Английская Википедия:ECAC Hockey

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Шаблон:Distinguish Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox sports league

Файл:ECACHockeyLocations.png
Locations of current ECAC Hockey member institutions.

ECAC Hockey is one of the six conferences that compete in NCAA Division I ice hockey. The conference used to be affiliated with the Eastern College Athletic Conference, a consortium of over 300 colleges in the eastern United States. This relationship ended in 2004; however, the ECAC abbreviation was retained in the name of the hockey conference.[1] ECAC Hockey is the only ice hockey conference with identical memberships in both its women's and men's divisions. Cornell has won the most ECAC men's hockey championships with 12, followed by Harvard at 11. Quinnipiac, which joined the league in 2005, already has 7 regular season championships. ECAC Hockey teams have won 10 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Championships, most recently in 2023.

History

ECAC Hockey was founded in 1961 as a loose association of college hockey teams in the Northeast.[2]

Cornell won the first NCAA championship for ECAC Hockey in 1967 in 4-1 victory over fellow ECAC Hockey team Boston University.

The Big Red won their second title in 1970 to complete the first and thus far only undefeated campaign in NCAA Division I men's ice hockey history, this time with a 6-4 victory over Clarkson.

ECAC Hockey completed back-to-back titles when Boston University won the 1971 championship with a 4-2 victory over Minnesota. The Terriers then made it two in a row for their school and three straight for ECAC Hockey when they repeated as champions in 1972 with a 4-0 victory over Cornell.

Boston University won their third title in 1978 with a 5-3 victory over Boston College, another ECAC Hockey member at that time.

In June 1983, concerns that the Ivy League schools were potentially leaving the conference and disagreements over schedule length versus academics caused Boston University, Boston College, Providence, Northeastern and New Hampshire to decide to leave the ECAC to form what would become Hockey East, which began play in the 1984–85 season.[1] By that fall, Maine also departed the ECAC for the new conference.[3]

This left the ECAC with twelve teams (Army, Brown, Clarkson, Colgate, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, RPI, St. Lawrence, Vermont, and Yale). Army would stay in the conference until the end of the 1990–91 season, at which point they became independent (they now play in Atlantic Hockey) and were replaced by Union College. Vermont left the ECAC for Hockey East at the end of the 2004–05 season, and were replaced in the conference by Quinnipiac.[1]

RPI won its second national championship, and first as a member of ECAC Hockey when it defeated Providence of the newly formed Hockey East, 2-1 at the 1985 championship tournament. The Engineers previously won in 1954 as a member of the Tri-State League.

Harvard won its first and thus-far only NCAA Division I Hockey Championship when the Crimson topped Minnesota, 4-3 in overtime at the 1989 Tournament.

After seven titles and multiple Frozen Four representatives in the preceding 23-year period, ECAC Hockey suffered through a 23-year drought before Yale won its first title at the 2013 Tournament with a 4-0 victory over first-time finalists Quinnipiac. The 2013 Tournament was also unique in that with Quinnipiac defeating fellow ECAC Hockey school Union to advance to the Frozen Four before losing to Yale in the final, the only teams to defeat an ECAC school at the Tournament were other schools from ECAC Hockey.

The Dutchmen gained a measure of revenge when it won the 2014 Championship with a 7-4 victory over Minnesota.

After finishing runner up again in 2016, Quinnipiac finally broke through to win their first title at the 2023 Tournament with a 3-2 overtime victory over Minnesota.

The ECAC began sponsoring an invitational women's tournament in 1985. ECAC teams began playing an informal regular season schedule in the 1988–89 season, with the conference officially sponsoring women's hockey beginning in the 1993–94 season.[4] ECAC teams won two of the three pre-NCAA American Women's College Hockey Alliance national championships, New Hampshire winning in 1998 and Harvard in 1999.

The ECAC was the only Division I men's hockey conference that neither gained nor lost members during the major conference realignment in 2011 and 2012 that followed the Big Ten Conference's announcement that it would launch a men's hockey league in the 2013–14 season.

Membership

There are 12 member schools in the ECAC. Since the 2006–07 season, all schools have participated with men's and women's teams, making ECAC Hockey the only Division I hockey conference with a full complement of teams for both sexes.[1]

Ivy League Teams

Six Ivy League universities with Division I ice hockey programs are members of ECAC Hockey. Those schools are: Harvard, Dartmouth, Cornell, Yale, Princeton, and Brown University. Columbia University does not currently have a varsity intercollegiate ice hockey program. Penn supported an intercollegiate varsity hockey program in the past and was an ECAC Hockey member from 1966 to 1978 before the team was disbanded. The Ivy school that has the best record against other Ivy opponents in regular season ECAC games is crowned the Ivy League ice hockey champion. The Ivy League schools require their teams to play seasons that are about three weeks shorter than those of the other schools in the league.[5] Thus, they enter the league schedule with fewer non-conference warm-up games. Harvard competes in the annual Beanpot Tournament.

Members

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
Brown University Providence, Rhode Island Bears 1764 Nonsectarian, founded by Baptists[6] 9,380[7] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes
Clarkson University Potsdam, New York Golden Knights 1896 Private/Non-sectarian 4,300[8] Liberty League (D-III) Шаблон:College color boxes
Colgate University Hamilton, New York Raiders 1819 Private/Baptists[9] 2,982[10] Patriot League Шаблон:College color boxes
Cornell University Ithaca, New York Big Red 1865 Private/Non-sectarian 23,600[11] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes
Dartmouth College Hanover, New Hampshire Big Green 1769 Private/Congregationalist 5,753[12] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes
Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts Crimson 1636 Private/Unitarian 20,042[13] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes
Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey Tigers 1746 Nonsectarian, but founded by Presbyterians[14] 6,677[15] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes
Quinnipiac University Hamden, Connecticut Bobcats 1929 Private/Non-sectarian 10,290[16] MAAC Шаблон:College color boxes
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, New York Engineers 1824 Private/Non-sectarian 7,633[17] Liberty League (D-III) Шаблон:College color boxes
St. Lawrence University Canton, New York Saints 1856 Non-denominational, founded by Universalist Church of America 2,487[18] Liberty League (D-III) Шаблон:College color boxes
Union College Schenectady, New York Garnet Chargers 1795 Private/Non-sectarian 2,050[19] Liberty League (D-III) Шаблон:College color boxes
Yale University New Haven, Connecticut Bulldogs 1701 Private/Congregationalist 12,458[20] Ivy League Шаблон:College color boxes

Шаблон:Multiple image

Membership timeline

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 bar:Yal color:both   from:06/01/1993 till:end text:(women, 1993-present)
 bar:Ver color:men    from:06/01/1963 till:06/01/1964 text:Vermont (men, 1963-64, 1974-2005)
 bar:Ver color:men    from:06/01/1974 till:06/01/2001
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Шаблон:Font color Шаблон:Font color Шаблон:Font color

Men's tournament sites

[21][22]

Файл:Dartmouth vs Princeton ice hockey 1, 2007.jpg
A men's game between Dartmouth and Princeton at Thompson Arena in Hanover

The ECAC Championship Game has been held at the following sites:

The winner of the game is awarded the Whitelaw Cup and receives an automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division I Hockey Tournament.

Men's tournament champions

Шаблон:Div col

  • 1962 St. Lawrence def. Clarkson 5–2
  • 1963 Harvard def. Boston College 4–3 (ot)
  • 1964 Providence def. St. Lawrence 3–1
  • 1965 Boston College def. Brown 6–2
  • 1966 Clarkson def. Cornell 6–2
  • 1967 Cornell def. Boston University 4–3
  • 1968 Cornell def. Boston College 6–3
  • 1969 Cornell def. Harvard 4–2
  • 1970 Cornell def. Clarkson 3–2
  • 1971 Harvard def. Clarkson 7–4
  • 1972 Boston University def. Cornell 4–1
  • 1973 Cornell def. Boston College 3–2
  • 1974 Boston University def. Harvard 4–2
  • 1975 Boston University def. Harvard 7–3
  • 1976 Boston University def. Brown 9–2
  • 1977 Boston University def. New Hampshire 8–6
  • 1978 Boston College def. Providence 4–2
  • 1979 New Hampshire def. Dartmouth 3–2
  • 1980 Cornell def. Dartmouth 5–1
  • 1981 Providence def. Cornell 8–4
  • 1982 Northeastern def. Harvard 5–2
  • 1983 Harvard def. Providence 4–1
  • 1984 Rensselaer def. Boston University 5–2
  • 1985 Rensselaer def. Harvard 3–1
  • 1986 Cornell def. Clarkson 3–2 (ot)
  • 1987 Harvard def. St. Lawrence 6–3
  • 1988 St. Lawrence def. Clarkson 3–0
  • 1989 St. Lawrence def. Vermont 4–1
  • 1990 Colgate def. Rensselaer 5–4
  • 1991 Clarkson def. St. Lawrence 5–4
  • 1992 St. Lawrence def. Cornell 4–2
  • 1993 Clarkson def. Brown 3–1
  • 1994 Harvard def. Rensselaer 3–0
  • 1995 Rensselaer def. Princeton 5–1
  • 1996 Cornell def. Harvard 2–1
  • 1997 Cornell def. Clarkson 2–1
  • 1998 Princeton def. Clarkson 5–4 (2ot)
  • 1999 Clarkson def. St. Lawrence 3–2
  • 2000 St. Lawrence def. Rensselaer 2–0
  • 2001 St. Lawrence def. Cornell 3–1
  • 2002 Harvard def. Cornell 4–3 (2ot)
  • 2003 Cornell def. Harvard 3–2 (ot)
  • 2004 Harvard def. Clarkson 4–2
  • 2005 Cornell def. Harvard 3–1
  • 2006 Harvard def. Cornell 6–2
  • 2007 Clarkson def. Quinnipiac 4–2
  • 2008 Princeton def. Harvard 4–1
  • 2009 Yale def. Cornell 5–0
  • 2010 Cornell def. Union 3–0
  • 2011 Yale def. Cornell 6–0
  • 2012 Union def. Harvard 3–1
  • 2013 Union def. Brown 3–1
  • 2014 Union def. Colgate 4–2
  • 2015 Harvard def. Colgate 4–2
  • 2016 Quinnipiac def. Harvard 4–1
  • 2017 Harvard def. Cornell 4–1
  • 2018 Princeton def Clarkson 2–1
  • 2019 Clarkson def Cornell 3–2 (ot)
  • 2020 Tournament Canceled
  • 2021 St. Lawrence def Quinnipiac 3–2 (ot)
  • 2022 Harvard def Quinnipiac 3-2 (ot)
  • 2023 Colgate def Harvard 3-2

Шаблон:Div col end

Men's regular season champion

The Cleary Cup, named for former Harvard player and coach Bill Cleary since 2001, is awarded to the team with the best record in league games at the end of the regular–season. There is no tie–breaking procedure should two or more teams end the season with the same record and the trophy is shared. A tie breaking procedure is applied to determine the top seed in the ECAC conference tournament. The Cleary Cup winner is not given any special consideration in the NCAA tournament as the ECAC awards its automatic bid to the winner of the ECAC tournament.

Шаблон:Div col

  • 1984–85 Rensselaer
  • 1985–86 Harvard
  • 1986–87 Harvard
  • 1987–88 Harvard and St. Lawrence
  • 1988–89 Harvard
  • 1989–90 Colgate
  • 1990–91 Clarkson
  • 1991–92 Harvard
  • 1992–93 Harvard
  • 1993–94 Harvard
  • 1994–95 Clarkson
  • 1995–96 Vermont
  • 1996–97 Clarkson
  • 1997–98 Yale
  • 1998–99 Clarkson
  • 1999–00 St. Lawrence
  • 2000–01 Clarkson
  • 2001–02 Cornell
  • 2002–03 Cornell
  • 2003–04 Colgate
  • 2004–05 Cornell
  • 2005–06 Colgate and Dartmouth
  • 2006–07 St. Lawrence
  • 2007–08 Clarkson
  • 2008–09 Yale
  • 2009–10 Yale
  • 2010–11 Union
  • 2011–12 Union
  • 2012–13 Quinnipiac
  • 2013–14 Union
  • 2014–15 Quinnipiac
  • 2015–16 Quinnipiac
  • 2016–17 Harvard and Union
  • 2017–18 Cornell
  • 2018–19 Cornell and Quinnipiac
  • 2019–20 Cornell
  • 2020–21 Quinnipiac
  • 2021–22 Quinnipiac
  • 2022–23 Quinnipiac
  • 2023–24 Quinnipiac

Шаблон:Div col end

Women's ECAC championship games

[23] Шаблон:Div col

  • 1984 Providence def. New Hampshire
  • 1985 Providence def. New Hampshire
  • 1986 New Hampshire def. Northeastern
  • 1987 New Hampshire def. Northeastern
  • 1988 Northeastern def. Providence
  • 1989 Northeastern def. Providence
  • 1990 New Hampshire def. Providence (in Durham, New Hampshire)
  • 1991 New Hampshire def. Northeastern (Durham)
  • 1992 Providence def. New Hampshire (in Providence, Rhode Island)
  • 1993 Providence def. New Hampshire (in Boston)
  • 1994 Providence def. Northeastern (Providence)
  • 1995 Providence def. New Hampshire (Providence)
  • 1996 New Hampshire def. Providence (Durham)
  • 1997 Northeastern def. New Hampshire (Boston)
  • 1998 Brown def. New Hampshire (Boston)
  • 1999 Harvard def. New Hampshire (Providence)
  • 2000 Brown def. Dartmouth (Providence)
  • 2001 Dartmouth def. Harvard (in Hanover, New Hampshire)
  • 2002 Brown def. Dartmouth (Hanover)
  • 2003 Dartmouth def. Harvard (Providence)
  • 2004 Harvard def. St. Lawrence (in Schenectady, New York)
  • 2005 Harvard def. Dartmouth (Schenectady)
  • 2006 Harvard def. Brown (in Canton, New York)
  • 2007 Dartmouth def. St. Lawrence (Hanover)
  • 2008 Harvard def. St. Lawrence (Boston)
  • 2009 Dartmouth def. Rensselaer (Boston)
  • 2010 Cornell def. Clarkson (in Ithaca, New York)
  • 2011 Cornell def. Dartmouth (Ithaca)
  • 2012 St. Lawrence def. Cornell (Ithaca)
  • 2013 Cornell def. Harvard (Ithaca)
  • 2014 Cornell def. Clarkson (in Potsdam, New York)
  • 2015 Harvard def. Cornell (Potsdam)
  • 2016 Quinnipiac def. Clarkson (Hamden, Connecticut)
  • 2017 Clarkson def. Cornell (Potsdam)
  • 2018 Clarkson def. Colgate (Potsdam)
  • 2019 Clarkson def. Cornell (Ithaca)
  • 2020 Princeton def. Cornell (Ithaca)
  • 2021 Colgate def. St. Lawrence (Hamilton)
  • 2022 Colgate def. Yale (New Haven)
  • 2023 Colgate def. Clarkson (New Haven)

Шаблон:Div col end

Men's conference records

Team's records against current conference opponents. (As of the end of the 2018-19 season.)

School colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Brown colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Clarkson colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Colgate colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Cornell colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Dartmouth colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Harvard colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Princeton colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Quinnipiac colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Rensselaer colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |St. Lawrence colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Union colspan="3" style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Yale Total
W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T W L T Win%
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Brown 19 68 9 25 58 8 43 80 7 69 83 8 47 116 13 90 72 12 10 24 6 30 63 9 30 48 13 25 23 14 77 102 8 452 727 103 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Clarkson 68 19 9 88 53 18 56 67 17 73 31 7 57 58 12 84 34 7 12 16 3 99 51 11 127 72 11 33 27 5 76 40 8 771 468 109 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Colgate 58 25 8 53 88 18 58 84 15 51 51 7 25 56 8 59 48 8 16 23 2 63 65 5 72 80 5 44 29 4 51 51 6 550 600 86 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Cornell 80 43 8 67 56 18 84 58 15 83 49 6 78 66 11 91 53 8 22 17 4 63 38 11 64 45 8 43 22 9 85 61 8 760 508 106 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Dartmouth 83 69 8 31 73 7 51 51 7 49 83 6 66 139 13 104 89 16 10 21 2 42 46 6 42 61 4 26 31 7 98 112 15 603 775 91 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Harvard 116 47 13 58 57 12 56 25 8 66 78 11 139 67 13 157 59 12 15 14 5 58 37 8 62 44 7 34 17 6 144 91 22 905 536 117 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Princeton 72 90 11 34 84 7 48 59 8 53 91 8 89 104 16 58 158 12 12 17 1 36 68 11 25 70 11 25 36 7 109 141 11 562 919 103 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Quinnipiac 24 10 6 16 12 3 23 16 2 17 22 4 21 10 2 14 15 5 17 12 1 17 7 9 15 15 4 18 17 5 22 7 5 204 143 46 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Rensselaer 63 30 9 51 97 11 65 63 5 38 63 11 46 42 6 37 58 8 69 37 11 7 17 9 60 83 7 53 40 11 57 52 6 546 582 94 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |St. Lawrence 48 30 13 72 127 11 80 72 5 45 64 17 61 42 4 44 62 7 70 25 11 15 15 4 83 60 7 38 29 3 64 41 11 620 567 93 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Union 23 25 14 27 33 5 29 44 4 22 43 9 31 26 7 17 34 6 36 25 7 17 18 5 40 53 11 29 38 3 27 27 5 298 366 76 Шаблон:Winpct
align=left style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle;" |Yale 102 77 8 40 76 8 51 51 6 61 85 8 112 98 15 91 144 22 141 109 11 7 22 5 52 57 6 41 64 11 27 27 5 725 810 105 Шаблон:Winpct
  • Harvard and Princeton both record a loss on January 4, 1941. The game was played in Princeton with the score either 5–3 Harvard or 6–2 Princeton.[24][25]

Conference arenas

Шаблон:Panorama

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Brown Meehan Auditorium (1962) 3,100
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Clarkson Cheel Arena (1991) 3,000
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Colgate Class of 1965 Arena (2016) 2,222
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Cornell Lynah Rink (1957) 4,267
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Dartmouth Thompson Arena (1975) 4,500
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Harvard Bright-Landry Hockey Center (1956/1979) 3,095
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Princeton Hobey Baker Memorial Rink (1923) 2,092
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Quinnipiac M&T Bank Arena (2007) 3,386
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Rensselaer Houston Field House (1949) 4,780
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| St. Lawrence Appleton Arena (1951) 2,300
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Union Frank L. Messa Rink at Achilles Center (1975) 2,225
style="Шаблон:CollegePrimaryStyle"| Yale Ingalls Rink (1958) 3,500

Awards

Men's

At the conclusion of each regular season schedule the coaches of each ECAC team vote which players they choose to be on the two to four All-Conference teams:[26] first team and second team (rookie team starting in 1987–88 and third team beginning in 2005–06). Additionally they vote to award up to 7 individual trophies to an eligible player at the same time. ECAC Hockey also awards a Conference Tournament Most Outstanding Player as well as an All-Tournament Team, which are voted on at the conclusion of the conference tournament. Three awards have been bestowed every year that ECAC has been in operation while the 'Best Defensive Defenseman' was retired from 1967–68 thru 1991–92[27] and the All-Tournament team was discontinued from 1973 thru 1988.[28]

Шаблон:Col-start Шаблон:Col-2

All-Conference teams

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
First Team 1961–62
Second Team 1961–62
Third Team 2005–06
Rookie Team 1987–88
All-Tournament Team 1962*

Шаблон:Col-2

Individual awards

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
Player of the Year 1961–62
Rookie of the Year 1961–62
Tim Taylor Award 1986–87
Best Defensive Defenseman 1961–62*
Best Defensive Forward 1992–93
Ken Dryden Award 1995–96
Student-Athlete of the Year 2006–07
Most Outstanding Player in Tournament 1962

Шаблон:Col-end

NCAA Records

  • In 2000, St. Lawrence University won the second longest game in NCAA tournament history. St. Lawrence defeated Boston University in quadruple overtime by a score of 3–2. Currently, this game is the fifth longest game in NCAA division I history.[29]
  • On March 4, 2006, Union College played host to the longest NCAA men's ice hockey game in NCAA history. In Game 2 of the first round of the 2006 ECACHL Tournament (best of three series) between Yale University and Union, Yale won 3–2 1:35 into the 5th overtime. Overall, the game took 141:35 to decide the winner.[30]
  • On March 11, 2010, Quinnipiac defeated Union College 3–2. The game, which lasted 150 minutes and 22 seconds, set a new record for the longest hockey game in NCAA history.[31] The record lasted until March 6, 2015 when a Hockey East playoff game between UMass and Notre Dame lasted just over a minute longer.[32]
  • Cornell University recorded the only undefeated and untied season for a Division I NCAA champion in 1970.[33]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:ECAC Hockey League Шаблон:ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament Шаблон:NCAA Division 1 hockey conferences