Song Played on West Wing When Jed Announces He Will Run Again
Michigan Wolverines men's water ice hockey | |
---|---|
Current season | |
University | University of Michigan |
Conference | Big Ten |
Caput coach | Mel Pearson fifth season, 89–62–sixteen (.581) |
Captain(south) | Nick Blankenburg |
Alternate captain(s) | Jimmy Lambert Nolan Moyle Mike Pastujov Matty Beniers |
Arena | Yost Water ice Arena Capacity: v,800[1] Surface: 200' x 85' |
Location | Ann Arbor, Michigan |
Student section | Children of Yost |
Colors | Maize and blue[two] |
Fight song | The Victors |
NCAA Tournament championships | |
1948, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1964, 1996, 1998 | |
NCAA Tournament Runner-up | |
1957, 1977, 2011 | |
NCAA Tournament Frozen Iv | |
1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1977, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2011, 2018, 2022 | |
NCAA Tournament appearances | |
1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1977, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2018, 2021, 2022 | |
Briefing Tournament championships | |
CCHA: 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2010 Big X: 2016, 2022 | |
Briefing regular season championships | |
1953, 1956, 1964, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2011 | |
Electric current uniform | |
The Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team is the college ice hockey team that represents the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Earning varsity status in 1922, the program has competed in 99 seasons. Betwixt 1959 and 1981, the squad competed in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) before joining the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) until the 2012–13 season.[three] Since the 2013–14 season, the Wolverines have competed in the Big Ten, which began sponsoring hockey. From 1991 to 2012, the team played in 22 consecutive NCAA Men'south Division I Ice Hockey Tournaments; an NCAA record.[iii] The Wolverines have won an NCAA-record nine Sectionalization I NCAA Men'south Water ice Hockey Championships,[3] 7 of which came during a 17-year stretch between 1948 and 1964. Two more championships were won under head coach Scarlet Berenson in 1996 and 1998.[iii]
Michigan has had many successes as a programme including a record-setting number of championships, full title tournament appearances, and sequent tournament appearances. In 2010, Michigan hosted a Guinness verified globe record crowd in backlog of 113,000 in an event known as The Big Chill. Players from the plan accept earned numerous honors, professional person championships, international championships, individual statistical championships, team and individual records. The team is currently led by Mel Pearson, a quondam assistant to coach Crimson Berenson who retired in 2017 after leading the program for 33 years. Berenson for about 50 years has connected to concord the school single-season goal scoring record, and was the second player in the programme's history to win the Stanley Cup. The program has dozens of National Hockey League alumni and over twenty current players. They currently hold the record for the near titles at the Bang-up Lakes Invitational with 17 titles respectively. Their traditional rival is Michigan State and the teams have played an annual game in Detroit since 1990, first at Joe Louis Arena simply currently at Piddling Caesars Loonshit since 2018.
Squad history [edit]
Early history [edit]
In 1920, "equally a result of the interest in the interclass and interfraternity leagues, in which twenty-2 teams took part," an informal Michigan hockey team was organized to stand for the university.[iv] [five] Mr. Le Mieux of the Engineering faculty, had played 12 years of professional person hockey and offered his services equally coach.[6] [7] Because of the difficulty in securing intercollegiate contest, the 1920 squad played a half dozen-game schedule against an Ann Arbor team, Assumption College, and iv games against teams from the Detroit Hockey League. The 1920 Michigan squad, with Russell Barkell equally the team'due south loftier scorer, compiled a 6–0 record and outscored opponents 27 to seven.[4] [5] In Feb 1920, The Michigan Alumnus noted: "There is a big sentiment for a Varsity hockey team. The difficulties are the lack of a University rink, and the arranging of suitable competition."[8] In April 1920, The Michigan Chimes wrote:
"The record of our informal hockey team which was organized at the close of the January interclass sports, has been truly remarkable. With only two weeks of practise, it has defeated the 3 strongest Detroit teams. ... Unfortunately this one team of ours which seems able to win, and shows possibilities of great development has non as yet been recognized as a regular team."[9]
Later, The Michigan Chimes published a lengthy article pleading for the assistants to recognize hockey every bit a varsity sport: "Agitation was started for the recognition of hockey every bit a varsity sport. What spell, what charm there is in that single appellation bestowed by custom on football, baseball, track, and recently basketball! What obstacles must be overcome, what sacrifices fabricated, to attain the heights!"[6]
With the success of the informal Michigan hockey team in 1920, Michigan moved forward with the development of the hockey team. According to Wilfred Byron Shaw'due south four-volume history of the Academy of Michigan, "Hockey as well had its commencement in 1921, with Joseph Barss as Double-decker (1921–26). Although officially non on the Western Conference athletic program, hockey provided a number of Big X teams with competition."[10] The 1921 flavour saw the development of intercollegiate hockey at Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.[11] [12] In January 1921, Michigan and Wisconsin scheduled four games to exist played on consecutive weekends from Feb 18 to 26, 1921.[13] The 1921 team began the season with two games against the Michigan Higher of Mines at Houghton, Michigan. Michigan lost the outset game iii–0 merely won the second game 4–3. Russell Barkell, the first standout hockey player at Michigan, was the Michigan star in both games confronting the College of Mines.[14] However, the balance of the season, including the planned four-game serial with Wisconsin, was cancelled due to warm weather. The Michigan Alumnus reported in March 1921: "The warmth of the present winter has made necessary the cancelling of all scheduled hockey games. The informal team had started off well, only lack of ice made the development of a really powerful team incommunicable."[xv]
In December 1921, The Michigan Alumnus wrote: "There will be much pushing of the puck this year. The Athletic Association hopes to have more money to spend for Michigan skaters, and plans to encourage hockey more than ever earlier. Nosotros used to spend our fourth dimension 'doing the grapevine,' just only because we were not fast enough for shinny. More power to the shinny artists."[sixteen]
Over the course of a 10-game schedule, Michigan's 1922 squad finished with a record of v–5. The team opened the 1922 flavour with a 5–ane victory over Michigan Agricultural College (now known as Michigan State University) in the first hockey match between the rival schools.[17] They followed with a 3–2 overtime victory over the Detroit Rayls on Jan 16, 1922. Later that month, the Notre Matriarch hockey team defeated Michigan iii–ii in overtime, marker the beginning defeat for the Michigan hockey squad on its home rink in three years.[eighteen] The squad traveled to Houghton for night games against the Michigan School of Mines, losing both games by scores of 2–ane and 5–ii.[nineteen] The Wolverines beat the School of Mines 4–one in a rematch in Ann Arbor. In the season'due south seventh game, Michigan defeated Wisconsin vi–3 in the first match between Western Conference hockey teams.[17] Following another loss to Notre Dame (vii–2), Michigan defeated Wisconsin for the second time by a score of five–one; Barkell scored iii goals confronting Wisconsin and was the high scorer in the game.[xx] The flavour ended with a 5–ii victory over the Windsor Monarchs.[17]
In March 1922, The Michigan Alumnus reported that athletic director Fielding H. Yost had stated that recognition of hockey every bit a minor sport was very probable in 1923. Yost expressed the view that the sport should be either intramural or intercollegiate and not an informal sport. The same article noted that Michigan's hockey squad had already met Notre Dame, Michigan Schoolhouse of Mines, Michigan Agricultural Higher and many Detroit teams.[21]
According to Bacon's history of the Michigan hockey programme, the beginning "official" college hockey game played west of the Alleghenies was a game between Michigan and Wisconsin, played on January 12, 1923, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The game went into overtime with Michigan prevailing by a score of 2–1. The Capital Times in Madison reported on the game every bit follows: "Michigan counted the first indicate, when Kahn, by clever work, rushed the brawl through the Badger defense for a goal. In the second period Blodgett for Wisconsin tied the score. The first five-minute menstruation of overtime found both teams contesting badly. The second five minutes was a repetition. The Wolverines seemed held on from the side, slipped the puck through the goal for the winning point."[22] In another account, the Madison newspaper wrote that, "subsequently outplaying Michigan all the way through, Wisconsin lost in the second overtime period when a lucky shot went for a goal."[23] Michigan once more defeated Wisconsin i–0 in the second game of the season, played the following day, Jan 13, 1923.[23]
Barss coached the Michigan Wolverines men'southward ice hockey squad from 1922 to 1927. In five years as the caput bus, the Michigan hockey squad compiled a record of 26–21–4.[24]
As the popularity of college hockey grew in the early 1920s, other colleges looked to Barss' pupils for coaching candidates. In Jan 1923, old Michigan hockey star Russell Barkell was hired as the passenger vehicle of the hockey team at Williams College.[25]
In Feb 1924, afterwards a 3–0 victory by Michigan over Wisconsin, a Madison newspaper praised the defensive play of the Barss-coached Wolverines: "With an about air-tight defense and a definite scoring attack the Michigan hockey team defeated the Badger half-dozen past a score of three–0 yesterday afternoon. Wisconsin could non terminate Michigan's fast team work and was unable to penetrate their defense to take any close shots at the goal."[26]
In mid-1925, the academy purchased the former Weinberg Coliseum, a local ice skating rink that had served as the unofficial home of the Wolverines hockey squad since 1920.[27] The facility, which had previously relied on winter weather to maintain its ice, was renovated to add bogus coolant to guarantee its playing surface year-circular.[28] The Michigan Coliseum would remain habitation to the Wolverines until the opening of Yost Ice Arena in 1973.[29]
Vic Heyliger era [edit]
From 1947–48 through 1956–57, when Vic Heyliger retired, the Michigan hockey team had won 195 games, lost only 41, and tied 11. The Wolverines' record got them ten consecutive invitations to the Frozen Iv, where they came dwelling with the national title six times-records that accept never been in danger of being broken by whatsoever college team a half century afterwards. This also helped shift the locus of power in hockey from the Due east to the Westward when it was previously idea to be the other way around. Led by Michigan, the West won xviii of the first twenty NCAA championships, setting the question rather emphatically. The run also ensured the squad its place on campus for years to come, filling a hole created past the football and basketball teams' mediocrity during the fifties.
Of Michigan's 53 players who take earned All-American status, almost half (24) played for Heyliger between 1948 and 1957. During that stretch he never had fewer than 2 players on the All-American squad. 4 times he had 5 players then honored, and in 1956 he had a record six players on the team. In Michigan history, twelve Wolverines have won information technology twice or more. Heyliger coached nine of them and recruited the tenth, Bob White. No other school has e'er clustered and developed such a mother lode of talent in the history of college hockey.
For all of this Heyliger was given the NCAA'due south Spencer Penrose Honour for Coach of the Year, he was inducted into the U.Southward. Hockey Hall of Fame, and he was selected in 1996 past the American Hockey Coaches Clan every bit one of the five all-time college coaches of the century, and the very best of the commencement half. In 1980 he became the first hockey autobus to exist inducted into the University of Michigan's Hall of Award. Heyliger's severe asthma forced him to get out the team and Ann Arbor in the summertime of 1957. His affect on the Michigan program, the NCAA tournament, the WCHA, and higher hockey would be hard to overstate.[thirty]
Al Renfrew era [edit]
Through Heyliger's tenure, able-bodied director Fritz Crisler had seen the virtue of having a Michigan homo caput the hockey program. When it came time for Crisler to conduct his second search for a hockey charabanc, therefore, he sought out Al Renfrew, an affable human who had captained the 1948–49 Wolverine squad and had already been coaching college hockey for six years.
At the terminate of Renfrew's first season in Grand Forks, Heyliger stepped downwardly from the Michigan job and told Renfrew to put his proper name in for it. Renfrew wrote Fritz Crisler a alphabetic character in March indicating his involvement, but Crisler didn't respond for over a calendar month. Renfrew had already concluded he was out of the running when Crisler called to offering him the task. His decision should have been harder than it was. He had built a great team at North Dakota, and the players he recruited won the national title 2 years after he left, but he was likewise excited to be back in Ann Arbor.[ commendation needed ]
Renfrew inherited a team that had gone 18–v–2 and finished one victory curt of its third sequent NCAA title in 1956–57—and then Renfrew promptly suffered Michigan'due south offset losing season since Earth War 2. His skaters finished eight–13 in 1957–58, his first year, and eight–thirteen–1 his second. But Renfrew wasn't worried-he knew he had a secret weapon coming in.[ citation needed ]
From 1958 to 1964, some 14 players made the trek from Regina, Saskatchewan to Ann Arbor, including i Ruddy Berenson. While nonetheless in high school, Berenson had already become a highly touted major junior actor, i good enough to join the Montreal Canadiens system straight out of high school, but he had other ideas. A serious student, Berenson became aware of the world of American college hockey when Regina Pats high-profile bus Murray Armstrong went south of the border in 1956 to accept the head coaching task at University of Denver. Berenson visited North Dakota in 1958 and was favorably impressed at the caliber of players the old passenger vehicle, a human named Al Renfrew, had lured to K Forks before Ranfrew returned to Michigan the year before. Only soon later Berenson's visit to North Dakota, Dale MacDonald, a Saskatchewan native playing for Renfrew at Michigan, told his coach that Berenson was the rare player worth going out of his way to get. Renfrew scraped together enough money to fly the young phenom to Michigan, thereby making him the first hockey player ever to receive a costless recruiting trip to Ann Arbor. The actress effort was worth information technology, for both parties. Once he was on campus, they didn't have to sell him on information technology. "Afterward I came downward on a visit," Berenson confirms, "I came back and told the other guys. "This is where we're going." And merely like that, a pipeline of hockey talent was created between Regina and Ann Arbor.[ citation needed ]
Berenson'south conclusion, at least, came with a price. Frank Selke, the Montreal GM who had drafted Berenson, warned him that if he went to an America college he would never become a pro. Fully aware he might be sacrificing the dream of every Canadian male child to play in the NHL-and for the Montreal Canadiens, no less—Berenson didn't flinch. After sitting out his first yr, which the NCAA required of all freshmen at that time, Berenson suited up for his first game on February 5, 1960, confronting Minnesota. He scored ninety seconds into his kickoff game, assisted on another goal 5 minutes later and scored a third later in the game. Everyone in the building that nighttime had just seen the future of Michigan hockey, and it looked bright.[ commendation needed ]
Renfrew notched his offset winning season and his commencement league playoff booth in the 1960–61 season. The post-obit flavour, the Berenson-captained squad didn't lose a game through New Year'south, and finished the regular flavour with a twenty–iii mark. As expected, the Wolverines received their first NCAA bid under Renfrew that spring. Michigan was a slight favorite entering the 1962 NCAA Tournament in Utica, New York, merely were upset past Clarkson 5–iv in the semifinal. In a life with few regrets, the game against Clarkson ranks near the superlative for Berenson. "We should've won it," he said. "We were destined to meet Michigan Tech in the finals, but got knocked off by and underdog-Clarkson-back when eastern teams weren't that good. You lot don't get also many chances to win it all as a actor. At the fourth dimension it doesn't seem so of import, but 10 years, twenty years afterward, you ask yourself: "Why the hell didn't we do that?"[ attribution needed ] Subsequently scoring his school record-tying 43rd goal confronting St. Lawrence in the consolation game, Berenson caught a ride to Boston, where he played for the Canadiens the side by side nighttime, making him the kickoff thespian to jump direct from college to the NHL.[31]
The 1964 squad returned its ii leading scorers from the previous season, Gary Butler and Gordon Wilkie, both ex-Pats, who had combined for 79 points in just 24 games the previous season. They played better than expected, combining for a remarkable 135 points in just 29 games-both players finished just shy of Berenson's single-season record of 70 points. Rookie Wilf Martin added an unexpected 58 points. Mel Wakabayashi, all five'five" of him, join the team in January 1964, centering Rob Coristine and Bob Ferguson on the third line. The trio added 107 points, which would have made them the top-scoring line the previous season. Added it all up and you lot had the starting time Michigan team to score more 200 goals in a season, averaging a prolific vii.v goals per game. Thanks largely to the scoring streak, this unheralded but determined agglomeration trounce every opponent at least one time en road to a 24–2–i record, winning more games than whatsoever team in Michigan history. At the 1964 Frozen Four, Denver took intendance of Rensselaer, 4–1, while Michigan survived a close game with Providence, 3–2. For the concluding game, vii,000 Pioneer fans packed the Denver Loonshit to watch their team battle for its fourth NCAA championship in 7 years. The underdog Wolverines shell Denver, half dozen–iii, in the Bulldogs' lawn, winning their seventh national championship. It was the last hurrah for the Regina regiment, a group of some 14 players who came to Ann Arbor betwixt 1958 and 1964. "This is the place", Berenson told them, and they followed.[32]
Transition to Yost Arena and the Primal Collegiate Hockey Clan (CCHA) [edit]
Renfrew retired equally head autobus following the 1972–73 flavor. He was succeeded by Dan Farrell, a former assistant coach at Michigan Tech (where Renfrew had previously coached). Farrell'due south commencement season was also the team'south first at their new home in the converted Fielding H. Yost Field House, now known as Yost Ice Arena. Farrell guided the Wolverines to the 1977 NCAA championship game at Olympia Stadium, losing to the Wisconsin Badgers by a score of 6–five. Farrell'southward teams would be unable to duplicate that success, and he stepped down at the end of the 1979–80 flavor.
Wilf Martin returned to his alma mater to serve as head coach, just only lasted ii games into the 1980–81 season earlier he was forced to stride downwardly for health reasons. Banana coach John Giordano took over for the balance of the season. In 1981, Giordano'south Wolverines moved from the WCHA to the CCHA, joining young man Big Ten rival schools Michigan State (which also jumped from the WCHA) and Ohio State (a founding member of the CCHA), also as football game rival Notre Dame. It was hoped that the alter in conferences would help the Wolverines compete, but Michigan followed upward a offset-round conference tournament loss to the Irish with back-to-back ninth-place finishes. In the jump of 1984 Giordano's squad mutinied when all 22 players signed a list of grievances.[33] With the entire team behind the revolt, athletic manager Don Canham was left with piddling selection but to relieve Giordano of his duties.
Red Berenson era [edit]
After a lengthy playing career in the NHL and a stint equally caput bus of the St. Louis Blues (where he won the Jack Adams Laurels) and a term every bit an banana to Scotty Bowman in Buffalo, Ruby Berenson returned to his alma mater in 1984 to take over the reins. Berenson's teams faced a stiff rival in Ron Mason's Spartans, who dominated the CCHA in the mid-80s and won the 1986 NCAA title. Prior to the 1989 CCHA playoffs, Berenson had the Wolverines adopt the winged helmet design associated with the football team.
After several years of rebuilding the Wolverines finally won a CCHA playoff serial in 1990 and returned to the NCAA tournament for the offset time in fourteen years the post-obit season. That appearance was the showtime of a record 22 consecutive berths, including 11 Frozen 4 appearances and three appearances in the title game, winning the title in 1996 and 1998. Along the way Berenson's teams won 11 CCHA titles, ix CCHA Tournaments and produced 11 30+ win seasons including a record 8 sequent from 1991 through 1998. Two of Berenson's players won the Hobey Baker Honor, Brendan Morrison (1997) and Kevin Porter while Marty Turco (127) and Steve Shields (111) became the 1st- and 2nd-winningest goaltenders in NCAA history.
The 1996 Frozen Four run is most notable for forward Mike Legg'south goal in the regional semi-concluding against Minnesota at Munn Ice Loonshit in Eastward Lansing. Legg picked upward the puck behind the net with the toe of his stick, cradled it on the blade, and tucked it into the elevation corner all in one move. The highlight-reel goal has go one of the most famous in the history of hockey worldwide and has been mimicked by many a thespian. While it goes by other names (Europeans call it an "airhook", while information technology has also been called a "Svech", after Carolina Hurricanes forward Andrei Svechnikov who was the offset to score such a goal in the NHL), most hockey players and fans call this motion merely "the Michigan".
The streak was broken in the final season of the CCHA, when the squad failed to get an invite after losing the conference championship to Notre Dame. Berenson'due south final trip to the NCAA tournament came in 2016, which was besides his concluding conference championship (this time in the Big X). Berenson announced his retirement on Apr 10, 2017.
Mel Pearson era [edit]
On April 24, 2017, Mel Pearson was announced as the new head motorbus at the Academy of Michigan. In his start flavour the squad went 22-xv-3 overall, eleven-10-three in Big Ten play. They reached the 2018 Big Ten Men'southward Ice Hockey Tournament but lost to Ohio State (3-2) in overtime. Nevertheless, the team qualified for the NCAA Tournament and went to the Frozen Four before losing to Notre Matriarch (iv-iii) on a terminal-second goal.
During the 2021 NHL Entry Draft, Michigan became the kickoff school in NCAA Partitioning I history to have three teammates drafted in the start round of the NHL Typhoon. Owen Power was drafted first overall past the Buffalo Sabres, Matty Beniers was drafted 2d overall past the Seattle Kraken, and Kent Johnson was drafted fifth overall past the Columbus Blueish Jackets. Michigan likewise became the starting time program to accept teammates drafted first and second overall in the same NHL Draft for the outset fourth dimension since 1969. With Beniers being picked by Seattle, Michigan became the get-go collegiate squad to accept a thespian drafted by all 32 NHL franchises. Incoming freshman recruits Luke Hughes was drafted fourth overall by the New Bailiwick of jersey Devils and Mackie Samoskevich was drafted 24th overall by the Florida Panthers. Michigan became the first program to accept 5 players/recruits selected in the first circular of one draft.[34] [35]
Conferences [edit]
Conference affiliation since 1951 [36]
- Midwest Collegiate Hockey League (1951–53)
- Western Intercollegiate Hockey League (1953–58)
- Large Ten Briefing (1958–81)
- Western Collegiate Hockey Association (1959–81)
- Central Collegiate Hockey Clan (1981–2013)
- Large X Conference (2013–nowadays)
NCAA National championships [edit]
Yr | Champion | Score | Runner-up | Urban center | Arena | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1948 | Michigan | 8–four | Dartmouth | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Loonshit | [37] |
1951 | Michigan | 7–one | Chocolate-brown | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [38] |
1952 | Michigan | 4–1 | Colorado College | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [39] |
1953 | Michigan | seven–3 | Minnesota | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [40] |
1955 | Michigan | v–3 | Colorado College | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [41] |
1956 | Michigan | 7–5 | Michigan Tech | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Loonshit | [42] |
1964 | Michigan | half dozen–3 | Denver | Denver, CO | Academy of Denver Arena | [43] |
1996 | Michigan | three–2 | Colorado Higher | Cincinnati, OH | Riverfront Coliseum | [44] |
1998 | Michigan | 3–ii | Boston College | Boston, MA | Armada Center | [45] |
Conference Regular-Season Championships [edit]
Season | Briefing | Record | Caput Coach |
---|---|---|---|
1952–53 | MCHL | 12–four–0 | Vic Heyliger |
1955–56 | WIHL | 15–ii–1 | Vic Heyliger |
1963–64 | WCHA | 12–2–0 | Al Renfrew |
1991–92 | CCHA | 22–vii–3 | Ruddy Berenson |
1993–94 | CCHA | 24–5–1 | Blood-red Berenson |
1994–95 | CCHA | 22–4–1 | Blood-red Berenson |
1995–96 | CCHA | 22–half-dozen–2 | Red Berenson |
1996–97 | CCHA | 21–3–3 | Cherry-red Berenson |
1999–00 | CCHA | 19–half dozen–3 | Red Berenson |
2001–02 | CCHA | nineteen–5–4 | Red Berenson |
2003–04 | CCHA | 18–eight–2 | Red Berenson |
2004–05 | CCHA | 23–3–2 | Crimson Berenson |
2007–08 | CCHA | 20–4–4 | Red Berenson |
2010–11 | CCHA | twenty–7–1 | Red Berenson |
Briefing Tournament championships [edit]
Tournament | Briefing | Title Game Opponent | Score | Location | Head Coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | CCHA | Lake Superior Land | 3–0 | Joe Louis Loonshit Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
1996 | CCHA | Lake Superior Land | four–3 | Joe Louis Loonshit Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
1997 | CCHA | Michigan State | 3–1 | Joe Louis Loonshit Detroit, MI | Crimson Berenson |
1999 | CCHA | Northern Michigan | 5–1 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Ruby-red Berenson |
2002 | CCHA | Michigan State | iii–2 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
2003 | CCHA | Ferris State | v–iii | Joe Louis Loonshit Detroit, MI | Blood-red Berenson |
2005 | CCHA | Ohio Land | 4–ii | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Scarlet Berenson |
2008 | CCHA | Miami University | 2–1 | Joe Louis Loonshit Detroit, MI | Carmine Berenson |
2010 | CCHA | Northern Michigan | 2–one | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
2016 | Large Ten | Minnesota | 5–three | Xcel Free energy Centre Saint Paul, MN | Red Berenson |
2022 | Big 10 | Minnesota | 4–3 | 3M Arena at Mariucci Minneapolis, MN | Mel Pearson |
Season-by-flavour results [edit]
Records past opponent [edit]
- Big X Conference opponents
Opponent | GP | W-L-T | Win % | Starting time coming together | Last meeting |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michigan State | 333 | 172–137–24 | 0.553 | 5–1 W Jan 11, 1922 | 8–0 Due west March v, 2022 |
Minnesota | 297 | 131–147–nineteen | 0.473 | 0–ii L January 22, 1923 | 4–three Westward March 19, 2022 |
Notre Matriarch | 156 | 84–67–5 | 0.554 | ii–three L Feb 4, 1923 | 2–1 W March 12, 2022 |
Ohio Country | 153 | ninety–49–14 | 0.634 | 21–0 Westward February 8, 1964 | 3–0 W February 20, 2022 |
Penn State | 37 | 22–14–i | 0.608 | 7–3 W Feb seven, 2014 | 4–iii W January fifteen, 2022 |
Wisconsin | 161 | 84–64–13 | 0.562 | 2–1 W (OT) January 12, 1923 | six–2 Due west January 29, 2022 |
- Former CCHA opponents
Opponent | GP | West-50-T | Win % | Outset coming together | Last meeting |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alaska Independent | 55 | 42–12–1 | 0.773 | 8–2 W Feb xiii, 1987 | 1–iv L January 12, 2013 |
Bowling Dark-green CCHA | 122 | 82–37–3 | 0.684 | 4–i W December 29, 1971 | 4–6 L January 1, 2018 |
Ferris State CCHA | 107 | 72–31–4 | 0.692 | five–two Westward Jan eight, 1982 | iv–1 West Dec 30, 2019 |
Lake Superior Land CCHA | 123 | 67–49–7 | 0.573 | 6–iii West December 28, 1973 | 7–iv Westward October 9, 2021 |
Miami (OH) NCHC | 104 | 73–27–4 | 0.721 | 3–2 W December 11, 1981 | vi–two Due west March 23, 2013 |
Michigan Tech CCHA | 227 | 125–94–viii | 0.568 | 1–0 W January 17, 1927 | 0–0 T (OT) December 29, 2021 |
Nebraska Omaha NCHC | 38 | 27–8–three | 0.750 | 6–2 Due west December 10, 1999 | 4–3 W November 16, 2013 |
Northern Michigan CCHA | 66 | 39–twenty–7 | 0.644 | 3–0 W December 19, 1981 | iii–two Due west December 29, 2015 |
Western Michigan NCHC | 120 | 74–36–ten | 0.658 | 5–4 W November 23, 1979 | 3–2 W (OT) October 23, 2021 |
- Major non-briefing opponents
Opponent | GP | Westward-L-T | Win % | Outset meeting | Terminal coming together |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boston Higher Hockey Eastward | 19 | 11–8–0 | 0.579 | half-dozen–4 W (OT) March 18, 1948 | 1–5 L Dec thirteen, 2014 |
Boston University Hockey East | 30 | 17–13–0 | 0.567 | 3–4 Fifty March 17, 1950 | 6–3 W March 25, 2018 |
Colorado College NCHC | 98 | 59–36–3 | 0.617 | 2–4 L December 15, 1939 | 2–1 Westward March 26, 2011 |
Cornell ECAC | 8 | three–4–ane | .438 | 7–ane West January 2, 1965 | 1–5 L November 24, 2012 |
Denver NCHC | 83 | 36–46–one | 0.440 | five–four Due west February 5, 1951 | 5–3 Westward March 23, 2002 |
Harvard ECAC | 31 | 5–2–1 | 0.688 | 0–7 L Dec thirty, 1930 | 3–3 T (OT) December 15, 2001 |
Maine Hockey East | 7 | 4–3–0 | .571 | 3–1 Due west December 29, 1990 | 2–one Due west March 29, 2003 |
Minnesota-Duluth NCHC | 43 | 24–18–1 | 0.570 | 8-4 W January seven, 1964 | 5–1 Due west October 15, 2021 |
Due north Dakota NCHC | 91 | 46–41–4 | 0.527 | 5–vi L January 9, 1948 | 2–5 Fifty March 26, 2016 |
Providence Hockey East | 3 | 3–0–0 | 1.000 | three–2 Due west March xx, 1964 | 6–0 W December 28, 2007 |
RPI ECAC | 14 | half-dozen–7–1 | .464 | 4–vi Fifty March 12, 1954 | five–2 Westward October 24, 2015 |
UMass Hockey East | 2 | 2–0–0 | 1.000 | 4–1 W Jan viii, 2022 | four–2 W Jan 9, 2022 |
Marriage ECAC | four | 1–2–1 | .375 | 3–vi Fifty Nov 27, 2011 | 4–0 W October viii, 2016 |
Yale ECAC | 12 | 8–4–0 | 0.667 | one–7 L December 30, 1929 | iii–2 Westward October thirty, 1999 |
Source:[46]
Coaches [edit]
Current coaching staff [edit]
Every bit of May 23, 2021
Name | Position coached | Consecutive season at Michigan in current position | |
---|---|---|---|
Mel Pearson | Head autobus | fifth | |
Neb Muckalt | Associate Head Bus | 5th | |
Matt Hunwick | Volunteer Banana Coach | 3rd | |
Steve Shields | Plan Banana | 3rd | |
Joe Maher | Manager of Strength & Workout | eighth | |
Reference: [47] |
All-time coaching records [edit]
Equally of the end of the 2020–21 flavour [48]
Tenure | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1922–1927 | Joseph Barss | v | 26–21–4 | .549 |
1927–1944 | Eddie Lowrey | 17 | 124–136–21 | .479 |
1944–1957 | Vic Heyliger | 13 | 228–61–thirteen | .776 |
1957–1973 | Al Renfrew | xvi | 222–207–eleven | .517 |
1973–1980 | Dan Farrell | seven | 135–129–6 | .511 |
1980 | Wilf Martin^ | 1^ | i–1–0 | .500 |
1980–1984 | John Giordano | four | 68–75–6 | .477 |
1984–2017 | Red Berenson | 33 | 848–426–92 | .654 |
2017–present | Mel Pearson | four | 68–55–15 | .547 |
Totals | 8 coaches | 99 seasons | 1,720–1,111–168 | .602 |
^ Martin coached the first two games of the 1980–81 season before Giordano took over the coaching duties.
Outdoor games [edit]
Game | Date | Matchup | Result | Attendance | Site | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Cold War | October six, 2001 | No. 5 Michigan at No. i Michigan State | T three–iii | 74,554 | Spartan Stadium | E Lansing, MI |
Military camp Randall Hockey Archetype | Feb vi, 2010 | No. 19 Michigan at No. iii Wisconsin | 50 ii–iii | 55,031 | Camp Randall Stadium | Madison, WI |
The Big Chill at the Big House | December 11, 2010 | No. 12 Michigan vs Michigan State | W 5–0 | 113,411 | Michigan Stadium | Ann Arbor, MI |
Frozen Diamond Faceoff | Jan xv, 2012 | No. fifteen Michigan at No. two Ohio Land | W 4–ane | 25,831 | Progressive Field | Cleveland, OH |
Great Lakes Invitational | December 27, 2013 | No. 3 Michigan vs. Western Michigan | L 2–iii (OT) | 25,449 | Comerica Park | Detroit, MI |
Great Lakes Invitational | Dec 28, 2013 | No. 3 Michigan vs. Michigan Land | L 0–3 | 26,052 | Comerica Park | Detroit, MI |
Hockey City Classic | February 7, 2015 | No. 14 Michigan vs. Michigan Land | West 4–one | 22,751 | Soldier Field | Chicago, IL |
Permit'due south Take This Outside Classic | Jan 5, 2019 | Michigan vs. No. vi Notre Dame | West 4–2 | 23,422 | Notre Dame Stadium | S Bend, IN |
Statistical leaders [edit]
Career points leaders [edit]
Player | Years | GP | Chiliad | A | Pts | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brendan Morrison | 1993–1997 | 155 | 102 | 182 | 284 | 159 |
Denny Felsner | 1988–1992 | 162 | 139 | 122 | 261 | 150 |
Brian Wiseman | 1990–1994 | 166 | 84 | 164 | 248 | 216 |
David Roberts | 1989–1993 | 169 | 90 | 157 | 247 | 198 |
Dave Debol | 1974–1978 | 166 | 112 | 134 | 246 | 88 |
Brad Jones | 1983–1987 | 147 | 89 | 138 | 227 | 202 |
Bill Muckalt | 1994–1998 | 162 | 105 | 121 | 226 | 239 |
T. J. Hensick | 2003–2007 | 131 | 75 | 147 | 222 | 100 |
Neil Celley | 1945–1946, 1948–1951 | 106 | 119 | 96 | 215 | 62 |
Gordon McMillan | 1945–1949 | 92 | 99 | 114 | 213 | 71 |
Career Goaltending Leaders [edit]
GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals confronting; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percent; GAA = Goals against average [49]
Minimum ane,000 minutes
Histrion | Years | GP | Min | W | L | T | GA | And then | SV% | GAA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shawn Hunwick | 2007–2012 | 87 | 5117 | 54 | 24 | 7 | 176 | 10 | .928 | 2.06 |
Strauss Isle of man | 2018–2021 | 77 | 4429 | 34 | 29 | ix | 158 | 11 | .926 | 2.14 |
Bryan Hogan | 2007–2011 | 85 | 4811 | 52 | 25 | 2 | 175 | 7 | .909 | 2.18 |
Josh Blackburn | 1998–2002 | 150 | 8818 | 91 | 37 | 20 | 334 | iv | .905 | 2.27 |
Marty Turco | 1994–1998 | 165 | 9334 | 127 | 28 | 7 | 361 | fifteen | .898 | 2.32 |
Statistics current through the start of the 2020–21 season.
Arena [edit]
Built in 1923 as a field business firm, the facility is named in honor of Michigan's legendary football autobus and athletic director, Fielding H. Yost. For many years, it housed the Michigan basketball team, until they relocated to the larger Crisler Arena in 1967. It also housed the runway teams in the 1950s. In 1973, information technology was converted into an ice arena, and the Michigan hockey team has used it always since. The Academy of Michigan's Senior and Collegiate synchronized skating and freestyle teams also practice at Yost. In addition, local high school teams, recreational leagues (AAAHA) and the university's intramural hockey league call it home.
The arena is one of the virtually unusual in higher hockey not simply because information technology retains the charm of an old barn, simply also offers the amenities of the most modern of arenas. Information technology has served as home of Michigan hockey since 1973–74, and over 3 million fans have helped brand it one of the most heady and intimidating venues in college hockey. The atmosphere has helped the Wolverines on the water ice significantly, accumulating more than 450 victories at home.[fifty]
Yost Water ice Arena has hosted NCAA Ice Hockey Tournament games five times in its history, most recently in 2003.
The Children of Yost [edit]
The Children of Yost is the official student department for Michigan Wolverines men'south ice hockey.
Rivalries [edit]
Michigan Country [edit]
Michigan and Michigan Land starting time played each other in 1922. Michigan and Michigan State began playing a neutral site game in Detroit once a year in the "Duel in the D" series in which Michigan leads the series 18–eleven–5. Michigan leads the all-time series betwixt the teams, 172–137–24.
Notre Dame [edit]
Michigan and Notre Dame first played each other in 1923. Michigan leads the all-fourth dimension serial between the teams, 83–67–5.
Players [edit]
Current roster [edit]
As of August 30, 2021.[51]
No. | Southward/P/C | Player | Class | Pos | Summit | Weight | DoB | Hometown | Previous team | NHL rights |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ane | Erik Portillo | Sophomore | Yard | 6' 6" (1.98 m) | 225 lb (102 kg) | 2000-09-03 | Gothenburg, Sweden | | BUF, 67th overall 2019 | |
half-dozen | Jack Summers | Senior | D | 5' 11" (ane.8 m) | 180 lb (82 kg) | 1999-05-18 | Livonia, Michigan | Tri-City (USHL) | — | |
vii | Nick Blankenburg (C) | Senior | F | 5' 9" (one.75 m) | 160 lb (73 kg) | 1998-05-12 | Washington, Michigan | | — | |
9 | Eric Ciccolini | Inferior | F | 6' 0" (1.83 m) | 170 lb (77 kg) | 2001-01-04 | Vaughan, Ontario | Toronto Jr. Canadiens (OJHL) | NYR, 205th overall 2019 | |
10 | Matty Beniers (A) | Sophomore | F | 6' 1" (1.85 one thousand) | 175 lb (79 kg) | 2002-xi-05 | Hingham, Massachusetts | USNTDP (USHL) | SEA, 2d overall 2021 | |
11 | Mackie Samoskevich | Freshman | F | v' 11" (one.8 m) | 190 lb (86 kg) | 2002-11-15 | Sandy Hook, Connecticut | Chicago (USHL) | FLA, 24th overall 2021 | |
thirteen | Kent Johnson | Sophomore | F | 6' one" (1.85 m) | 165 lb (75 kg) | 2002-10-xviii | Port Moody, British Columbia | Trail (BCHL) | CBJ, 5th overall 2021 | |
15 | Jacob Truscott | Sophomore | D | half dozen' 1" (1.85 m) | 178 lb (81 kg) | 2002-04-12 | Port Huron, Michigan | | VAN, 144th overall 2020 | |
17 | Johnny Beecher | Junior | F | half-dozen' 3" (ane.91 yard) | 209 lb (95 kg) | 2001-04-05 | Elmira, New York | | BOS, 30th overall 2019 | |
19 | Brendan Brisson | Sophomore | F | half-dozen' 0" (1.83 m) | 185 lb (84 kg) | 2001-10-22 | Manhattan Beach, California | Chicago (USHL) | VGK, 29th overall 2020 | |
20 | Keaton Pehrson | Junior | D | 6' 2" (1.88 grand) | 194 lb (88 kg) | 1998-12-10 | | Tri-City (USHL) | — | |
21 | Michael Pastujov (A) | Graduate | F | half dozen' 0" (ane.83 m) | 190 lb (86 kg) | 1999-08-23 | Bradenton, Florida | USNTDP (USHL) | — | |
22 | Owen Power | Sophomore | D | half-dozen' half-dozen" (one.98 one thousand) | 214 lb (97 kg) | 2002-xi-22 | | Chicago (USHL) | BUF, 1st overall 2021 | |
23 | Jimmy Lambert (A) | Senior | F | 6' 0" (1.83 m) | 175 lb (79 kg) | 1997-02-09 | Saskatoon, Saskatchewan | Vernon (BCHL) | — | |
24 | Steve Holtz | Sophomore | D | 6' 4" (1.93 m) | 190 lb (86 kg) | 1999-04-02 | | Penticton (BCHL) | — | |
25 | Luke Morgan | Graduate | F | 5' 11" (one.viii yard) | 190 lb (86 kg) | 1997-08-28 | Brighton, Michigan | Lake Superior State (WCHA) | — | |
26 | Philippe Lapointe | Sophomore | F | 5' 11" (1.8 m) | 185 lb (84 kg) | 2000-02-29 | Novi, Michigan | Trail (BCHL) | — | |
27 | Nolan Moyle (A) | Senior | F | 6' 2" (1.88 m) | 185 lb (84 kg) | 1999-09-13 | | Dark-green Bay (USHL) | — | |
31 | Noah West | Sophomore | M | 6' 2" (ane.88 thou) | 185 lb (84 kg) | 2000-xi-25 | Pittsboro, Indiana | | — | |
34 | Thomas Bordeleau | Sophomore | F | five' 9" (ane.75 m) | 179 lb (81 kg) | 2002-01-03 | Terrebonne, Quebec | USNTDP (USHL) | SJS, 38th overall 2020 | |
37 | Jack Leavy | Senior | G | half dozen' 5" (ane.96 m) | 205 lb (93 kg) | 1997-09-xix | Birmingham, Michigan | Johnstown (NAHL) | — | |
43 | Luke Hughes | Freshman | D | 6' ii" (1.88 chiliad) | 186 lb (84 kg) | 2003-09-09 | Canton, Michigan | USNTDP (USHL) | NJD, fourth overall 2021 | |
51 | Garrett Van Wyhe | Senior | F | vi' 2" (1.88 one thousand) | 200 lb (91 kg) | 1997-04-30 | Seattle, Washington | Fargo (USHL) | — | |
55 | Jake Gingell | Senior | D | vi' 0" (1.83 yard) | 205 lb (93 kg) | 1997-02-eleven | Dexter, Michigan | Youngstown (USHL) | — | |
56 | Dylan Knuckles | Freshman | F | five' 10" (1.78 g) | 181 lb (82 kg) | 2003-03-04 | Strongsville, Ohio | USNTDP (USHL) | TBL, 126th overall 2021 | |
71 | Nick Granowicz | Inferior | F | vi' one" (ane.85 1000) | 174 lb (79 kg) | 1998-03-28 | Macomb, Michigan | Merritt (BCHL) | — | |
73 | Ethan Edwards | Freshman | D | 5' 11" (ane.8 m) | 185 lb (84 kg) | 2002-06-06 | St. Albert, Alberta | | NJD, 120th overall 2020 | |
90 | Jay Keranen | Junior | D | 5' eleven" (1.viii m) | 183 lb (83 kg) | 1998-05-08 | Brighton, Michigan | Prince George (BCHL) | — | |
94 | Mark Estapa | Freshman | F | 6' 2" (1.88 m) | 197 lb (89 kg) | 2002-01-13 | St. Clair, Michigan | Tri-City (USHL) | — |
Michigan has had numerous players recognized with prestigious awards and honors. The following is a summary of some of the other standout Michigan Wolverines men'southward ice hockey players.
U.Due south. Hockey Hall of Fame [edit]
The following individuals have been inducted into the The states Hockey Hall of Fame.[52]
- Vic Heyliger (1974)
- Willard Ikola (1990)
- John Matchefts (1991)
- Wally Grant (1994)
- John MacInnes (2007)
- Carmine Berenson (2018)
Hobey Baker Honor winners [edit]
The following players have been awarded the Hobey Baker Laurels.[53]
- Brendan Morrison (1997)
- Kevin Porter (2008)
Actor of the year [edit]
- The Hockey News U.S. Higher Actor of the Year[54]
- David Oliver (1994)
- Brendan Morrison (1996, 1997)
- Central Collegiate Hockey Clan[55]
- David Oliver (1994)
- Brendan Morrison (1996, 1997)
- Kevin Porter (2008)
- Western Collegiate Hockey Association[56]
- Crimson Berenson (1962)
- Gordon Wilkie (1964)
- Mel Wakabayashi (1966)
Academic All-American [edit]
Michigan has had two hockey Academic All-American.[56]
- Zach Hyman (2015, first team)
- Jeff Jillson (2001, second team)
Winter Olympic medalists [edit]
Michigan has had twenty-one players and one motorbus participate in the Wintertime Olympics. Seven of these participants earned Olympic medals.[52]
- Willard Ikola (1956 silver medal, United States)
- John Matchefts (1956 silver medal, United States)
- Bob White (1956 bronze medal, Canada)
- Todd Brost (1992 silver medal, Canada)
- David Harlock (1994 silvery medal, Canada)
- Jack Johnson (2010 silver medal, The states)
- Carl Hagelin (2014 silver medal, Sweden)
Wolverine All-Americans [edit]
Forty-eight Michigan Wolverines men's water ice hockey players have been chosen every bit Commencement team Division I All-Americans by the American Hockey Coaches Association.[57]
- Ross Smith (1948, 1950)
- Wally Gacek (1949)
- Wally Grant (1949)
- Connie Hill (1949)
- Dick Starrak (1949)
- Gil Burford (1951)
- Neil Celley (1951)
- Bob Heathcott (1951)
- John McKennell (1951)
- Alex MacLellan (1953)
- Lorne Howes (1956)
- Bob Schiller (1956)
- Bill MacFarland (1956)
- Bob White (1958, 1959)
- Bob Watt (1959)
- Red Berenson (1961, 1962)
- Tom Polanic (1964)
- Gordon Wilkie (1964)
- Mel Wakabayashi (1965)
- Jim Keough (1968)
- Robbie Moore (1974)
- Dave Debol (1977)
- Murray Eaves (1980)
- Paul Fricker (1981)
- Myles O'Connor (1989)
- Denny Felsner (1992)
- David Oliver (1994)
- Brian Wiseman (1994)
- Brendan Morrison (1995–97)
- Marty Turco (1997)
- John Madden (1997)
- Beak Muckalt (1998)
- Jeff Jillson (2000)
- Andy Hilbert (2001)
- Mike Komisarek (2002)
- Mike Cammalleri (2002)
- T.J. Hensick (2005, 2007)
- Jack Johnson (2007)
- Kevin Porter (2008)
- Louie Caporusso (2009)
- Aaron Palushaj (2009)
- Jacob Trouba (2013)
- Zach Hyman (2015)
- Kyle Connor (2016)
- Tyler Motte (2016)
- Zach Werenski (2016)
- Quinn Hughes (2019)
- Cameron York (2021)
Wolverines in the NHL [edit]
Source:[58]
= NHL All-Star Team | = NHL All-Star[59] | = NHL All-Star[59] and NHL All-Star Team | = Hall of Famers |
|
|
Statistical accomplishments [edit]
The all-time Michigan single-season goal scoring leaders are Ruby-red Berenson (1961–62) and Dave Debol (1976–77) who have each totaled 43. Denny Felsner (1988–92) has totaled 139 in his career for the school record. Brendan Morrison holds the school record for both single-season and career assists with 57 (1996–97) and 182 (1994–97), respectively. Debol (99, 1976–77) and Morrison (284, 1994–97) hold the unmarried-season and career points records, respectively.[60]
On defense, Marty Turco holds the single-flavour and career win records with 34 (1995–96) and 127 (1995–98). The single-season goals against average is held by Billy Sauer (1.95, 2007–08), while the career tape is held by Shawn Hunwick (2.21, 2007–2012). Shawn Hunwick holds the single-season salve pct tape, (.925, 2010–11), and besides holds the career record (.924, 2007–2012). Montoya's half-dozen unmarried-flavour shutouts (2003–2004) is the schoolhouse record while Turco's fifteen is the career record.[60]
Current national private records [edit]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's water ice hockey players hold NCAA Sectionalization I national records:[61]
- John Madden – single-season shorthanded goals – (10, 1996)
- John Madden – career shorthanded goals – (23, 1994–97)
- Robbie Moore – career saves – (4434, 1973–76)
- Marty Turco – career wins – (127, 1995–98)
Old national individual records [edit]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players formerly held NCAA Sectionalization I national records:[62]
- Neil Celley – single-season points per game (2.93 1951–1952)
- Gordon McMillan – single-season points per game (2.70 1948–1949)
- Neil Celley – single-season goals per game (1.48 1951–1952)
- Gil Burford – unmarried-season goal points per game (one.48 1950–1952)
- Karl Bagnell – single-flavor saves (1305, 1972–75)
- Gordon McMillan – career points per game (2.54, 1949–1954)
- Gil Burford – career goals per game (ane.30 1951–1952)
- Wally Gacek – career goals per game (1.21 1949–1951)
- Gordon McMillan – career assists per game (ane.38, 1949–1952)
- David Oliver – career game-winning goals (21, 1994–2006)
- Steve Shields – career wins (111, 1991–94)
Recent individual national statistical champions [edit]
The following Michigan Wolverines men'south ice hockey players accept been national statistical champions:[63]
- Brendan Morrison – points per game (two.02, 1997)
- T. J. Hensick – points per game (1.68, 2007)
- Brendan Morrison – assists per game (1.31, 1997)
- T. J. Hensick – assists per game (1.12, 2007)
- Jason Botterill – power play goals (19, 1997)
- John Madden – brusque-handed goals (ten, 1996)
- John Madden – brusk-handed goals (8, 1997)
- Scott Matzka – short-handed goals (6, 2000)
- Dale Rominski – game-winning goals (8, 1999)
- Republic of chad Kolarik – game-winning goals (7, 2008)
- Marty Turco – goalie winning percent (.850, 1997)
- Billy Sauer – goalie winning percentage (.851, 2008)
National team records [edit]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey teams agree NCAA Partitioning I national records:[64]
- Largest single-game margin of victory (21–0, vs. Ohio State, February 8, 1964)
- Most single-season overtime wins (6, 1998)
In add-on, the 2005 and 2007 teams led the nation in goals per game, and the 1996 and 1997 teams led the nation in both goals allowed per game and scoring margin per game.[65]
NCAA Tournament history [edit]
Including the 2022 NCAA Sectionalization I Men'southward Water ice Hockey Tournament, Michigan holds several NCAA Men'due south Ice Hockey Championship records: Tournaments (39, tied), consecutive tournaments (22), Frozen 4 appearances (26) and championships (9).[66] Through the 2021 Tournament, the team has a 53–xxx record in the NCAA Tournament, including a 25–sixteen tape in the Frozen Four.[67] The following is the complete history of the Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team in the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship.[68]
Year | Seed | First Circular | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | Notes |
iv-team tournament | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1948 | — | — | Boston College Due west 6–4 OT | Dartmouth College W viii–4 | Fastest consecutive goals record (0:05) still stands (Gordon McMillan and Wally Gacek) vs. Dartmouth[69] | |
1949 | — | — | Dartmouth College 50 2–four | Colorado Higher W 10–iv | — | |
1950 | — | — | Boston University L 3–4 | Boston College W 10–half-dozen | vs. Boston College only tournament game with no penalties for either team[seventy] | |
1951 | — | — | Boston University Due west 8–two | Brown Due west 7–one | Gil Burford's ix career Frozen Iv goals was a record until 1987.[71] | |
1952 | — | — | St. Lawrence W 9–3 | Colorado College W 4–1 | — | |
1953 | — | — | Boston University W 14–ii | Minnesota West 7–3 | Unmarried-game record for goals by i team in any NCAA tournament game (xiv), tied in 1954.[69] Second largest win margin in any single tournament game. | |
1954 | — | — | Renssealer L 4–6 | Boston College W 7–2 | — | |
1955 | — | — | Harvard W 7–3 | Colorado Higher W 5–3 | — | |
1956 | — | — | St. Lawrence Westward 2–1 OT | Michigan Tech W vii–v | — | |
1957 | — | — | Harvard University West 6–1 | Colorado College L vi–13 | — | |
1962 | — | — | Clarkson L 4–5 | St. Lawrence W 5–i | — | |
1964 | — | — | Providence Due west 3–2 | Denver W vi–iii | — | |
5-team tournament | ||||||
1977 | W2 | — | Bowling Green West vii–5 | Boston University West 6–4 | Wisconsin 50 5–6 OT | Shortest overtime championship game (0:23)[72] |
12-team tournament | ||||||
1991 | W3 | Cornell Fifty 4–5 OT, W half dozen–4, Due west 9–3 | Boston University 50 1–four, 50 i–8 | — | — | — |
1992 | W1 | bye | Northern Michigan W 7–6 | Wisconsin L ii–iv | — | — |
1993 | W2 | bye | Wisconsin Due west iv–three OT | Maine L 3–4 OT | — | — |
1994 | W1 | farewell | Lake Superior Country L 4–v OT | — | — | — |
1995 | W1 | good day | Wisconsin W four–3 | Maine L 3–4 3OT | — | Longest overtime tournament game at the fourth dimension (100:28), surpassed in 2021.[72] |
1996 | W2 | goodbye | Minnesota W 4–3 | Boston University West 4–0 | Colorado Higher West 3–2 OT | — |
1997 | W1 | bye | Minnesota West 7–four | Boston Academy L 2–3 | — | — |
1998 | W3 | Princeton W 2–1 | N Dakota W four–3 | New Hampshire West four–0 | Boston College W 3–2 OT | Marty Turco's nine career Tournament wins and two career Frozen 4 shutouts are old records.[69] |
1999 | E5 | Denver W five–three | New Hampshire 50 1–2 OT | — | — | — |
2000 | E5 | Colgate West iv–3 OT | Maine 50 5–2 | — | — | — |
2001 | W3 | Mercyhurst W 4–3 | St. Cloud Country West four–3 | Boston Higher L two–4 | — | — |
2002 | W4 | St. Cloud State Westward four–2 | Denver Due west 5–3 | Minnesota Fifty ii–3 | — | — |
16-team tournament | ||||||
2003 | MW3 | Maine West 2–1 | Colorado College Due west 5–3 | Minnesota L 2–3 OT | — | — |
2004 | NE2 | New Hampshire Due west 4–1 | Boston College L 2–3 OT | — | — | — |
2005 | MW2 | Wisconsin Due west four–1 | Colorado College L 3–iv | — | — | — |
2006 | W3 | North Dakota 50 i-5 | — | — | — | — |
2007 | W2 | Due north Dakota Fifty 5–8 | — | — | — | — |
2008 | E1 | Niagara W 5–one | Clarkson Due west 2–0 | Notre Dame 50 four–5 OT | — | — |
2009 | E1 | Air Forcefulness L 0–2 | — | — | — | — |
2010 | MW3 | Bemidji State W 5–1 | Miami L two–iii 2OT | — | — | — |
2011 | W2 | Nebraska-Omaha W 3–ii OT | Colorado Higher W two–1 | North Dakota Due west 2–0 | Minnesota-Duluth Fifty 2–3 OT | — |
2012 | MW1 | Cornell L 2–iii OT* | — | — | — | — |
2016 | MW2 | Notre Matriarch W 3–2 OT | North Dakota L ii–5 | — | — | — |
2018 | NE2 | Northeastern West 3–2 | Boston University W 6–3 | Notre Dame L 3–4 | — | — |
2021 | MW2 | Minnesota Duluth Fifty No contest | — | — | — | Michigan was removed from the tournament earlier beginning play due to positive COVID-19 test results and forfeited the game as a effect.[73] |
2022 | MW1 | American International W 5–3 | Quinnipiac W 7–four | Denver | — | — |
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External links [edit]
- Official website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michigan_Wolverines_men%27s_ice_hockey
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