diego, California Sioux City (USHL) DET, 36th overall 2021
27   Kyle Mayhew Graduate D 5' 7" (1.7 m) 158 lb (72 kg) 1997-12-25 Anaheim Hills, California Fairbanks (NAHL)
28   Brett Edwards Senior F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 1998-09-10 Grande Prairie, Alberta Drumheller (AJHL)
29   Tristan Lemyre Freshman F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 2001-01-15 Mirabel, Quebec Dubuque (USHL)
30   Magnus Chrona Senior G 6' 5" (1.96 m) 218 lb (99 kg) 2000-08-28 Stockholm, Sweden Skellefteå J20 (J20 SuperElit) SJS, 152nd overall 2018
31   Jack Caruso Junior G 5' 9" (1.75 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 1999-06-07 St. Louis, Missouri Fairbanks (NAHL)
32   Justin Lee (A) Senior D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2000-03-14 Waskada, Manitoba Fargo (USHL)
34   Carter Mazur Sophomore F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 173 lb (78 kg) 2002-03-28 Jackson, Michigan Tri-City (USHL) DET, 70th overall 2021
35   Matt Davis Sophomore G 6' 0" (1.83 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 2001-06-16 Calgary, Alberta Green Bay (USHL)

Pioneers in the NHL

As of July 1, 2022.

† Patrick won two Stanley Cups as the general manager for the Pittsburgh Penguins. @ Dineen won his Stanley Cup as an assistant coach for the Chicago Blackhawks. # Johnston won his Stanley Cup as an executive for the Carolina Hurricanes. ^ Affleck won his Stanley Cup as an executive for the St. Louis Blues.

& Butler won his Stanley Cup as player for the St. Louis Blues. He did not play enough NHL games to merit engraving his name on trophy that year, but he did get to skate with the Cup in uniform after the final game. He then retired from hockey.

Notes:

  • 1 Masterton suffered severe head trauma on January 13, 1968, during an NHL game when he fell to the ice and hit his head. He died two days later and became the first player to die as a direct result of an injury during an NHL game. The Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy is awarded annually to the NHL player who best personifies perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to the game of ice hockey.

WHA

Several players also were members of WHA teams.

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The Denver Pioneers men s ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I college ice hockey program that represents the University of Denver They play at Magness Arena in Denver Colorado The Pioneers are a member of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference NCHC Previously they were members of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association WCHA from its creation in 1959 to the end of its men s hockey competition in 2013 Denver Pioneers men s ice hockeyCurrent seasonUniversityUniversity of DenverConferenceNCHCFirst season1949 50Head coachDavid Carle6th season 116 53 13 673 ArenaMagness ArenaCapacity 6 315 1 Surface 200 x 85 LocationDenver ColoradoColorsCrimson and gold 2 NCAA Tournament championships1958 1960 1961 1968 1969 2004 2005 2017 2022NCAA Tournament Runner up1963 1964 1973NCAA Tournament Frozen Four1958 1960 1961 1963 1964 1966 1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1986 2004 2005 2016 2017 2019 2022NCAA Tournament appearances1958 1960 1961 1963 1964 1966 1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1986 1995 1997 1999 2002 2004 2005 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2022 2023Conference Tournament championships1960 1961 1963 1964 1966 1968 1969 1971 1972 1973 1986 1999 2002 2005 2008 2014 2018Conference regular season championships1957 58 1959 60 1960 61 1962 63 1963 64 1967 68 1971 72 1972 73 1977 78 1985 86 2001 02 2004 05 2009 10 2016 17 2021 22 2022 23Current uniformThe Pioneers are tied with the Michigan Wolverines for the most all time NCAA National Hockey Championships with nine 1958 1960 1961 1968 1969 2004 2005 2017 2022 The Pioneers have won 15 Regular Season Conference Championships 13 WCHA 2 NCHC and 14 Conference Playoff Championships 15 WCHA 2 NCHC About 75 Pioneers have gone on to play in the National Hockey League including Keith Magnuson Kevin Dineen Matt Carle 2006 Hobey Baker Award winner Paul Stastny and Will Butcher 2017 Hobey Baker Award winner Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Armstrong era 1 2 1 Early 60s 1 2 2 Late 60s 1 2 3 Dynasty s end 1 3 Decline 1 4 Gwozdecky era 1 4 1 Back to back titles 1 4 2 Playoff disappointments 1 5 New coach new conference 1 6 9th National Championship 2 Season by season results 3 Denver Colorado College rivalry 4 Head coaches 5 Awards and honors 5 1 Hockey Hall of Fame 5 2 United States Hockey Hall of Fame 5 3 NCAA 5 3 1 Individual awards 5 3 2 All Americans 5 4 MCHL WIHL WCHA 5 4 1 Individual awards 5 4 2 All Conference 5 5 NCHC 5 5 1 Individual awards 5 5 2 All Conference 6 Olympians 7 Statistical leaders 7 1 Career points leaders 7 2 Career goaltending leaders 8 Denver Athletic Hall of Fame 9 Current roster 10 Pioneers in the NHL 10 1 Retired NHL players stats 10 2 Active players stats 10 3 WHA 11 Arenas 11 1 University of Denver Arena 1948 1997 11 2 Magness Arena 1999 present 11 3 Other Colorado Arenas 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditSource 3 Early years Edit In 1949 the DU Arena a former WWII surplus drill hall from Idaho was reassembled in Denver with an ice plant giving the university the ability to properly field an ice hockey team for the first time Before the end of the year Vern Turner the rink manager for the Broadmoor Ice Palace and a former semi professional goaltender was hired as the team s first coach and the Pioneers hit the ice for their first game in December losing to the University of Saskatchewan 17 0 Denver would unsurprisingly lose its first 9 games before recording the first victory against Wyoming on January 27 The following season saw much improvement with the team as it finished with an 11 11 1 record and when Turner stepped down after the year it gave Neil Celley the opportunity to build the program When Celley assumed the reins he was the youngest head coach in the history of college ice hockey at 24 3 and had won a national title with Michigan the year before as a player 4 The team responded to Celley by raising their record to 18 6 1 and finishing tied for second in the inaugural MCHL standings Unfortunately Celley s old team was selected ahead of Denver for the NCAA tournament due to a better overall record The Pioneers would continue to play well under Celley but their winning percentage dropped every year until 1956 when they finished just a hair above 500 Celley resigned after that season and turned the team over to ex NHLer Murray Armstrong Armstrong era Edit Armstrong came to DU and guaranteed an NCAA title within three years and did it in his second year The team using Armstrong s coaching pipeline to ex Junior players in Canada took a year to get going but by 1958 the DU team started firing on all cylinders Denver won its first conference title tying with North Dakota and received the second western seed for its first NCAA tournament bid Denver did not let the bright lights stun them as they rolled through the competition winning both games 6 2 and taking their first NCAA National Title in Minneapolis The next season an argument between conference members over the recruitment of Canadian players who had played junior hockey caused the WIHL to collapse and left Denver without a conference 5 Denver struggled to fill out its schedule and though DU finished with the best record of any western team 22 5 1 their competition was so paltry that the Pioneers were passed over in favor of North Dakota who had taken three of four matches between them for the NCAA tournament with Big Ten champion Michigan State receiving the other bid After that disaster all teams that had been in the WIHL restarted the conference under a new name WCHA and instituted a playoff among other reforms Because the matter of recruitment was left unchanged Denver was able to take full advantage and build their program into the dominant power for the duration of the decade Early 60s Edit Denver kicked off its first season in the WCHA by winning the regular season title and being WCHA tournament co champions along with Michigan Tech The WCHA had arranged its tournament to take advantage of the NCAA bid policy that would give automatic bids to tournament champions and because there was no rival western conference the WCHA could guarantee that both of its co champions would make the frozen four Denver won both of its NCAA games and captured the 1960 National Title The Tournament MOP was split for the first time that year and while it was given to three separate players none of them wore Denver sweaters The Pioneers followed up their second championship by thoroughly dominating the competition in 1961 In what is typically ranked among the best seasons ever 6 the squad began with five victories before dropping a match to Michigan Tech on the road and then never lost another game The 61 Pioneers scored 242 times in only 32 contests for a rate of just over 7 5 goals per game Additionally they allowed just 59 goals against in that time 1 84 While neither marks were records the average scoring differential of 5 72 is still an NCAA record Denver had the second and third leading scoring in the nation who were only topped by Phil Latreille scoring an all time NCAA record of 80 goals in 21 games Not only did the Pioneers post the first 30 win season in NCAA history but by playing in every game George Kirkwood set an NCAA record for wins in a season 30 Denver made sure they also did their damage when it counted the most in the four playoff games they played 2 conference 2 NCAA the Pioneers won each by at least 5 goals and won all four matches by a total of 35 6 In the NCAA championship game against St Lawrence Denver surrendered the first goal but ended the night by scoring the final nine an NCAA record and won the game by 10 goals 12 2 also an NCAA record and were one short of tying the NCAA record of 13 in the championship game 7 Denver tied the record by placing 5 players on the All Tournament Team 8 and set the record with 5 players on the All WCHA First Team 9 as well as the AHCA All American Team 10 and swept all 5 individual awards offered that year Three of the players from that team eventually played in the NHL a rare occurrence for NCAA teams at the time 11 After such unparalleled dominance it was expected that Denver would decline the following year especially with so many of the players graduating but the team still finished 3rd in the WCHA One year later they won both WCHA conference titles and again made the NCAA tournament After dropping Clarkson in a relatively easy 6 2 semifinal match Denver faced off against North Dakota for a rematch of it first title in 1958 The Fighting Sioux scored three times before 8 minutes had elapsed and while Denver responded with two quick goals North Dakota tacked on two more in the first to finish with a 5 2 lead When they added another 5 minutes into the second it looked as if they were going to walk to a national title but the Pioneers did npt quit and scored twice to cut the lead in half entering the third North Dakota closed ranks and set up a wall in front of Rudy Unis in the final frame but still could not stop Denver from scoring however the Pioneers could only notch one goal and lost their first NCAA tournament game 5 6 12 The team s streak of seven consecutive tournament wins from the start is still an NCAA record Denver followed up that disappointment with a second place finish despite playing only 10 games and a WCHA tournament championship over Michigan In the NCAA tournament DU produced a very similar result to the year before by dropping their semifinal opponent easily then allowing the team they defeated in the WCHA championship to score the first three goals This time it was the Wolverines who would take the title and send the Pioneers home disappointed 13 The next season Denver finished with a record of 18 8 2 one of the best in the nation but because they only played 12 conference games and won only 4 matches they finished 6th in the WCHA and were left out of the conference playoffs The following season Denver increased their conference schedule to 20 games but because the WCHA added Minnesota Duluth as a member the conference tournament now included all 8 teams Denver was given a regional matchup against the dismal Colorado College Tigers and took the game easily to give them a shot against arch nemesis North Dakota for an entry to the NCAA tournament Despite being the lower seed the game was played in Denver s home stadium due in part to a terrible blizzard that dropped more than two feet around Grand Forks 14 The home game may have given Denver just enough of an advantage and the Pioneers edged UND 5 4 in overtime to return to the NCAA tournament Once there Denver faced Clarkson for the third time in the semifinal but the Golden Knights were able to avenge their earlier losses and send DU to its first consolation game Though they won the match the Pioneers and their fans were far from satisfied with the result The following season Denver rose to 2nd in the conference but because the WCHA tournament was still arranged for regional matchups the Pioneers had to play top seed North Dakota in the second round and the Fighting Sioux were able to redeem themselves with a win Late 60s Edit While many programs may have been happy with the results Denver achieved in 66 and 67 the Pioneers were decidedly nonplussed When the team began 1968 season slowly losing three out of their first five games they were taken to task and responded by winning every remaining game except for a stretch in late December when they played four Olympic squads Denver finished the season atop the WCHA and with the regional restrictions abolished they were able to take full advantage of their top seed and demolish their competition 27 7 in the three games In the NCAA tournament Denver faced Boston College for the first time 15 and swatted the Eagles away with a 4 1 victory despite sloppy play The final brought North Dakota and DU together for a rubber match and the two teams fought a tough defensive battle through two periods before the floodgates opened and Denver scored four times in the final frame while Gerry Powers earned the first shutout in a championship game 3 The next season was much the same after a slow start the Pioneers ran through most of their competition finishing second in the WCHA and taking down much weaker opponents in the conference tournament to return to the NCAA playoff For this 1969 championship they beat Harvard 9 2 in the opening match before facing Ken Dryden led Cornell The Pioneers did not have any problems scoring against the seemingly impregnable Big Red defense building leads three times while the final one stuck and Denver won its fifth NCAA national title 4 3 Dynasty s end Edit Despite losing many players from the dual national title teams due to graduations Denver did not lose much footing and finished second in the WCHA but lost to new entry Wisconsin in the conference tournament The next season Denver finished second for the third straight year and were able to win another league co championship and receive the top western seed The Pioneers had to settle for a third place NCAA finish after losing only their second semifinal game in nine opportunities The next season Denver won both conference titles for the fifth time in their history but were stunned by a 2 7 loss to Cornell in the semifinal the team s worst loss to a college team in over six years 3 As if their recent tournament collapses needed a concrete symbol the DU Arena roof failed in 1972 and forced the team to play most of their remaining home games at the Denver Coliseum 16 While the Pioneers were able to overcome that difficulty and win the WCHA yet again and finish as the NCAA runner up it was a battle off the ice that would eventually cost them dearly Throughout the 1960s the matter of recruiting Canadian major junior players was becoming an issue again and by the 1970s Minnesota coach John Mariucci was pushing the NCAA for change Mariucci did not like his teenage American players who grew up playing locally in Minnesota playing against older Canadian players that Denver recruited due to Denver s lack of local players to recruit Minnesota even refused to schedule the Pioneers for years in the 1960s which spurred the NCAA to support Minnesota s position In 1974 the NCAA asked all schools that rostered major junior Canadian players to declare these students ineligible and in recompense the current players would have their NCAA eligibility restored as a grandfathering ploy with all future major junior players remaining ineligible 16 While most universities acceded to the NCAA demand Denver did not The school refused to call its own players cheaters and ended up paying the price The university had its trip to the 1973 tournament vacated and with its pipeline from Canada cut the team began to falter in the standings 1974 75 saw Denver post its first losing season since Armstrong s first year and while the team was slowly recovering DU would not make another tournament appearance until long after his retirement in 1977 Decline Edit Armstrong s assistant Marshall Johnston took over and the team jumped up in the standings as the nation s top ranked team winning the WCHA regular season crown and breaking the school record for wins with 33 albeit in 40 games but DU was stopped in the WCHA second round by an upstart Colorado College team after finding out that Denver s appeal to be eligible for the 1978 NCAA tournament was denied by the NCAA After declining to 6th place the following season Denver ended 1979 80 dead last in the WCHA and missed the playoffs entirely The team rebounded the next season but afterwards Johnston returned to the NHL and the program was given to a third straight former pro Ralph Backstrom Backstrom s entry coincided with four WCHA members bolting for the CCHA leaving the conference with only 6 schools The co championship format was abolished and though Denver provided some glimpse of hope in Backstrom s first season the team slipped towards the bottom of the division for three seasons By the end of the 1984 85 season Denver had lost eight consecutive playoff games and was in danger of becoming an afterthought in the WCHA The 1985 86 team provided a surprising start the following campaign winning seven of their first eight game en route to the WCHA regular season and playoff championships over Michigan Tech Minnesota Duluth and Minnesota followed by a home NCAA 7 6 total goal series win over Cornell to make it to the Frozen Four Denver played a school record 48 games that year and won 34 contests also a DU record despite losing in the NCAA semifinal 5 2 to Harvard in Providence The stark turnaround garnered Backstrom the Spencer Penrose Award The highlights were short lived however and over the succeeding four years Denver returned to being a middling team in the WCHA Backstrom left in 1990 and was replaced by Frank Serratore While he would later achieve a great deal of success with Air Force Serratore s time in Denver was the darkest period in the history of the program In his first season the Pioneers won only 6 games losing a school record 30 of 38 matches The following season brought only marginal improvements but when the team rose above 500 in 1992 93 it looked like Serratore s job may be saved but after slipping back to 9th in the conference the year after he was out as coach and replaced by Wisconsin alumnus George Gwozdecky Gwozdecky era Edit When Denver hired Gwozdecky they hoped they were getting the same coach that had won back to back CCHA Coach of the Year awards at Miami Ohio In his first season in 1995 he delivered by getting the Pioneers to win 10 more games than they had the year before and jump from 9th in the conference to a tie for second place and an NCAA win over New Hampshire After a disappointing opening round loss in the WCHA playoffs the following year Denver returned to the NCAA tournament in 1997 and beat a very strong Vermont squad in the first round In 1999 the Pioneers were able to defeat a dominant North Dakota to take their first conference championship in thirteen years but lost their first NCAA tournament game to Michigan in the first meeting between the two since the Wolverines left the WCHA 17 Denver stumbled over the next two years before winning their first WCHA regular season title under Gwozdecky as well as a second conference championship Unfortunately the Pioneers found themselves pitted against Michigan in the first game and lost to the Maize and Blue yet again The Pioneers lost in the first round of the WCHA tournament each of the next two years but their record in 2004 was good enough to snag the 2 seed despite the loss 18 Back to back titles Edit DU was able to defeat Gwozdecky s previous team Miami in a close game before advancing to face North Dakota in the West Regional Final The top team in the nation held Denver off the scoresheet and out shot the Pioneers 23 13 in the opening two periods but the Fighting Sioux could not get the puck past Adam Berkhoel The two teams remained scoreless until just 2 29 remained in regulation when Luke Fulghum deflected a puck into the net and sent the Pioneers into the Frozen Four for the first time in 18 years 19 Denver met Minnesota Duluth in the semifinal and looked like were outmatched when the Bulldogs scored twice in the first five minutes of the game Even when Denver cut the lead in half a second power play goal by 2004 Hobey Baker winner Junior Lessard followed soon thereafter The Pioneers however were not deterred and came out firing in the third tying the score in less than four minutes and adding another two goals before the period was half over Duluth was so stunned by the comeback that they could only muster 6 shots in the period as Denver took the game to make their first national championship since their vacated appearance in 1973 20 With Maine as the only obstacle left in their path Denver put up in front of Adam Berkhoel and allowed only 24 shots to reach their goalie including none during a 6 on 3 power play advantage in the last minute and a half of the game Berkhoel earned the shutout making the lone goal from Gabe Gauthier in the first as the winner 21 After winning their first title in 35 years Denver raised their game tying Colorado College for the WCHA crown and producing the 2 offense in the country In the WCHA tournament however it was their defense that led the way With rookie goaltender Peter Mannino standing on his head for two shutouts the Pioneers allowed only two goals in four games winning three one goal games to take the conference championship DU earned the 2 overall seed and had to survive a scare from Bemidji State in their first game After allowing 3 to the much weaker Beavers Glenn Fisher was benched in favor of Mannino for the remaining three games and the Pioneers cruised to the championship game with 4 2 and 6 2 wins In the Final Denver met North Dakota for the fourth time matching the record for championship meetings with Michigan and Colorado College The two teams exchanged goals in the first but future NHLer Paul Stastny put the Pioneers into the lead with a power play marker just after the midpoint With their season on the line North Dakota began an onslaught on the DU net firing 23 shots in the third but Mannino was equal to the take and kept everything out The Pioneers scored twice in the third to put the game away and take their seventh national championship 22 Playoff disappointments Edit The next season brought Denver its first Hobey Baker winner in Matt Carle but the team floundered in the first round of the WCHA tournament and this time their record was not good enough to get them into the championship After another first round exit the following year Denver righted the ship and won the WCHA tournament in 2008 In the first round they found themselves facing conference rival Wisconsin only the second time in NCAA history that two teams from the same conference met in the opening round Despite being favored in the game the Pioneers were beaten 2 6 and sent home disappointed The Pioneers would return to the tournament each of the next five seasons but the results were much the same losing in the first round four times and thoroughly dismissed by North Dakota in the 2011 regionals Despite the regular season success the early playoff exits coupled with a contract structure dispute these results led Denver to fire their head coach in 2013 only 17 wins away from tying Murray Armstrong s program record 23 New coach new conference Edit A game between Denver and Omaha in 2017 Gwozdecky s firing coincided with the founding of the NCHC a power conference that was created due to Wisconsin and Minnesota leaving to restart the Big Ten hockey division Denver was accompanied by all of its traditional rivals and began its tenure under Jim Montgomery but finishing 6th in the 8 team conference Despite their lackluster start the Pioneers were provided with an opportunity by facing weaker than expected opposition in the final two games and were able to win the inaugural championship as they had done with the WCHA 54 years earlier The Pioneer s NCAA run was predictably short lived but the team seemed to have found new life under Montgomery s watch which they demonstrated by increasing their win total in each of the next three years In addition they won progressively more tournament games reaching the Frozen Four in 2016 before winning the National Championship in 2017 along with getting their second Hobey Baker Award this one going to Will Butcher After the team won its second NCHC tournament title in 2018 Montgomery left to join the Dallas Stars as head coach DU replaced Montgomery with his Denver assistant 28 year old David Carle Carle took Denver to the 2019 Frozen Four in his rookie season after first and second round NCAA wins over Ohio State and American International but the Pioneers fell in the Frozen Four semi finals to Massachusetts 4 3 in overtime in Buffalo New York 9th National Championship Edit In 2022 following wins against UMass Lowell and Minnesota Duluth David Carle and the Denver Pioneers entered the Frozen Four for the 18th time in school history In the semi finals Denver played the University of Michigan Carter Savoie scored in overtime to secure a 3 2 victory and advance the Pioneers to the National Championship game for their 12th time in program history In the National Championship game Denver failed to score until the third period against Minnesota State However Denver finally broke through adding 5 goals to clinch their 9th National Championship in program history 24 Season by season results EditMain article List of Denver Pioneers men s ice hockey seasons Source 25 Denver Colorado College rivalry Edit Game between the Denver Pioneers and Colorado College Tigers Magness Arena December 2016 Of all the rivals that the Denver Pioneer s hockey program play against the most intense rivalry is that from Colorado College Since Denver s hockey program started in 1949 the two schools have played at least four times a season In the 1993 94 season a gold pan trophy was added as a reward for the winning team thus the rivalry has been dubbed the Battle for the Gold Pan 26 Head coaches EditDavid Carle is the current head coach of Denver hockey hired in May 2018 As of the end of the 2022 23 season 17 Tenure Coach Years Record Pct 1949 1951 Vern Turner 2 15 24 1 3881951 1956 Neil Celley 6 81 43 6 6461956 1977 Murray Armstrong 21 460 215 31 6741977 1981 Marshall Johnston 4 89 63 7 5821981 1990 Ralph Backstrom 9 182 174 14 5111990 1994 Frank Serratore 4 49 92 9 3571994 2013 George Gwozdecky 19 443 267 64 6142013 2018 Jim Montgomery 5 125 57 26 6632018 Present David Carle 5 116 53 13 673Totals 9 coaches 74 seasons 1 560 1007 171 601Awards and honors EditHockey Hall of Fame Edit Source 27 Craig Patrick 2001 Glenn Anderson 2008 United States Hockey Hall of Fame Edit Source 28 Craig Patrick 1996 NCAA Edit Individual awards Edit Hobey Baker Award Matt Carle 2006 Will Butcher 2017 Spencer Penrose Award Murray Armstrong 1961 Ralph Backstrom 1986 George Gwozdecky 2005 Jim Montgomery 2017 Tim Taylor Award Joey LaLeggia 2012 Mike Richter Award Tanner Jaillet 2017 NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Scoring Champion Ed Beers 1982 Bobby Brink 2022 Tournament Most Outstanding Player Murray Massier 1958 Bill Masterton 1961 Gerry Powers 1968 Keith Magnuson 1969 Adam Berkhoel 2004 Peter Mannino 2005 Jarid Lukosevicius 2017 Michael Benning 2022 All Americans Edit AHCA First Team All Americans 1951 52 Eddie Miller F 1957 58 Ed Zemrau F 1959 60 Marty Howe D George Konik F Bill Masterton F 1960 61 George Kirkwood D Marty Howe D Grant Munro D Jerry Walker F Bill Masterton F 1962 63 Bill Staub F 1964 65 Wayne Smith D 1965 66 Wayne Smith D 1966 67 Jim Wiste F 1967 68 Keith Magnuson D Jim Wiste F 1968 69 Keith Magnuson D George Morrison F 1969 70 George Morrison F 1970 71 Mike Christie D Vic Venasky F 1971 72 Tom Peluso F 1972 73 Ron Grahame G Rob Palmer F 1977 78 Ernie Glanville G Doug Berry F 1986 87 Dallas Gaume F 2003 04 Ryan Caldwell D 2004 05 Matt Carle D 2005 06 Matt Carle D 2009 10 Marc Cheverie G Patrick Wiercioch D Rhett Rakhshani F 2013 14 Sam Brittain G 2014 15 Joey LaLeggia D 2016 17 Will Butcher D Henrik Borgstrom F 2017 18 Henrik Borgstrom F Troy Terry F 2019 20 Ian Mitchell F 2021 22 Bobby Brink F AHCA Second Team All Americans 1985 86 Chris Olson G Jim Smith F Dwight Mathiasen F 1988 89 Daryn McBride F 1989 90 Dave Shields F 1998 99 Paul Comrie F 2001 02 Wade Dubielewicz G 2004 05 Brett Skinner D 2005 06 Paul Stastny F 2007 08 Chris Butler D 2011 12 Jason Zucker F 2012 13 Juho Olkinuora G 2013 14 Joey LaLeggia D 2014 15 Trevor Moore F 2015 16 Will Butcher D 2016 17 Tanner Jaillet G 2017 18 Tanner Jaillet G 2022 23 Michael Benning D Carter Mazur F Massimo Rizzo F MCHL WIHL WCHA Edit Individual awards Edit Most Valuable Player Player of the Year Jerry Walker F 1961 Keith Magnuson D 1968 Ron Grahame G 1973 Dallas Gaume C 1986 Matt Carle D 2006 Marc Cheverie G 2010 Defensive Player of the Year Aaron MacKenzie 2003 Ryan Caldwell 2004 Matt Carle 2006 Goaltender of the Year George Kirkwood 1960 1961 Buddy Blom 1964 Gerry Powers 1968 Ron Grahame 1973 Ernie Glanville 1978 Wade Dubielewicz 2001 2002 Marc Cheverie 2010 Student Athlete of the Year Dave Shields C 1990 Brian Konowalchuk C 1994 Petri Gunther D 1997 Connor James C 2004 Ted O Leary F 2006 J P Testwuide D 2009 Sophomore Freshman Rookie of the Year George Kirkwood G 1960 Jack Wilson D 1964 Keith Magnuson D 1967 George Morrison LW 1969 Craig Redmond D 1982 Dave Shields C 1987 Rick Berens F 1988 Paul Stastny C 2005 Jason Zucker LW 2011 Joey LaLeggia D 2012 Coach of the Year Murray Armstrong 1961 1968 Marshall Johnston 1978 Ralph Backstrom 1986 George Gwozdecky 1995 2002 2005 2010 Most Valuable Player in Tournament Stephen Wagner 1999 Wade Dubielewicz 2002 All Conference Edit First Team All MCHL WIHL WCHA 1951 52 Don Burgess D Eddie Miller D 1952 53 Eddie Miller D 1957 58 Ed Zemrau D 1959 60 George Kirkwood G Marty Howe D Bill Masterton F 1960 61 George Kirkwood G Marty Howe D George Konik D Bill Masterton F Jerry Walker F 1961 62 Jack Wilson D 1962 63 Bill Staub F 1963 64 Bill Staub F 1964 65 Wayne Smith D 1965 66 Wayne Smith D 1966 67 Keith Magnuson D Jim Wiste F 1967 68 Keith Magnuson D Jim Wiste F 1968 69 Keith Magnuson D George Morrison F 1969 70 George Morrison F 1970 71 Mike Christie D 1971 72 Tom Peluso F 1972 73 Ron Grahame G Bruce Affleck D Rob Palmer F Peter McNab F 1977 78 Ernie Glanville G Doug Berry F 1981 82 Ed Beers F 1983 84 Jim Leavins D 1985 86 Dallas Gaume F 1988 89 Daryn McBride F 1989 90 Dave Shields F 1998 99 Paul Comrie F 2001 02 Wade Dubielewicz G 2002 03 Aaron MacKenzie D 2004 05 Matt Carle D Brett Skinner D 2005 06 Matt Carle D Paul Stastny F 2009 10 Marc Cheverie G Patrick Wiercioch D Rhett Rakhshani F 2011 12 Joey LaLeggia D Second Team All MCHL WIHL WCHA 1951 52 Bill Abbott F 1952 53 Bill Abbott F 1953 54 Bill Abbott D Jack Smith F 1954 55 Bill Abbott D Jack Smith F 1955 56 Ed Zemrau D 1957 58 Murray Massier F 1959 60 George Konik D John MacMillan F 1961 62 Trent Beatty F 1962 63 Jack Wilson D Dominic Fragomeni F 1963 64 Buddy Blom G Wayne Smith D Jim Kenning D 1967 68 Gerry Powers G Cliff Koroll F 1968 69 Gerry Powers G Tom Miller F 1969 70 Tom Gilmore F 1970 71 Vic Venasky F 1973 74 Bruce Affleck D 1976 77 Greg Woods D 1977 78 Greg Woods D Lex Hudson D Perry Schnarr F 1980 81 Ken Berry F 1985 86 Tom Allen G Dwight Mathiasen F 1987 88 Daryn McBride F 1989 90 Eric Murano F 1994 95 Sinuhe Wallinheimo G 1995 96 Antti Laaksonen F 2000 01 Wade Dubielewicz G 2002 03 Wade Dubielewicz G 2003 04 Ryan Caldwell D 2004 05 Gabe Gauthier F 2007 08 Chris Butler D 2008 09 Marc Cheverie G Patrick Wiercioch D 2009 10 Tyler Ruegsegger F 2010 11 Matt Donovan D Jason Zucker F Drew Shore F 2011 12 Jason Zucker F Drew Shore F 2012 13 Juho Olkinuora G Joey LaLeggia D Third Team All WCHA 1996 97 Jim Mullin G 1997 98 Paul Comrie F 1998 99 James Patterson F 2001 02 Adam Berkhoel G Aaron MacKenzie D Connor James F 2002 03 Kevin Doell F 2003 04 Adam Berkhoel G Gabe Gauthier F 2005 06 Ryan Dingle F 2006 07 Ryan Dingle F 2007 08 Peter Mannino G Tyler Bozak F 2008 09 Anthony Maiani F Rhett Rakhshani F 2009 10 Joe Colborne F WCHA All Rookie Team 1997 98 Mark Rycroft F 2000 01 Ryan Caldwell D 2003 04 Matt Carle D 2004 05 Paul Stastny F 2005 06 Chris Butler D 2007 08 Tyler Bozak F 2008 09 Patrick Wiercioch D Joe Colborne F 2009 10 Matt Donovan D 2010 11 Sam Brittain G David Makowski D Jason Zucker F 2011 12 Juho Olkinuora G Joey LaLeggia D 2012 13 Nolan Zajac D NCHC Edit Individual awards Edit Player of the Year Joey LaLeggia 2015 Will Butcher 2017 Henrik Borgstrom 2018 Bobby Brink 2022 Rookie of the Year Danton Heinen 2015 Henrik Borgstrom 2017 Carter Mazur 2022 Goaltender of the Year Sam Brittain 2014 Tanner Jaillet 2017 2018 Magnus Chrona 2023 Forward of the Year Trevor Moore 2015 Danton Heinen 2016 Henrik Borgstrom 2018 Bobby Brink 2022 Defenseman Defensive Defenseman of the Year Joey LaLeggia 2014 2015 Justin Lee 2023 Offensive Defenseman of the Year Joey LaLeggia 2014 2015 Will Butcher 2017 Michael Benning 2023 Scholar Athlete of the Year Gabe Levin 2016 Tournament MVP Daniel Doremus 2014 Tanner Jaillet 2018 All Conference Edit First Team All NCHC 2013 14 Sam Brittain G Joey LaLeggia D 2014 15 Joey LaLeggia D Trevor Moore F 2015 16 Will Butcher D Danton Heinen F 2016 17 Tanner Jaillet G Will Butcher D 2017 18 Tanner Jaillet G Henrik Borgstrom F 2019 20 Ian Mitchell D 2021 22 Bobby Brink F 2022 23 Magnus Chrona G Michael Benning D Massimo Rizzo F Second Team All NCHC 2014 15 Danton Heinen F 2016 17 Henrik Borgstrom F Dylan Gambrell F 2017 18 Troy Terry F Dylan Gambrell F 2019 20 Emilio Pettersen F 2021 22 Michael Benning D Carter Savoie F 2022 23 Carter Mazur F NCHC All Rookie Team 2013 14 Trevor Moore F 2014 15 Danton Heinen F 2015 16 Dylan Gambrell F 2016 17 Michael Davies D Henrik Borgstrom F 2017 18 Ian Mitchell D 2019 20 Magnus Chrona G Bobby Brink F 2021 22 Sean Behrens D Shai Buium D Carter Mazur F Massimo Rizzo FOlympians EditThis is a list of Denver hockey alumni who were a part of an Olympic team 29 Name Position Denver Tenure Team Year FinishGlenn Anderson Right Wing 1978 1979 Canada 1980 6thKen Berry Right Wing 1978 1979 1980 1981 Canada 1980 1988 6th 4thKevin Dineen Right Wing 1981 1983 Canada 1984 2014 4th GoldMarshall Johnston Defenseman 1960 1963 Canada 1964 1968 4th BronzeAntti Laaksonen Forward 1993 1997 Finland 2006 SilverDerek Mayer Defenseman 1985 1988 Canada 1994 SilverRonald Naslund Forward 1962 1965 USA 1972 SilverCraig Patrick Right Wing 1966 1970 USA 1980 2002 Gold SilverCraig Redmond Defenseman 1982 1983 Canada 1984 4thNick Shore Center 2010 2013 USA 2022 5thPaul Stastny Center 2004 2006 USA 2010 2014 Silver 4thTroy Terry Right Wing 2015 2018 USA 2018 7thDavid Tomassoni Forward 1972 1975 ITA 1984 9th Craig Patrick was an assistant coach for the 1980 team and the general manager for the 2002 team Kevin Dineen was head coach of the Gold Medal Winning Canadian women s team at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi Russia Statistical leaders EditSource 17 Career points leaders Edit Player Years GP G A Pts PIMDallas Gaume 1982 1986 145 78 188 266Dwight Mathiasen 1983 1986 123 90 108 198John McMillan 1983 1987 152 69 127 196Bill Masterton 1958 1961 89 66 130 196Rick Berens 1987 1991 159 94 86 180Doug Berry 1975 1978 119 65 115 180Dave Shields 1986 1990 146 71 108 179Ed Hayes 1969 1973 140 74 103 177Greg Woods 1975 1979 161 51 125 176Peter McNab 1970 1973 105 78 92 170Career 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 GAADevin Cooley 2017 2020 32 1 708 15 9 4 55 6 927 1 93Tanner Jaillet 2014 2018 135 7 560 82 27 16 257 9 925 1 94Evan Cowley 2013 2017 52 2 469 23 15 3 79 6 933 2 04Wade Dubielewicz 1999 2003 85 4 629 44 26 6 170 8 923 2 20George Kirkwood 1959 1961 66 57 5 4 6 904 2 20Magnus Chrona 2019 2023 114 6 686 73 34 5 245 13 914 2 20Statistics current through the end of the 2022 23 season Denver Athletic Hall of Fame EditThe following is a list of people associated with the Denver men s ice hockey program who were elected into the Denver Athletic Hall of Fame induction date in parenthesis 30 Murray Armstrong 1996 Keith Magnuson 1996 Bill Masterton 1996 Ron Grahame 1997 George Konik 1997 Jerry Walker 1999 Dallas Gaume 2000 Eddie Miller 2000 Jim Wiste 2000 1960 Championship Team 2000 Marty Howe 2001 Craig Patrick 2001 Marshall Johnston 2002 Cliff Koroll 2003 1961 Championship Team 2004 Gerry Powers 2005 George Kirkwood 2006 1968 Championship Team 2006 1958 Championship Team 2008 1969 Championship Team 2010 Ed Zemrau 2012 George Morrison 2012 John MacMillan 2014 2004 Championship Team 2014 Current roster EditAs of August 26 2022 31 No S P C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights2 Sean Behrens Sophomore D 5 9 1 75 m 178 lb 81 kg 2003 03 31 Barrington Illinois NTDP USHL COL 61st overall 20214 Jack Devine Sophomore F 5 11 1 8 m 175 lb 79 kg 2003 10 02 Glencoe Illinois NTDP USHL FLA 221st overall 20226 McKade Webster Junior F 5 10 1 78 m 175 lb 79 kg 2000 07 28 St Louis Missouri Green Bay USHL TBL 213th overall 20197 Aidan Thompson Freshman F 5 11 1 8 m 170 lb 77 kg 2002 02 18 Fort Collins Colorado Lincoln USHL CHI 90th overall 20229 Owen Ozar Sophomore F 5 9 1 75 m 156 lb 71 kg 2000 04 05 Prince Albert Saskatchewan Waterloo USHL 11 Lucas Olvestad Freshman D 6 1 1 85 m 190 lb 86 kg 2002 03 19 Stockholm Sweden Dubuque USHL 13 Massimo Rizzo Sophomore F 5 11 1 8 m 178 lb 81 kg 2001 06 13 Burnaby British Columbia Coquitlam BCHL CAR 216th overall 201914 Rieger Lorenz Freshman F 6 2 1 88 m 192 lb 87 kg 2004 03 30 Calgary Alberta Okotoks AJHL MIN 56th overall 202215 Carter King Junior F 5 10 1 78 m 185 lb 84 kg 2001 08 30 Calgary Alberta Surrey BCHL 16 Tristan Broz Sophomore F 6 0 1 83 m 183 lb 83 kg 2002 10 10 Bloomington Minnesota Minnesota Big Ten PIT 58th overall 202117 Casey Dornbach Graduate F 6 0 1 83 m 183 lb 83 kg 1997 07 07 Edina Minnesota Harvard ECAC 18 Jared Wright Freshman F 6 2 1 88 m 176 lb 80 kg 2002 11 22 Burnsville Minnesota Omaha USHL LAK 169th overall 202219 Tyler Haskins Freshman F 6 1 1 85 m 170 lb 77 kg 2003 07 07 Rochester Minnesota Madison USHL 20 Michael Benning Junior D 5 9 1 75 m 178 lb 81 kg 2002 01 05 St Albert Alberta Sherwood Park AJHL FLA 95th overall 202021 Kent Anderson Freshman D 6 3 1 91 m 205 lb 93 kg 2003 11 13 Calgary Alberta Green Bay USHL 22 Connor Caponi Junior F 5 9 1 75 m 186 lb 84 kg 2000 03 20 Milwaukee Wisconsin Waterloo USHL 23 Lane Krenzen Senior D 5 10 1 78 m 188 lb 85 kg 1998 02 21 Twig Minnesota Austin NAHL 26 Shai Buium Sophomore D 6 3 1 91 m 220 lb 100 kg 2003 03 26 San Diego California Sioux City USHL DET 36th overall 202127 Kyle Mayhew Graduate D 5 7 1 7 m 158 lb 72 kg 1997 12 25 Anaheim Hills California Fairbanks NAHL 28 Brett Edwards Senior F 5 11 1 8 m 192 lb 87 kg 1998 09 10 Grande Prairie Alberta Drumheller AJHL 29 Tristan Lemyre Freshman F 5 9 1 75 m 170 lb 77 kg 2001 01 15 Mirabel Quebec Dubuque USHL 30 Magnus Chrona Senior G 6 5 1 96 m 218 lb 99 kg 2000 08 28 Stockholm Sweden Skelleftea J20 J20 SuperElit SJS 152nd overall 201831 Jack Caruso Junior G 5 9 1 75 m 187 lb 85 kg 1999 06 07 St Louis Missouri Fairbanks NAHL 32 Justin Lee A Senior D 6 0 1 83 m 185 lb 84 kg 2000 03 14 Waskada Manitoba Fargo USHL 34 Carter Mazur Sophomore F 6 0 1 83 m 173 lb 78 kg 2002 03 28 Jackson Michigan Tri City USHL DET 70th overall 202135 Matt Davis Sophomore G 6 0 1 83 m 179 lb 81 kg 2001 06 16 Calgary Alberta Green Bay USHL Pioneers in the NHL EditAs of July 1 2022 NHL All Star team NHL All Star 32 NHL All Star 32 and NHL All Star team Hall of FamersPlayer Position Team s Years Games Stanley CupsBruce Affleck Defenseman STL VAN NYI 1974 1984 280 1 Glenn Anderson Right Wing EDM TOR NYR STL 1980 1996 1 129 6Erik Andersson Left Wing CGY 1997 1998 12 0Ed Beers Left Wing CGY STL 1981 1986 250 0Beau Bennett Right Wing PIT NJD STL 2012 2018 200 1Adam Berkhoel Goaltender ATL 2005 2006 9 0Doug Berry Center COR 1979 1981 121 0Ken Berry Left Wing EDM VAN 1981 1989 55 0Henrik Borgstrom Center FLA CHI 2017 present 110 0Tyler Bozak Center TOR STL 2009 2022 814 1Lyle Bradley Center CAL CLE 1973 1977 6 0Rick Bragnalo Center WAS 1975 1979 145 0Bobby Brink Right Wing PHI 2021 Present 10 0Mike Busniuk Defenseman PHI 1979 1981 143 0Will Butcher Defenseman NJD BUF 2017 2022 275 0Chris Butler Defenseman BUF CGY STL 2008 2019 407 0 amp Ryan Caldwell Defenseman NYI PHO 2005 2008 4 0Matt Carle Defenseman SJS TBL PHI NSH 2005 2017 730 0Mike Christie Defenseman CAL CLE COR VAN 1974 1981 412 0Joe Colborne Center TOR CGY COL 2010 2017 295 0Paul Comrie Center EDM 1999 2000 15 0Ed Cristofoli Right Wing MTL 1989 1990 9 0Kevin Dineen Right Wing HFD PHI CAR OTT CBJ 1984 2003 1 188 1 Kevin Doell Center ATL 2007 2008 8 0Matt Donovan Defenseman NYI NSH 2011 2019 69 0Wade Dubielewicz Goaltender NYI CBJ MIN 2003 2010 43 0Dylan Gambrell Center SJS OTT 2017 Present 173 0Dallas Gaume Center HFD 1988 1989 4 0Gabe Gauthier Left Wing LAK 2006 2008 8 0Ron Grahame Goaltender BOS LAK QUE 1977 1981 114 0Danton Heinen Center BOS ANA PIT 2016 Present 348 0Blake Hillman Defenseman CHI 2017 2018 4 0Lex Hudson Defenseman PIT 1978 1979 2 0Connor James Center LAK PIT 2005 2009 16 0Marshall Johnston Defenseman MNS CAL 1967 1974 251 1 Chris Kenady Right Wing STL NYR 1997 2000 7 0George Konik Defenseman PIT 1967 1968 52 0Cliff Koroll Right Wing CHI 1969 1980 814 0Antti Laaksonen Left Wing BOS MIN COL 1998 2007 483 0Mike Lampman Left Wing STL VAN WAS 1972 1977 96 0 Player Position Team s Years Games Stanley CupsJim Leavins Defenseman DET NYR 1985 1987 41 0Pete LoPresti Goaltender MNS EDM 1974 1981 175 0Aaron MacKenzie Defenseman COL 2008 2009 5 0John MacMillan Right Wing TOR DET 1960 1965 104 2Keith Magnuson Defenseman CHI 1969 1980 589 0Peter Mannino Goaltender NYI ATL WPG 2008 2012 6 0Tom Martin Left Wing WIN HFD MNS 1984 1990 92 0Bill Masterton Center MNS 1967 1968 38 0Dwight Mathiasen Right Wing PIT 1985 1988 33 0Derek Mayer Defenseman OTT 1993 1994 17 0Scott Mayfield Defenseman NYI 2013 Present 346 0Peter McNab Center BUF BOS VAN NJD 1973 1987 954 0Dakota Mermis Defenseman ARI NJD MIN 2017 Present 25 0Paul Messier Center COR 1978 1979 9 0Tom Miller Center DET NYI 1970 1975 118 0Ian Mitchell Center CHI 2020 Present 47 0Trevor Moore Forward TOR LAK 2018 Present 204 0Gavin Morgan Center DAL 2003 2004 6 0George Morrison Left Wing STL 1970 1972 115 0Logan O Connor Forward COL 2018 Present 124 1Rob Palmer Forward CHI 1973 1976 16 0Craig Patrick Center CAL STL KCS WAS 1971 1979 401 2 Matt Pettinger Left Wing WAS VAN TBL 2000 2010 422 0Lynn Powis Center CHI KCS 1973 1975 130 0Rich Preston Center CHI NJD 1979 1987 580 0Rhett Rakhshani Right Wing NYI 2010 2012 7 0Craig Redmond Defenseman LAK EDM 1984 1989 191 0Mark Rycroft Right Wing STL COL 2001 2007 226 0Jim Shires Left Wing DET STL PIT 1970 1973 56 0Drew Shore Center FLA CGY VAN CAR 2012 2021 98 0Nick Shore Center LAK OTT CGY TOR WPG 2014 2020 299 0Brett Skinner Defenseman NYI 2008 2009 11 0Wayne Smith Defenseman CHI 1966 1967 2 0Paul Stastny Center COL STL WPG VGK 2006 Present 1 072 0Troy Terry Right Wing ANA 2017 Present 218 0Brock Trotter Center MTL 2009 2010 2 0Vic Venasky Center LAK 1972 1979 430 0Patrick Wiercioch Defenseman OTT COL 2010 2017 268 0Jim Wiste Center CHI VAN 1968 1971 52 0Jason Zucker Left Wing MIN PIT 2011 Present 561 0 Patrick won two Stanley Cups as the general manager for the Pittsburgh Penguins Dineen won his Stanley Cup as an assistant coach for the Chicago Blackhawks Johnston won his Stanley Cup as an executive for the Carolina Hurricanes Affleck won his Stanley Cup as an executive for the St Louis Blues amp Butler won his Stanley Cup as player for the St Louis Blues He did not play enough NHL games to merit engraving his name on trophy that year but he did get to skate with the Cup in uniform after the final game He then retired from hockey Retired NHL players stats Edit Note This is a partial list of NHL players who attended DU 75 DU players have played in the NHL Forwards DefensemenName Seasons GP G A P PIMBruce Affleck 7 280 14 66 80 86Glenn Anderson 16 1 129 498 601 1 099 1 120Erik Andersson 1 12 2 1 3 134Ed Beers 5 250 94 116 210 256Matt Carle 12 704 44 231 275 245Mike Christie 7 412 15 101 116 550Kevin Dineen 19 1 188 355 405 760 2 229Marshall Johnston 7 251 14 52 66 58Cliff Koroll 11 814 208 254 462 376Antti Laaksonen 8 483 81 87 168 152Keith Magnuson 11 589 14 125 139 1 442Peter McNab 14 954 363 450 813 179Bill Masterton1 1 38 4 8 12 4Craig Patrick 9 401 72 91 163 61Rich Preston 8 580 127 164 291 348Craig Redmond 5 191 16 68 84 134Mark Rycroft 4 226 21 25 46 113Vic Venasky 7 430 61 101 162 66 Active players stats Edit Active as of the end of the 2017 18 season 33 Forwards DefensemenName Seasons GP G A P PIMPaul Stastny 12 824 220 426 646 19 384Tyler Bozak 9 594 136 229 365 78 182Joe Colborne 7 295 42 72 114 38 144Chris Butler 7 394 13 71 84 30 187Jason Zucker 7 330 97 75 172 33 124Patrick Wiercioch 6 268 16 58 74 5 138Scott Mayfield 5 83 5 17 22 14 98Henrik Borgstrom 1 4 1 0 1 1 0Troy Terry 1 2 0 0 0 0 0Beau Bennett 6 200 24 40 64 2 52Blake Hillman 1 4 1 0 1 1 0Will Butcher 1 81 5 39 44 1 8Nick Shore 4 236 15 38 53 15 78Danton Heinen 2 85 16 31 47 7 18Dylan Gambrell 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 Notes 1 Masterton suffered severe head trauma on January 13 1968 during an NHL game when he fell to the ice and hit his head He died two days later and became the first player to die as a direct result of an injury during an NHL game The Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy is awarded annually to the NHL player who best personifies perseverance sportsmanship and dedication to the game of ice hockey WHA Edit Several players also were members of WHA teams Player Position Team s Years Avco CupsDoug Berry Center EDM 1978 1979 0Tom Gilmore Right wing LAS EDM 1972 1975 0Ron Grahame Goaltender HOU 1973 1977 1George Konik Defenseman MFS 1972 1973 0Brian Morenz Left wing NYD NYG JK SDM 1972 1976 0George Morrison Left wing MFS CAC 1972 1977 0Craig Patrick Center MFS 1976 1977 0Lynn Powis Center CAC IND WIN 1975 1978 1Rich Preston Right wing HOU WIN 1974 1979 2Cal Sandbeck Defenseman EDM 1977 1979 0Jim Wiste Center CLC IND 1972 1976 0 34 Arenas Edit University of Denver Arena 1948 1997 Edit University of Denver Arena DU Arena was a 5 237 seat multi purpose arena in Denver In addition to serving as the Pioneers home rink it hosted several Frozen Fours It was razed in 1997 to make room for the 75 million Magness Arena part of the Ritchie Center for Sports and Wellness which opened in 1999 Originally a Naval Drill Hall built during World War II in Farragut Idaho the DU Arena was donated to the University after the war and reassembled on the Denver campus in 1948 49 to house the University s then new ice hockey program The arena was refurbished in 1972 73 when the roof needed repairs and 14 seven ton steel trusses were added to shore up the roof Additional patchwork renovations were added in the 1990s prior to razing in 1997 The best known features of the arena were the steep bleacher balcony at the south end and the 1970s rainbow painted on the north end wall Famous hockey games held there include the NCAA ice hockey finals in 1961 1964 and 1976 Magness Arena 1999 present Edit Magness Arena is a 7 200 seat multi purpose collegiate sports arena in Denver Colorado It was built from 1997 to 1999 as part of the Daniel L Ritchie Center for Sports amp Wellness an 84 million 400 000 square foot 37 000 m2 sports complex at the University of Denver It is home to the University of Denver Pioneers ice hockey and basketball teams The Ritchie Center replaced the former DU Arena and DU Fieldhouse which were razed in 1997 to make way for the Ritchie Center The basketball team also plays smaller games at Hamilton Gymnasium located in the Ritchie Center The arena is named after cable television pioneer Bob Magness who donated 10 million towards construction costs Other Colorado Arenas Edit When the DU Arena roof was being fixed between 1972 and 1973 the Pioneers played home games at the Denver Coliseum When Magness Arena was under construction from 1997 to 1999 Denver played its home games at four different arenas around the state Denver Coliseum McNichols Arena Colorado Springs World Arena and at the Air Force Academy s Cadet Ice Arena DU has also played a 2012 home exhibition game at Denver s Pepsi Center against the University of British Columbia Denver s all time record hockey crowd was the 2016 regular season outdoor NCHC game against Colorado College called The Battle on Blake before over 35 000 fans at Denver s Coors Field baseball stadium the most fans to ever see a home DU sporting event in Denver DU s indoor record home crowd was the 1995 Denver Cup final at McNichols Arena where Denver defeated Colorado College before over 16 000 fans Magness Arena looking northwest Magness arena looking north northeast The Ritchie Center is home to many DU Pioneers athletics programsReferences Edit Events amp Rentals University of Denver Retrieved January 4 2023 Colors University of Denver Retrieved October 28 2022 a b c d Denver Pioneers men s Hockey 2004 05 Media Guide Denver Pioneers Retrieved November 2 2018 Univ of Michigan 1950 51 roster and statistics EliteProspects Retrieved October 24 2018 History of the WCHA College Hockey Historical Archive Retrieved January 4 2017 The 10 Greatest College Hockey Teams of All Time Bleacher Report Retrieved November 3 2018 Denver Pioneers 2007 08 Hockey Yearbook PDF Denver Pioneers Retrieved January 3 2017 NCAA Frozen Four Records PDF NCAA org Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2012 Retrieved June 19 2013 All WCHA Teams College Hockey Historical Archives Retrieved April 13 2014 Men s Ice Hockey Award Winners PDF NCAA org Retrieved June 11 2013 Alumni report for U of Denver Hockey DB Retrieved November 3 2018 North Dakota 2015 16 Hockey Yearbook PDF North Dakota Archived from the original PDF on September 18 2016 Retrieved January 1 2017 Michigan 2009 10 Hockey Yearbook PDF Michigan Wolverines Retrieved December 30 2016 50th Anniversary Reliving the Historical March 2 4 1966 Blizzard NOAA Retrieved November 2 2018 Tourney Time First Round Preview vs Denver Boston College Eagles Retrieved November 4 2018 a b Denver Pioneers 55 Years of Overcoming Obstacles USCHO com April 20 2004 Retrieved November 4 2018 a b c Denver hockey 2018 19 Media Guide PDF Denver Pioneers Retrieved November 4 2018 Final Bracketology 2003 2004 USCHO com March 21 2004 Retrieved November 5 2018 Berkhoel Bull Fulghum Send Denver To Boston USCHO com March 27 2004 Retrieved November 5 2018 Thursday April 8 2004 Denver DEN vs Minnesota Duluth MND College Hockey Stats Retrieved November 5 2018 Berkhoel Pioneers Whitewash Black Bears For NCAA Title USCHO com April 10 2004 Retrieved November 5 2018 The Road Less Traveled Pioneers Repeat as NCAA Champion USCHO com April 9 2005 Retrieved November 5 2018 George Gwozdecky fired as Denver Pioneers hockey coach after 19 years Denver Post April 1 2013 Retrieved November 5 2018 2022 Division I Men s Ice Hockey Official Bracket NCAA com www ncaa com Retrieved 11 March 2023 Denver Hockey Media Guide 2020 21 PDF Denver Pioneers Retrieved March 13 2021 David Kensa College Hockey s Top 10 Rivalries College Hockey News February 8 2006 Legends of Hockey Hockey Hall of Fame Retrieved October 7 2018 United States Hockey Hall of Fame Hockey Central co uk Retrieved April 21 2010 Alumni report for U of Denver Hockey DB Retrieved November 5 2018 DENVER ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME Denver Pioneers Retrieved November 7 2018 2019 20 Men s Ice Hockey Roster Denver University Retrieved July 3 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 2017 2018 Alums In The NHL collegehockeyinc com Alumni report for U of Denver Internet Hockey Database Retrieved May 11 2022 External links Edit Denver Pioneers men s ice hockey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Denver Pioneers men 27s ice hockey amp oldid 1152835133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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