Английская Википедия:Atlantic Hockey tournament

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Infobox NCAA conference tournament The AHA tournament is the conference tournament for the Atlantic Hockey Association. The winner of the tournament receives an automatic berth into the NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament.

The tournament was first held in 2004 after the cessation of the MAAC men's ice hockey tournament, the first year of conference play. The final four games were held at Tate Rink in West Point, New York in 2004. The tournament championship moved to the Northford Ice Pavilion in Northford, Connecticut for 2005 then to the Hart Center in Worcester, Massachusetts for 2006. Starting with the 2007 tournament, the final four was moved to a neutral site, the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester, New York, the home of the AHL's Rochester Americans.[1]

AHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament champions

Шаблон:Main [2]

Championships by season

Year Regular Season Champion Tournament Champion Notes
2004 Holy Cross Holy Cross Atlantic Hockey Association founded by American International, Army, Bentley, Canisius, Connecticut, Holy Cross, Mercyhurst, Quinnipiac and Sacred Heart
2005 Quinnipiac Mercyhurst Final AHA season for Quinnipiac, (leaving for the ECAC)
2006 Holy Cross Holy Cross
2007 RIT Air Force Air Force and RIT join the AHA
2008 Army Air Force
2009 RIT
Air Force
Air Force
2010 RIT RIT
2011 RIT Air Force Niagara and Robert Morris join the AHA
2012 Air Force Air Force
2013 Niagara Canisius
2014 Mercyhurst Robert Morris Final AHA season for Connecticut, (leaving for Hockey East)
2015 Robert Morris RIT
2016 Robert Morris RIT
2017 Canisius Air Force
2018 Mercyhurst Air Force
2019 American International American International
2020 American International None Tournament cancelled after quarterfinals due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 American International American International
2022 American International American International
2023 RIT Canisius

Formats

2004-2005

The AHA Tournament format begins as a single-game elimination three-round format, with an additional play-in game for the teams the finished eighth and ninth.

2006

After Quinnipiac leaves to join the ECAC, the 8-team conference drops the play-in game from the tournament.

2007

With Air Force and RIT joining the conference, but with RIT's ineligibility for the conference tournament, a play-in game was added for one year.

2008

The opening round becomes a best-of-three with 5 separate series played between all ten of the conference teams with the two remaining lowest-seeded teams playing in a final-five game to determine the last semifinalist. All series after the opening round are single-elimination.

2009-2010

The four lowest-seeded teams play two play-in games to determine the final two qualifiers for the quarterfinals.

2011

With Niagara and Robert Morris joining the conference, the tournament was expanded to have four rounds. The tournament competitors were split into two groups: 'East' and 'West', and each group was arranged to play so that the top two finishers for each group received a bye into the quarterfinals while the remaining four teams in each group played single-elimination games to advance to the quarterfinals. The quarterfinals remained a best-of-three format while the final four stayed as single-elimination games.

2012-2013

The 'East' and 'West' groupings are dropped and the opening round becomes a best-of-three series with the top four finishers receiving byes into the quarterfinals.

Championship appearances

Шаблон:Col-begin Шаблон:Col-break

By school

No. School Record Pct
7 Air Force 7–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
5 RIT 3–2 Шаблон:Winning percentage
5 Mercyhurst 1–4 Шаблон:Winning percentage
4 Robert Morris 1–3 Шаблон:Winning percentage
3 Canisius 1–2 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 American International 2–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 Holy Cross 2–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 Sacred Heart 0–2 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Army 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Bentley 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Niagara 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Quinnipiac 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage

Шаблон:Col-break

By coach

No. Coach Record Pct
7 Frank Serratore 7–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
5 Wayne Wilson 3–2 Шаблон:Winning percentage
5 Rick Gotkin 1–4 Шаблон:Winning percentage
4 Derek Schooley 1–3 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 Eric Lang 2–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 Paul Pearl 2–0 Шаблон:Winning percentage
2 Dave Smith 1–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 C. J. Marottolo 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Shaun Hannah 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Jason Lammers 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Trevor Large 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Rand Pecknold 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Ryan Soderquist 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage
1 Brian Riley 0–1 Шаблон:Winning percentage

Шаблон:Col-end [3]

MAAC

Шаблон:Main article The MAAC founded its hockey sponsorship starting in 1997 due to NCAA regulations that required all Division I conferences to participate in all Division sports. At the founding of the MAAC hockey conference, only three of the eight founding teams were full members of the conference (Canisius, Fairfield, Iona). The MAAC began play starting with the 1998-99 season and quickly added two additional teams (Mercyhurst and Bentley) the following year. Army joined the conference for the 2000-01 season, bringing the conference up to eleven member teams. At the conclusion of the 2002-03 season Fairfield and Iona both discontinued their men's ice hockey programs, and while the conference's remaining nine teams could continue without them, having only one full member necessitated the folding of the MAAC hockey conference as the eight associate members had no vote for the legislation the conference passed. The following year all of the teams continued their programs in the newly formed Atlantic Hockey conference.[4]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Atlantic Hockey Association Шаблон:Rochester Sports