2013-14 Army Hockey Guide

Page 1



TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION MARKER ARMY HOCKEY QUICK FACTS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

GENERAL INFORMATION Location ....................................................West Point, N.Y. Founded ................................................... March 16, 1802 Enrollment ...................................................................4,400 Nickname ....................................................Black Knights Motto ..............................................Duty, Honor, Country Colors ......................................................Black, Gold, Gray Mascot ............................................................................Mule Superintendent ................. Lt. Gen. Robert L. Caslen Athletic Director ....................................... Boo Corrigan Conference .................. Atlantic Hockey Association Arena ...................................................................... Tate Rink Size .......................................................200 feet x 85 feet Capacity ........................................................................ 2,525 Tate Rink Box Office........................... 1-877-TIX-ARMY Tate Rink Press Box ..............................845-938-5116 HOCKEY INFORMATION First Year of Hockey ................................................. 1904 Overall Record........................... 1093-1000-122 (.521) 2012-13 Record ........................................................7-22-5 2012-13 Conference Record ...............................7-15-5 Letterwinners Returning ............................................. 18 Letterwinners Lost ................................................. Seven Newcomers ....................................................................Nine Head Coach .......................................................Brian Riley Alma Mater .........................................................Brown ‘83 Career Record ..................... 105-166-48 (9 seasons) Record at Army.......................................................... same Hockey Office Phone .............................845-938-3711 Assistant Coaches ..............Trevor Large, Eric Lang Captain ..........................................................Brian Schultz Alternate Captains ......... Mac Lalor, Josh Richards Dir. of Hockey Operations.......................... Tom Doran Athletic Trainer ......................................... Alex Ambrose Athletic Interns .............................2nd Lt. Ryan Leets ......................................................... 2nd Lt. Cheyne Rocha ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS Hockey Contact..........................................Tracy Nelson Office .......................................................... 845-938-4090 Cellular ......................................................... 914-755-7764 E-mail....................................... tracy.nelson@usma.edu Web Site............................... www.goARMYsports.com Twitter .......................... ArmyAthletics, Army_Hockey Facebook ........ Facebook.com/Army Black Knights Army A Line ...............................845-938-ARMY (2769)

OCTOBER Fri. 11

at Penn State+

8:00 p.m.

Sat. 26 at Merrimack

7:05 p.m.

NOVEMBER Fri. 1

at Connecticut*

Sat. 2

BENTLEY*

7:05 p.m.

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 8

HOLY CROSS*

7:05 p.m.

Sun. 10 at Boston College

7:05 p.m.

Tue. 12 at Sacred Heart*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 15

7:05 p.m.

at Niagara*

Sat. 16 at Niagara*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 22 SACRED HEART*

7:05 p.m.

Sat. 23 at Sacred Heart*

7:05 p.m.

Tue. 26 at American Int’l*

7:05 p.m.

DECEMBER Fri. 6

CANISIUS*

Sat. 7

CANISIUS*

7:05 p.m. 7:05 p.m.

Fri. 20 PROVIDENCE

7:05 p.m.

JANUARY Fri. 3

MERCYHURST*

Sat. 4

MERCYHURST*

7:05 p.m. 7:05 p.m.

Fri. 10 AIR FORCE*$

6:00 p.m.

Sat. 11 AIR FORCE*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 17

at RIT*

7:05 p.m.

Sat. 18 at RIT*

7:05 p.m.

Sat. 25 at Royal Military College! 7:05 p.m. Fri. 31

at Robert Morris*

7:05 p.m.

FEBRUARY Sat. 1

at Robert Morris*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 7

at American Int’l*

7:05 p.m.

Sat. 8

AMERICAN INT’L*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 14

BENTLEY*

7:05 p.m.

Sat. 15 at Bentley*

7:05 p.m.

Fri. 21

7:05 p.m.

at Connecticut*

Sat. 22 CONNECTICUT* Fri. 28

7:05 p.m.

at Holy Cross*

7:05 p.m.

HOLY CROSS*

7:05 p.m.

MARCH Sat. 1

F-S 7-9 First Round Series Highest Seed F-S 14-16 Quarterfinal Series Highest Seed Fri. 21

MEDIA GUIDE CREDITS The 2013-14 Army Hockey Media Guide is an official publication of the U.S. Military Academy Office of Athletic Communications. The guide was designed, written and edited by Tracy Nelson and Ryan Yanoshak. Design and editing assistance was provided by Bob Beretta, Brian Gunning, Mady Salvani, Pam Flenke, Amanda Niglia and Harrison Antognioni. Photos courtesy of Danny Wild, John Pellino, Tommy Gilligan, Mark Aikman, David Hahn, Beverly Schaefer Photography, West Point DPTMS, Mady Salvani, Paul Rader, Ken Booth, Bruce Adler, Pete Hennessey and Army Athletic Communications.

ON THE COVERS Front Cover: Senior captain Brian Schultz. Back Cover: Alternate captains Mac Lalor and Josh Richards. Inside Covers: The Army hockey team and locker rooms.

AHA Semifinals^

Rochester, N.Y.

Sat. 22 AHA Championship^ Rochester, N.Y. F-S 28-30 NCAA Regionals

TBD

Home Games In BOLD CAPS All times Eastern + - Televised on Big Ten Network * - Atlantic Hockey Association contest $ - Televised on CBS Sports Network ! - Exhibition game in Kingston, Ont. ^ - Atlantic Hockey playoffs at Blue Cross Arena, Rochester, N.Y.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Quick Facts......................................................................1 Schedule ...........................................................................1 Ticket Information ..................................................... 2 Broadcast Schedule .................................................. 2 Marketing/Promotions Schedule ........................ 3 Media Services ............................................................. 4 Alumni Weekend .......................................................... 5 Army Sports Hall of Fame........................................ 6 The Riley Legacy ...........................................................7 Army in the NHL............................................................ 8 Frozen Four Skills Challenge .................................. 9 International Competition ...................................10 The NHL at Tate Rink ................................................11 Perspectives on West Point ................................ 12 Media Day ..................................................................... 13 Outdoor Scrimmage................................................. 13 Hockey Facilities..................................................14-15 Why West Point ....................................................16-19 About the U.S. Military Academy ................ 20-21 Distinguished Graduates ...............................22-23 Center for Enhanced Performance...................24 West Point Academics............................................25 Athletic Training........................................................ 26 Army Strength ............................................................ 27 Academy Leadership .............................................. 28 Athletics Director Boo Corrigan ....................... 29 Coach Brian Riley ...............................................30-31 Assistant Coach Trevor Large .............................32 Assistant Coach Eric Lang ....................................32 Hockey Support Staff............................................. 33 Officer Representatives ....................................... 33 Rosters................................................................... 34-35 Meet the Black Knights ..................................36-51 2011-12 in Review ..............................................52-62 College Hockey .......................................................... 63 The AHA .................................................................. 64-65 Army Hockey History ....................................... 66-67 Career Hat Tricks................................................68-70 Academic Awards .......................................................71 Awards and Honors ............................................72-74 Scoring Leaders .........................................................75 Goaltending Leaders ...............................................76 AAA Award .....................................................................76 Career Records .......................................................... 77 Season Records .........................................................78 All-Time Record vs. Opponents ................... 79-80 Army vs. RMC........................................................81-82 Army All-Americans ................................................. 83 Two Seasons To Remember ................................ 84 Decade-by-Decade Results ..........................85-86 All-Time Results .................................................. 87-97 All-Time Letterwinners ..................................98-101 Media Roster............................................................ 102

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY SCHEDULE


HOW TO CATCH SECTION THEMARKER BLACK KNIGHTS BROADCAST AND MULTI-MEDIA SCHEDULE

TICKET INFORMATION

The Army Sports Network will carry at least 26 regular season games and all playoff contests for the 2013-14 season. Army’s Nikoli Busko and Nick DeSanctis handle all calling duties for the Black Knights’ array of broadcasts.

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

AUDIO WEB STEAM: Offered as part of Army’s Knight Vision subscription-based package. Visit www.goARMYsports.com for more. VIDEO WEB STREAM: In partnership with the Atlantic Hockey Association, this is offered as a part of America One, which is subscription based. Visit www.americaone.com for detail. RADIO BROADCAST: Fans in the Hudson Valley can listen on 1340 WALL and 1390 WEOK.

DATE

OPPONENT

WEB STREAM AUDIO VIDEO

O11

@ Penn State

O26

@ Merrimack

N1

@ Connecticut

N2

BENTLEY

RADIO

ON THE CALL

Busko

Busko Busko

Busko

N8

HOLY CROSS

Busko

N10

@ Boston College

Busko

N12

@ Sacred Heart

N15

@ Niagara

N16

@ Niagara

N22

SACRED HEART

DeSanctis

N23

@ Sacred Heart

DeSanctis

Busko •

Busko

@ AIC

D6

CANISIUS

D7

CANISIUS

Busko

D20

PROVIDENCE

Busko

J3

MERCYHURST

J4

MERCYHURST

J10

AIR FORCE

J11

AIR FORCE

@ RIT

J18

@ RIT

J25

@ RMC

J31

@ Robert Morris

F1

@ Robert Morris

F7

@ AIC

Busko •

Busko

Busko Busko

Busko Busko

Busko

F8

AIC

DeSanctis

F14

BENTLEY

DeSanctis

F15

@ Bentley •

Busko

F21

@ Connecticut

F22

CONNECTICUT

TICKET PRICING Address ......................................................................................................639 Howard Road .............................................................................................................. West Point, N.Y. 10996 Phone ...............................................................................................................1-877-TIX-ARMY Buy Online ............................................................................................. goARMYsports.com Single Game Tickets ..........................................................................Chairbacks $10-20 ........................................................................................................................... Bleachers $9-14 ...........................................................................................................................Rinkside $35-45 Mini Plan (Three Game) .............................................................................................. $21-51 Mini Plan (Six Game) ..................................................................................................$46-88 Season Tickets ......................................................................................... Chairbacks $140 ...............................................................................................................................Bleachers $98 Rink-Side (includes hospitality) ................................................................................$249

DeSanctis

N26

J17

Season and single-game tickets for the 2013-14 Army hockey season are now on sale and can be purchased in a number of ways. Fourteen games are scheduled to be played at Tate Rink this season, highlighted by Atlantic Hockey Association matchups against service-academy rival Air Force, Bentley, Holy Cross, Sacred Heart, Canisius, Mercyhurst, American International and Connecticut. Lauded as one of the top venues in the region, the Black Knights played in front of six sellout crowds a year ago. Season tickets for chairback seats can be purchased for $140 for the general public and $112 for West Point faculty/staff. Bleacher seats are $98 each for the year, while the popular rink side seats, which include food and beverage, are available for the fourth straight season at $249 for Army A Club members. Group tickets for those with 10 or more in their party are also available for purchase. Please visit www.goARMYsports.com/tickets for more information on group opportunities and rates. Mini-plans, group tickets and single-game seats are also offered. Tickets can be purchased on-line at www.goARMYsports.com, in person at the Army Ticket Office or by calling 1-877-TIX-ARMY.

DeSanctis

F28

@ Holy Cross

Busko

M1

HOLY CROSS

Busko

PAGE 2 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


HOCKEY SECTION KNIGHT MARKER AT WEST POINT MARKETING With 14 home games scheduled, a bevy of promotions are planned for Hockey Knight at West Point. Below is a tentative list of hockey promotions, which is subject to change. For the most up-to-date information, please visit www.goARMYsports.com. Date Oct. 5

Giveaway

Schedule Posters Hockey Knight T-Shirts

Glowsticks

House of Blues T-Shirts Thunder Stix

AT R

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Promotions Black and Gold Scrimmage Movie Knight (The Mighty Ducks) Open Skate Nov. 2 vs. Bentley Opening Knight Skate with the Black Knights Nov. 8 vs. Holy Cross Black Knights Buddies Salute to Heroes Chuck-A-Puck Flag on Ice Nov. 22 vs. Sacred Heart Black Knights Buddies Dec. 6 vs. Canisius West Point Schools Knight Chuck-A-Puck Dec. 7 vs. Canisius Scout Knight Skate with the Black Knights Dec. 20 vs. Providence Black Knights Buddies Teddy Bear Toss Skate with the Black Knights Jan. 3 vs. Mercyhurst House of Blues Jan. 10 vs. Air Force Cadet Support Knight Jan. 11 vs. Air Force Cadet Support Knight Feb. 14 vs. Bentley Bring Your Date To Tate Scout Knight Feb. 22 vs. UConn Skate with the Black Knights Mar. 1 vs. Holy Cross Senior Knight


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

COVERING THE BLACK KNIGHTS SECTION MARKER INTERVIEWS: Army head coach Brian Riley and selected players will be available to the media at the conclusion of each game, following a 10-minute cooling off period. In most cases, the players will be made available outside of the locker room, located in the northwest corner of the arena. Access to the locker room area can be made via the steps at the north end of the east stands and by walking behind the goal area. The locker room is closed to the media. The visitor’s locker room is located in the southeast corner of the arena and can be accessed using the stairs at the south end of the east stands. Please see the visiting Sports Information Director for visiting players and coaches. For those desiring interviews with Riley during the week, the best time to reach him is between 9 a.m. and noon. No gameday interviews will be granted except upon extenuating circumstances. All requests for player or coach interviews must be made through Tracy Nelson of the Office of Athletic Communications in order to avoid disruptions to players’ academic schedules. PRESS BOX: Tate Rink’s press box is located in Sections 12 and 13 on the east side of the arena at center ice. The press facilities can be accessed by entering the arena from the east concourse between Sections 12 and 13. Seating in the press box is limited and is restricted to credentialed media only. CREDENTIALS: Working credentials for all media personnel are issued on a firstcome, first-served basis by contacting Tracy Nelson in the Army Office of Athletic Communications. In most instances, credentials will be left at the Will Call window, located on the east side of the

ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA RELATIONS ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS Tracy Nelson Office: 845-938-4090 Cell: 914-755-7764 E-Mail: tracy.nelson@ usma.edu

ticket office in the lobby of the Holleder Center. There is no designated press parking, although special arrangements for television crews may be arranged through Tracy Nelson or Mike Rubbino, facilities operations manager. GAME SERVICES: Game notes, statistics, line charts and other vital information will be available in the press box prior to the game. Shot charts and statistics will be distributed during each period break with a full game summary compiled following the contest. The press box is equipped with internet access and reporters should bring their own cord. There is no wireless access in Tate Rink. RADIO: Up to three spaces are available per crew. West Point officials reserve the right to limit radio crews to fewer members. Three outside radio lines are available from Tate Rink. Rental fee for these lines is $75 per line. A check and completed radio line agreement MUST be received in the Office of Athletic Communications PRIOR to the game or hand-delivered to an athletic communications representative before plugging into the line. Only outgoing collect or credit card calls are permitted. Stations in need of ISDN service should contact Tracy Nelson in Army’s Office of Athletic Communications. TELEVISION: Special arrangements must be made through the Office of Athletic Communications and Mike Rubbino, facilities operations manager. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Still photographers are requested to contact athletic communications personnel for instructions as to where they may be during game action. Shooting from the penalty boxes is limited to professional photographers representing accredited media outlets or the Army Athletic Association.

U.S. Military Academy 639 Howard Road West Point, N.Y. 10928

PAGE 4 • @ARMY_HOCKEY

MULTI-MEDIA COVERAGE: Audio and video broadcasts of Army’s selected hockey games are available on the internet to Knight Vision subscribers on the Black Knights’ official Web site at: www. goARMYsports.com. TWITTER: The official Army hockey Twitter feed is available at www.twitter.com/ Army_Hockey (@Army_Hockey). Scoring updates, links and much more are posted. For general athletic news, visit www.twitter.com/ArmyAthletics (@ArmyAthletics). FACEBOOK: The official Army Athletic Association Facebook page is listed as Army Black Knights. Photos, upcoming events, polls, contests and much more can be found on the site. For hockey-specific news, search Army Hockey at West Point. INSTAGRAM: Be sure to follow Army Black Knights on Instagram for a plethora of images surrounding all things Army Athletics. YOUTUBE: Army Black Knights on YouTube offers a secondary home for all video content, which is primarily available through Knight Vision. Exclusive YouTube content is also provided.


THE ARMY SECTION HOCKEY MARKER FAMILY ALUMNI

Legendary coach Jack Riley celebrating his 90th birthday at West Point.

been so great to see so many old friends and players and I thank you all for coming out.” Said Brian Riley, “This has been a great weekend and there are so many people to thank. The Army hockey staff and the Army Hockey Association did an outstanding job putting this together and we are so thankful for the folks that came out to say hi to my dad and support our program.”

Army hockey alumni and current players shake hands after a competitive game.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Each year, the Army Hockey Association holds a golf tournament at the West Point Golf Course, a dinner and alumni game, allowing former players a chance to re-connect, players of different generations to gather and a chance to re-tell stories and pass along the proud traditions of West Point and Army hockey. Three years ago, the event was among the best attended as hundreds of former players, administrators, friends, fans and supporters turned out to celebrate the 90th birthday of former coach Jack Riley. A spirited alumni game with specially made sweaters and pucks, a huge turnout for the golf tournament and a birthday celebration that included family, friends and four Olympic hockey coaches helped make the Army Hockey Alumni Weekend and Jack Riley Birthday Celebration a rousing success. From Friday’s alumni game to Saturday’s 90th birthday party for the legendary Riley, former players, fans and family had the opportunity to share stories, reminisce and pass on birthday wishes to Riley. “What a great weekend for Army hockey,” said Army hockey head coach Brian Riley, Jack’s youngest son. “Seeing so many old faces and such a great turnout really reinforced that Army hockey is a bond for life.” The weekend began with Friday’s alumni game, a close contest with the white squad pulling out a 13-12 victory as more than 20 skaters participated. Each jersey had the Riley nameplate on the back and everyone wore number 90. Special pucks, featuring a photo of Riley and the date, were utilized. “It’s great to see the guys,” said Ed Healy, a 1976 graduate who served as Jack’s head Officer Representative for four years. “It’s been a while since I have been here and this seemed like the perfect weekend to come back and see coach and reconnect with some old friends.” Jack Riley, who won 542 games while behind

the Army bench and coached the 1960 U.S. Olympic team to a gold medal, spent parts of the game in the crowd catching up with former players and friends and also spent some time coaching as well. Saturday’s tournament at the West Point Golf Course featured more than 100 participants and a slew of prizes and raffle items. A few golfers sported replica USA sweaters for the start of the event and a few hockey stickers were spotted in golf bags. Each of the four golfers on the winning team received a copy of the book 1960: Miracle at Squaw Valley, written by Harvey Shapiro., among other great prizes. Following the golf event, the festivities moved to the West Point Ski Slope for a birthday celebration of Riley, the head coach of Army for 36 seasons, after passing a road sign that wished him Happy Birthday. More than 150 people were on hand, most of whom signed a giant card provided by U.S.A. Hockey. Brian Riley served as master of ceremonies, thanking everyone for their support of the event and Army hockey. He then introduced three other Olympic coaches who made the trek to West Point, N.Y. Murray Williamson, an assistant on the 1968 squad and head coach of the ‘72 team that won a silver medal; Tim Taylor, an assistant in 1984 and the head coach in 1994 and Lou Vairo, an assistant in 2002 and head coach in 1984, were all on hand for an historic gathering of Olympic greatness. In addition to the Olympic head coaches, all five of Jack Riley’s children -- sons Jay, Mark, Rob and Brian and daughter Mary Beth -- as well as nieces and nephews, cousins and grandchildren were on hand. Carl Ulrich, who served as Athletic Director during Riley’s tenure made the trek and former neighbor Bobby Knight, who was out of the country and unable to attend, sent birthday wishes. “I am so blessed,” said Jack Riley, shortly after the crowd sang Happy Birthday. “It has


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

ARMY SECTION IN THE HALL MARKER OF FAME

(L to R) Bob Knight, Jack Riley, Mike Krzyzewski are all members of the Army Sports Hall of Fame.

George Clark was inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame as a part of the Class of 2008.

The Kenna Hall of Army Sports is located in the state-of-the-art Kimsey Athletic Center, just across the street from Tate Rink.

PAGE 6 • @ARMY_HOCKEY

The Army Sports Hall of Fame has inducted nine classes and there is a strong hockey presence among the Academy’s top athletes. Coach Jack Riley and players David Rost, David Merhar, George Clark, John Boretti, Pete Dawkins and Ralph Chesnauskas all left their mark on one of the country’s oldest hockey programs and earned induction. The Army Sports Hall of Fame is located in the Kimsey Athletic Center. Each inductee has a plaque highlighting their many accomplishments and each team has a separate area detailing the history of the sport at West Point. Riley is Army’s all-time winningest coach and compiled a 542-343-20 record during his remarkable 36-year career at the Black Knights’ hockey helm. He retired in 1986 as the second-winningest college hockey head coach in NCAA history and currently ranks ninth on the list. In addition, Riley led the 1960 U.S. Olympic Team to a gold medal at the Squaw Valley Games. Merhar led Army’s hockey team in scoring during each of his three seasons with the varsity, but it was his explosive senior campaign that earned him national acclaim. Merhar erupted for an NCAA-record 57 goals and tallied 50 assists during the 1968-69 season, becoming the first collegiate player ever to surpass 100 points in one year. No player in NCAA hockey history has scored more points than Rost, who compiled an astounding 330 points during his remarkable four-year career at Army. Rost was tabbed a first-team All-East selection in 1977, capping a sparkling senior season in which he set an Academy record with 108 points, while jointly setting the NCAA single-season scoring mark with Clarkson’s Dave Taylor. The Black Knights’ career assist leader with 226, Rost tallied 104 career goals to graduate in third place in that category. His 66 assists in 1974-75 remain an Academy record. Clark wasn’t far behind Rost and Merhar when it came to scoring. The Academy’s only two-time All-American, Clark is third alltime with 266 points. His 153 goals top the Academy goals scoring chart while his 113 assists are 10th all-time. He had a sevengoal game to his credit and once netted nine points in a game. Boretti was a three-sport star at the Academy in baseball, soccer and hockey. He played 75 games as a defenseman with 27 points. Dawkins, a Heisman Trophy winner in 1958, was also a defenseman on the hockey team. Chesnauskas, the most recent inductee as part of the Class of 2009, was also a threesport star. In addition to hockey, he also played football and basketball. On the ice, he served as team captain as a senior for Riley, despite having no hockey experience prior to his arrival at the U.S. Military Academy.


THE SECTION RILEYMARKER LEGACY

ROB RILEY

JACK RILEY

• Army Head Coach (1986-2004) • 306 Career Victories • 257 Victories At Army • Youngest Head Coach Ever To Win Division III National Title (1983-84) • Captained Boston College To 1978 NCAA Championship Game • Spent two years as head coach of the Springfield Falcons, the AHL affiliate of the Columbus Blue Jackets

BRIAN RILEY

• Army Head Coach (1951-1986)

• Army Head Coach (2004-present)

• Retired As Second-Winningest Coach In NCAA History (542 Career Victories) • Two-Time NCAA “Coach of the Year” (1957, 1960) • Coached 1960 Olympic Gold Medal Team • 1979 Inductee, U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame • 1999 Inductee, International Hockey Hall Of Fame • 2004 Inductee, Army Sports Hall Of Fame • Two-Time Lester Patrick Award Winner (1986, 2002)

• Three-Time Atlantic Hockey “Coach Of The Year” (2006, ‘07, ‘08) • Army Assistant Coach (1988-96, 1998-2004) • Assistant Coach On Three Different Teams That Qualified For NCAA Tournament • Assistant Coach For SUNY Plattsburgh NCAA Championship Team (1986-87) • 94-19-10 Record In Two Seasons As Head Coach At Shattuck St. Mary’s • Team Captian At Brown (1982-83)

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

THE FIRST FAMILY OF ARMY HOCKEY


SECTION ARMY IN MARKER THE NHL ZACH MCKELVIE

ANDY LUNDBOHM

Calgary Flames

San Jose Sharks, Florida Panthers

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

• Signed a free agent contract with the Boston Bruins July 13, 2009 • Recently signed with the Calgary Flames for whom he is playing now • 2009 USMA graduate • Henry “Hal” Beukema Award winner as Army’s team MVP • Army’s first two-time first-team Atlantic Hockey Association choice • Atlantic Hockey Defenseman of the Year • Resigned with the Bruins in 2011. • Participated in training camp with the Bruins in 2011 and 2012 • Played in 39 games with the Providence Bruins. Scored once and handed out an assist.

• Authored four-year professional career in San Jose Sharks and Florida Panthers organizations • Signed as a free agent by the Florida Panthers on July 16, 2002 • Spent the first three years of his career with the San Jose Sharks • Appeared in 51 games for the Cleveland Barons (AHL) in 2001-02 season • Signed as a free agent by the San Jose Sharks on June 8, 1999 • Participated in the North American College Hockey Championship series pitting college seniors from the U.S. against Canada • 1999 USMA graduate • Two-time “Hal” Beukema Award winner as Army’s team MVP • Among Army’s all-time leading scorers

DAN HINOTE

BRAD ROBERTS

Colorado Avalanche, St. Louis Blu Blues es

• Signed with the Youngstown Steelhounds of the Central Hockey League Oct. 19, 2006 • 23-14-4 mark in 41 games in first season • Named team’s Rookie of the Year • Played in 13 games in 2007-08 before continuing his military career • Participated in the 2006 NCAA Frozen Four Skills Challenge • 2006 USMA graduate • Henry “Hal” Beukema Award winner as Army’s team MVP

• Nine-year veteran of the National Hockey League gue • Signed a multi-year contract with the St. Louis Blues ues after seven years in Colorado • Scored 27 goals and dished out 38 assists in 353 career games with the Avalanche • Scored 6 goals and 9 assists in 69 career playoff games • Member of the Colorado Avalanche’s Stanley Cup championship club in 2000-01 • Drafted in the seventh round of the 1996 NHL entry draft (167th overall) • Played in 2000 AHL all-star game, recorded an assist • 1999-00 Lester Kinney Award winner as the Hershey Bears (AHL) most improved player • First NHL game was Oct. 5, 1999 vs. Nashville • First NHL point was Oct. 10, 1999 vs. N.Y. Islanders • First NHL goal was Mar. 4, 2000 vs. Tampa Bay

PAGE 8 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


UPSECTION TO THE CHALLENGE MARKER NCAA FROZEN FOUR CHALLENGE The Army hockey team has been well represented at the NCAA Frozen Four Skills Challenge. In six years of the all-star-like celebration, Army has had four players take part in the festivities. In addition to the skills showcases, those selected also participate in community and charity events in the host city as well as autograph and photo opportunities. Goalie Brad Roberts, forwards Luke Flicek and Owen Meyer and defenseman Zach McKelvie have all participated.

BRAD ROBERTS, 2006 Bradley Center, Milwaukee, Wis.

LUKE FLICEK, 2008 Pepsi Center, Denver, Colo.

OWEN MEYER, 2010 Ford Field, Detroit, Mich.

PAGE 9 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

ZACH MCKELVIE, 2009 Verizon Center, Washington, D.C.


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

INTERNATIONAL SECTION MARKER COMPETITION

Olympic gold medals and international competition omp petition and success are also a part of the Army hockey tradition.. From Jack Riley and Larry Palmer winning gold medals to players competing in the World University Games and nd pre-Olympic Tours, Army hockey has traveled the globe. Riley, Army’s head coach for 36 seasons, was as behind the bench for the 1960 U.S. Olympic team and pulled off a series of stunning upsets on the way to winning the gold medal. To build team unity, he named his lines Red, d Whit White and d Bl Blue iinstead of the standard first, second and third lines and preached fitness. A 7-5 win over Czechoslovakia was followed by a 12-1 win over Australia before they opened medal play with a 6-3 victory over Sweden. The U.S. followed that up with a 2-1 upset against gold-medal favorite Canada and a 9-1 pasting of Germany. Riley then guided the Americans past Russia, 3-2, marking the first time in history a U.S. hockey team had beaten a Soviet team. The rematch with the Czechs was closer but following a 9-4 win that included six unanswered goals by the Americans, the celebration was set. A standing ovation on the plane ride home was followed by a military police escort at West Point and a victory gathering. Riley also participated as a skater internationally, competing in the ‘48 Olympics in Stockholm where the team finished fourth despite defeating Italy 3-1 and Poland 31-1. Riley scored the gamewinning goal in a 4-3 win over England but Canada won the gold medal. Palmer, a three-time letterwinner for Riley at West Point, joined the gold-medal winning team following his graduation in 1959 as the back-up goaltender. Scott Schulze, a defenseman who registered 90 points prior to his graduation from West Point in 1990, was a member of Team U.S.A. in the World University Games in 1989 in Sapporo, Japan. The 1991 World University Games’ U.S. roster featured classmates Todd Tamburino and Scott Williams during competition in Sophia, Bulgaria. Williams was a 1991 graduate with 31 points while Tamburino collected 57 points from his defenseman position. Ed Crowley, a 1948 graduate, was an alternate on the 1948 squad with Riley while Paul DeGironimo was part of a pre-Olympic Tour prior to his graduation in 1987.

The 1960 U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team before the final cut.

1960 OLYMPIC HOCKEY GOLD MEDAL: United States SILVER MEDAL: Canada BRONZE MEDAL: Soviet Union U.S. Results 2/19 - United States 7, Czechoslovakia 5 2/21 - United States 12, Australia 1 2/22 - United States 6, Sweden 3 2/24 - United States 9, Germany 1 2/25 - United States 2, Canada 1 2/27 - United States 3, USSR 2 2/28 - United States 9, Czechoslovakia 4

Larry Palmer (left) and coach Jack Riley.

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THE SECTION NHL AT MARKER TATE RINK TOP TRAINING FACILITY West Point has become a popular training stop for NHL teams. Team visits have ranged from a day to a week and usually include lunch in the Cadet Mess Hall with the Corps of Cadets, military-style training on and off post, utilization of Tate Rink and its locker room and work in the O’Meara, Malek, Dawkins Class of 1959 Strength Development Center. The Florida Panthers, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, Buffalo Sabres and New Jersey Devils are among the NHL teams that have worked out at West Point. The U.S. Junior National team and Polish National Team have also taken advantage of the state-of-the-art facilities.

Keith Primeau of the Philadelphia Flyers pictured here in 2008.

Head coach Brian Riley speaks to members of the Pittsburgh Penguins organization during one of their three training visits to West Point (2013, 2007, 2006).

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Henrik Lundquist and the New York Rangers visited Tate Rink in 2007 and 2005.

The Pittsburgh Penguins are the most recent team to utilize West Point to cap off training camp. They spent Sept. 27-29, 2013, on the banks of the Hudson. Pictured here are Penguins and Army team captains (L to R) Evgeni Malkin, Brooks Orpik, Mac Lalor, Sidney Crosby, Josh Richards, Brian Schultz and Chris Kunitz looking out onto Washington Statue.


PERSPECTIVES SECTION ON MARKER WEST POINT “Having the opportunity to coach here at West Point is both an honor and a privilege. On a daily basis, you have an opportunity to interact with the most impressive young people that this country has to offer. Knowing that in some small way, you as a coach help develop these young men to become the future leaders -- in not only the U.S. Army but in this country -- makes coaching here at West Point both a rewarding and humbling experience.”

– HEAD COACH BRIAN RILEY

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

“When first stepping foot on the academy grounds, I was immediately impressed with the tremendous amount of history behind every door. The sense of pride within West Point is second to none, and I feel honored to become a part of this storied tradition. Coach Riley and his staff run a first-class program with a family atmosphere and I am grateful to assist in those efforts. This community has been extremely welcoming and I feel privileged to have the opportunity to coach the future leaders of this country here at West Point.”

–ASSISTANT COACH TREVOR LARGE “To me, West Point means brotherhood. I came here because of the friendships I have seen past graduates make and I want to be a part of that. Even though the Academy is rather challenging, this place is truly one-of-a-kind because of the people you get to interact with throughout your time here. Each person has their own story and cares about your development as a leader in the future. It’s something no other institution can claim.”

The Army hockey team formed Neighborhood Knights in 2009. One component of the community outreach program includes partaking in the Adopt-A-Highway program.

- JUNIOR MAURICE ALVAREZ “West Point sets itself apart from other institutions in the way that cadets are challenged in every facet of life - intellectually, physically, morally, and spiritually. Each day is filled with unique demands and challenges that allow students to achieve more than they ever thought possible. These challenges connect cadets and graduates alike in a shared meaning that forms a camaraderie unseen at any other institution.”

- JUNIOR ZAK ZAREMBA “West Point is more than just a prestigious school; it is a place where people come to develop their leadership qualities. West Point is a physically and mentally demanding place where individuals will go through successes and failures alike, allowing themselves to expand their experiences through life lessons. This place will always hold a special place in my heart because of the people that I have met here, the sense of being part of a family - West Point and Army Hockey - and the memories that I have made here.”

Members of the Army hockey team graciously greet fans for autograph sessions after select home games.

- JUNIOR ROB TADAZAK “I came to West Point because of the type of people I knew who went here, and also the people I met on my visit. Being around the officers, instructors, and hockey players made me see the type of people that the Army commissions. It made me want to be a part of something unlike anything else.”

- JUNIOR ALTERNATE CAPTAIN MAC LALOR “I came to West Point to push myself both academically and athletically. It’s a special place because it is such a roller coaster of emotions. Because of the high expectations in everything we do, I succeed and fail to some degree every day. That’s something that you don’t get in other place, and I am thankful because that type of lifestyle makes you better.”

- JUNIOR ALTERNATE CAPTAIN JOSH RICHARDS “West Point is the premier leadership institution in the world. It is physically, mentally and emotionally challenging and sometimes leads you to your breaking point. It is the hardest, yet most rewarding experience I have done in my life.”

The Army hockey team has been a regular on national television broadcasts during head coach Brian Riley’s tenure. The team’s Jan. 10 contest against rival Air Force will air live on CBS Sports Network.

- SENIOR CAPTAIN BRIAN SCHULTZ

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MORE WITH SECTION THE BLACK MARKER KNIGHTS MEDIA DAY The Army hockey team held Media Day on Sept. 25 at Tate Rink. Along with filming spots to air on the rink’s state-of-the-art video board, the Black Knights had still headshots taken, snapped the official team photo and partook in interviews and photo sessions with local television and print media members.

TAKING THE GAME OUTDOORS Each year, the Army hockey team makes the trek on Route 9W to Bear Mountain State Park for an outdoor scrimmage. Often held around the Christmas break, the team travels in vans for a workout outside. Teams are chosen by the captains and then sticks are thrown in the middle of the rink where a player randomly choose who uses what model. What follows is a high-intensity game with nothing but pride on the line, held in one of the most spectacular settings of the Hudson Valley.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

(Top Left) Kyle Vogel stands in for his still headshot. (Top Right) Zak Zaremba partakes in an interview with local YNN Hudson Valley television. (Bottom Center) Joe Kozlak films his video board spots .


SECTION ARMY FACILITIES MARKER

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

TATE RINK Holleder Center, the home of Tate Rink and Army Hockey, is located next to venerable Michie Stadium on the sprawling acreage of West Point. Holleder Center, a 131,000 square foot facility, was completed on Oct. 1, 1985, and houses Tate Rink, Christl Arena, offices for the Army hockey staff, administrative offices, the Army Ticket Office and an athletic training room. Tate Rink, with a capacity of 2,525 fans, has served as home ice for 25 years and continues to attract fans in record numbers while proving a true “home ice” advantage for the Black Knights. Army christened Tate Rink with a 5-0 victory over Ryerson on Oct. 25, 1985 and has enjoyed success at home ever since, with a .500 or better record 20 times and a winning percentage greater of than .600. In excess of 30,000 people have turned out to Tate Rink in each of the past 20 seasons to support the Black Knights. In 1996-97, the Black Knights set a third consecutive attendance mark, attracting 42,929 fans. The all-time single-game attendance record for Tate Rink is 3,147, established in 1988-89 when Army edged Rensselaer, 4-3. New dasher boards, seamless glass and a new ice surface are among the recent upgrades made to Tate Rink. Other recent renovations include: a Daktronics scoreboard, installation of 32 television-quality lights with 600- and 1,000-watt settings and installation of a Double-Ply, Low-E ceiling. Premium rink-side seating and a hospitality area are the newest additions to Tate Rink. Twenty-four seats were added to the North end of the rink and for the third consecutive year, fans will have the chance to visit the hospitality area. The hockey players benefit from a spacious locker room right outside the ice surface. Included in the space is a locker room, changing room, team room, athletic training room and the team’s video suite. The team room and video suite are the latest additions. Donations by players, families and friends of Army Hockey helped complete the team room that includes large sofas, a big-screen television, surround sound, study carousels and wireless Internet.

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SECTION ARMY FACILITIES MARKER INSIDE THE LOCKER ROOM

Pictured here is the outer portion of the Black Knights’ state-of-the-art locker room area.

A view of Army’s team room, complete with hardwood tables and chairs, flat screen televisions, plush couches and computer working stations for the cadet-athletes.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Head coach Brian Riley addresses the team in the Black Knights’ impressive locker room.


WHY WEST POINT? “I think if my dear mother were alive, she would tell you nothing comes close to graduating from West Point, even going to the moon.”

- ASTRONAUT FRANK BORMAN “The combination of an education at West Point and the experience of a career in the armed services will prepare you in a unique way for a rich diversity of further career and service in civilian life.”

- HEISMAN TROPHY WINNER GLENN DAVIS

FRANK BORMAN

“I believe in the code ... ‘Duty, Honor, Country.’ I believe in service to one’s country. The institution of the armed forces has thrived on its commitment to developing excellence. It is meritocracy in action. Race, religion, wealth, background count not.”

- PRESIDENT GEORGE H.W. BUSH

GLENN DAVIS

GEORGE H.W. BUSH

“From the birth of our existence, America has had a faith in the future -- a belief that where we’re going is better than where we’ve been, even when the path ahead is uncertain. To fulfill that promise, generations of Americans have built upon the foundation of our forefathers -- finding opportunity, fighting injustice, forging a more perfect union. Our achievement would not be possible without the Long Gray Line that has sacrificed for duty, for honor, for country.” - PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

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“My four years at West Point were wonderful. I loved every minute of it and particularly the last three years. I loved the history. I loved the tradition. I liked wearing the uniform. I felt like I belonged there. Everything was meaningful to me. There is no question in my mind the proudest day of my father’s life was the day I graduated from West Point. There is a picture of the two of us standing on ‘The Plain’ and he is just beaming.”

- GENERAL H. NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF “I was so proud to be on the verge of entering the only institution in American society at that time that was totally integrated, in which I would have the opportunity to rise, based solely on performance and ability. The nation always looks to West Point and always looks to each and every one of you to follow always the angels of your nature.”

NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF

- GENERAL COLIN POWELL “In every corner of America, the words ‘West Point’ command immediate respect. This place where the Hudson River bends is more than a fine institution of learning. The United States Military Academy is the guardian of values that have shaped the soldiers who have shaped the world.” - PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

“How great it must be, gosh how great it must be to be a member of this Corps. To know that camaraderie of discipline, of manners, of courtesy, of human sensibility, of one’s duty to his fellow man.” - JOURNALIST WALTER CRONKITE GEORGE W. BUSH

“This place reeks of honor and discipline. With this show, we’ve been to a lot of great campuses all throughout the country over the years—and folks, let me tell you - there is absolutely nothing like this! Do yourself a favor and go look up West Point’s wikipedia page and compare that to your local college – that ought to shut you down for a while!” – COLIN COWHERD, ESPN RADIO HOST

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WHY WEST POINT? “Any of us who went through the process; anyone who felt the flame of that furnace, came away altered in the way we go about running our lives. Some part of it is the belief that you are not only doing it for personal glory, but you do it because it is your responsibility. It’s part of being a member of The Corps and each of us that have felt that magic feel especially privileged to have done so.”

- HEISMAN TROPHY WINNER PETE DAWKINS

PETE DAWKINS

“As I look back over my career in government, in business, of course in the military, I think West Point was a very influential experience. It hardened a sense of discipline, a sense of responsibility, duty and integrity and also very happily combined an alertness of mind and body.”

- FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE ALEXANDER HAIG

“For here we train the men and women whose duty it is to defend the Republic, the men and women whose profession is watchfulness, whose skill is vigilance, whose calling is to guard the peace, but if need be, to fight and win.”

- PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN

ALEXANDER HAIG

“West Point is the ring. It’s the foundation for everything I have done.” - MIKE KRZYZEWSKI ‘69

RONALD REAGAN

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“In the evening of my memory, always I come back to West Point. Always there echoes and re-echoes ... Duty -- Honor -- Country. Today marks my final roll call with you. But I want you to know, when I cross the river, my last conscious thoughts will be of The Corps ... and The Corps ... and The Corps ...”

- GENERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR

“As I look back on my life, I’ll always revere the opportunities that came along that brought about the choice I made to go to West Point. I just feel that it was fundamental in molding the fabric of my life. The experiences that I had at West Point,

they were irreplaceable.” - ASTRONAUT EDWIN “BUZZ” ALDRIN

DOUGLAS MACARTHUR

“You have ahead of you the best of all professions. Being a leader is the best thing you can possibly be and you’re at a school that will make you the best possible leader. West Point is the ring. It’s the foundation of everything I have done.”

- HEAD COACH MIKE KRZYZEWSKI

“This nation is grateful that four years ago every man and woman graduating today made a life-changing decision. You left the comforts and familiar surroundings of civilian life, and devoted yourselves to one of the noblest professions in a free country--the profession of arms.”

- FORMER VICE PRESIDENT DICK CHENEY DICK CHENEY

“West Point’s graduates have served America in many, many ways. Not only by leading troops into combat, but also by exploring frontiers, founding universities, laying out the railroads, building the Panama Canal, running corporations, serving in the Congress and The White House, and walking on the moon. Through our history, whenever duty called, the men and women of West Point have never failed us, and I speak for all Americans when I say, I know you never will.”

- PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON

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ABOUT WEST POINT The United States Military Academy is renowned because of its historic and distinguished reputation as a military academy, and as a leading, progressive institution of higher education. Made legendary in books and movies produced over the years, the Academy’s “Long Gray Line” of graduates includes some of our nation’s most famous and influential men: Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, George S. Patton, Omar Bradley, Douglas MacArthur, Dwight Eisenhower and Norman Schwarzkopf. Because of this superb education and leadership experience, West Point graduates historically have been sought for high level civilian and military leadership positions. Their numbers include two U.S. presidents, several ambassadors, state governors, legislators, judges, cabinet members, educators, astronauts and corporate executives. Today, West Point continues to provide hundreds of young men and women the unique opportunity to develop physically, ethically and intellectually while building a foundation for an exciting, challenging and rewarding career as an Army officer in the service of our nation. Cadets have much more responsibility in running the Academy than students in most other colleges or universities. It adds to the leadership experience. Cadets succeed at West Point because of the support they receive from the staff and faculty. After all, many faculty members are West Point graduates and understand the challenge cadets face on a daily basis. They also serve as ideal role models, showing cadets what Army life is like. The U.S. Military Academy’s primary strength is its ability to develop leaders of character who are committed to “Duty, Honor, Country” and selfless service to our nation.

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THE PREMIER LEADER DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTION IN THE NATION


THE LONG GRAY LINE

AT WEST POINT, IT IS OFTEN SAID ... “MUCH OF THE HISTORY WE TEACH WAS MADE BY PEOPLE WE TAUGHT.”


DISTINGUISHED SECTION MARKER GRADUATES

FRANK BORMAN

ULYSSES S. GRANT

ROBERT E. LEE ’29

ULYSSES S. GRANT ’43 Grant distinguished himself during the Civil War at the Battle of Vicksburg in 1863; his victory secured control of the Mississippi River for the Union. President Abe Lincoln later appointed him Commanding General of the Army in March 1864. On April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House, Va., Robert E. Lee (USMA 1829) surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to him, ending the Civil War. Grant later served as the 18th President of the United States from 1869 to 1877. Today, his image graces the $50 bill.

time, he was responsible for the revitalization of the Academy. He was later promoted to General of the Army and served as Supreme Allied Commander in the Pacific Theater during World War II. During that time, he received the Medal of Honor for leading defense preparation and operations on the Philippine Islands. He later served as Supreme Allied Commander, Japan, and as commander, United Nations Command in the Far East. He was one of only five officers to be promoted to General of the Army (five stars).

JOHN J. PERSHING ’86 Considered the second most senior officer in Army history, behind only George Washington, Pershing served as commander of the American Expeditionary Force during World War I. The two-million-plus troops of the AEF made a decisive contribution to the defeat of Imperial Germany. Pershing’s abilities as a leader distinguished him among European commanders, and through repeated successes on the battlefield, promoted American prestige around the world. He served as Army Chief of Staff in 1921, and was named General of the Armies of the United States upon his retirement in 1924.

DOUGLAS MacARTHUR ’03 After World War I, MacArthur returned to West Point to serve as the Academy’s 31st Superintendent from 1919 to 1922. During that

JAMES KIMSEY

in 1948. He served as the 34th President of the United States from 1953 to 1961 and was one of only five officers to be promoted to General of the Army (five stars).

“Old Blood and Guts,” Patton was one of the most colorful commanders in the Army. During World War II the famed commander of the 2nd Armored Division and later the Third Army displayed courage and daring as prominently as the pair of ivory handled revolvers he wore. Patton accomplished one of the most remarkable feats in military history in December 1944, when he quickly turned the Third Army northward to reinforce the Allied southern flank against the German attack in the Battle of the Bulge. The General’s doctrine of aggressive employment of massive armor forces continue to prove themselves in combat arenas around the world.

OMAR N. BRADLEY ’15 During his career, Bradley earned a reputation as one of the best infantry commanders in World War II. He commanded the 82nd Airborne and 28th Infantry Divisions before going on to command the 1st Army and the 12th Army Group. After the war he served as Army Chief of Staff from 1948 to 1949 and served as the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1949 to 1953. He was the last Army officer to be promoted to General of the Army (five stars), and the Bradley fighting vehicle is named in his honor.

DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER ’15 During World War II, Eisenhower served as Supreme Commander of Allied Forces Europe from 1943 to 1944, during which he led the D-Day invasion of Europe. During that time, he was promoted to General of the Army (five stars). After the war, he served as Army Chief of Staff from 1945 to 1948 and was named President of Columbia University

NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF

became the third Heisman Trophy winner in Army football history. He later served as chairman and CEO of Primerica.

JAMES V. KIMSEY ’62 ALEXANDER M. HAIG JR. ’47 Haig served as Chief of Staff to President Richard Nixon from 1973 to 1974; Supreme Allied Commander in Europe 1974 to 1979; President of United Technologies Corporation 1980 to 1981 and Secretary of State during the Reagan administration from 1981 to 1982.

FRANK BORMAN ’50 GEORGE S. PATTON JR. ’09

GEORGE W. GOETHALS ’80 Goethals became an architect and was builder of the Panama Canal, 1904 TO 1914.

ROBERT KIMBROUGH

An astronaut from 1962 to 1970, Borman commanded the first circumlunar flight of the earth. He later served as President of Eastern Airlines.

Kimsey was the founding chairman of America Online, and was named chairman emeritus in 1996. He founded the Kimsey Foundation in 1996.

MICHAEL W. KRZYZEWSKI ’69 Krzyzewski served as head basketball coach at West Point from 1974 to 1979 before assuming similar duties at Duke University. Krzyzewski has led the Blue Devils to three national championships and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in October 2001. He coached the U.S. at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

FIDEL V. RAMOS ’50 One of the Academy’s international cadets, Ramos served as a Philippine Army officer after graduation. He eventually became the country’s military Chief of Staff and later Secretary of National Defense. He also served as President of the Republic of the Philippines from 1992 to 1998.

EDWIN E. ALDRIN ’51 An astronaut from 1963 to 1972, Aldrin participated in the first manned lunar landing with Michael Collins (USMA ’52) and was the second man to walk on the moon.

EDWARD WHITE ’52 An astronaut from 1962 to 1967, White was the first man to walk in space and was one of the three astronauts killed in the Apollo I disaster in 1967.

H. NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF ’56 As Commander-in-Chief, United States Central Command from 1988 to 1991, Schwarzkopf’s command ultimately responded to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait with the largest U.S. deployment since the Vietnam War, including portions of the Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps as well as units from dozens of nations around the world. After retiring, Schwartzkopf received the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

PETER M. DAWKINS ’59 Dawkins was Cadet Brigade Commander (First Captain of the U.S. Corps of Cadets) as a senior and

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MARTIN E. DEMPSEY ’74 General Martin E. Dempsey serves as the 18th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In this capacity, he serves as the principal military adviser to the President, the Secretary of Defense and the National Security Council. By law, he is the nation’s highest-ranking military officer. Prior to becoming Chairman, the general served as the Army’s 37th Chief of Staff. Dempsey served as the Deputy Commander and then Acting Commander of U.S. Central Command. Before becoming Chief of Staff of the Army, he commanded U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.

RAYMOND T. ODIERNO ‘76 Odierno commanded the 4th Infantry Division during the fall of 2003 which, along with Special Forces units, captured Saddam Hussein in December of that year. Odierno helped plan and coordinate the raid that netted Iraq’s fallen dictator. He currently serves as Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army.

ROBERT S. KIMBROUGH ’89 Kimbrough was named one of 11 new astronaut candidates by NASA in May 2004. Kimbrough ranks among Army Baseball’s career leaders in saves. A veteran of Desert Storm, he currently works for NASA in Houston as a flight simulation engineer and participated in a space shuttle mission in 2009.

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

The Academy’s ninth Superintendent (1852-55), Lee was a model cadet during his four years at West Point. He graduated second in his class and never earned a single demerit during his four years at the Academy. At the beginning of the Civil War, he was selected to serve as Commanding General of the Army, but instead resigned his commission and was named General-In-Chief of the Confederate Army from 1861 to 1865. Lee’s surrender to Ulysses S. Grant (USMA 1843), at Appomattox Court House, Va., ended the Civil War. Fort Lee, Va., was named in his honor.

ALEXANDER HAIG


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

CENTER FOR SECTION ENHANCED MARKER PERFORMANCE The Center For Enhanced Performance (CEP) ensures that every cadet now has the opportunity to develop expertise in the key mental skills which underlie high-level performance in all situations. It offers three programs designed to maximize West Point cadet performance, as well as export these critical mental skills to the United States Army at large. The Performance Enhancement Program (PEP) uses state-of-the-art training methods and sophisticated audio/ video technologies, while broadening the applications to include cadets from every performance endeavor. This training, as comprehensive and detailed as any received by professional and Olympic athletes, enables cadets to develop confidence under pressure, concentration amidst distractions, and composure during times of stress. Cadets participate in individual training sessions, during free periods in their academic schedule, learning, and then applying the skills of imagery, attention control, stress and energy management, and goal setting. Biofeedback training allows cadets to learn crucial self-regulation techniques. Sophisticated audio and video simulations of game and practice situations are created to facilitate guided imagery and mental rehearsal of specific physical, academic, or military skills. The Academic Excellence Program provides instruction in academic support skills designed to help cadets succeed in the classroom. Three classes are offered throughout the academic year: 1) the Student Success Course, a 20 lesson course combining the study skills of textbook marking, note taking, test preparation and time management, with the mental skills such as attention

control, confidence building, stress and energy management; 2) Reading Efficiency, a 10 lesson course designed to improve reading speed and comprehension through drill and utilization of modern computer technologies; and 3) Information Literacy and Critical Thinking, a 20-lesson course taught jointly with the USMA Library staff created to enhance problem-solving skills and critically read and evaluate research. The CEP Tutor Program organizes final exam preparation sessions at the end of each semester, and cadet tutors for nearly every academic course are available throughout the year. Most recently the CEP created the Military Enhancement Program (MEP), designed to apply the skills and techniques taught by the Performance Enhancement Program within a military context. MEP Training is now nested throughout the 47 months of the West Point experience. These programs are unique aids to the every member of the Corps of Cadets who seeks to achieve their full potential in academics, athletics and military training. The Center for Enhanced Performance is a powerful demonstration of the Academy’s commitment to provide the finest training available to the future leaders of the nation. The results the program has had on hockey players is undeniable. Army has garnered two first team Academic All-America certificates over the last two years, produced one Senior CLASS Award winner and had the vast majority of the roster make the dean’s list. In 2012-13, the Black Knights totaled 17 Atlantic Hockey Association Academic honor roll members, a dozen of which return for the 2013-14 campaign.

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A CADET The West Point academic calendar is broken down into Day One and Day Two. Below are the typical schedules for senior captain Brian Schultz. A Nuclear Engineering major, Schultz is member of the Atlantic Hockey Association AllAcademic Team.

Brian Schultz

DAY ONE 0620 .................................................................Wake-up 0655 ........................................Breakfast formation 0700-0720................ Breakfast with company 0730-0825 ................History of the Military Art 0840-0935......................................... Heat Transfer 0950-1045 ...........................Combat Applications 1100-1145 .....................................................Free Hour 1200................................................. Lunch formation 1210-1235 ..................... Lunch with hockey team 1245-1340 ....................................Study/Homework 1355-1450 ..............Advanced Nuclear Systems .............................................................Design Project I 1530-1830 .....................................Hockey practice 1900 .............................. Dinner with hockey team 1930-2300................................. Homework/ Study 2330-0000................................................ Lights out DAY TWO 0630.................................................................Wake-up 0655 ........................................Breakfast formation 0700-0720 ...................Breakfast with company 0730-0935 ...................... Mechanics of Material 0950-1045 ....................Nuclear Weapon Effects 1100-1150 ....... Instrumentation and Shielding 1200................................................. Lunch formation 1210-1235 ..................... Lunch with hockey team 1250-1450 ...... Study/Homework or Lab period 1530-1830 .....................................Hockey practice 1900 .............................. Dinner with hockey team 1900-2300 ..................................Study/Homework 2330 ............................................................. Lights out “MILITARY SPEAK” Plebe or Fourth Class ............................ Freshman Yearling or Third Class .......................Sophomore Cow or Second Class ..................................... Junior Firstie or First Class ......................................Senior OBC......................................... Officer Basic Course A cadet’s first stop after graduation from the Academy. OBC preceeds a cadet’s first assignment. BRANCH ..................(i.e. Field Artillery, Infantry) Specific part of the Army that each cadet chooses to join upon graduation. Cadets receive their “branch” in February of their senior year. What you branch determines where you are stationed for OBC. HONOR CODE ...... “A Cadet Will Not Lie, Cheat, Steal or Tolerate Those Who Do.” The creed, or oath, each cadet takes upon entering the Academy. It is the code by which all cadets must live.

Members of the Philadelphia Flyers visited the Center for Enhanced Performance during their visit in 2003.

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ACADEMICS SECTION ATMARKER WEST POINT

DETERMINE IF YOU MEET ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS To meet West Point’s minimum entrance requirements, you must: be at least 17 but not yet 23 on the day you enter West Point; be a U.S. citizen at the time you enter (except for foreign cadets as noted above); not be married or pregnant, nor have a legal obligation to support a child or other dependent. Additionally, you must meet academic, medical and physical qualifications. To be considered academically qualified, you should have an aboveaverage high school or college academic record and strong performance on the standardized American College Testing (ACT) Assessment Program Exam or the College Board Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT). Additionally, you should take a strong college preparatory program in high school, including four years of English, four years of math (including trigonometry), two years of laboratory science, two years of a foreign language and one year of U.S. history. To be medically qualified, you must be in good physical and mental health and pass a medical exam administered by the Department of Defense. To meet physical qualification standards, you must demonstrate above-average strength, endurance and agility. The West Point Field Force administers a Physical Aptitude Exam to measure these traits. The exam includes: pull-ups for men/flexed arm hang for women, basketball throw from the kneeling position, standing long jump, a 300-yard shuttle run and a two-minute bout of push-ups.

Junior ROTC, or Navy, Air Force, or Marine Junior ROTC units which have been designated as Honor Units with Distinction.

START A FILE AT WEST POINT West Point will start your candidate file upon receipt of a completed Precandidate Questionnaire. You may obtain a questionnaire by writing or calling: Director of Admissions U.S. Military Academy 646 Swift Road West Point, NY 10996-1905 (845) 938-3188 Automated admissions information is also available at the above phone number. Additionally, you can request a questionnaire from the Academy’s World Wide Web page at: www.usma.edu/ Admissions. The web site also includes additional information about the admissions process as well as the courses of instruction available at West Point. Finally, if you are at least a high school junior and are sincerely interested in attending West Point and serving as an officer in the U.S. Army, you should talk to your school guidance counselor. Each counselor’s office has a copy of the latest West Point catalog and information to help you with your college choices.

APPLY FOR A NOMINATION A nomination is the legal authority for West Point to consider a candidate for admission. Nominations are available from every member of Congress and from the representatives to Congress listed above. At a minimum, you should apply to your two senators, your representative and the Vice President. Nominations are also available, from the President, for children of career military personnel, and from the Secretary of the Army for enlisted soldiers in the Regular Army, Army Reserve or Army National Guard; for children of deceased or 100% disabled veterans; children of persons awarded the Medal of Honor; and students in Army ROTC, Army

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ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES ENGINEERING Civil Electrical Mechanical Information Systems Environmental Engineering Management Systems Nuclear Engineering Nuclear Engineering Psychology Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Civil Infrastructure Systems System Management HUMANITIES Art, Philosophy & Literature History Foreign Languages Law and Legal Studies Foreign Area Studies BASIC SCIENCES Physics Environmental Geography Geospatial Information Science Chemistry Life Science Computer Science Mathematical Sciences Operation Research Basic Sciences Electronics and Info Technology Systems Environmental Sciences SOCIAL SCIENCES Psychology Sociology Economics Human Geography Leadership Management Political Science Polit Military Art & Science Militar

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Peterson’s Guide ranks West Point as one of the most competitive colleges in the nation and Forbes ranked West Point as American’s best college in 2009. There are approximately 12,000 applications each year for less than 1,200 cadet vacancies. Applicants compete for vacancies and are evaluated in three areas: academics, physical aptitude and demonstrated leadership ability. Cadet vacancies are allocated to each member of Congress and to the representatives to Congress from Washington, D.C., Guam, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, American Samoa and the Mariana Islands. Many foreign governments are also invited to nominate cadets under a Department of State program, so the student population at West Point is incredibly diverse. The following is an overview of the first three steps toward gaining admittance to West Point. Further information regarding the admissions process and orientation visits is available by calling the Director of Admissions at (845) 9384041. Should you wish to schedule an official visit, contact the Army Hockey office at (845) 938-8012.


ATHLETIC TRAINING

Stationed on the first floor of Kimsey Athletic Center, Army’s athletic training department moved into its new and spacious home in the spring of 2003. The athletic training room now covers 9,500 square feet, housing the finest equipment available for the prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of athletic injuries. Highlights of the facility include a 1,202-square-foot cardiovascular room containing more than 25 pieces of equipment; a stateof-the-art hydrotherapy area equipped with a 2,018-square-foot rehabilitation pool, Jacuzzi, two large pools, and four regular pools; 10 treatment tables; five modular taping tables; high-density storage; and a physician’s office with X-ray capability. The training room also features a vast array of the latest treatment and rehabilitation equipment. Thanks to the expansive new treatment area, Army’s athletic training staff can service countless Black Knight athletes simultaneously so they are able to realize their full potential on the “fields of friendly strife.” PAGE 26 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


STRENGTH & CONDITIONING O’MEARA, MALEK, DAWKINS CLASS OF 1959 STRENGTH DEVELOPMENT CENTER An integral component in Army’s intercollegiate athletic program is the strength and conditioning department. The most visible sign of Army’s commitment in this area is the O’Meara, Malek, Dawkins, Class of 1959 Strength Development Center in Kimsey Athletic Center, one of the finest facilities in the nation. The monstrous 20,000-square-foot center is located on the second floor of Kimsey Athletic Center and features 30 tons of plates and dumbbells; 15 pieces of cardiovascular equipment, including six high-speed treadmills; a state-of-theart weight training area with 16 rack and platform training stations, as well as a separate dumbbell area; and top-of-the-line Hammer strength equipment. Under the direction of Scott Swanson, the O’Meara, Malek, Dawkins, Class of 1959 Strength Development Center rivals any training facility in the country.

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WEST SECTION POINT LEADERSHIP MARKER LTG ROBERT CASLEN

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

SUPERINTENDENT Lieutenant General Robert L. Caslen, Jr. became the 59th Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point on July 17, 2013. LTG Caslen graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1975. He earned master’s degrees from Long Island University and Kansas State University. Previous to this assignment, LTG Caslen served as the Chief of the Office of Security CooperationIraq. LTG Caslen’s prior deployments and assignments include serving as the commander of the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., the command that oversees the Command and General Staff College and 17 other schools, centers, and training programs located throughout the United States; commanding general of the 25th Infantry Division (Light) and commanding general of the Multi-National Division-North during Operation Iraqi Freedom; Commandant of Cadets for the U.S. Military Academy; Deputy Director for the War on Terrorism, J-5, The Joint Staff; Assistant Division Commander (maneuver), 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized); Chief of Staff, 10th Mountain Division (Light); Chief of Staff, Combined Joint Task Force Mountain during Operation Enduring Freedom; Commander, 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); Chief of Staff, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); Senior Brigade C2 Observer/Controller, Operations Group, Joint Readiness Training Center; Commander, 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry, 25th Infantry Division (Light); Executive Officer to the Deputy Commander in Haiti during Operation Uphold Democracy; J-3 in Honduras for Joint Task Force Bravo; Brigade Operations Officer, 3rd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); Executive Officer, 2nd Battalion, 187th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) during Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm. LTG Caslen’s awards and decorations include the Distinguished Service Medal, the Defense Superior Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Legion of Merit with four Oak Leaf Clusters, the Bronze Star Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters, the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, and the Meritorious Service Medal with five Oak Leaf Clusters. He has earned the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Joint Chiefs of Staff Identification Badge, and is Airborne, Air Assault, and Ranger qualified. LTG Caslen is married with three children.

BG RICHARD CLARKE COMMANDANT OF CADETS Brigadier General Richard D. Clarke was born in Stuttgart, Germany, and raised in an Army family. He was commissioned in the Infantry from the U.S. Military Academy. Prior to assuming duties as the 74th Commandant of Cadets at West Point, he served as the deputy commanding general of Operations, 10th Mountain Division. BG Clarke began his career as a rifle platoon leader with 1st Battalion, 48th Infantry, 3rd Armored Division. Beginning in December 1988, Clarke commanded two companies in the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault); Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry, as well as the 101st Long Range Surveillance Detachment. In June of 1992, he transitioned to the 75th Ranger Regiment, and in March of 1993 became the commander of the Ranger Reconnaissance Detachment. He subsequently served as the company commander of Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. Later he held the position of battalion S-3 and then battalion executive officer of 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry, of the 1st Armored Division. This was followed in May 1999 when he assumed duties as the brigade executive officer of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. In March of 2002, he became the commander of the 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division. This was directly followed in May 2004 by command of the 1st Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. He then served as the commander of the 75th Ranger Regiment from August of 2007 to August of 2009, and then the director of operations, Joint Special Operations Command, from August 2009 to August 2011. BG Clarke’s deployments while serving in the aforementioned positions include Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, Operation Joint Guardian, three deployments in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and four deployments in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. BG Clarke is a graduate of the Infantry Basic Officer Leadership Course and advanced courses, and the Army Command and General Staff College. Additionally, he received a Master of Security and Strategic Studies from the National War College and a Master of Business Administration from Benedictine College. BG Clarke’s decorations include; the Defense Superior Service Medal (with Oak Leaf Cluster), the Legion of Merit (with Oak Leaf Cluster); Bronze Star Medal (with four Oak Leaf Clusters); Meritorious Service Medal (with three Oak Leaf Clusters); Air Medal, Army Commendation Medal (with two Oak Leaf Clusters); the Army Achievement Medal (with six Oak Leaf Clusters); the National Defense Service Medal (with Bronze Star); the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal; the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal; and the Afghanistan Service Medal. He also earned the Combat Infantryman Badge (with Star), the Expert Infantryman Badge, the Master Parachutist Badge, the Military Free Fall Parachutist Badge, the Air Assault Badge, and the Ranger Tab.

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BG TIMOTHY TRAINOR DEAN OF THE ACADEMIC BOARD Brigadier General Timothy E. Trainor, Ph.D., became the Dean of the Academic Board at the United States Military Academy in the summer of 2010. He previously served as professor and head of the Department of Systems Engineering at West Point where he taught courses in engineering management, systems engineering and decision analysis. Trainor graduated with a Bachelor of Science from West Point in 1983 and entered the Engineer Branch of the U.S. Army. As an engineering officer, Trainor has served in operational assignments around the world, including Germany, Honduras, Fort Bragg, N.C., Fort Riley, Kans. and Sarajevo, Bosnia. Trainor has a Master of Business Administration from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke and a doctorate degree in industrial engineering from North Carolina State University. He is a member of the Military Applications Society of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences the Military Operations Research Society, the American Society for Engineering Management and the American Society of Engineering Education. He is a past president of Epsilon Mu Eta, the national Engineering Management Honor Society. Trainor is also a member of the Board of Fellows for the David Crawford School of Engineering at Norwich University. As an analyst, Trainor helped develop the Installation Status Report that provides the Army a standardized means to assess infrastructure and environmental conditions on installations to support resource allocation decisions. He has applied decision analysis methods in completing an organizational analysis of the Army’s Installation Management Agency and in assessing defense security cooperation programs. Trainor deployed to Basrah, Iraq in the summer of 2007 and worked with the British-led Provincial Reconstruction Team in helping the provincial Iraqi leaders improve their infrastructure revitalization plans. Trainor is married to Col. Donna Brazil, a 1983 graduate of West Point, who is a professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at the Academy. They have a daughter Cory, who graduated from West Point in 2013. Son, Danny is currently a cow at West Point. They have another son, Zach, who is attending the U.S. Military Academy Prep School.


ATHLETIC SECTION LEADERSHIP MARKER DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS THIRD YEAR | NOTRE DAME, 1990 Patriot League, serving as chairman of the conference’s Broadband Committee. Corrigan, who was the senior associate athletic director for external affairs at Duke University starting in August 2008, brings a wealth of leadership to his post. He is a proven administrator with 18 previous years of experience in all areas of revenue generation, external affairs, staff management and leadership. Corrigan’s chief responsibilities at Duke included the oversight of the Blue Devil corporate partnerships and the Marketing, Promotions, Ticket, Internet Operations, Sports Information and Video Services departments. In only two years at Duke, Corrigan was responsible for the negotiation of multi-media rights to ISP. A supervisor of the 2009 NCAA Champion women’s tennis and 2010 NCAA Champion men’s lacrosse programs, Corrigan was a part of three NCAA Championships at Duke in just two seasons. He is currently a member of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Rules committee and the Atlantic Coast Conference Men’s Lacrosse Committee, while serving on the Executive Budget Committee at Duke. Prior to arriving at Duke in August of 2008, he oversaw Notre Dame’s corporate relations and marketing as an associate athletic director for five years. During his stint at Notre Dame, Corrigan spearheaded the redesign of its official athletics website and creation of 15-20 hours of original video content weekly. That resulted in a 35 percent increase in page views and unique users. Corrigan also worked directly with ISP Sports, CSTV, and NBC Sports from a sales and marketing standpoint. Before joining the staff at Notre Dame, Corrigan spent nearly three years as the associate athletic director for marketing at the United States Naval Academy. He was responsible for turning the marketing department from a deficit to profit in his first year with full budget responsibility for the department. Corrigan also was intimately involved with the re-branding of the Annual Giving Campaign (The Blue and Gold), which led to an increase of 75 percent year over year donations. His collegiate experience also includes a stint as assistant director of marketing at Florida State from 1992-95. Corrigan is a 1990 University of Notre Dame graduate with a degree in economics. He is married to the former Kristen Aceto, a former field hockey and lacrosse player at the University of Virginia who also earned a master’s degree from the school. The couple has three children, Finley, Tre and Brian. He is the youngest of seven children of Gene and Lena Corrigan.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Boo Corrigan was named the Academy’s director of athletics on Feb. 1, 2011. “We have an opportunity to work every day with a truly exceptional group of young people,” Corrigan said. “The opportunities they receive through intercollegiate athletics will help shape their own leadership styles as they become officers in the U.S. Army. We have a great team that focuses daily on our cadet-athletes. We strive to enhance their overall experience as they develop into the leaders our nation needs.” In his short time as athletic director, Corrigan has strengthened and expanded Army Athletics’ relationships in several key areas. In his tenure, Army has secured a new apparel agreement with Nike, a new pouring rights contract with Coke and bringing in the Aspire Group to enhance ticket sales and better serve Army season ticket holders. Corrigan also crafted the Team Army concept, a comprehensive plan designed to add significant value to Army’s corporate Academic All-Americans, including six firstsponsorships while maintaining the tradition team selections. Lacrosse’s Brendan Buckely became the first Army athlete to capture of West Point Athletics. Corrigan, who has a proven record as a Academic All-American of the Year honors in fundraiser, spearheaded changes in the 2012. In 2011, the Black Knights’ football team Army A Club and ticket operations that have boasted two first-team CoSIDA Academic Allresulted in more than $20 million dollars in Americans, a first for the program since 1957. major gifts and record-setting annual giving Since the start of the 2011-12 season, Army during his tenure. During that time the funding boasts six Patriot League Scholar-Athletes of for a new lacrosse facility, that is scheduled to the Year, including Buckley, a two-time overall men’s winner. break ground, was secured. Twenty of Army’s 24 NCAA programs scored In addition to his role in enhancing revenues for Army Athletics, Corrigan led a strategic above the national average in the 2013 NCAA planning process that developed a new mission APR report. The men’s cross country and wrestling teams earned public recognition statement and goals for the department. In his first full two years at West Point, for finishing in the top 10 percent of their Corrigan has overseen a program that owns respective sport. The cross country squad eight Patriot League regular season or boasted a perfect score of 1,000. In addition, former football standout Andrew tournament championships and sent eight teams to the NCAA postseason (rifle). Thirty- Rodriguez, Class of 2012, became the first three cadets have earned a major award from Army player to win the National Football Foundation’s Willam V. Campbell Trophy, which their conference,. In 2012-13 alone, Army accounted for more is presented annually to the nation’s top than 100 all-league citations. Hockey’s Cheyne football scholar-athlete. Rodriguez later was Rocha and lacrosse’s Brendan Buckley each honored with the Amateur Athletic Union’s captured the Senior CLASS Award in their James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur respective sports, making Army the only athlete in the country. He was the first Army school in the nation to have multiple winners player to receive the award since 1946 and in 2012-13. was just the third player in history (Peyton The 2012-13 season was one of the most Manning, Tim Tebow) to win both the Campbell successful in recent memory on the fields of Trophy and Sullivan Award. friendly strife. Army teams combined to post Army has been the focus of national attention an overall record of 236-183-8. The program’s since Corrigan’s arrival. He was instrumental .562 winning percentage was the highest in in supporting the CBS documentary, “Game eight years. The winter sports programs had of Honor,” that chronicled the Black Knights’ their best season in five years as the women’s 2011 football season leading up to its annual basketball team won the Patriot League showdown with arch-rival Navy. Not only was regular season title, the men’s basketball the two-hour program broadcast to a national team posted its first winning season in 28 audience on Showtime, but also won the Emmy years and the rifle squad advanced to the Award for Best Sports Documentary. The Army NCAA Championships for the 10th consecutive football team was also the focus of a behindseason. the-scenes book titled, “Soldiers First,” written It was also a great year in the competition by New York Times writer Joe Drape. against fellow service academies. Army Corrigan has also made his mark on the split the season series versus Navy, 16-16-1, aesthetics of historic Michie Stadium. In marking the best winning percentage against order to upgrade the appearance and provide the Mids (.500) since 2004-05. The Black a better experience for Army fans, Corrigan Knights owned a 4-2-1 record against Air Force, implemented a Michie Stadium branding and improving the record to 20-18-2 (.525) versus signage campaign that began in 2011. The service academy foes in 2012-13. first phase of the project was completed prior Cadet-athletes have continued to thrive to the 2012 season. in the classroom under Corrigan’s watch. In In addition to his duties at West Point, his two full years, Army has boasted seven Corrigan has been an active leader in the


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

SECTION HEAD COACH MARKER

BRIAN RILEY Head Coach 10th Season; Brown, 1983 COACHING EXPERIENCE • Head Coach, Army, 2004-present • Assistant Coach, Army, 1989-96, 1999-2004 • Head Coach, Shattuck St. Mary’s Prep School (Minn.), 1996-98 • Asst. Coach, UMass-Lowell, 1987-88 • Asst. Coach, SUNY Plattsburgh, 1984-87

ATHLETIC BACKGROUND • Four-year hockey letterwinner, Brown University; • Team Co-Captain, 1982-83

AWARDS/HONORS • Atlantic Hockey “Coach of the Year,” 2006, 2007, 2008 • Class of ’36 Trophy (Brown), 1983 • Patrick Jones Trophy (Brown), 1983

ACADEMIC BACKGROUND • B.A., Political Science, Brown University, 1983 • M.S., Education, Boston University, 2003

HEAD COACHING RECORD YEAR 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 CAREER

SCHOOL Army Army Army Army Army Army Army Army

RECORD 11-21-3 12-18-7 19-12-5 19-14-4 11-19-6 11-18-7 11-20-4 4-23-7 98-145-43

PCT. (.357) (.419) (.597) (.568) (.389) (.403) (.371) (.221) (.418)

When Brian Riley was named Army hockey’s 16th head coach in 2004, he was familiar with West Point. Following 14 years as an assistant to his brother Rob and a lifetime of hockey education from his father Jack, Brian Riley knew all about the U.S. Military Academy. The knowledge, preparation and hard work have all paid off for Brian as he adds to the Riley legacy and Army hockey. Just the third Army hockey coach in the past 62 years, Brian Riley has made his mark on a program coached by his father and brother in just eight seasons. The Vice President for Membership of the American Hockey Coaches Association, Brian Riley is a three-time Atlantic Hockey Association Coach of the Year, has guided Army to eight consecutive Atlantic Hockey Association playoff berths, led the team to its the first regular season championship in program history, posted non-conference victories and had four players chosen to participate in the NCAA Frozen Four Skills Competition. Riley was recently appointed to the NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Committee, which is responsible for the management of the NCAA Championship. Brian Riley has posted a 105-166-48 mark during his tenure behind the West Point bench after succeeding his brother, Rob who briefly retired from coaching in 2004. Prior to Rob, Jack Riley, their father, stood behind the Black Knights bench for 36 seasons. In addition to his success at Army, Jack Riley also coached the U.S. Olympic hockey team to a stunning gold medal in the 1960 Games. Utilizing a defensive system that focuses on physical, intense play and opportunistic scoring, Riley has led his squad to the Atlantic Hockey Association playoffs in all nine of his seasons and has registered non-conference wins each of the past five campaigns. An upstart Riley club opened the 2012-13 season as one of the hottest teams in the AHA with early wins over Sacred Heart (2), American International and then No. 19th-ranked Robert Morris - all in the friendly confines of Tate Rink. The Black Knights sat in the upper echelon of the AHA standings throughout much of the first half of conference action, which ultimately helped the USCHO name Riley its mid-season Coach of the Year. Army went on to finish the year with an AHA playoff berth, forward Joe Kozlak earned AHA All-Rookie Team honors and senior Andy Starczewski was among the initial candidates for the Hobey Baker Award. In addition to the on-ice success of his players, Riley had the pleasure of coaching 2013 Men’s Hockey Senior CLASS Award winner Cheyne Rocha, who also earned first team Academic All-America honors for the second year in a row. In 2011-12, Army posted seven ties and four wins, including victories over Canadian rival Royal Military College (9-1), ECAC Hockey’s Rensselaer (3-2) in the Toyota/UConn Classic and a dramatic 4-4 overtime tie with Air Force. Riley helped Army resume its rivalry with its military brethren for the first time since 2006 and then watched as 12 players registered points in the eight-goal victory. Army qualified for the Atlantic Hockey Playoffs but dropped a pair of games to Holy Cross in the opening round. The 2010-11 team won 11 games and earned home ice for the playoffs while a pair of players – Marcel Alvarez and Cody Omilusik earned All-AHA accolades. Among the victories, was a 5-2 triumph at the University of Massachusetts at the Mullins Center, a dramatic 5-4 win at Air Force, a three-point weekend against Robert Morris and a 4-1 victory over AIC outdoors at Rentschler Field in Hartford, Conn. During the 2009-10 season, Riley helped the Black Knights to an 11-win season and the No. 6 seed in the conference playoffs. Among the victories was a three-point weekend against Air Force at Tate Rink, a 4-4 overtime draw at Colgate and a 2-1 win at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the second consecutive year of a non-conference win. In the postseason, Riley was selected as an assistant coach of the East squad at the NCAA Frozen Four Skills Competition where he coached Army’s Owen Meyer, the fourth Black Knight selected for the honor, joining Brad Roberts (2006), Luke Flicek (2008) and Zach McKelvie (2009). In 2008-09, with a team of 12 freshmen, Riley guided the Black Knights to the Atlantic Hockey Association playoffs for the sixth straight season. Included in the wins was a shocking upset of No. 2 Miami, 3-2 in the consolation game of the Ohio Hockey Classic. Six years ago, Riley led Army to its first regular season championship and won 19 games for the second consecutive season. Army went 19-14-4 in 2007-08, winning the AHA regular season title and the top seed in the conference tournament. For the second straight year, Army advanced to the semifinal round. During the 2007-08 season, Army put together a league-best nine-game unbeaten streak (8-0-1) to clinch the regular season title. Army won the first two games of the best-of-three series with Sacred Heart to advance to the semifinals where a loss to Mercyhurst ended the season. In 2006-07, the Black Knights hosted a league playoff game at Tate Rink for the first time and beat Bentley, 6-2. They followed that with a 3-1 win over Connecticut in the semifinals before losing to Air Force in the finals. Riley was named the league coach of the year for the first time in 2005-06 when the team finished fifth in conference play after overcoming a 0-7-1 start. In his first campaign behind the Black Knights’ bench, Riley engineered one of the biggest upsets in the NCAA when Army stunned Colgate, 3-2, in Hamilton, N.Y., for his first career win.

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SECTION HEAD COACH MARKER

Flames organization. He originally signed two free agent contracts with the Boston Bruins while he was serving his country. McKelvie is just one of Riley’s defensive gems, as his expertise in working with the defense has molded Army’s squads into one of the most stingy blue line units in college hockey. A 1983 graduate of Brown, Riley began his coaching career in 1984 with a three-year stint as an assistant coach at SUNY Plattsburgh. During that period, the Cardinals advanced to the NCAA Division III Tournament three times, reaching the championship game twice. In 1988, Riley moved to the Division I ranks at the University of MassachusettsLowell. There, he teamed with his cousin, Bill Riley, for one season, directing the River Hawks to the NCAA Tournament, giving him his fourth straight postseason appearance. The following winter, Riley joined his brother’s staff at West Point for the first time ARMY HOCKEY HEAD COACHING HISTORY where he spent the Coach Years Seasons Record Pct. next seven seasons. Capt. Edward King 1904 1 5-1-0 .833 In 1996, the West Capt. Robert Foy 1905-07 3 15-8-0 .652 Point native left the Lt. George Russell 1908-10 3 5-7-4 .438 comfort and familiarity Lt. LeRoy Bartlett 1911-12 2 3-4-1 .438 of the Academy, Lt. Philip Gordon 1913-14 2 7-6-0 .538 Lt. Frank Purdon 1915-17 3 9-10-1 .475 where he grew up, for Capt. Joseph Viner 1918 1 6-3-0 .667 the great Midwest Capt. Philip Day 1919-20 2 6-4-1 .591 and a head coaching Talbot Hunter 1921-23 3 12-12-2 .500 position at Shattuck Ray Marchand 1924-43 20 76-106-9 .421 St. Mary’s Prep School Lt. Col. John Hines 1944 1 5-4-0 .556 Maj. Robert Lutz 1945 1 7-2-1 .750 in Faribault, Minn. Len Patten 1946-50 5 33-35-2 .486 There, Riley Jack Riley 1951-86 36 542-343-20 .610 carved out a stellar Rob Riley 1986-2004 18 257-288-33 .473 two-year coaching 105-166-48 .406 Brian Riley 20049 career in which his Totals 109 1093-1000-122 .521 teams compiled an

impressive 94-19-10 record. In his first season, Riley directed the squad to a 40-9-7 record before improving to 54-10-3 in 1997-98. In 1999, Riley returned to West Point, where he served at his brother’s side until assuming the head coaching position in 2004. During his collegiate playing days, Riley co-captained Brown’s hockey squad his senior season, earning honorable mention All-Ivy League. He was presented the Class of ’36 Trophy for his outstanding contributions over his four-year career and the Patrick Jones Trophy for most team spirit. Prior to starring for Brown, Riley attended New Hampton Prep and led the hockey team to a No. 1 national ranking among prep schools. He was chosen as the school’s most outstanding athlete while captaining both the soccer and hockey teams. Riley completed course work on his master’s, earning a graduate degree in Education from Boston University, in May 2003. Riley is married to the former Marybeth Feldman of Highland Falls, N.Y. The couple resides at West Point with their three children: Jack, 21, Danielle, 19, and Brendan, 17. Jack Riley a freshman member of the hockey team at Mercyhurst College. Danielle is beginning her sophomore year at Merrimack as a member of the women’s lacrosse team. Brendan is in his senior year of high school and plays both golf and hockey.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Riley led his team to 11 wins during that initial season, setting the Academy record for most victories by a rookie head coach. He broke the record established by his brother, Rob, in 1986-87. In addition, the younger Riley also piloted the Black Knights to their first postseason win in more than a quarter century when Army defeated American International College, 5-3, in the first round of the Atlantic Hockey tournament. Riley’s father, Jack, started it all in 1951 when legendary football coach and athletic director at West Point, Earl “Red” Blaik, hired him to head the hockey program. What began as a one-year contract, turned into a 36-year Hall of Fame career that culminated in 542 victories. Riley’s brother, Rob, took the reins from his father in the fall of 1986 and racked up 306 victories of his own over 18 winters. When Rob officially stepped down in the summer of 2004, he passed the torch (and family tradition) on to his younger brother. Brian brings an extensive resume to his “dream job” at the Academy. No stranger to West Point or the “West Point Experience,” the younger Riley has spent 14 years as an assistant coach to his brother, eventually rising to the position of associate head coach. Brian played an integral role in recruiting many of the athletes that helped Army put together back-to-back 20-win seasons and tutored Corey and Ian Winer, former Colorado Avalanche forward Dan Hinote. Riley also recruited Zach McKelvie, a hulking defenseman now part of the Calgary


ASSISTANT SECTION MARKER COACHES ERIC LANG Assistant Coach Second Season; American International, 1998

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

TREVOR LARGE Assistant Coach Sixth Season; Ferris State, 2003 Trevor Large is in his sixth season with the Army hockey program and oversees the team’s penalty kill as well as playing a large role with the goaltenders and recruiting. A four-year player at Ferris State, Large was added to head coach Brian Riley’s staff in September of 2008 and immediately took responsibility for Army’s penalty kill unit and practice plans. A tireless recruiter, Large plays a large role in shaping the Black Knights. He has tutored talented and highscoring forwards Owen Meyer, Mike Hull, Eric Sefchik and Cody Omilusik and guided defensemen Mac Lalor, Maurice Alvarez, Cody Ikkala and John Clark among many others. Large also plays a prominent role in Army’s video analysis and scouting reports. Prior to arriving at West Point, Large spent two seasons at American International College. Large skated for four years with the Ferris State Bulldogs in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association and registered 33 points in 129 career games. The teams’ “Most Improved” player in 2001, he was a member of the 2003 regular-season championship squad that made the first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance for the Bulldogs. Large and his wife, Molly, reside in Cold Spring, N.Y. The couple welcomed their first child, Brody, in 2012.

Eric Lang, a seven-year coaching veteran and four-year letterwinner, begins his second season with Army hockey and first as a full-time assistant coach. He spent the 201213 season as a volunteer assistant coach before being elevated this summer. Lang, who spent three seasons as the women’s head coach at Manhattanville and one season as the men’s head coach, will begin his duties immediately. Lang replaces Mike Warde. A 1998 graduate of American International College, Lang has plenty of Atlantic Hockey Association experience. In addition to his time as a volunteer at Army, he spent two seasons as an assistant at his alma mater after four seasons on the ice. Lang joins Trevor Large as Army’s assistant coaches. Large spent two seasons coaching at AIC as well when he earned his master’s degree and is in his fifth season at Army. Lang handles Army’s power play units, have recruiting responsibilities and will have a hand in video analysis and on- and office work. During his four seasons at Manhattanville, Lang led the women’s squad to an NCAA Tournament appearance, won 58 games and guided the team to a No. 8 ranking in the final uscho.com Division III National poll. In his final season behind the Valiants’ women’s bench, Lang posted a 19-8-2 record, led the squad to an ECAC East Tournament title and had a league-best 11 players named to the ECAC All-Academic Team. During his second season as head coach, Lang guided the Valiants to a 19-7-1 record despite just nine veterans on the roster. The team won the ECAC East Conference regular season championship and defeated two nationally ranked opponents. In his first season as a head coach, Lang put together a 20-7-0 record, a top seed in the ECAC East Conference Tournament and helped Holly Nonis to second-team All-America and conference player of the year honors. Lang guided the Manhattanville men’s squad to a 14-9 record during his one season behind the bench. Prior to his appointment at Manhattanville, Lang spent two seasons as an assistant at AIC where he conducted video analysis and film breakdown of opponents and worked with the defense and power play units. Lang was a four-year letterwinner at AIC and earned his degree in Psychology in 1998. He later secured his masters in Organizational Development from AIC. A two-time captain, he was honored with the ECAC Merit Medal and the school’s Henry Butova Leadership Award. He scored 25 goals and handed out 34 assists during his career. Lang has also worked for the National Hockey League as an off-ice official where he assisted in game scoring and analysis and was the head hockey coach for Byram Hills High School in Armonk, N.Y., for four seasons. Lang and his wife Christine have a daughter, Addison Grace, and a son, Eric James, and reside in White Plains, N.Y.

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SECTION HOCKEYMARKER STAFF SUPPORT STAFF

NOAH STRONE Hockey Equipment Manager

COL WILEY THOMPSON Head Officer Representative

SCOTT SWANSON Strength and Conditioning

ALEX AMBROSE Athletic Trainer

TRACY NELSON Athletic Communications

2LT RYAN LEETS Fall Athletic Intern

2LT CHEYNE ROCHA Spring Athletic Intern

OFFICER REPRESENTATIVES Officer Representatives (OR) are something unique to military academies. The OR team provides valuable incite and assistance to help the cadets succeed in their West Point endeavors. One OR can be found on the team bench for all games as well. Col. Wiley Thompson serves as the team’s head OR.

Pictured (L to R): LTC Michael Johnson, CPT Christopher Thoma, LTC Derek Burt, Brian Macdonald, COL Wiley Thompson, LTC Ross Coffey, MAJ Ford Lannan. Missing from photo is LTC (Ret) Jonathan Liba.

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BOB BERETTA Executive AD/ Sport Supervisor


SECTION 2013-14 ROSTER MARKER

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

NUMERICAL ROSTER NO. 1 2 3 4 6 7 8 10 11 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 30 35

NAME Rob Tadazak James McNulty Christian Pomarico Ryan Nick Connor Costello Andrew O’Leary Kyle Vogel Zak Zaremba Brian Schultz (C) C.J. Reuschlein Joe Kozlak Clint Carlisle Michael St. Denis Joe Bruckler Mac Lalor (A) Josh Richards (A) Jonathan Gehrt Garret Peterson Thane Heller Luke Jenkins Maurice Alvarez Kyle Plageman Shane Hearn Willie Faust Josh Roberts Tanner Creel Parker Gahagen

POS. G F/D D D D F F F F F F F F F D F D D F D D F F F F G G

CL. Jr. So. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. Jr. Sr. Fr. So. Fr. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. So. So. Jr. Fr. So. So. So. Fr. Fr.

HT. 6-0 6-4 6-0 5-10 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-1 5-10 6-1 6-2 5-10 5-9 5-9 6-0 5-11 5-11 6-2 6-2 5-10 6-2 5-11 5-10 5-10 5-11 5-10 6-2

WT. HOMETOWN/HIGH SCHOOL (LAST TEAM, LEAGUE) 200 Lapeer, Mich./Lapeer East (Michigan Warriors, NAHL) 215 Howell, Mich./Catholic Central (Flin Flon Bombers, SJHL) 200 Simsbury, Conn./Northwood (Muskegon Lumberjacks, USHL) 190 Plymouth, Mich./Plymouth (Port Huron Fighting Falcons, NAHL) 205 Londonderry, N.H./The Governor’s Acad. (New Jersey Hitmen, EJHL) 210 Norwich, Vt./Shattuck St. Mary’s (Topeka Road Runners, NAHL) 200 Richland, Wash./Sand Creek (Wenatchee Wild, NAHL) 185 Parma, Ohio/Ursuline (Brockville Braves, CJHL) 180 Aurora, Ohio/St. Edward (South Shore Kings, EJHL) 205 Flint, Mich./Hartland (Texas Tornado, NAHL) 190 Duluth, Minn./Duluth Marshall (Amarillo Bulls, NAHL) 170 Dallas, Texas/Northwest (Amarillo Bulls, NAHL) 175 Auburn, Maine/Phillips Exeter Academy 170 Burlington, Mass./UNL Independent Study (South Shore Kings, EJHL) 185 Needham, Mass./St. Sebastian’s (Boston Junior Bruins, EJHL) 170 Lee, N.H./Phillips Exeter (South Shore Kings, EJHL) 180 Woodbury, Minn./Woodbury (Austin Bruins, NAHL) 196 Coppell, Texas/Coppell (Amarillo Bulls, NAHL) 210 Elizabethtown, Pa./Elizabethtown (Boston Junior Bruins, EJHL) 180 River Falls, Wis./River Falls (Amarillo Bulls, NAHL) 220 Cleveland, Ohio/St. Ignatius (Pembroke Lumberkings, CJHL) 185 Cleveland, Ohio/Culver Military Acad. (Port Huron Fighting Falcons, NAHL) 185 Auburn, Maine/Hebron Academy 180 Stillwater, Minn./Hill Murray (Odessa Jackalopes, NAHL) 185 Southport, Conn./Trinity Pawling (New York Apple Core, EJHL) Kildeer, Ill./Saint Viator (Tri-City Storm, USHL/New Jersey Hitmen, EJHL) 160 193 Buffalo, N.Y./Williamsville North (Buffalo Jr. Sabres, OJHL)

ALPHABETICAL NO. 24 17 15 6 30 27 35 20 26 22 23 14 18 2 4 7 21 25 3 13 19 28 16 11 1 8 10

PLAYER POSITION Maurice Alvarez D Joe Bruckler F Clint Carlisle F Connor Costello D Tanner Creel G Willie Faust F Parker Gahagen G Jonathan Gehrt D Shane Hearn F Thane Heller F Luke Jenkins D Joe Kozlak F Mac Lalor D James McNulty F/D Ryan Nick D Andrew O’Leary F Garret Peterson D Kyle Plageman F Christian Pomarico D C.J. Reuschlein F Josh Richards F Josh Roberts F Michael St. Denis F Brian Schultz F Rob Tadazak G Kyle Vogel F Zak Zaremba F

Head Coach: Brian Riley (Brown, 1983), 10th season Assistant Coach: Trevor Large (Ferris State, 2003), Sixth season Assistant Coach: Eric Lang (American International, 1998), Second season Head Officer Representative: Col. Wiley Thompson Equipment Manager: Noah Strone Athletic Trainer: Alex Ambrose Strength and Conditioning Coach: Scott Swanson Athletic Communications Contact: Tracy Nelson

2013-14 BLACK KNIGHTS Front Row (L to R): Parker Gahagen, Michael St. Denis, Jonathan Gehrt, Mac Lalor, Brian Schultz, Rob Tadazak, Josh Richards, Joe Kozlak, Willie Faust, Tanner Creel. Middle Row (L to R): C.J. Reuschlein, Christian Pomarico, Maurice Alvarez, Thane Heller, James McNulty, Andrew O’Leary, Kyle Vogel, Garret Peterson, Connor Costello. Back Row (L to R): Ryan Nick, Kyle Plageman, Josh Roberts, Clint Carlisle, Zak Zaremba, Joe Bruckler, Luke Jenkins, Shane Hearn.

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ROSTER SECTION BREAKDOWN MARKER BLACK KNIGHTS BY PREVIOUS TEAM Central Junior Hockey League (2) #10 Zak Zaremba ........................Brockville Braves #24 Maurice Alvarez.... Pembroke Lumberkings Eastern Junior Hockey League (8) #5 Connor Costello ................ New Jersey Hitmen #11 Brian Schultz ..................... South Shore Kings # 17 Joe Bruckler ...................... South Shore Kings #18 Mac Lalor ....................... Boston Junior Bruins #19 Josh Richards ................... South Shore Kings #22 Thane Heller ................. Boston Junior Bruins #28 Josh Roberts ................New York Apple Core #30 Tanner Creel .................... New Jersey Hitmen

North American Hockey League (12) #1 Rob Tadazak ..........................Michigan Warriors #4 Ryan Nick .......... Port Huron Fighting Falcons

BLACK KNIGHTS BY POSITION Forwards (15) #2 James McNulty #7 Andrew O’Leary #8 Kyle Vogel #10 Zak Zaremba #11 Brian Schultz #13 C.J. Reuschlein #14 Joe Kozlak #15 Clint Carlisle #16 Michael St. Denis #19 Josh Richards #22 Thane Heller #25 Kyle Plageman #26 Shane Hearn #27 Willie Faust #28 Josh Roberts Defensemen (9) #2 James McNulty #3 Christian Pomarico #4 Ryan Nick #5 Connor Costello #18 Mac Lalor #20 Jonathan Gehrt #21 Garret Peterson #23 Luke Jenkins #24 Maurice Alvarez Goaltenders (3) #1 Rob Tadazak #30 Tanner Creel #35 Parker Gahagen

Ontario Junior Hockey League (1) #35 Parker Gahagen .................Buffalo Jr. Sabres Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (1) #2 James McNulty .....................Flin Flon Bombers United States Hockey League (2) #3 Christian Pomarico ....Muskegon Lumberkings #30 Tanner Creel ............................... Tri-City Storm

BLACK KNIGHTS BY CLASS Seniors (2) #11 Brian Schultz #17 Mike Santee Juniors (5) #1 Rob Tadazak #10 Zak Zaremba #18 Mac Lalor #19 Josh Richards #24 Maurice Alvarez

Illinois (1) #30 Tanner Creel ............................................Kildeer Maine (2) #16 Michael St. Denis ...................................Auburn #26 Shane Hearn ............................................Auburn Massachusetts (2) #17 Joe Bruckler ...................................... Burlington #18 Mac Lalor ..............................................Needham Michigan (4) #1 Rob Tadazak ................................................ Lapeer #2 James McNulty ...........................................Howell #4 Nick Ryan ................................................Plymouth #13 C.J. Reuschlein ..............................................Flint Minnesota (3) #14 Joe Kozlak ...................................................Duluth #20 Jonathan Gehrt ............................... Woodbury #27 Willie Faust ......................................... Stillwater New Hampshire (2) #5 Connor Costello ............................Londonderry #19 Josh Richards ................................................. Lee New York (1) #35 Parker Gahagen .....................................Buffalo

Sophomores (12) #2 James McNulty #3 Christian Pomparico #7 Andrew O’Leary #8 Kyle Vogel #14 Joe Kozlak #16 Michael St. Denis #20 Jonathan Gehrt #22 Thane Heller #23 Luke Jenkins #26 Shane Hearn #27 Willie Faust #28 Josh Roberts

Ohio (4) #10 Zak Zaremba ............................................. Parma #11 Brian Schultz .............................................Aurora #24 Maurice Alvarez................................ Cleveland #25 Kyle Plageman .................................. Cleveland

Freshmen (9) #3 Ryan Nick #5 Connor Costello #13 C.J. Reuschlein #15 Clint Carlisle #17 Joe Bruckler #21 Garret Peterson #25 Kyle Plageman #30 Tanner Creel #35 Parker Gahagen

Vermont (1) #7 Andrew O’Leary ........................................Norwich

Pennsylvania (1) #22 Thane Heller ..............................Elizabethtown Texas (2) #15 Clint Carlisle ...............................................Dallas #21 Garret Peterson.....................................Coppell

Washington (1) #8 Kyle Vogel ................................................ Richland Wisconsin (1) #23 Luke Jenkins ..................................... River Falls

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Prep School (2) #16 Michael St. Denis .... Philips Exter Academy #26 Shane Hearn .........................Hebron Academy

#7 Andrew O’Leary ............ Topeka Road Runners #8 Kyle Vogel .................................. Wenatchee Wild #13 C.J. Reuschlein .......................... Texas Tornado #14 Joe Kozlak ......................................Amarillo Bulls #15 Clint Carlisle .................................Amarillo Bulls #20 Jonathan Gehrt ..........................Austin Bruins #21 Garret Peterson..........................Amarillo Bulls #23 Luke Jenkins ................................Amarillo Bulls #25 Kyle Plageman .. Port Huron Fighting Falcons #27 Willie Faust .......................Odessa Jackalopes

BLACK KNIGHTS BY STATE Connecticut (2) #3 Christian Pomarico ............................Simsbury #28 Josh Roberts ....................................Southport


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER BRIAN SCHULTZ

11

Captain Senior • Forward 5-10 • 180 Aurora, Ohio St. Edward South Shore Kings (EJHL)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Tabbed to serve as team captain for the 2013-14 season ... one of two seniors on the team … one of four players from Ohio … one of seven players from the Eastern Junior Hockey League … has played in 94 career games with six goals and seven assists. 2012-13: Appeared in 33 games … scored four goals and handed out three assists … collected one short-handed tally … selected to AHA Academic Team … two multiple-point games … had a goal and assist opposite RIT and Connecticut … broke away for short-handed goal at Mercyhurst … scored first goal of season in 5-2 win over Sacred Heart … posted an assist in 5-0 victory over No. 19 Robert Morris.

BACKGROUND: Born in Cleveland, Ohio ... family now resides in Aurora, Ohio ... 2008 graduate of St. Edward ... played for Scott Harlow and the South Shore Kings of the EJHL ... team finished runner-up at the 2010 national championship ... led squad to regular season and league titles ... selected to EJHL All-Star first-team ... served as assistant captain ... four-year Honor Roll selection ... graduated with a 3.93 grade point average ... named English Student of the Year as a sophomore ... enjoys bowling, basketball and spending time with family and friends ... son of Jeff Schultz and Lynn Casey ... one brother, Mike Schultz, plays hockey for Ohio University ... first member of his family to embark on military career ... lists Chris Drury as his favorite athlete ... major is Nuclear Engineering.

2011-12: Appeared in 29 games ... scored one goal and handed out two assists ... lone tally of the season was a game-winning score against Rensselaer ... 3-2 victory came at the Toyota UConn Classic, Army’s third consecutive season with a non-conference victory ... credited with an assist at Robert Morris and at Tate Rink against Mercyhurst ... one of 18 players named to the Atlantic Hockey Association AllAcademic Team. 2010-11: Appeared in 32 games ... totaled a goal and two assists in first campaign ... collected an assist in his first collegiate game against Holy Cross ... posted second assist against Sacred Heart ... netted first career goal against American International ... all three points came at Tate Rink.

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PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER MAC LALOR

18

Alternate Captain Junior • Forward 6-0 • 180 Needham, Mass. St. Sebastian’s Boston Junior Bruins (EJHL)

Selected to serve as an alternate captain for the 2013-14 season ... one of five juniors on the team … one of two players from Massachusetts … one of seven players out of the Eastern Junior Hockey League … Army’s second-leading scorer last season ... has recorded 10 career goals and 18 career assists … four multiple-point games … named the team’s Heinmiller Award winner as top freshman in 2011-12.

BACKGROUND: Born in Silver Spring, Md. ... now resides in Needham, Mass. ... 2009 graduate of St. Sebastian’s School ... all-league selection at St. Sebastian’s ... played for head coach Peter Masters and the Boston Junior Bruins of the EJHL ... totaled four goals and 26 assists in 87 games over a two-year span ... son of Mike and Leanne Lalor ... has one brother, Jordan, who graduated from Bowdoin College ... father, Mike, played in the NHL for 12 seasons and won a Stanley Cup with the Montreal Canadiens in 1985-86 ... enjoys golf, guitar and snowboarding ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... member of the National Honor Society and Spanish National Honor Society at St. Sebastian’s ... lists Nicklas Lidstrom as his favorite athlete ... majoring in Management.

2011-12: Appeared in 31 games … scored four goals and handed out six assists … tied for seventh on the team in scoring … collected one power play and one short-handed goal … awarded the Heinmiller Award as the team’s top freshman … credited with two assists in a 3-3 overtime tie with Mercyhurst for his first multiple-point game …

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2012-13: Appeared in 33 games … scored six goals and handed out 12 assists … second on the team in scoring and assists … shared the team lead with four power play goals … selected to AHA Academic Team … three multiple-point games … scored twice on the power play at Merrimack … had a power play goal and assist in 7-2 victory at Holy Cross, coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … assisted on two goals in win against AIC … scored lone goal, on the power play, in season-opener against Nebraska-Omaha … three-game scoring streak with two goals and three assists opposite AIC, Connecticut and Merrimack … assisted on Joe Kozlak’s game-winning goal in 1-0 overtime victory at Canisius … scored during 2-2 overtime tie with Bentley … also registered goal at AIC … posted an assist in Atlantic Hockey Association playoff game at Mercyhurst.

ended the season with an assist in two of his final three games … registered first collegiate point at Tate Rink against Bentley with an assist … scored first two collegiate goals at Robert Morris … scored an even-strength goal in a loss and then a power play tally in 3-3 overtime tie the next night … netted short-handed tally at Holy Cross, capping a stretch of three goals and two assists in five games … also scored at American International … collected assists against Sacred Heart and Holy Cross in the first round of the playoffs.


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER JOSH RICHARDS

19

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Alternate Captain Junior • Forward 5-11 • 170 Lee, N.H. Phillips Exeter South Shore Kings (EJHL)

Selected to serve as an alternate captain for the 2013-14 season ... one of five juniors on the team … one of two players from New Hampshire … one of seven players out of the Eastern Junior Hockey League … switched from wearing No. 3 to No. 19 last season ... Army’s fourth-leading scorer last season ... owns 18 career points, 16 (5G, 11A) of which came in 2012-13 ... four career multiple-point games. 2012-13: Appeared in all 34 games … scored five goals and handed out 11 assists … netted one power play score … fourth on the team in points … third in assists … selected to AHA Academic Team … three multiple-point games … scored first goal of season in second game, opposite Maine … netted power play tally in 4-4 overtime tie with Sacred Heart … handed out two assists in 7-2 victory over Holy Cross, coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … netted score in win over Bentley … credited with two assists in 5-0 victory over No. 19 Robert Morris … goal and assist at RIT … scored goal in second of series as well … posted assists in Atlantic Hockey Association playoff game at Mercyhurst … posted assists against Holy Cross, Bentley, Air Force and Canisius.

a hand in both goals in a 6-2 loss … one of 18 players named to the Atlantic Hockey Association All-Academic Team. BACKGROUND: Born in Stillwater, Okla. ... now resides in Lee, N.H. ... 2010 graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy ... played for head coach Scott Harlow and the South Shore Kings of the EJHL ... totaled 35 points his final season and helped the squad to a third-place league finish ... son of Mark and Marie Richards ... one sister, Sarah ... father played Division I lacrosse at the University of New Hampshire ... sister played Division I field hockey at Rider ... served as captain and was named Most Valuable Player at Phillips Exeter ... played shortstop as member of the Phillips Exeter baseball team ... member of the National Latin Honor Society ... majoring in Management.

2011-12: Appeared in 20 games … scored once and handed out an assist … both of his points came at Tate Rink against Bentley … had

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PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER MIKE SANTEE Senior • Forward 5-9 • 184 Park Ridge, Ill. Maine South Pembroke Lumberkings (CJHL)

tie ... posted his first short-handed goal at Bentley during 5-1 victory ... handed out an assist at Holy Cross ... was +2 with a goal and assist in 4-4 tie with Mercyhurst on national television ... first career multiplepoint game ... had a goal and assists in regular-season-ending series with AIC ... played in both playoff games at Air Force.

2012-13: Did not play.

BACKGROUND: Born in Oak Lawn, Ill. ... now resides in Park Ridge, Ill. ... 2007 graduate of Maine South High School ... played baseball, football, basketball and soccer growing up ... earned two letters and served as team captain of Maine South’s gymnastics team ... played for coach Sheldon Keefe and the Pembroke Lumberkings of the Central Junior Hockey League ... named to the CJHL All-Stars in the first “Battle of Ontario” ... won a pair of CJHL Championships ... enjoys cheering on the Chicago Blackhawks, spending time with friends and watching movies ... son of Ingrid and David Santee ... father was a two-time Olympic figure skater .... David participated in the 1976 and ‘80 Olympics ... one brother, Chris ... first member of family to embark on military career ... lists Tuomo Ruutu, Dave Bolland and his father as his favorite athletes ... majoring in Management.

2011-12: Was not enrolled at the U.S. Military Academy. 2010-11: Appeared in 32 games ... scored five goals and handed out six assists ... scored once short-handed ... tallied pair of gamewinning goals ... registered an assist in season-opening game vs. Colgate ... added an assist the next game vs. Holy Cross ... scored first goal of the season against AIC, the game-winner ... scored in both games of weekend split with Niagara ... picked up game-winner in 4-1 victory ... scored opposite Ohio State in the Catamount Cup ... posted short-handed goal against Connecticut ... registered two assists against AIC ... second career multiple-point game ... ended season with assists in final two games. 2009-10: Appeared in 21 games ... season curtailed by injuries ... scored four goals ... handed out four assists ... credited with an assist at Merrimack, his second collegiate game ... scored first collegiate goal at Colgate ... score knotted the game at 4 in eventual overtime

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of two seniors on the team … endured an injury-plagued career ... left the Academy due to injury and reentered for junior season ... has played in 53 career games … nine goals and 10 assists with two multiple-point games … owns two career short-handed and gamewinning goals ... three-time Dean’s List selection.


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER MAURICE ALVAREZ

24

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Senior • Defenseman 6-2 • 210 Cleveland, Ohio St. Ignatius Pembroke Lumberkings (CJHL)

One of five juniors on the team … one of four players from Ohio … one of two players from the Central Junior Hockey League … switched from wearing No. 16 to No. 24 last season, while also switching from defense to forward ... totaled 23 career points, including 14 as a rookie ... three goals and six assists in 2012-13 ... one career multiple-point game.

and then handed out an assist against Mercyhurst for a three-game scoring streak … scored final goal later in regular season against AIC … registered assists against RPI, Air Force, Bentley, Holy Cross and AIC … collected a point in the playoffs with an assist in second game against Holy Cross.

2012-13: Appeared in 32 games … made the move from defense to forward … scored three goals and handed out six assists … posted assists in both games of series against Sacred Heart … scored gamewinning goal in 3-2 win against Sacred Heart … credited with the game-winning goal in 5-0 victory over nationally ranked Robert Morris … scored third goal of season opposite Connecticut … registered an assist in 3-3 overtime tie with Air Force … had an assist on lone goal in 1-1 overtime draw against Mercyhurst … also credited with assists against Holy Cross and Bentley … appeared in both AHA playoff games against Mercyhurst.

BACKGROUND: Born in Mayfield Heights, Ohio ... now resides in Cleveland ... 2009 graduate of Saint Ignatius High School ... played for head coach Sheldon Keefe and the Pembroke Lumberkings ... won two CJHL Championships with the Lumberkings ... claimed the Eastern Canada Championship in 2011 ... part of national championship Lumberkings squad in 2011 ... two-time CJHL all-star ... son of Paula and Eva Alvarez ... older brother Marcel is a 2012 West Point graduate ... Maurice enjoys golf, paintball and skiing ... lists Steven Stamkos as his favorite athlete ... major is Systems Management.

2011-12: Appeared in 33 games … recorded five goals and nine assists … tied with his brother, Marcel, for fourth on the team in scoring … netted two power play goals … first collegiate goal and assist came at Sacred Heart … scored a power play goal, the game-winning tally, in a 2-1 victory … scored his second goal two nights later … assisted on lone goal in 1-1 overtime tie against Brown … tallied even-strength goals in back-to-back games against Robert Morris and Mercyhurst

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PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER ROB TADAZAK

1

Junior • Goalkeeper 6-0 • 200 Lapeer, Mich. Lapeer East Michigan Warriors (NAHL)

2012-13: Appeared in 22 games … announced as the starting goalie on 21 occasions … posted a 3-13-4 mark … recorded two shutouts … selected to AHA Academic Team … made 607 saves in 1232:31 of action … registered a .907 save percentage and 3.02 goals against average … both numbers led the team … collected first career shutout at Canisius ... made 25 stops in 1-0 overtime victory … earned second shutout in his next start against No. 19 Robert Morris … registered 22 saves in 5-0 victory … allowed two goals or less in nine appearances … registered at least 25 saves in 14 contests … turned away careerbest 50 saves in first start opposite No. 20 Maine … won first game of season with 25 stops in 5-2 victory over Sacred Heart … earned an overtime tie in second game of Sacred Heart series … made 22 saves in 3-2 win against Pioneers later in season … stopped 42 stops in 4-2 loss at Merrimack … turned away 42 shots in a 3-3 overtime tie at Air Force … made 40 saves in 1-1 overtime tie at Mercyhurst … earned tie against Bentley in 2-2 draw with 23 saves … started both playoff games against Mercyhurst.

2011-12: Appeared in 11 games … announced as the starting goalie in 10 contests … posted a 3.20 goals against average and .908 save percentage … credited with 317 saves … made 20 or more saves in 10 games … established career standard with 53 saves against Brown in 1-1 overtime tie … collected 39 saves in his next start, a 3-3 tie at Robert Morris … also earned a point with an overtime tie with 33 saves against Mercyhurst … ended stretch of three straight starts where he earned team a point … recorded 37 saves in first collegiate start against Merrimack … saw first collegiate action against nationally ranked Union and made four saves in nine minutes of work … turned away 32 shots in 5-3 loss to RIT … collected first collegiate point with an assist on the first of three Andy Starczewski goals against the Tigers … totaled 33 saves against Niagara in a 3-0 loss. BACKGROUND: Born in Royal Oak, Mich. ... now resides in Lapeer, Mich. ... 2008 graduate of Lapeer East High School ... played for the Michigan Warriors of the NAHL ... named Most Valuable Player in the NAHL and Goalie of the Year while collecting all-league honors ... posted a 27-9-5 record with nine shutouts and a .944 save percentage ... son of Bob and Darlene Tadazak ... younger brother, Steven, is a junior at Central Michigan University ... also has an older brother, John ... lettered twice in baseball and once in soccer in high school ... lists Carey Price as his favorite athlete ... majoring is Environmental Geography.

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One of five juniors on the team … one of four players from Michigan … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League … registered a .908 save percentage in first season with a 3.20 goals against average ... made 21 starts as a sophomore and authored a 3.02 GAA with a .907 save percentage ... two career shutouts ... career-best 53 saves vs. Brown during freshman campaign.


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER ZAK ZAREMBA

10

Junior • Forward 6-1 • 195 Parma, Ohio Ursuline Brockville Braves (CJHL)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of five juniors on the team … one of four players from Ohio … one of two players from the Central Junior Hockey League … 12 career goals and 11 career assists ... two career multiple-point games. 2012-13: Appeared in all 34 games … scored seven goals and handed out five assists … selected to AHA All-Academic Team … whistled for just two penalties … scored two power play goals … opened the season with assists in both games at the Ice Breaker Classic against Nebraska-Omaha and Maine … stretched his scoring streak to three with a goal against Sacred Heart … netted a power play tally in 7-2 win at Holy Cross, coach Brian Riley’s 100th career win … scored power play goal in 3-2 win against Sacred Heart … netted goal in 3-3 overtime tie at Air Force … scored lone Army goal in 1-1 overtime draw opposite Mercyhurst … picked up goals against Bentley and Canisius … registered an assist in Atlantic Hockey Association playoff contest at Mercyhurst … had an assist in 5-0 victory over No. 19 Robert Morris … also collected assist against Niagara .

Sacred Heart the next time out … second multiple-point game was against Connecticut with a goal and assist … netted goals in both games of a late-season home-and-home series against Sacred Heart … also handed out assists against Holy Cross and Bentley BACKGROUND: Born in Cleveland, Ohio ... resides in Parma, Ohio ... 2009 graduate of Ursuline High School ... honor roll student ... played for head coach Todd Gill and the Brockville Braves of the CJHL ... served as alternate captain ... helped team to Fred Page Cup championship and national semifinals ... also played for the Mahoning Valley Phantoms where he was an alternate captain ... selected to the 2010-11 CJHL All-Star game ... played in the National Junior A Tier 3 Tournament with the Cleveland Lumberjacks in 2007-08 ... son of Liz and the late Ken Zaremba ... two siblings, Al and Cassie ... father served in the Air Force ... both of his grandfathers served in the military ... lists Martin St. Louis as his favorite athlete ... majoring in Kinesiology.

2011-12: Appeared in 34 games … totaled five goals and six assists … 11 points were sixth on the squad … team leader with a +4 plus/ minus rating … netted a goal in first career game with a tally against nationally ranked Union … scored goal less than three minutes into contest … registered first assist at Merrimack … collected first multiple-point game with two assists at RIT … scored in a 2-1 win at

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PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER WILLIE FAUST

27

Sophomore • Forward 5-10 • 180 Stillwater, Minn. Hill Murray Odessa Jackalopes (NAHL)

One of 12 sophomores on the roster … one of three players from Minnesota … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League ... solid contributor with 12 points during rookie season ... three career multiple-point games.

BACKGROUND: Born and resides in Stillwater, Minn. … started skating at age three … 2010 graduate of Hill Murray School … three-year letterwinner in baseball … all-conference selection as a second baseman … also played outfield during American Legion season … twice played in the Minnesota State High School Hockey Tournament … team finished third in 2010 … all-state honorable mention hockey selection as a senior … High Honor Roll student for eight semesters … chosen for the All-Academic Award for best scholar-athlete for hockey … played for head coach Paul Gillis and the Odessa Jackalopes of the NAHL … served as team captain … team plays where movie Friday Night Lights was filmed … son of Scott and Sue Faust … has two brothers, Andy and Max … cousin Mark Osiecki played in the NHL and spent time as the head hockey coach at Ohio State ... first player in his family to embark on a military career … enjoys spending time with friends, reading and watching and playing sports in his free time … lists Zach Parise and Tiger Woods as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

20

Sophomore • Defenseman 5-11 • 180 Woodbury, Minn. Woodbury Austin Bruins (NAHL)

One of 12 sophomores on the team … one of three players from Minnesota … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League ... regular on Army’s defense as a rookie. 2012-13: Appeared in 33 games … scored three times … handed out six assists … three multiple-point games … collected first career point with an assist at Sacred Heart … netted first goal and registered first multiple-game game in a 7-2 win at Holy Cross in head coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … registered assists on both Army goals in a 4-2 loss at Merrimack … had a goal and assist in 5-0 victory over nationally ranked Robert Morris … scored first goal in 2-2 overtime tie at Connecticut … registered an assist at Bentley … competed in both AHA playoff games at Mercyhurst. BACKGROUND: Born in Woodbury, Minn. … still calls Woodbury home … 2010 honors graduate of Woodbury High School … played for head coach Chris Tok and the Austin Bruins of the NAHL … scored seven goals and handed out 25 assists in 52 games during his last year with the Bruins … led the team with five power play goals and 11 power play assists … totaled 10 goals and 33 assists during his two years in Austin … was an outfielder on the Woodbury baseball team for three years … won three Suburban East Conference championships with Woodbury’s hockey team … squad finished fifth in the state during his sophomore season … son of Roger and Michele Gehrt … has two brothers, Chris and Nick … grandfather Roger Gehrt, Sr., was an Airman Second Class in the Air Force … grandfather, James Andreen, was an Airman First Class in the Air Force as well … cousin, Mark Mueller, was a major in the Air Force … enjoys fishing in his free time … lists Ryan McDonagh and Ray Bourque as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

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2012-13: Appeared in 27 games … registered five goals and seven assists … two multiple-point games … selected to AHA Academic Team … three power play goals … credited with goal and two assists in weekend series against Sacred Heart … three points helped Army to win and tie … named the AHA Rookie of the Week … scored twice in 5-0 victory over nationally ranked Robert Morris … scored against Connecticut … netted goal in AHA playoff game at Mercyhurst … registered assists against Sacred Heart, RIT and Connecticut.

JONATHAN GEHRT


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER SHANE HEARN Sophomore • Forward 5-10 • 185 Auburn, Maine Hebron Academy

26

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … one of two players from Maine … one of two prep school players ... played quality minutes as a rookie and tallied 11 points on four goals and seven assists. 2012-13: Appeared in all 34 games … scored seven goals and handed out seven assists … selected to AHA Academic Team … earned a “Starzie” from CBS Sports announcer Dave Starman … collected the Bavis Brothers Award which was presented for hustle … scored twice in a 7-2 win at Holy Cross, head coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … first collegiate goals … registered first assist in 3-2 win at Bentley … credited with game-winning goal in 3-2 win against AIC … netted even-strength goal in loss to Bentley … registered assists opposite Robert Morris, Air Force, Mercyhurst, Bentley, Connecticut and American International … competed in both AHA playoff games at Mercyhurst. BACKGROUND: Born in Pittsburgh, Pa. … now calls Auburn, Maine home … 2012 graduate of Hebron Academy … played for head coaches James LeBlanc and Matt Plante … two-year team captain … led the team in points and goals during his senior season … named team MVP … earned the Coaches Award during his junior season … member of the high honor roll … competed in boxing, golf and lacrosse as well … named all-conference in the New England Lacrosse League … son of Joe and Heather Hearn … has one sister, Hannah … first member of his family to embark on a military career … enjoys fishing and scuba diving … certified scuba diver … lists Tiger Woods as his favorite athlete ... major is undeclared.

THANE HELLER

22

Sophomore • Forward 6-2 • 210 Elizabethtown, Pa. Elizabethtown Boston Junior Bruins (EJHL)

One of 12 sophomores on the roster … only player from Pennsylvania … one of seven players from the Eastern Junior Hockey League ... coming off productive rookie campaign that included 15 points on nine goals and six assists. 2012-13: Appeared in all 34 games … scored nine goals and handed out six assists … two multiple-point games … scored four power play goals … selected to AHA Academic Team … second on the squad with nine goals … shared team lead for power play tallies … scored first goal in second collegiate game opposite Maine … registered a goal and assist in a 7-2 win at Holy Cross in head coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … posted goal and assist in 3-2 win opposite Sacred Heart … scored power play goal in 3-3 overtime tie at Air Force … netted a tally in 5-0 win over nationally ranked Robert Morris … also collected goals against American International, RIT and Bentley … handed out assists opposite Sacred Heart, Bentley and Connecticut. BACKGROUND: Born in Lancaster, Pa. … now calls Elizabethtown, Pa., home … 2010 graduate of Elizabethtown High School … attended The Gunnery for two years … two-year member of the soccer team as starting varsity goalkeeper … all-league, all-section and all-district selection as a lacrosse player … competed for a season on the freshman football team … played for coach Peter Masters and the Boston Junior Bruins … drew time in 44 games … racked up 27 goals and 40 assists … finished third on the team with 67 points … netted 11 power play goals … son of Dennis and Laurie Heller … has one sister, Kalicia … first member of his family to embark on a military career … learned all of the NHL teams before his ABCs ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 44 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER LUKE JENKINS

23

Sophomore • Defenseman 5-10 • 180 River Falls, Wis. River Falls Amarillo Bulls (NAHL)

One of 12 sophomores on the team … lone player on the squad from Wisconsin … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League ... played in all but two games as a rookie.

BACKGROUND: Born in River Falls, Wis. … still calls River Falls home … 2009 graduate of River Falls High School … played hockey and tennis at River Falls … first team all-state hockey player … member of the National Honor Society … graduated with honors … played for head coach Dennis Williams and the Amarillo Bulls of the NAHL … totaled 35 points in 98 games over two seasons … 12 goals and 23 assists … collected 13 playoff points, including six goals in 25 games … helped Bulls to 2011 South Division Championship … son of Tom Jenkins and the late Jennifer Jenkins … has one sister, Brittni … first member of his family to embark on a military career … enjoys aviation and fishing … holds his Federal Aviation Administration private pilots license … grew up with a rink in his backyard … competed in a hockey tournament in the West Edmonton Mall as a 10-year-old ... major is undeclared.

Sophomore • Forward 6-2 • 190 Duluth, Minn. Duluth Amarillo Bulls (NAHL)

14

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … one of three players on the roster from Minnesota … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League ... named to AHA All-Rookie Team after registering 17 points (7G, 10A) as a freshman ... two multiple-point games ... presented with the Heinmiller Award, given annually to the team’s most outstanding freshman. 2012-13: Appeared in all 34 games … scored seven goals and handed out 10 assists … finished third on the team in scoring … tied for third on squad with seven goals … fourth on team with 10 assists … named to the Atlantic Hockey Association All-Rookie Team … earned October AHA Rookie of the Month honors with six points in his first six games … selected to AHA Academic Team … shared team lead with two game-winning goals … made collegiate debut against Nebraska-Omaha … registered first point with an assist against Maine … early-season three-game scoring streak with an assist against Sacred Heart in next game … wrapped up streak with goal and assist in second game opposite Sacred Heart … posted power play goal and assist in 7-2 victory at Holy Cross, coach Brian Riley’s 100th career victory … four-game scoring streak late in season … one goal and three assists in back-to-back series’ against Bentley and Connecticut … scored goal in Atlantic Hockey Association playoff series at Mercyhurst … scored opening goal in 2-2 overtime tie with Connecticut … netted lone goal in 1-0 overtime victory at Canisius … added one assist and a goal in series opposite RIT. BACKGROUND: Born in St. Paul, Minn. … now calls Duluth, Minn., home … 2009 graduate of Duluth Marshall High School … member of the golf team for five seasons … two-time participant in the Minnesota State Golf Tournament … part of two Lake Superior all-conference teams as a hockey player … member of the 2008 Lake Superior Conference championship team … helped squad to second-place finish at the 2008 Minnesota State Tournament … voted Most Valuable Player of the 2009 CCM All-Star Game … played for head coach Dennis Williams and the Amarillo Bulls of the NAHL … helped team to third-place finish in the 2011 Robertson Cup … team was a semifinalist in 2012 when he was an all-tournament team selection … served as team captain in his final season after handling alternate duties the season prior … named team MVP in 2011-12 … son of Jane and Joel Kozlak … has one brother, Scott, and a sister, Trish … brother, Scott, played hockey at Air Force and is now a first lieutenant with the U.S. Air Force … choose West Point after being inspired by his brother … could have played collegiate golf, but instead fulfilled his dream of attending a military academy ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 45 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

2012-13: Appeared in 32 games … registered a goal and three assists … selected to AHA Academic Team … scored first collegiate goal in second game … netted tally opposite Maine … registered two assists in 4-4 overtime tie at Sacred Heart, his first collegiate multiple-point game … handed out an assist against Connecticut … competed in one AHA playoff game at Mercyhurst.

JOE KOZLAK


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER JAMES McNULTY

2

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Sophomore • Forward/Defense 6-4 • 215 Howell, Mich. Catholic Central Flin Flon Bombers (SJHL)

ANDREW O’LEARY Sophomore • Forward 6-1 • 210 Norwich, Vt. Shattuck St. Mary’s Topeka Road Runners (NAHL)

7

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … one of four players from Michigan … lone player on the team from the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League ... utilized in 16 games during rookie campaign.

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … lone player from Vermont … one of 12 players on the team from the North American Hockey League ... earned time in 22 games during rookie campaign.

2012-13: Appeared in 16 games … did not record a point … registered nine shots on goal … drew first collegiate appearance against Maine … played at Brown … competed in Atlantic Hockey Association games against Niagara, Sacred Heart, Bentley, Robert Morris Air Force, RIT, Mercyhurst and American International … played in both AHA playoff games at Mercyhurst.

2012-13: Appeared in 22 games … scored twice and handed out an assist … selected to AHA Academic Team … made collegiate debut against Nebraska-Omaha … netted first collegiate goal in 3-3 overtime draw against Air Force … also scored in his first game against RIT … registered initial assist against Connecticut … competed in one Atlantic Hockey Association playoff game at Mercyhurst.

BACKGROUND: Born in Detroit, Mich. ... now calls Howell, Mich., home ... 2009 graduate of Detroit Catholic Central ... member of the Honor Roll of four years ... played hockey, football and lacrosse ... served as team captain on the football team where he played linebacker and tight end ... occupied the midfield in lacrosse ... successful hockey career began when he started skating at age three and includes being a two-time state champion ... two national championship runner-up finishes ... fourth-place finish at the World Pee Wee Quebec Tournament as a youngster ... Ontario Hockey League draft pick ... earned three Most Valuable Player Awards ... Alberta Junior Hockey League Rookie All-Star ... last played for head coach Mike Reagan and the Flin Flon Bombers of the SJHL ... served as team captain ... son of Jim and Kim McNulty ... has two sisters, Shelby and Brittney ... Brittney is a Navy Corpsman ... enjoys hunting and fishing ... lists Todd Bertuzzi and Eric Lindros as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

BACKGROUND: Born in Duluth, Minn. ... now calls Norwich, Vt., home ... 2009 graduate of Shattuck St. Mary’s ... played for coach Scott Langer and the Topeka Road Runners of the NAHL ... won a the regular season championship in 2010-11 ... drafted by the Halifax Mooseheads in the 2008 Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Draft ... has also competed in the USHL and EJHL ... son of Shawn and Amy O’Leary ... has three brothers, Michael, Matthew and Peter ... comes from a hockey-playing family ... in addition to his father, his uncle, Ryan O’Leary, played at Denver and was drafted by the Calgary Flames in the fourth round of the 1989 NHL Draft ... began skating when he was two years old ... enjoys friends, family and fishing in his spare time ... lists Evgeni Malkin and LeBron James as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 46 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER CHRISTIAN POMARICO

3

Sophomore • Defenseman 6-1 • 200 Simsbury, Conn. Northwood Muskegon Lumberjacks (USHL)

JOSH ROBERTS

28

Sophomore • Forward 5-11 • 185 Southport, Conn. Trinity Pawling New York Apple Core (EJHL)

One of 12 sophomores listed … one of two players from Connecticut … one of seven players on the team from the Eastern Junior Hockey League ... played in all but four games during freshman campaign.

2012-13: Appeared in 31 games … registered two goals and two assists … made collegiate debut opposite Nebraska-Omaha … scored first goal in 3-2 win against American International … second goal game against Connecticut … collected first assist opposite Connecticut … registered an assist against Mercyhurst in Atlantic Hockey Association playoffs.

2012-13: Appeared in 30 games … registered three assists … collected first collegiate point with an assist in 3-2 win against American International … picked up an assist in 3-3 overtime tie at Air Force … posted an assist in his next game, opposite RIT … appeared in both AHA playoff games against Mercyhurst.

BACKGROUND: Born in Setauket, N.Y. ... now calls Simsbury, Conn., home ... 2011 graduate of Northwood School ... served as team captain of the lacrosse team where he played in the midfield ... hockey team’s home rink was in Lake Placid, N.Y., where the “Miracle on Ice” took place ... played for Jim Mackenzie and the Muskegon Lumberkings of the USHL ... served as alternate captain ... son of John and Diane Pomarico ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... cousin, Tom, was a member of the University of Michigan football team and is a 2012 graduate ... enjoys fishing, golfing and cycling ... lists Scott Stevens, Bob Robert and P.J. Stock as his favorite athletes.

BACKGROUND: Born in Reston, Va. … now calls Southport, Conn., home … 2010 graduate of Fairfield College Preparatory School … 2011 graduate of Trinity Pawling School … won a state championship as a forward at Fairfield Prep … played for head coach Frank Bretti and the New York Applecore in the EJHL … son of Mike and Fran Roberts … has three siblings, Jonathan, Rachael and Matthew … first member of his family to embark on a military career … enjoys golf in his spare time … lists Ryan Callahan and Mark Messier as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 47 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … one of two players from Connecticut … one of two players on the team from the United States Hockey League ... played in all but three games as a rookie.


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER

16

MICHAEL ST. DENIS Sophomore • Forward 5-9 • 175 Auburn, Maine Phillips Exeter Academy

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of 12 sophomores on the squad … one of two players from Maine … one of two prep school players on the team. 2012-13: Appeared in three games … selected to AHA Academic Team … made collegiate debut against Maine … played in nonconference game at Brown … competed in Atlantic Hockey Association game at Holy Cross. BACKGROUND: Born in Lewiston, Maine ... now calls Auburn, Maine, home ... 2012 graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy ... played right wing for coach Dana Barbin ... also competed on the tennis, track and field and lacrosse squads ... son of Kelly and Gerry St. Denis ... has one brother, Gregory, and one sister, Kerri ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... enjoys fishing, boating, movies, golf, tennis and ping pong in his spare time ... lists Paul Kariya, Teemu Selanne and Zach Parise as his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

KYLE VOGEL Sophomore • Forward 6-2 • 200 Richland, Wash. Sand Creek Wenatchee Wild (NAHL)

8

One of 12 sophomores on the roster … lone player out of state of Washington … one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League ... injury-shortened rookie campaign. 2012-13: Appeared in five games … season-ending injury in October … made collegiate debut opposite Nebraska-Omaha … also drew non-conference action against Penn State … was on the ice for Atlantic Hockey Association games against Sacred Heart and Holy Cross. BACKGROUND: Born in Bad Kreuznach, Germany … now calls Richland, Wash., home … 2010 graduate of Sand Creek High School … played hockey and baseball … first baseman on the diamond … played for head coach John Becanic and the Wenatchee Wild of the NAHL … voted team fan favorite … son of Hans and Dana Vogel … has one brother, Evan … father, Hans, and uncle, Rich Meader, served in the Army … grandfather, Bill Meader, is retired from the Air Force … enjoys baseball, football and music in his spare time … lists Felix Hernandez, Jake Locker, Hope Solo, Jonathan Towes, Patrick Kane and Marion Hossa as his favorite athletes … attended four high schools in four years … only person in his family to ever play hockey ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 48 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER JOE BRUCKLER Freshman • Forward 5-9 • 170 Burlington, Mass. UNL Independent Study South Shore Kings (EJHL)

17

CLINT CARLISLE Freshman • Forward 5-10 • 170 Dallas, Texas Northwest Amarillo Bulls (NAHL)

15

One of nine rookies on this year’s roster ... one of two freshmen from Texas ... first players in program history from Texas ... one of 12 players out of the North American Hockey League.

BACKGROUND: Born in Laguna Hills, Calif. ... now resides in Burlington, Mass. ... 2012 graduate of University of Nebraska-Lincoln Independent Study High School ... educated online and was a high honor student from middle school up through graduation ... turned in a perfect score on Massachusetts’s standardized mathematics test ... was a 2011-12 Atlantic Junior Hockey League (AJHL) Junior A All-Star ... led the league in assists (44) and totaled a careerhigh 66 points in 53 league games as a senior with the Northern Cyclones Junior A hockey team ... in 2010-11, led the team in points during the USA Hockey Junior A playoffs ... played for coaches Bill Flanagan, Joe Flanagan and Wes Dollof of the Northern Cyclones ... also played at the juniors level for the South Shore Kings and head coach Scott Harlow ... son of Peter and Carolyn Bruckler ... youngest of three children ... has two older brothers in Corey and Peter ... mother, Carolyn, served in the Marine Corps for eight years and Army National Guard for six additional years as a staff sergeant ... father, Peter, was a sergeant in the Marine Corps for 12 years and fought in the Persian Gulf War ... cousin, Jeff Plante, was a member of the West Point Class of 1987 and reached the rank of captain in the U.S. Army ... great uncle is Jacques Plante, who is widely recognized as the first goalie to wear a mask regularly in the National Hockey League ... Plante won six Stanley Cups with the Montreal Canadiens and seven Vezina Trophies as the top goaltender in the NHL ... enjoys playing tennis, fishing, reading, weight lifting and listening to music ... lists Daniel Briere of the Montreal Canandiens as one of his favorite athletes ... major is undeclared.

BACKGROUND: Born and raised in Dallas, Texas ... given name is William Clint Carlisle ... 2010 graduate of Northwest High School ... played at the juniors level for head coach Dennis Williams of the Amarillo Bulls ... team won the Robertson Cup as the National American Hockey League champions ... previously played alongside current Army sophomores Joe Kozlak and Luke Jenkins, along with fellow rookie Garret Peterson, with the Amarillo Bulls ... son of Craig and Kathryn Carlisle ... has a younger sister, Camille ... enjoys golfing and watching football in his spare time ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... major is undeclared.

CONNOR COSTELLO

6

Freshman • Defenseman 6-1 • 205 Londonderry, N.H. The Governor’s Academy New Jersey Hitmen (EJHL)

One of nine freshmen on this year’s team ... one of two players from New Hampshire ... one of seven players out of the Eastern Junior Hockey League. BACKGROUND: Born in Bethpage, N.Y. ... now calls Londonderry, N.H., home ... 2012 graduate of The Governor’s Academy, a boarding school in Byfield, Mass. ... only freshman to make the varsity hockey team at The Governor’s Academy ... went on to serve as team captain in 2011-12, along with captaining the track and field team during that same time ... won The Governor’s Academy Coach’s Award in 2011-12 ... three-year honor roll student ... played for head coach Toby Harris and the New Jersey Hitmen ... team won the Dineen Cup, which is awarded to the Eastern Junior Hockey League champion ... played alongside fellow rookie Tanner Creel ... son of Michael and Kathleen Costello ... has a younger sister, Terri ... father, Michael, built a homemade rink in the family’s backyard when Connor was five years old ... maternal grandfather, James Kelley, was a master chief in the U.S. Navy and retired after 22 years of service in 1988 ... paternal grandfather, Walter Costello, enlisted in the U.S. Army and fought in the Korean War ... has lived away from home since the age of 14 ... enjoys playing ping pong, swimming and biking ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 49 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of nine freshmen on the team ... one of two players from Massachusetts ... one of seven players fro the Eastern Junior Hockey League.


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER TANNER CREEL

30

Freshman • Goaltender 5-10 • 160 Kildeer, Ill. Saint Viator New Jersey Hitmen (EJHL) Tri-City Storm (USHL)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of nine freshmen on the roster ... lone player from Illinois ... played in both the Eastern Junior Hockey League (New Jersey Hitmen) and United States Hockey League (Tri-City Storm) ... one of two rookie goaltenders on this year’s squad. BACKGROUND: Born in Birmingham, Ala. ... now calls Kildeer, Ill., home ... given name is William Tanner Creel ... graduated in 2012 from Saint Viator High School ... captured state and regional hockey championships with Team Illinois of the Tier I Elite Hockey League ... lists that championship run as his greatest hockey memory so far ... graduated with high honors ... played on the juniors level for head coach Toby Harris of the New Jersey Hitmen and head coach Josh Hauge of the Tri-City Storm ... played alongside fellow rookie Connor Costello with the Hitmen ... pair helped New Jersey win the 2013 Dineen Cup, which is awarded to the Eastern Junior Hockey League champion ... son of Keith and Ginger Creel ... has a younger sister, Caitlin ... father, Keith, served in the U.S. Army for eight years ... uncle served in the U.S. Air Force ... moved 14 times growing up ... began playing hockey at age eight when his family lived in Canada ... enjoys listening to music and traveling ... favorite goaltenders are Marc Andre Fleury and Henrik Lundqvist ... drafted by the Chicago Steel of the United States Hockey League (USHL) in 2012 ... major is undeclared.

PARKER GAHAGEN

RYAN NICK Freshman • Defenseman 5-10 • 190 Plymouth, Mich. Plymouth Port Huron Fighting Falcons (NAHL)

4

One of nine rookies on the roster ... one of four players out of Michigan ... one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League. BACKGROUND: Born in Dearborn, Mich. ... lives in Plymouth, Mich. ... 2011 Plymouth High School graduate ... played juniors for the Port Huron Fighting Falcons of the NAHL ... played for head coach Michael Gershon and alongside fellow Army rookie Kyle Plageman ... son of David and Monica Nick ... only child ... played forward nearly his entire life ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... won a state championship at the midgets level ... enjoys golf, guitar, men’s softball league and hanging out with friends ... major is undeclared.

GARRET PETERSON

21

Freshman • Defenseman 6-2 • 196 Coppell, Texas Coppell Amarillo Bulls (NAHL)

35

Freshman • Goaltender 6-2 • 193 Buffalo, N.Y. Williamsville North Buffalo Junior Sabres (OJHL)

One of the team’s nine rookies ... only player from New York ... only player out of the Ontario Junior Hockey League ... one of two rookie goaltenders on this year’s squad. BACKGROUND: Born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y. ... 2011 graduate of Williamsville North High School ... named the New York State Public High School Athletic Association hockey Player of the Year in 2011 ... three-time Williamsville North Most Valuable Player ... also a standout on the baseball field ... won the school’s MVP award for baseball in 2011 as well ... named to the Amherst Avenue of Athletes, which selects one male and one female from each area high school and recognizes them for having the best combination of athletic and academic accomplishments ... played on the juniors level for the Buffalo Junior Sabres and head coaches Mike Peca and Grant Ledyard ... garnered OJHL Goalie of the Year runner-up ... son of Dennis and Suzette Gahagen ... youngest of three children ... siblings Taylor and Aryelle ... Taylor played Division III baseball for Fredonia State ... grandfather served in WWII ... enjoys playing golf ... contemplated playing collegiate baseball before deciding to play juniors hockey ... major is undeclared.

One of nine freshmen on the roster ... one of two rookies out of Texas ... first players in program history from Texas ... one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League. BACKGROUND: Born in Dallas, Texas ... now calls nearby Coppell, Texas home ... graduated from Coppell High School in 2011 ... awarded the school’s English award ... named 2009 Player of the Organization when playing for the Dallas Ice Jets Junior A team ... also played for the Amarillo Bulls and head coach Dennis Williams and previously, the St. Louis Bandits and head coach Jeff Brown, who enjoyed a 14-year NHL career ... son of Mark and Suzanne Peterson ... has one younger sister, Sarah ... first family to embark on a military career ... juniors teammate of fellow rookies Clint Carlisle and Kyle Plagemen while playing with the Amarillo Bulls ... trio helped the Bulls win a 2012-13 national championship ... childhood friend, Colin Jacobs, was drafted by the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres ... recovered from a separated shoulder when with the Bulls, but rehabbed to win a national title and commit to Army ... enjoys art and music ... major is undeclared.

PAGE 50 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


PLAYER SECTION BIOGRAPHIES MARKER KYLE PLAGEMAN

25

Freshman • Forward 5-11 • 185 Cleveland, Ohio Culver Academy Port Huron Fighting Falcons (NAHL)

C.J. REUSCHLEIN Freshman • Forward 6-1 • 205 Flint, Mich. Hartland Texas Tornado (NAHL)

13

One of nine freshmen on the team ... one of four players out of Michigan ... one of 12 players from the North American Hockey League.

BACKGROUND: Born in Edmonton, Alberta ... calls Cleveland, Ohio, home ... 2012 Culver Academy graduate ... boarding school is located in Indiana ... Culver team captain as a senior ... Gold A student and President’s Scholar Award recipient ... played juniors for the Amarillo Bulls, along with fellow rookies Garret Peterson and Clint Carlisle, and the Port Huron Fighting Falcons with classmate Ryan Nick ... son of Kristen and Otis Plageman ... has two sisters, Claire and Emma ... first member of his family to embark on a military career ... father, Otis, played hockey at Bowling Green State University ... part of the Bell Cup-winning team at the Ottawa International Hockey Festival at age 11 ... enjoys water sports, reading, golfing, country music and hanging out with his dog ... has lived away from home since age 14 ... favorite professional athlete is Mark Messier ... avid Adam Sandler movie fanatic ... major is undeclared.

BACKGROUND: Born in Lansing, Mich. ... now calls Flint, Mich., home ... given name is Curran J., but goes by C.J. ... 2011 Hartland High School graduate ... began playing organized hockey at age four with the Detroit Little Caesars ... played the last two years for the Texas Tornado of the NAHL under the direction of head coach Tony Curtale ... once played an outdoor game at “The Big House” at the University of Michigan ... son of Jim and Kelli Reuschlein ... eldest of four children ... siblings Sarah, Ellie and Casie ... entertained the idea of playing college lacrosse, but settled on hockey ... two roommates from juniors also committed to play Division I hockey at Ferris State and Denver ... enjoys golfing and sailing ... huge Detroit Tigers and Red Wings fan ... major is undeclared.

The Pittsburgh Penguins visited West Point for a training weekend, Sept. 27-29, 2013. Pictured here are players, coaches and support staff from both the 2013-14 Army Black Knights and NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins in front of Washington Hall at West Point.

PAGE 51 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

One of nine rookies on the team ... one of four players from Ohio ... one of 12 players out of the North American Hockey League.


2012-13 RESULTS DATE OPPONENT

W/L

A

0

ATT

SF

SA

GOALIE (SAVES)

ARMY GOAL SCORERS

OCTOBER (2-3-1; 2-0-1) 12 vs. Neb.-Omaha

L

1

5

2200

18

38

Leets (33)

Lalor (PP)

13 vs. #20 Maine

L

3

4

2254

24

54

Tadazak (50)

Heller, Jenkins, Richards

19 SACRED HEART*

W

5

2

1253

28

27

Tadazak (25)

Zaremba, Starczewski (3, 1 EN), Schultz

20 at Sacred Heart*

T OT

4

4

353

41

29

Tadazak (25)

Richards (PP), Faust (PP), Starczewski, Kozlak (EN)

26 PENN STATE

L

0

5

1537

34

45

Tadazak (18), Leets (22)

27 at Holy Cross*

W

7

2

1409

35

35

Leets (33)

none Zaremba (PP), Hearn, Kozlak (PP), Gehrt Lalor (PP), Heller (PP), Hearn

NOVEMBER (2-3-0; 2-2-0)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

9

NIAGARA*

L

0

5

1381

27

36

Leets (19), Tadazak (11)

none

10 NIAGARA*

L

1

4

1548

29

31

Tadazak (25)

16 SACRED HEART*

W

3

2

1273

38

28

Tadazak (18), Leets (8)

17 at Brown

L

0

3

1384

25

30

Leets (27)

none

29 at Bentley*

W

3

2

522

33

26

Leets (24)

Starczewski, Richards, Burns (SH)

Heller (PP) Heller, Zaremba (PP), Alvarez

DECEMBER (2-2-1; 2-1-1) 1

AIC*

W

3

2

2648

28

33

Leets (31)

Heller, Pomarico, Hearn

7

at Connecticut*

T

2

2

721

31

29

Leets (29)

Kozlak, Gehrt

11 at Merrimack

L

2

4

1869

24

46

Tadazak (42)

27 RUSSIAN JR (Exh)

L

2

6

2636

43

33

Leets (13), Tadazak (14)

29 at Canisius*

L

1

5

903

19

51

Leets (46)

30 at Canisius*

W OT 1

0

786

36

26

Tadazak (25)

Lalor (PP), Lalor (PP) Kozlak, Lalor Zaremba Kozlak

JANUARY (1-4-1; 1-4-1) 4

#19 ROBERT MORRIS* W

5

0

1624

36

22

Tadazak (22)

Alvarez, Gehrt, Heller, Faust, Faust

5

#19 ROBERT MORRIS* L

1

4

2626

48

28

Tadazak (24)

Rocha

11 at Air Force*

L

1

4

2497

27

36

Leets (32)

12 at Air Force*

T OT

3

3

1607

30

45

Tadazak (42)

Heller (PP), Zaremba, O’Leary

Hearn

18 RIT*

L

5

6

1716

30

38

Tadazak (32)

Schultz, Starczewski, Richards, O’Leary, Heller (EX)

19 RIT*

L

2

4

2681

23

40

Leets (36)

Richards, Kozlak

26 RMC (Exh)

W

4

1

2629

48

13

Leets (12)

Heller, Heller (PP), Alvarez, Gehrt (PP)

FEBRUARY (0-6-2; 0-6-2) 1

at Mercyhurst*

T OT

1

1

707

29

41

Tadazak (40)

2

at Mercyhurst*

L

1

8

1025

15

45

Tadazak (20), Leets (17)

8

AIC*

L

0

3

1598

36

24

Tadazak (31)

Zaremba Schultz (SH) none

15 at Bentley*

L

3

5

601

42

33

Leets (28)

16 BENTLEY*

T OT

2

2

2195

56

25

Tadazak (23)

Kozlak, Zaremba, Heller (PP) Starczewski, Lalor

22 CONNECTICUT*

L

3

4

1877

35

20

Tadazak (16)

Schultz, Starczewski (PP), Faust (PP)

23 CONNECTCUT*

L

3

6

2626

33

30

Leets (24)

26 at AIC*

L

1

4

112

32

29

Tadazak (25)

Alvarez, Pomarico, Clark Lalor

MARCH (0-4-0; 0-2-0) 1

HOLY CROSS*

L

3

6

2005

28

37

Leets (31)

2

at Holy Cross*

L

0

2

1025

20

36

Tadazak (34)

none

8

at Mercyhurst

L

1

3

1015

21

28

Tadazak (25)

Starczewski

9

at Mercyhurst

L

2

5

912

38

39

Tadazak (34)

Faust (PP), Kozlak

PAGE 52 • @ARMY_HOCKEY

Starczewski, Bobb, Starczewski (PP)


2012-13 STATISTICS ## NAME

GP

G

A

PTS SHOTS PCT

+/-

NO-MIN MIN MAJ OTH PP SH

FG

GW GTG OT

HT

PN

UA

21 Andy Starczewski

34

11

15

26

107

.103

-7

3-6

3

0

0

2

0

3

1

0

0

1

0

1

18 Mac Lalor

33

6

12

18

89

.067

-14

17-53

14

1

2

4

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

14 Joe Kozlak

34

7

10

17

91

.077

-14

10-20

10

0

0

1

0

2

2

1

1

0

0

0

19 Josh Richards

34

5

11

16

89

.056

-11

7-14

7

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

22 Thane Heller

34

9

6

15

84

.107

-9

8-16

8

0

0

4

0

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

10 Zak Zaremba

34

7

5

12

83

.084

-11

2-4

2

0

0

2

0

2

0

1

0

0

0

0

27 Willie Faust

27

5

7

12

44

.114

-5

9-18

9

0

0

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

26 Shane Hearn

34

4

7

11

50

.080

-3

3-6

3

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

1

24 Maurice Alvarez

32

3

6

9

79

.038

-2

3-17

1

1

1

0

0

1

2

0

0

0

0

0

20 Jonathan Gehrt

33

3

6

9

50

.060

-11

11-22

11

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

11 Brian Schultz

33

4

3

7

46

.087

-10

17-53

14

1

2

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

20

1

6

7

46

.022

-5

3-6

3

0

0

0

1

0

1

0

0

0

0

1

5

John Clark

34

1

6

7

30

.033

-10

4-8

4

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

Christian Pomarico

31

2

2

4

24

.083

-11

13-37

11

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

32

1

3

4

33

.030

-11

3-6

3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

23 Luke Jenkins 25 Cheyne Rocha

32

1

3

4

27

.037

-12

4-8

4

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

7

22

2

1

3

21

.095

-12

6-34

2

2

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

13 Jon Bobb

15

1

2

3

17

.059

0

6-12

6

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

28 Josh Roberts

30

0

3

3

22

.000

-2

14-39

12

1

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

16 Michael St. Denis

3

0

0

0

2

.000

-1

0-0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

4

10

0

0

0

3

.000

-4

7-14

7

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0 0

Andrew O’Leary

Cody Ikkala

30 Ryan Leets

16

0

0

0

0

.000

0

2-4

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

James McNulty

16

0

0

0

9

.000

-5

5-10

5

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

8

Kyle Vogel

5

0

0

0

5

.000

-4

1-2

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2-4

2

TM TEAM

18

0

0

0

0

.000

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

TOTAL

34

73

114

187

1051

.069

-174 160-413 144 7

9

17

2

11

7

3

1

1

0

5

Opponents

34

121

201

322

1166

.104

-

168-377 161

4

31

2

23

22

2

0

3

0

6

PCT

W

SHO

PP

##

NAME

GP-GS

35

Matt Walsh

1-0

1

Rob Tadazak 22-21

30

Ryan Leets

16-13

TM

EMPTY NET

MINUTES GA

AVG

2:20

0

0.00

0

.000

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1232:31

62

3.02

607

.907

3

13

4

2

14

1

0

0

0

821:15

52

3.80

438

.894

4

9

1

0

16

1

0

0

0

18-0

11:45

7

-

0

.000

0

0

0

0

1

0

7

0

0

TOTAL

34-0

2067:51

121

3.51

1045

.896 7

22

5

2

31

2

7

0

0

Opponents

34-0

2067:51

73

2.12

978

.931

7

5

5

17

2

1

0

0

POWER PLAY STATISTICS ## POWER PLAYS GP 21 Andy Starczewski 34 18 Mac Lalor 33 22 Thane Heller 34 10 Zak Zaremba 34 27 Willie Faust 27 20 Jonathan Gehrt 33 14 Joe Kozlak 34 19 Josh Richards 34 24 Maurice Alvarez 32 3 Christian Pomarico 31 11 Brian Schultz 33 13 Jon Bobb 15 23 Luke Jenkins 32 15 R.J. Burns 20 GOALS BY PERIOD 1 2 ARMY 18 32 Opponents 41 44 SAVES BY PERIOD 1 2 ARMY 346 326 Opponents 330 295

3 22 36

G 2 4 4 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

A Pts 8 10 4 8 1 5 3 5 1 4 4 4 2 3 2 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

OT Total 1 73 0 121

3 OT Total 350 23 1045 337 16 978

SAVES

22

L

3

T

TEAM STATISTICS SHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts Shot pct. Goals/Game Shots/Game Assists

ARMY

OPP

73-1051 .069 2.1 30.9 114

121-1166 .104 3.6 34.3 201

POWER PLAYS Goals-Power Plays Conversion Percent Shot Attempts Shot Percent

17-144 .118 199 .085

31-133 .233 175 .177

GOAL BREAKDOWN Total Goals Power Play Short-handed Empty net Penalty Unassisted Overtime Shootout Delayed Penalty

73 17 2 1 0 5 1 0 0

121 31 2 7 0 6 0 0 0

SH

EN

PEN

SOG

PENALTIES Number Minutes Penalties/Game Pen minutes/Game Minor Major 10-minute Misconduct Game Misconduct Gross Misconduct Match

160 413 4.7 12.1 144 7 2 6 0 1

168 377 4.9 11.1 161 3 2 2 0 0

ATTENDANCE Total Dates/Avg Per Date Neutral Site #/Avg

28588 15/1906 2/2227

17448 17/1026

**Players listed in bold are returning in 2013-14

PAGE 53 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

15 R.J. Burns


2012-13 STARTING LINEUPS DATE OPPONENT

RESULT

LW

C

RW

LD

RD

G

OCTOBER (2-3-1; 2-0-1) 12 vs. Neb.-Omaha

L, 1-5

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Alvarez

Leets

13 vs. #20 Maine

L, 3-4

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

19 SACRED HEART*

W, 5-2

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

20 at Sacred Heart*

T, 4-4 OT

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

26 PENN STATE

L, 0-5

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

27 at Holy Cross*

W, 7-2

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

NOVEMBER (2-3-0; 2-2-0) 9 NIAGARA*

L, 1-5

Bobb

Heller

Starczewski

Rocha

Clark

Leets

10 NIAGARA*

L, 3-4

O’Leary

McNulty

Roberts

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

16 SACRED HEART*

W, 3-2

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

17 at Brown

L, 0-3

Faust

Burns

Zaremba

Gehrt

Lalor

Leets

29 at Bentley*

W, 3-2

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Lalor

Leets

DECEMBER (2-2-1; 2-1-1) 1 AIC*

W, 3-2

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Lalor

Leets

7 at Connecticut*

T, 2-2 OT

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Lalor

Leets

11 at Merrimack

L, 2-4

Schultz

Kozlak

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

27 RUSSIAN JR (exh)

L, 2-6

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Leets

29 at Canisius*

L, 1-5

Schultz

Burns

Zaremba

Rocha

Clark

Leets

30at Canisius*

W, 1-0 OT

Faust

Burns

Kozlak

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

JANUARY (1-4-1; 1-4-1) 4 #19 ROBERT MORRIS* W, 5-0

Faust

Burns

Kozlak

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

5 #19 ROBERT MORRIS* L, 1-4

Faust

Burns

Kozlak

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

11 at Air Force*

L, 1-4

Schultz

Kozlak

Burns

Gehrt

Lalor

Leets

12 at Air Force*

T, 3-3 OT

Schultz

Kozlak

Burns

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

18 RIT*

L, 5-6

Schultz

Kozlak

Roberts

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

19 RIT*

L, 2-4

Schultz

Kozlak

Faust

Gehrt

Lalor

Leets

26 RMC (exh)

W, 4-1

Schultz

Kozlak

Faust

Rocha

Clark

Leets

FEBRUARY (0-6-2; 0-6-2) 1 at Mercyhurst*

T, 1-1 OT

Schultz

Kozlak

Faust

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

2 at Mercyhurst*

L, 1-8

O’Leary

Kozlak

Schultz

Gehrt

Lalor

Tadazak

8 AIC*

L, 0-3

Schultz

Kozlak

Zaremba

Pomarico

Jenkins

Tadazak

15 at Bentley*

L, 3-5

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Gehrt

Lalor

Leets

16 BENTLEY*

T, 2-2 OT

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

22 CONNECTICUT*

L, 3-4

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Rocha

Clark

Tadazak

23 CONNECTCUT*

L, 3-6

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Gehrt

Lalor

Leets

26 at AIC*

L, 1-4

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Pomarico

Lalor

Tadazak

MARCH (0-4-0; 0-2-0) 1 HOLY CROSS*

L, 3-6

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Rocha

Clark

Leets

2 at Holy Cross*

L, 0-2

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Pomarico

Ikkala

Tadazak

8 at Mercyhurst

L, 1-3

Starczewski

Kozlak

Alvarez

Pomarico

Lalor

Tadazak

9 at Mercyhurst

L, 2-5

Faust

Heller

Richards

Pomarico

Jenkins

Tadazak

PAGE 54 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


2012-13 GAME-BY-GAME COMPARISON DATE OPPONENT

RESULT

GOALS

ASSISTS

SHOTS

PEN-MIN

POWER PLAY

OCTOBER (2-3-1; 2-0-1) 12 vs. Neb.-Omaha

L, 1-5

1/5

2/8

18/38

4-8/2-4

1-2/1-4

13 vs. #20 Maine

L, 3-4

3/4

3/6

24/54

5-21/2-4

0-1/0-3

19 SACRED HEART*

W, 5-2

5/2

6/3

28/27

1-2/5-18

0-4/0-1

20 at Sacred Heart*

T, 4-4 OT

4/4

8/6

41/29

7-22/8-24

2-6/2-5

26 PENN STATE

L, 0-5

0/5

0/6

34/45

8-16/8-27

0-6/1-5

27 at Holy Cross*

W, 7-2

7/2

9/4

35/35

7-14/8-16

4-8/2-7

NOVEMBER (2-3-0; 2-2-0) L, 0-5

0/5

0/6

27/35

5-10/4-8

0-2/0-3

10 NIAGARA*

L, 1-4

1/4

2/8

31/29

6-23/8-27

1-4/1-2

16 SACRED HEART*

W, 3-2

3/2

6/4

38/28

5-21/5-10

1-5/0-4

17 at Brown

L, 0-3

0/3

0/5

25/30

5-10/7-14

0-7/2-5

29 at Bentley*

W, 3-2

3/2

4/3

33/26

5-21/5-10

1-5/0-4

DECEMBER (2-2-1; 2-1-1) 1

AIC*

W, 3-2

3/2

6/4

28/33

3-6/2-4

0-1/1-3

T, 2-2 OT

2/2

3/4

31/29

4-8/6-12

0-5/1-3

11 at Merrimack

L, 2-4

2/4

4/8

24/46

5-10/5-10

2-3/1-3

27 RUSSIAN JR (exh)

L, 2-6

2/6

6/4

43/33

7-14/8-27

0-6/0-6

7 at Connecticut*

29 at Canisius*

L, 1-5

1/5

2/10

19/51

10-31/4-8

0-3/1-9

30 at Canisius*

W, 1-0 OT

1/0

2/0

36/25

2-4/7-14

0-7/0-2

JANUARY (1-4-1; 1-4-1) 4 #19 ROBERT MORRIS*

W, 5-0

5/0

9/0

36/22

3-6/3-6

0-3/0-3

5 #19 ROBERT MORRIS*

L, 1-4

1/4

1/8

48/28

3-6/8-16

0-8/0-2

11 at Air Force*

L, 1-4

1/4

1/8

27/36

6-12/4-8

0-4/2-

12 at Air Force*

T, 3-3 OT

3/3

5/6

30/45

3-6/2-4

1-2/1-3

18 RIT*

L, 5-6

5/6

7/9

30/38

4-8/4-8

0-4/2-4

19 RIT*

L, 2-4

2/4

2/5

23/40

2-4/2-4

0-2/1-2

26 RMC

W, 4-1

4/1

7/1

48/13

6-12/10-20

2-7/0-4

FEBRUARY (0-6-2; 0-6-2) 1

at Mercyhurst*

T, 1-1 OT

1/1

2/2

29/41

4-8/3-6

0-2/0-3

2 at Mercyhurst*

L, 1-8

1/8

0/12

15/45

6-12/5-13

0-5/2-6

8 AIC*

L, 0-3

0/3

0/4

36/34

4-8/6-12

0-6/1-4

15 at Bentley*

L, 3-5

3/5

5/8

42/33

3-6/5-10

1-5/0-3

16 BENTLEY*

T, 2-2 OT

2/2

3/2

56/25

3-17/3-6

0-3/0-2

22 CONNECTICUT*

L, 3-4

3/4

5/8

35/20

6-23/8-16

2-7/1-6

23 CONNECTCUT*

L, 3-6

3/6

6/12

33/30

8-16/7-14

0-6/3-7

26 at AIC*

L< 1-4

1/4

1/7

32/29

5-21/3-6

0-3/2-5

MARCH (0-4-0; 0-2-0) 1

HOLY CROSS*

L, 3-6

3/6

5/8

28/37

4-8/4-8

1-4/2-4

2 at Holy Cross*

L, 0-2

0/2

0/2

20/36

9-26/9-18

0-6/1-5

8 at Mercyhurst

L, 1-3

1/3

2/6

21/28

6-12/5-10

0-5/0-6

9 at Mercyhurst

L, 2-5

2/5

3/9

38/39

1-2/3-6

1-2/0-0

73/121

114/201

1051/1116

160-413/168-377

17-144/31-133

TOTALS

PAGE 55 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

9 NIAGARA*


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

2012-13 STATISTICS ARMY’S RECORD WHEN

LEADING SCORERS

Overall .........................................................7-22-5 Atlantic Hockey .......................................7-15-5 AHA Playoffs...............................................0-2-0 Exhibition Games...................................... 1-1-0 Home ........................................................... 4-10-1 Away.............................................................3-10-4 at a neutral site .......................................0-2-0 in overtime ..................................................1-0-5 on television ...............................................2-2-1 in white jerseys ........................................0-5-0 in gold jerseys...........................................3-5-0 in black jerseys .......................................4-11-4 in blue jerseys........................................... 0-1-0 in one-goal games ..................................4-3-0 in two-goal games ..................................0-5-0 in three-goal games............................... 1-9-0 in four-goal games .................................0-2-0 in five-goal-plus games ........................2-3-0 in October ....................................................2-3-1 in November ...............................................2-3-0 in December................................................2-2-1 in January ..................................................... 1-4-1 in February..................................................0-6-2 in March ...................................................... 0-4-0 scoring power-play goal .......................2-7-2 allowing power-play goal ...................2-16-3 scoring short-handed goal .................. 1-1-0 allowing short-handed goal .............. 0-1-0 on Tuesdays ...............................................0-2-0 on Thursdays ............................................. 1-0-0 on Fridays....................................................3-9-2 on Saturdays ...........................................2-10-3 on Sundays .................................................. 1-1-0 on Saturdays (after Fri. win) ................1-3-1 on Saturdays (after Fri. loss) ..............1-5-2 on Saturdays (after Fri. tie) ................ 0-1-0 following a win ..........................................3-3-2 following a loss ......................................4-15-3 following a tie ...........................................0-3-0 vs. WCHA teams ....................................... 0-1-0 vs. Hockey East teams .........................0-2-0 vs. Independent teams ........................ 0-1-0 vs. ECAC Hockey teams ........................ 0-1-0 vs. ranked opponents ............................1-2-0 vs. teams receiving votes ...................0-3-0 when outshooting opp. .........................5-7-3 when being outshot ..............................1-15-2 when shots are even ............................. 1-0-0 when scoring first...................................6-3-2 when opp. scores first .........................1-19-3 when leading after one .........................4-2-1 when trailing after one .......................0-19-3 when tied after one .................................3-1-1 when leading after two ........................3-1-2 when trailing after two.......................0-21-2 when tied after two ............................... 4-0-1 when scoring 5+ goals ...........................3-1-0 when scoring 4 goals ............................ 0-0-1 when scoring 3 goals .............................3-5-1 when scoring 2 goals ............................0-3-2 when scoring 1 goal ................................ 1-8-1 when scoring 0 goals ............................0-5-0 when opp. scores 5+ goals .............. 0-10-0 when opp. scores 4 goals ................... 0-8-1 when opp. scores 3 goals ....................0-3-1 when opp. scores 2 goals ....................5-1-2 when opp. scores 1 goal ...................... 0-0-1 when opp. scores 0 goals ...................2-0-0

POINTS ................................. GP .....................G-A-P 21 Andy Starczewski ............ 34 ................... 11-15-26 18 Mac Lalor ..........................33 ...................6-12-18 14 Joe Kozlak .........................34.....................7-10-17 19 Josh Richards..................34.....................5-11-16 22 Thane Heller ....................34......................9-6-15 10 Zak Zaremba ....................34.......................7-5-12 27 Willie Faust .......................27 .......................5-7-12 26 Shane Hearn....................34....................... 4-7-11 24 Maurice Alvarez .............32........................3-6-9 20 Jonathan Gehrt ..............33 .......................3-6-9

SCORING 5 on 5: 5 on 4: 5 on 3: 4 on 4: 6 on 5: 5 on 6: 4 on 5: 4 on 6: Totals

GOALS .................................... GP .............................G 21 Andy Starczewski ............ 34 ................................ 11 22 Thane Heller ....................34................................ 9 14 Joe Kozlak .........................34.................................7 10 Zak Zaremba ....................34.................................7 18 Mac Lalor ..........................33 ............................... 6 19 Josh Richards..................34.................................5 27 Willie Faust .......................27 .................................5 26 Shane Hearn....................34.................................4 11 Brian Schultz ....................33 ................................4 24 Maurice Alvarez .............32................................ 3

ARMY FOR 52 17 0 0 2 0 2 0 73

AGAINST 81 30 1 0 7 0 2 0 121

SPECIAL TEAMS BREAKDOWN POWER PLAY Overall Home Away Neutral AHA

POWER-PLAY GOALS........ GP ....................... PPG 18 Mac Lalor ..........................33 ................................4 22 Thane Heller ....................34.................................4 27 Willie Faust .......................27 ................................ 3 21 Andy Starczewski ............ 34 ..................................2 10 Zak Zaremba ....................34.................................2

G 17 5 11 1 13

PENALTY KILL PK Overall 102 Home 39 Away 57 Neutral 6 AHA 81

SHORT-HANDED GOALS .. GP .......................SHG 11 Brian Schultz ....................33 ................................ 1 15 R.J. Burns ...........................20................................. 1

Att. 144 65 76 3 118

Pct. 11.8% 7.7% 14.5% 33.3% 11.0%

Att. 133 52 74 7 107

Pct. 76.7% 75.0% 77.0% 85.7% 75.7%

GAME HIGHS TEAM POINTS 16 ................................10/27/12 at Holy Cross GOALS 7 ...................................10/27/12 at Holy Cross ASSISTS 9...................................10/27/12 at Holy Cross ......................... 1/4/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris SHOTS ON GOAL 56 .......................................2/16/13 vs. Bentley SAVES 50 ...............................10/13/12 vs. #20 Maine PENALTY MINUTES 31.....................................12/29/12 at Canisius

GAME-WINNING GOALS. GP ......................GWG 24 Maurice Alvarez .............32.................................2 14 Joe Kozlak .........................34.................................2 ASSISTS ............................... GP .............................A 21 Andy Starczewski ............ 34 ................................15 18 Mac Lalor ..........................33 ............................. 12 19 Josh Richards..................34...............................11 14 Joe Kozlak .........................34.............................. 10 27 Willie Faust .......................27 .................................7 26 Shane Hearn....................34.................................4 22 Thane Heller ....................34................................ 6 24 Maurice Alvarez .............32................................ 6 20 Jonathan Gehrt ..............33 ............................... 6 15 R.J. Burns ...........................20................................ 6 PENALTIES .......................... GP .............. Pen-Min 11 Brian Schultz ....................33 .......................17-53 18 Mac Lalor ..........................33 .......................17-53 28 Josh Roberts ...................30 ...................... 14-39 3 Christian Pomarico .........31 ........................13-37 20 Jonathan Gehrt ..............33 ....................... 11-22 14 Joe Kozlak .........................34....................... 10-20 27 Willie Faust .......................27 ..........................9-18 22 Thane Heller ....................34..........................8-16 4 Cody Ikkala .......................... 10............................. 7-14 19 Josh Richards..................34...........................7-14

PLAYER POINTS 3..................................#21 Starczewski, twice GOALS 3...........#21 Starczewski vs. SHU, 10/19/12 ASSISTS 3#21 Starczewski at Holy Cross, 10/27/12 SAVES .............................................................50 ........#1 Tadazak vs. #20 Maine, 10/13/12

LEADING GOALTENDERS NAME ......................... W-L-T ...... GAA .......SAVE % #1 Rob Tadazak ........ 3-13-4..... 3.02 .............. .907 #30 Ryan Leets .........4-9-1.........3.80 ............... .894 #35 Matt Walsh .........0-0-0 .......0.00 ................000

**Players listed in bold are returning for the 2013-14 season

PAGE 56 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


2012-13 STATISTICS PERIOD HIGHS

SCORING -- BY CLASS GP 34 34 32 15 10 125 GP 33 injured 33 GP 33 34 34 32 133 GP 34 34 27 34 33 20 31 32 22 30 16 5 3 321

G 11 1 1 1 0 14 G 4

A 15 6 3 2 0 26 A 3

P 26 7 4 3 0 40 P 7

PPG 2 0 0 0 0 2 PPG 0

SH 0 0 0 0 0 0 SH 1

GWG 1 0 0 0 0 1 GWG 0

4 G 6 5 7 3 21 G 7 9 5 4 3 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 34

3 A 12 11 5 6 34 A 10 6 7 7 6 6 2 3 1 3 0 0 0 51

7 P 18 16 12 9 55 P 17 15 12 11 9 7 4 4 3 3 0 0 0 85

0 PPG 4 1 2 0 7 PPG 1 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

1 SH 0 0 0 0 0 SH 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

0 GWG 0 0 0 2 2 GWG 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

2012-13 AWARDS

SCORING -- THE LAST TIME PLAYER #1 Tadazak #2 McNulty #3 Pomarico #4 Ikkala #5 Clark #7 O’Leary #8 Vogel #10 Zaremba #11 Schultz #13 Bobb #14 Kozlak #15 Burns #16 St. Denis #17 Santee #18 Lalor #19 Richards #20 Gehrt #21 Starczewski #22 Heller #23 Jenkins #24 Alvarez #25 Rocha #26 Hearn #27 Faust #28 Roberts #30 Leets PLAYER #30 Leets #35 Tadazak

SHOTS 28 ..........1/5/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris, 3rd SAVES 22 ................... 10/26/12 vs. Penn State, 3rd GOALS 3...............................Four times, most recent .....................................2/23/13 vs. UConn, 2nd

SCORED A GOAL (GAMES PLAYED) HAD AN ASSIST (GP) n/a (33) 11/5/11 at RIT (30) n/a (16) n/a (16) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (5) 3/9/13 at Mercyhurst 2/13/10 vs. RIT (63) 1/21/12 vs. Air Force (21) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (5) 3/9/13 at Mercyhurst 1/18/13 vs. RIT (10) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (2) n/a (5) n/a (5) 2/15/13 at Bentley (8) 3/9/13 at Mercyhurst 2/22/13 vs. UConn (6) 2/22/13 vs. UConn (6) 3/1/13 vs. Holy Cross (2) 3/1/13 vs. Holy Cross (2) 3/9/13 at Mercyhurst 3/1/13 vs. Holy Cross (3) 11/29/12 at Bentley (9) 1/12/13 vs. Air Force n/a (3) n/a (3) 2/5/11 vs. UConn (7) 3/5/11 vs. AIC 2/26/13 at AIC (4) 3/8/13 at Mercyhurst (1) 1/19/13 vs. RIT (12) 3/8/13 at Mercyhurst (1) 1/4/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (17) 2/15/13 at Bentley (8) 3/8/13 at Mercyhurst (1) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (5) 2/15/13 at Bentley (8) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (5) 10/13/12 vs. #20 Maine (30) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (4) 2/23/13 vs. UConn (5) 3/1/13 vs. Holy Cross (3) 1/5/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (16) 1/19/13 vs. RIT (12) 1/11/13 at Air Force (15) 2/26/13 at AIC (4) 3/9/13 at Mercyhurst 2/22/13 vs. UConn (6) n/a (30) 1/18/13 vs. RIT (11) n/a (58) 1/29/11 at Bentley (43) RECORDED A SHUTOUT (SAVES) LAST WIN (SAVES) n/a 12/1/12 vs. AIC (31) 1/4/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (22)1/4/13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (22)

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION PLAYER OF THE MONTH ...........................Andy Starczewski, October ROOKIE OF THE MONTH .......................................... Joe Kozlak, October PLAYER OF THE WEEK ............................................ Mac Lalor, 12/17/12 ..........................Andy Starczewski, 10/22/12 ROOKIE OF THE WEEK .......................................Willie Faust, 10/22/12 ............................................ Willie Faust, 1/6/13 ARMY ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ATHLETE OF THE WEEK .......................................... Rob Tadazak, 1/6/13 ..........................Andy Starczewski, 10/22/12

2012-13 MULTIPLE POINT GAMES PLAYER #21 Starczewski #21 Starczewski #21 Starczewski #13 Bobb #11 Schultz #27 Faust #11 Schultz #19 Richards #21 Starczewski #27 Faust #20 Gehrt #15 Burns #19 Richards #18 Lalor #20 Gehrt #18 Lalor #22 Heller #21 Starczewski #14 Kozlak #18 Lalor #19 Richards #20 Gehrt #22 Heller #26 Hearn #21 Starczewski #14 Kozlak #23 Jenkins #27 Faust

PAGE 57 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

G-A-P OPPONENT 3-0-3 vs. SHU 10/19/12 0-3-3 at HC, 10/27/12 2-0-2 vs. HC, 3/1/13 1-1-2 vs. HC, 3/1/13 1-1-2 vs. UConn, 2/22/13 1-1-2 vs. UConn, 2/22/13 1-1-2 vs. RIT, 1/18/13 1-1-2 vs. RIT, 1/18/13 1-1-2 vs. RIT, 1/18/13 2-0-2 vs. RMU, 1/4/13 1-1-2 vs. RMU, 1/4/13 0-2-2 vs. RMU, 1/4/13 0-2-2 vs. RMU, 1/4/13 2-0-2 at MM, 12/11/12 0-2-2 at MM, 12/11/12 0-2-2 vs. AIC, 12/1/12 1-1-2 vs. SHU, 11/16/12 0-2-2 vs. SHU, 11/16/12 1-1-2 at HC, 10/27/12 1-1-2 at HC, 10/27/12 0-2-2 at HC, 10/27/12 1-1-2 at HC, 10/27/12 1-1-2 at HC, 10/27/12 2-0-2 at HC, 10/27/12 1-1-2 at SHU, 10/20/12 1-1-2 at SHU, 10/20/12 0-2-2 at SHU, 10/20/12 1-1-2 at SHU, 10/20/12

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

SENIORS #21 Andy Starczewski #5 John Clark #25 Cheyne Rocha #13 Jon Bobb #4 Cody Ikkala TOTALS JUNIORS #11 Brian Schultz #17 Mike Santee TOTALS SOPHOMORES #18 Mac Lalor #19 Josh Richards #10 Zak Zaremba #24 Maurice Alvarez TOTALS FRESHMEN #14 Joe Kozlak #22 Thane Heller #27 Willie Faust #26 Shane Hearn #20 Jonathan Gehrt #15 R.J. Burns #3 Christian Pomarico #23 Luke Jenkins #7 Andrew O’Leary #28 Josh Roberts #2 James McNulty #8 Kyle Vogel #16 Michael St. Denis TOTALS


MULTIPLE-POINT GAMES #2 JAMES MCNULTY None #3 CHRISTIAN POMARICO None #4 CODY IKKALA None #5 JOHN CLARK (1) 2010-11 (1) Nov. 5 at UMass, W 5-2 (2A)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

#7 ANDREW O’LEARY None #10 ZAK ZAREMBA (2) 2011-12 (2) Feb. 7 at Connecticut, W 4-2 (G, A) Nov. 5 at RIT, L 3-5 (2A) #11 BRIAN SCHULTZ (2) 2012-13 (2) Feb. 22 vs. UConn, L 4-3 (G, A) Jan. 18 vs. RIT, L 6-5 (G, A) #13 JON BOBB (1) 2012-13 (1) March 1 vs. Holy Cross, L 6-3 (G,A) #14 JOE KOZLAK (2) 2012-13 (2) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (G, A) Oct. 20 at Sacred Heart, T 4-4 (OT) (G, A) #16 MICHAEL ST. DENIS None #17 MIKE SANTEE (2) 2010-11 (1) Feb. 18 AIC, W 6-4 (2A) 2009-10 (1) Feb. 19 at Mercyhurst, T 4-4 OT (G, A) #18 MAC LALOR (4) 2012-13 (3) Dec. 11 at Merrimack, L 2-4 (2PPG) Dec. 1 vs. AIC, W 3-2 (2A) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (G, A) 2011-12 (1) Dec. 3 vs. Mercyhurst, T 3-3 OT (2A) #19 JOSH RICHARDS (4) 2012-13 (3) Jan. 18 vs. RIT, L 6-5 (G, A) Jan. 4 vs. #19 Robert Morris, W 5-0 (2A) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (2A) 2011-12 (1) Jan. 27 vs. Bentley, L 2-6 (G, A) #20 JONATHAN GEHRT (3) 2012-13 (3) Jan. 4 vs. #19 Robert Morris, W 5-0 (G, A) Dec. 11 at Merrimack, L 2-4 (2A) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (G, A)

#21 ANDY STARCZEWSKI (17) 2012-13 (6) March 1 vs. Holy Cross, L 6-3 (2G) Jan. 18 vs. RIT, L 6-5 (G, A) Nov. 16 vs. Sacred Heart, W 3-2 (2A) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (3A) Oct. 20 at Sacred Heart, T 4-4 (OT) (G, A) Oct. 19 vs. Sacred Heart, W 5-2 (3G) 2011-12 (5) March 3 at Holy Cross, L 2-5 (2A) Feb. 7 at Connecticut, W 4-2 (G, A) Jan. 28 at Bentley, W 3-1 (G, A) Nov. 26 at Robert Morris, T 3-3 (OT) (2A) Nov. 5 at RIT, L 3-5 (3G) 2010-11 (1) Oct. 17 HOLY CROSS, L, 4-5 (OT) (3A) 2009-10 (5) Jan. 16 at Canisius, T 4-4 (2A) Dec. 5 SACRED HEART, W 4-2 (2G) Nov. 28 CANISIUS, W 7-2 (2G, A) Nov. 21 at Bentley, W 5-1 (2A) Oct. 30 at Colgate, T 4-4 (G, A) #22 THANE HELLER (2) 2012-13 (2) Nov. 16 vs. Sacred Heart, W 3-2 (G, A) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (G, A) #23 LUKE JENKINS (1) 2012-13 (1) Oct. 20 at Sacred Heart, T 4-4 (OT) (G, A) #24 MAURICE ALVAREZ (1) 2011-12 (1) Nov. 11 at Sacred Heart, W 2-1 (PPG, A) #25 CHEYNE ROCHA (3) 2010-11 (2) Feb. 5 at UConn, W 5-3 (3A) Oct. 17 HOLY CROSS, L 4-5 (OT) (G, A) 2009-10 (1) Jan. 29 AIR FORCE, W 4-2 (2A) #26 SHANE HEARN (1) 2012-13 (1) Oct. 27 at Holy Cross, W 7-2 (2G) #27 WILLIE FAUST (3) 2012-13 (3) Feb. 22 vs. UConn, L 4-3 (G, A) Jan. 4 vs. #19 Robert Morris, W 5-0 (2) Oct. 20 at Sacred Heart, T 4-4 (OT) (G, A) #28 JOSH ROBERTS None CAREER SHUTOUTS #30 RYAN LEETS None #1 ROB TADAZAK (2) 2012-13 (2) Jan. 4 vs. #19 Robert Morris, W 5-0, 22 saves Dec. 30 at Canisius, W 1-0 (OT), 25 saves

PAGE 58 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


THE LAST TIME Army won when trailing by three goals: ................................... 02-03-01 vs. Iona ...................................................................... (6-5 win – trailed 3-0 in first period) Army won when trailing by four goals: ...............02-25-86 vs. SUNY Plattsburgh .......................................................................(6-5 OT win – trailed 5-1 in second) Army erased a four-goal deficit: .........................................12-08-01 vs. Air Force ........................................................................... (5-4 loss – trailed 4-0 in second) Army and its opponent both played a penalty-free game: ................... 01-04-02 .....................................................................................vs. Connecticut (3-3 OT tie) an Army player recorded a hat trick: ..........Andy Starczewski, 10-19-12 ........................................................................... vs. Sacred Heart (5-2 win) an Army player recorded a natural hat trick: .......................Mark Dube, 2-18-11 ....................................... vs. AIC UConn (3 goals in second period of 6-4 victory) an Army player registered successive hat tricks: .....................Andy Lundbohm, .......................................01-10-98 vs. Villanova (3); 1-13-98 vs. Connecticut (3) Army players registered successive hat tricks: ........ Owen Meyer, 11-10-07 vs. ...................................................AIC (3); Bryce Hollweg, 11-16-07 vs. Bentley (3) two Army players registered hat tricks in the same game: .... Kevin Keenan (3) ..................................................Matt Wilson (3), at Buffalo (15-2 win), 01-19-85 three Army players registered hat tricks in the same game: ............................................... Pete Dawkins (4), John Farrell (4), Ted Crowley (3) ............................................................................vs. Colgate (14-1 win), 02-14-59 an Army player recorded a hat trick in his first collegiate game: ............................................................Bucky Burleigh, 01-30-99 vs. Scranton (3) an Army player recorded a play-maker (three assists): ....................................Andy Starczewski, 10-27-12 at Holy Cross (7-2 W) an Army player scored a short-handed goal: ....................... 2-2-13, Brian Schultz at Mercyhurst (16:16 of 3rd period) an Army player scored an empty-net goal: ................................ 10-19-12 ........................ Andy Starczewski vs. Sacred Heart (17:52 of 3rd period) an Army player scored an extra-skater goal: .............................. 1-18-13 ................................................. Thane Heller vs. RIT (19:52 of 3rd period) an Army player attempted a penalty shot: ...................................... Kyle Maggard ........... 2-11-12 vs. Holy Cross, goalie Matt Ginn (18:24 of third period - saved) an opponent attempted a penalty shot: .......Casey Bailey (Penn State), ......................................... 10-26-12 vs. Ryan Leets (third period - saved) Army scored four unanswered goals: .10-27-12 at Holy Cross (7-2, win) Army scored five unanswered goals: 1-4-13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (5-0) Army scored six unanswered goals: .......................... 2-2-08 vs. UConn (6-0 win) Army scored seven unanswered goals: ............. 11-17-00 vs. Bentley (9-2, win) Army scored eight unanswered goals: .......... 01-28-00 vs. Scranton (10-1, win) Army scored nine unanswered goals: ........... 12-3-99 vs. Assumption (9-0, win) Army scored 10 unanswered goals: ....................2-17-98 vs. Nichols (10-0, win) Army scored 11 unanswered goals:.............. 01-31-98 vs. Scranton (11-0, win) an opponent scored four unanswered goals:........................................ 11-12-10 ......................................................................................... at Mercyhurst (4-0, loss) an opponent scored five unanswered goals: ...............................11-9-12 ....................................................................................... Niagara (5-0, loss) an opponent scored six unanswered goals: ...... 1-30-09 vs. Bentley (6-0, loss) an opponent scored seven unanswered goals: 3-9-03 vs. Quinnipiac (7-0, loss) an opponent scored eight unanswered goals: .........................................10-8-11 ..........................................................................................vs. #11 Union (8-1 loss) BOLD SITUATIONS OCCURED DURING THE 2012-13 SEASON

PAGE 59 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Army scored eight goals.................................................2-26-10 at AIC (8-6, win) Army scored nine goals: ........................................... 11-20-10, vs. AIC (9-3, win) Army scored 10 goals: .......................................2-26-00, vs. Findlay (10-6, win) Army scored 11 goals: ..................................... 2-14-98, vs. Fairfield (11-2, win) Army scored 12 goals: ..................................... 2-25-95, vs. Fairfield (12-3, win) Army scored 13 goals: ............................................1-17-97, vs. Iona (13-3, win) Army scored 14 goals: ...................................... 1-29-99, vs. Nichols (14-1, win) Army scored 15 goals: ...................................... 1-19-85, vs. Buffalo (15-2, win) Army scored 16 goals: ............................2-16-84, vs. American Int’l (16-3, win) Army scored 17 goals: ................................10-29-82, vs. Kent State (17-3, win) Army scored 18 goals: .....................February 1944, vs. Penn State (18-3, win) an opponent scored nine goals: ............................ 3-6-04, vs. UConn (9-6, loss) an opponent scored 10 goals: ......................12-28-91, vs. Colgate (10-3, loss) an opponent scored 11 goals: ....................12-27-91, vs. Clarkson (11-1, loss) an opponent scored 12 goals: ..............2-23-96, vs. UMass-Lowell (12-3, loss) an opponent scored 13 goals: .......................... 2-17-79, vs. Elmira (13-2, loss) an opponent scored 14 goals: ............... 2-26-55, vs. St. Lawrence (14-1, loss) an opponent scored 15 goals: ............................ 1-3-92, vs. Maine (15-5, loss) an opponent scored 17 goals: ...................... 2-25-55, vs. Clarkson (17-0, loss) an Army player scored three goals: .......................................... 10-19-12 ........................................................ vs. Sacred Heart (Andy Starczewski) an Army player scored four goals: .............11-6-99, vs. Bentley (Mike Fairman) an Army player scored five goals: .....................2-7-76, vs. RMC (Larry Pallotta) an Army player scored six goals: ............. 2-16-74, vs. New Haven (George Clark) an Army player scored seven goals: ..........2-5-75, vs. Wesleyan (George Clark) an Army player had three assists: ...................2-5-11 at UConn (Cheyne Rocha) an Army player had four assists: ...............................2-19-11, at AIC (Mike Hull) an Army player had five assists: ................ 11-16-07, vs. Bentley (Owen Meyer) an Army player had six assists: ....................... 1-19-85, vs. Buffalo (Bob Dwan) an Army player had seven assists: .....................1-12-80, vs. Bryant (Tom Rost) an Army player had four points: ...............2-5-11 at UConn (C. Omilusik, 3G, A) an Army player had five points: ..............11-16-07, vs. Bentley (Hollweg, Meyer) an Army player had six points: ........................... 2-4-93, vs. Fairfield (Ian Winer) an Army player had seven points: ............ 12-1-76, vs. SUNY Plattsburgh (Dave Rost) an Army player had nine points: ......................12-17-76, vs. Bryant (Dave Rost) an Army goalie made 40-44 saves: .........................................2-1-13 at Mercyhurst .................................................................................................................(Rob Tadazak 40) an Army goalie made 45-49 saves: .................................12-29-12 at Canisius ........................................................................................................(Ryan Leets, 47) an Army goalie made 50-59 saves: ..............................10-13-12, vs. #13 Maine ..........................................................................................................(Rob Tadazak, 50) an Army goalie made at least 60 saves: ...................2-27-59, vs. Northeastern ....................................................................................................(Larry Palmer, 63) an Army team took 40-49 shots on goal: .............................................. 48 ............................................................ 1-5-13 vs. #19 Robert Morris, L 4-1 an Army team took 50-59 shots on goal: ............................................. 56 ...................................................................... 2-16-13 vs. Bentley, T, 2-2 OT an Army team took 60-69 shots on goal: ................... 1-29-99, vs. Nichols (60) an Army team took 70-74 shots on goal: ..................2-20-96, vs. Scranton (71) an Army team took at least 75 shots in a game: ........1-28-84, vs. Buffalo (76) an opponent took 40-49 shots on goal: .......................................1-19-13 ......................................................................................... vs. RIT, L, 2-4 (40) an opponent took 50-59 shots on goal: 12-29-12 at Canisius 5-1 L (51) an opponent took at least 60 shots on goal: .......2-27-59, vs. Northeastern (66) Army held an opponent to 10 shots on goal: ........... 1-20-06, vs. Canisius (10) Army was held under 10 shots on goal: ..............10-27-06, vs. Notre Dame (7) an Army goaltender was credited with an assist: .................................11-5-11 at Sacred Heart ................................................................................................................................................(Rob Tadazak) an Army goaltender scored a goal: .............................2-16-01, vs. Sacred Heart .......................................................................................................(Scott Hamilton) Army shut out an opponent: ..............1-4-13 vs. #19 Robert Morris (5-0) ................................................................................Rob Tadazak, 22 saves Army posted back-to-back shutouts .............................. 12-30-12/1-4-13 ..............................................at Canisius (Tadazak, 25 saves 1-0 OT); and ................................................vs. #19 Robert Morris (Tadazak, 22 saves) Army was shut out by an opponent: ................3-2-13 at Holy Cross (2-0) Army won in overtime: ..................................... 12-30-12 at Canisius (1-0) Army lost in overtime: ....................................12-30-10 vs. #17 Merrimack (2-1) Army tied in overtime: ........................................2-16-13 vs. Bentley (2-2) Army won when trailing after two periods of play: ................................................ ................................................................. 2-5-11 at UConn (5-3 win -- trailed 1-0) Army swept a weekend series: .................................. 11/29/12-12/1/12 .............................................................................vs. Bentley, AIC (3-2, 3-2)


2012-13 GAME SUMMARIES

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

GAME #1 (10-12-12) Nebraska-Omaha 5, Army 1 Ice Breaker Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. NEBRASKA-OMAHA 5, ARMY 1 UNO 2-2-1--5 ARMY 0-1-0--1 First Period: UNO – Raubenheimer (Montpetit, Aneloski), PP, 4:31 UNO – Seeler (Zombo, Raubenheimer), 8:43 Second Period: UNO – Aneloski (Seeler, Raubenheim), 4:27 UNO – Searfoss (Gwidt), 7:54 ARMY – Lalor (Zaremba, Starczewski), PP, 9:21 Third Period: UNO – White (Searfoss), 14:48 Shots: UNO 38 (11-18-9); Army 18 (6-4-8) Saves: UNO 17 (Faulkner, 60:00, 6-3-8); Army 33 (Leets, 60:00, 9-16-8) Power Plays: UNO, 1-4; Army, 1-2 Penalties: UNO, 2-4; Army, 4-8 Attendance: 2,200 GAME #2 (10-13-12) #20 Maine 4, Army 3 Ice Breaker Consolation Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. MAINE 4, ARMY 3 ARMY 1-1-1--3 MAINE 0-3-1--4 First Period: ARMY – Heller (Starczewski), 5:41 Second Period: ARMY – Jenkins (Zaremba), 2:31 MAINE – Anthoine (unassisted), 11:24 MAINE – Leidermark (Merchant, Leen), 12:35 MAINE --- Higgins (Shore, Diamond), 13:51 Third Period: ARMY – Richards (Kozlak), 9:01 MAINE -- Diamond (Higgins, Hutton), 9:56 Shots: Maine 54 (14-19-21); Army 24 (6-8-10) Saves: Maine 21 (Morris, 60:00, 5-7-9); Army 50 (Tadazak, 59:24, 14-16-20; empty net, 00:36) Power Plays: Maine, 0-3; Army, 0-1 Penalties: Maine, 2-4; Army, 5-21 Attendance: 2,254 GAME #3 (10-19-12) Army 5, Sacred Heart 2 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. ARMY 5, SACRED HEART 2 SHU 0-2-0--2 ARMY 1-1-3--5 First Period: ARMY – Zaremba (Rocha, Clark), 00:29 Second Period: ARMY – Starczewski (unassisted), 2:36 SHU – Verbeek (Sheehan), 8:45 SHU – Lake (Curry, Bonner), 18:10 Third Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Faust) 1:41 ARMY – Schultz (Burns, Kozlak), 8:24 ARMY – Starczewski (Alvarez), 17:52 Shots: Sacred Heart 27 (8-15-4); Army 28 (9-6-13) Saves: Sacred Heart 23 (Legatto, 59:48, 8-5-10; empty net, 00:12); Army 25 (Tadazak, 60:00, 8-13-4) Power Plays: Sacred Heart, 0-1; Army, 0-4 Penalties: Sacred Heart, 5-18; Army, 1-2 Attendance: 1,253 GAME #4 (10-20-12) Army 4, Sacred Heart 4 OT Milford Ice Pavilion, Milford Ice Pavilion ARMY 4, SACRED HEART 4 (OT) ARMY 0-2-2-0--4 SHU 1-2-1-0--4 First Period: SHU – Delong (Sheehan), 1:09 Second Period: ARMY – Richards (Jenkins, Alvarez) PP, 1:53 SHU – Sheehan (George, Brightbill), PP, 4:03 ARMY – Faust (Gehrt, Kozlak), PP, 15:02 SHU – Verbeek (Solomon, Filteau), 19:48 Third Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Faust, Jenkins), 7:35 SHU – Bonner (Curry), 11:35 ARMY – Kozlak (Heller, Starczewski), EX, 19:27 Overtime: None. Shots: Army 41 (19-10-9-3); Sacred Heart 29 (13-8-6-2) Saves: Army 25 (Tadazak, 64:17, 12-6-5-2; empty net, 00:43); Sacred Heart 37 (Bodnarchuk, 65:00, 19-8-7-3) Power Plays: Army, 2-6; Sacred Heart, 2-5 Penalties: Army, 7-22; Sacred Heart, 8-24 Attendance: 353

GAME #5 (10-26-12) Penn State 5, Army 0 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. PENN STATE 5, ARMY 0 PSU 1-3-1--5 ARMY 0-0-0--0 First Period: PSU – Brooks (Loik, Glen), 10:15 Second Period: PSU -- Milley (Bailey), PP, 2:36 PSU – Sweetland (Bailey), 12:44 PSU – Bailey (Jensen), 13:46 Third Period: PSU – Glen (Sweetland), 4:07 Shots: Penn State 45 (13-9-23); Army 34 (12-12-10) Saves: Penn State 34 (Musico, 59:20, 12-12-10; empty net, 00:40); Army 40 (Tadazak, 44;02, 12-6-0; Leets, 15:53, x-x-22 empty net, 00:05) Power Plays: Penn State 1-5; Army, 0-5 Penalties: Penn State, 8-27; Army, 8-16 Attendance: 1,537 GAME #6 (10-27-12) Army 7, Holy Cross 2 Hart Center, Worcester, Mass. ARMY 7, HOLY CROSS 2 ARMY 3-3-1—7 HOLY CROSS 0-2-0—2 First Period: ARMY – Zaremba (Starczewski, Heller), PP, 3:57 ARMY – Hearn (unassisted), 11:21 ARMY --- Kozlak (Richards, Gehrt), PP, 12:58 Second Period: HC – Fletcher (Vos), SH, 9:40 HC – Nunn (Zych), 10:12 ARMY – Gehrt (unassisted), 10:25 ARMY – Lalor (Starczewski), PP, 13:49 ARMY – Heller (Starczewski, Lalor), PP, 18:22 Third Period: ARMY – Hearn (Richards, Kozlak), 14:00 Shots: Army 35 (14-11-10); Holy Cross 35 (13-9-13) Saves: Army 33 (Leets, time, 13-7-13); Holy Cross 28 (Ginn, time, 11-8-9) Power Plays: Army 4-8; Holy Cross 2-7 Penalties: Army 7-14; Holy Cross 8-16 Attendance: 1,409 GAME #7 (11-9-12) Niagara 5, Army 0 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. NIAGARA 5, ARMY 0 NIAGARA 4-1-0--5 ARMY 0-0-0--0 First Period: NIAGARA – Kohls (Giancarlo), 1:27 NIAGARA – Williams (Hannan, Kohls), 8:19 NIAGARA – Lochner (Divjak, Ryan), 9:22 NIAGARA – Rashid (kohls), 17:34 Second Period: NIAGARA – Zanette (unassisted), 7:53 Third Period: None. Shots: Niagara 35 (17-10-8); Army 27 (7-12-8) Saves: Niagara 27 (Chubak, 60:00, 7-12-8); Army 30 (Leets, 27:53, 13-6-x; Tadazak, 32:07, x-3-8) Power Plays: Niagara, 0-3; Army, 0-2 Penalties: Niagara, 4-8; Army, 5-10. Attendance: 1,381 GAME #8 (11-10-12) Niagara 4, Army 1 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. NIAGARA 4, ARMY 1 NIAGARA 2-1-1--4 ARMY 0-0-1--1 First Period: NIAGARA – Murphy (Ryan, Iuorio), PP, 7:09 NIAGARA -- Benedict (Rashid, Ryan) 13:5 Second Period: NIAGARA – Benedict (Turcotte, Williams), 2:53 Third Period: ARMY – Heller (Zaremba, Starczewski), PP, 14:30 Shots: Niagara 29 (11-11-6); Army 31 (14-6-11) Saves: Niagara 30 (Chubak, 60:00, 14-6-10); Army 25 (Tadazak, 60:00, 9-10-6) Power Plays: Niagara, 1-2; Army, 1-4 Penalties: Niagara, 8-27; Army, 6-23 Attendance: 1,548

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GAME #9 (11-16-12) Army 3, Sacred Heart 2 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. ARMY 3, SACRED HEART 2 SHU 1-1-0--2 ARMY 1-1-1--3 First Period: ARMY – Heller (Starczewski, Clark), 3:39 SHU – Filteau (Curry, Brightbill), 4:25 Second Period: ARMY – Zaremba (Lalor, Starczewski), PP, 4:34 SHU – Delong (Ketchum, Sheehan), 18:52 Third Period: ARMY – Alvarez (Faust, Heller), 9:44 Shots: Sacred Heart 28 (12-10-6); Army 38 (10-11-17) Saves: Sacred Heart 35 (Bodnarchuk, 58:45, 9-10-16; empty net, 1:15); Army 26 (Tadazak, 27:22, 11-7-x; Leets, 32:37, x-2-6) Power Plays: Sacred Heart, 0-4; Army, 1-5 Penalties: Sacred Heart, 5-10; Army, 5-21 Attendance: 1,273 GAME #10 (11-17-12) Brown 3, Army 0 Meehan Auditorium, Providence, R.I. BROWN 3, ARMY 0 ARMY 0-0-0--0 BROWN 1-0-2--3 First Period: BROWN – Lorito (Jacobson, Zaires), PP, 4:55 Second Period: None. Third Period: BROWN – Lorito (Wahl, Robertson), PP, 6:25 BROWN – Lorito (Lamacchia), SH, 7:43 Shots: Army 25 (8-7-10); Brown 30 (15-9-6) Saves: Army 27 (Leets, 60:00, 14-9-4); Brown 25 (DeFilippo, 60:00, 8-7-10) Power Plays: Army, 0-7; Brown, 2-5 Penalties: Army, 5-10; Brown, 7-14 Attendance: 1,384 GAME #11 (11-29-12) Army 3, Bentley 2 John A. Ryan Skating Arena, Watertown, Mass. ARMY 3, BENTLEY 2 ARMY 1-2-0--3 BENTLEY 0-2-0--2 First Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Faust, Heller), 16:01 Second Period: ARMY – Richards (Hearn, Rocha), 8:01 BEN – Breton (Grieve), 9:13 BEN – Switzer (Krause, Blomquist), 8:26 ARMY – Burns (unassisted), SH, 11:24 Third Period: None. Shots: Army 33 (13-11-9); Bentley 26 (8-10-8) Saves: Army 24 (Leets, 60:00, 8-8-8); Bentley 30 (Komm, 58:47, 12-9-9) Power Plays: Army, 0-3; Bentley, 0-3 Penalties: Army, 3-6; Bentley, 3-6 Attendance: 522 GAME #12 (12-1-12) Army 3, AIC 2 “TK” Night Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. ARMY 3, AIC 2 AIC 0-1-1--2 ARMY 0-1-2--3 First Period: None. Second Period: AIC –Peake (Pleskach and Puskar), PP, :40 ARMY – Heller (Starczewski, Lalor), 17:23 Third Period: ARMY – Pomarico (Lalor, Roberts), 2:45 ARMY –Hearn (Richards, Kozlak), 14:48 AIC – Porter (Leitner, Pleskach), 16:49 Shots: AIC 33 (9-15-9); Army 28 (9-10-9) Saves: AIC 25 (Meisner, 59:05, 9-9-7); Army 31 (Leets, 60:00, 9-14-8) Power Plays: AIC, 1-3; Army, 0-1 Penalties: AIC, 2-4; Army, 3-6 Attendance: 2,648


2012-13 GAME SUMMARIES GAME #13 (12-7-12) Army 2, Connecticut 2 (OT) Freitas Ice Forum, Storrs, Conn. ARMY 2, UCONN 2 OT ARMY 1-1-0-0--2 UCONN 1-0-1-0--2 First Period: ARMY – Kozlak (Lalor), 8:20 UCONN – Bouchard (Smutek, Gerling), PP, 15:17 Second Period: ARMY – Gehrt (Bobb, Burns), 10:51 Third Period: UCONN – Carriere (Pauly), 10:32 Overtime: None Shots: Army 31 (10-10-10-1); Connecticut 29 (7-7-14-1) Saves: Army 27 (Leets, time, 6-7-13-1); Connecticut 29 (Bartus, 30:31, 9-4-x-x; Grogan, 34:39, x-5-10-1) Power Plays: Army, 0-5; Connecticut, 1-3 Penalties: Army, 4-8; Connecticut, 6-12 Attendance: 721

EXHIBITION (12-27-12) Russian Junior All-Stars 6, Army 2 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. RUSSIAN JR. ALL-STARS 6, ARMY 2 RUSSIAN JR. 1-4-1—6 ARMY 0-2-0—2 First Period: R – Krivchenko (Berdnikov), 7:40 Second Period: R – Berdnikov (Mishchenko), 00:34 R – Krivchenko (Mischenko, Berdnikov), 3:21 A – Lalor (Kozlak, Richards), 3:53 R – Upitis (unassisted), 4:10 A – Kozlak (Rocha, Lalor), 6:48 R – Lomako (Vikharev, Makarov), 17:53 Third Period: R – Stoliaren (unassisted), 9:00 Shots: Russian Jr. All-Stars 33 (9-15-9); Army 43 (14-16-13) Saves: Russian Jr. All-Stars 41 (Maskovtsev, 60:00, 14-14-13); Army 27 (Leets, 30:14, 8-5-x; Tadazak, 29:42, x-6-8; empty net, 00:04) Power Plays: Russian Jr. All-Stars, 0-6; Army, 0-6 Penalties: Russian Jr. All-Stars, 8-27; Army, 7-14 Attendance: 2,636 GAME #15 (12-29-12) Canisius 5, Army 1 Buffalo State Sports Arena, Buffalo, N.Y. CANISIUS 5, ARMY 1 ARMY 0-1-0—1 CANISIUS 2-2-1—5 First Period: CAN – Bohrer (McKellar, Cuddemi), PP, 9:46 CAN – Grazen (Shupe, Lindsay), 12:45 Second Period: CAN – Shupe (Grazen, Lindsay), 1:08 ARMY – Zaremba (Clark, Richards), 7:03 CAN – Sullivan (Gibbons, Beck), 16:46 Third Period: CAN – Shupe (Lindsay), 16:16 Shots: Army 19 (6-7-6); Canisius 52 (16-18-17) Saves: Army 46 (Leets, 60:00, 14-16-16); Canisius 18 (Capobianco, 60:00, 6-6-6) Power Plays: Army, 0-3; Canisius, 1-9 Penalties: Army, 10-31; Canisius, 4-8 Attendance: 903

GAME #17 (1-4-13) Army 5, #19 Robert Morris 0 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. CBS Sports Network ARMY 5, #19 ROBERT MORRIS 0 RMU 0-0-0—0 ARMY 1-3-1—5 First Period: ARMY – Alvarez (Zaremba), 19:00 Second Period: ARMY – Gehrt (Richards, Starczewski), 9:47 ARMY – Heller (Gehrt, Richards), 11-05 ARMY – Faust (Burns, Lalor), 17:43 Third Period: ARMY – Faust (Schultz, Burns), 1:00 Shots: Robert Morris 22 (5-9-8); Army 36 (12-14-10) Saves: Robert Morris 31 (Levine, 41:38, 11-11-1; Ferber, 18:22, 0-0-8); Army 22 (Tadazak, 59:54, 5-9-8; empty net, 00:06) Power Plays: Robert Morris, 0-3; Army, 0-3 Penalties: Robert Morris, 3-6; Army, 3-6 Attendance: 1,624 GAME #18 (1-5-13) #19 Robert Morris 4, Army 1 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. House of Blues #19 ROBERT MORRIS 4, ARMY 1 RMU 3-0-1—4 ARMY 1-0-0—1 First Period: RMU – Gibson (Moore, Denham), 3:22 ARMY – Rocha (Hearn), 5:28 RMU – Wydo (Hervato, Hinds), 14:02 RMU – Blazek (Geerin, South), 19:56 Second Period: None. Third Period: RMU – Jones (unassisted), EN, 18:59 Shots: Robert Morris 28 (10-7-11); Army 48 (10-10-28) Saves: Robert Morris 24 (Levine, 60:00, 9-10-28); Army 24 (Tadazak, 58:29, 7-7-10; empty net, 1:31, x-x-1) Power Plays: Robert Morris, 0-2; Army, 0-8 Penalties: Robert Morris, 8-16; Army, 3-6 Attendance: 2,626 GAME #19 (1-11-13) Air Force 4, Army 1 Cadet Ice Arena, USAFA, Colo. AIR FORCE 4, ARMY 1 ARMY 0-0-1—1 AIR FORCE 1-2-1—4 First Period: AF – Persian (Holm, Carey), 9:29 Second Period: AF – De Laurell (Thomas, Carew), PP, 14:39 AF – De Laurell (Walsh, Carew), 18:33 Third Period: AF – De Laurell (Thomas, Kruse), PP, 15:31 ARMY – Hearn (Lalor), 16:03 Shots: Army 27 (13-3-11); Air Force 36 (9-13-14) Saves: Army 32 (Leets, 60:00, 8-11-13); Air Force 26 (Torf, 60:00, 13-3-10) Power Plays: Army, 0-4; Air Force, 2-6 Penalties: Army, 6-12; Air Force, 4-8 Attendance: 2,497

GAME #20 (1-12-13) Army 3, Air Force 3 (OT) Cadet Ice Arena, USAFA, Colo. CBS Sports Network ARMY 3, AIR FORCE 3 (OT) ARMY 1-2-0-0—3 AIR FORCE 0-2-1-0—3 First Period: ARMY – Heller (Richards, Burns), PP, 7:14 Second Period: AF – Kruse (McDonald, Artman), 1:14 ARMY – Zaremba (Alvarez, Hearn), 4:45 ARMY – O’Leary (Roberts), 5:33 AF – Artman ( Timar), 7:08 Third Period: AF – De Laurell (Carew, McKenzie), PP, 3:24 Overtime: None. Shots: Army 30 (14-8-7-1); Air Force 45 (12-16-12-5) Saves: Army 42 (Tadazak, 65:00, 12-14-11-5); Air Force 27 (Torf, 65:00, 13-6-7-1) Power Plays: Army, 1-2; Air Force, 1-3 Penalties: Army, 3-6; Air Force, 2-4 Attendance: 1,607 GAME #21 (1-18-13) RIT 6, Army 5 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. RIT 6, ARMY 5 RIT 3-1-2—6 ARMY 1-2-2—5 First Period: RIT – Smith (Saracino), 1:02 ARMY – Schultz (Roberts), 9:04 RIT – Lynch (Kuqali, Mitchell), 11:43 RIT – Descoteaux (McGowan, Lynch), PP, 18:01 Second Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Richards), 7:56 RIT – Colavecchia (Mitchell), PP, 16:09 ARMY – Richards (Starczewski, Lalor), 19:41 Third Period: RIT – Smith (Mitchell), 7:17 RIT – Miller (Potts), 11:35 ARMY – O’Leary (Clark), 18:19 ARMY – Heller (Schultz, Kozlak), 19:52 Shots: RIT 38 (15-13-10); Army 30 (11-7-12) Saves: RIT 25 (Watson, 60:00, 10-5-10); Army 32 (Tadazak, 58:30, 12-12-8; empty net, 1:30) Power Plays: RIT, 2-4; Army, 0-4 Penalties: RIT, 4-8; Army, 4-8 Attendance: 1,716 GAME #22 (1-19-13) RIT 4, Army 2 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. RIT 4, ARMY 2 RIT 2-1-1—4 ARMY 0-2-0—2 First Period: RIT – Mitchell (Hartley), 10:21 RIT – Mitchell (Colavecchia, Hartley), 14:35 Second Period: ARMY – Richards (Rocha), 1:22 RIT – Smith (Hartley), 5:17 ARMY – Kozlak (Faust), 9:44 Third Period: RIT – Smith (unassisted), EN, 19:35 Shots: RIT 40 (12-15-13); Army 23 (9-4-10) Saves: RIT 21 (Watson, 60:00, 9-2-10); Army 36 (Leets, 59:48, 10-14-12; empty net, 00:12) Power Plays: RIT, 1-2; Army, 0-2 Penalties: RIT, 2-4; Army, 2-4 Attendance: 2,681 EXHIBITION (1-26-13) Army 4, RMC 1 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. ARMY 4, RMC 1 RMC 0-0-1—1 ARMY 1-1-2—4 First Period: ARMY – Heller (Richards), 6:31 Second Period: ARMY – Heller (Alvarez, Lalor), PP, 9:22 Third Period: RMC – Cook (MacLean), 9:46 ARMY – Alvarez (Hearn, Gehrt), 12:43 ARMY – Gehrt (Jenkins, Starczewski), PP, 18:07 Shots: RMC 13 (5-4-4); Army 48 (12-17-19) Saves: RMC 44 (Dorsey, 60:00, 11-16-17); Army 12 (Leets, 59:53, 5-4-3; empty net, 00:07) Power Plays: RMC, 0-4; Army, 2-7 Penalties: RMC, 10-20; Army, 6-12 Attendance: 2,629

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

GAME #14 (12-11-12) Merrimack 4, Army 2 Lawler Arena, North Andover, Mass. MERRIMACK 4, ARMY 2 ARMY 0-0-2—2 MERRIMACK 0-1-3—4 First Period: None. Second Period: MM – Hussar (Brodhag, Biggs), 4:22 Third Period: MM – Bates (Biggs, Jardine), 6:14 ARMY – Lalor (Starczewski, Gehrt), PP, 9:13 ARMY – Lalor (Gehrt, Faust), PP, 9:50 MM – Scotti (Hussar, Mansfield) PP, 12:06 MM – Collins (Bly, Christie) EN, 19:56 Shots: Army 24 (5-8-11); Merrimack 46 (19-12-15) Saves: Army 42 (Tadazak, 59:07, 19-11-12; empty net, :53); Merrimack 22 (Tirronen, 60:00, 5-8-11) Power Plays: Army, 2-3; Merrimack, 1-3 Penalties: Army, 5-10; Merrimack, 5-10 Attendance: 1,869

GAME #16 (12-30-12) Army 1, Canisius O (OT) Buffalo State Sports Arena, Buffalo, N.Y. ARMY 1, CANISIUS 0 (OT) ARMY 0-0-0-1—1 CANISIUS 0-0-0-0—0 First Period: None. Second Period: None. Third Period: None. Overtime: ARMY – Kozlak (Burns, Lalor), 2:51 Shots: Army 36 (12-11-11-2); Canisius 25 (7-3-10-5) Saves: Army 25 (Tadazak, 62:51, 7-3-10-5); Canisius 35 (Capobianco, 62:51, 12-11-11-1) Power Plays: Army, 0-7; Canisius, 0-2. Penalties: Army, 2-4; Canisius, 7-14 Attendance: 786


2012-13 GAME SUMMARIES

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

GAME #23 (2-1-13) Army 1, Mercyhurst 1 (OT) Mercyhurst Ice Center, Erie, Pa. ARMY 1, MERCYHURST 1 ARMY 0-1-0-0—1 MERCYHURST 1-0-0-0—1 First Period: MH – Chiasson (O’Donoghue, Blakey), 15:06 Second Period: ARMY – Zaremba (Alvarez, Hearn), 7:09 Third Period: None. Overtime: None. Shots: Army 29 (9-13-5-2); Mercyhurst 41 (13-11-12-5) Saves: Army 40 (Tadazak, 65:00, 12-11-12-5); Mercyhurst 28 (Strang, 64:56, 9-12-5-2, empty net, 00:04) Power Plays: Army, 0-2; Mercyhurst, 0-3 Penalties: Army, 4-8; Mercyhurst, 3-6 Attendance: 707 GAME #24 (2-2-13) Mercyhurst 8, Army 1 Mercyhurst Ice Center, Erie, Pa. MERCYHURST 8, ARMY 1 ARMY 0-0-1—1 MERCYHURST 1-5-2—8 First Period: MH - Chiasson (O’Donoghue, Blakey), 8:36 Second Period: MH – Misiak (Jones, Bahntge), PP, 4:31 MH – Misiak (Zay), 12:06 MH – Misiak (O’Donoghue, Mastrodicasa), 15:19 MH – Just (unassisted), SH, 15:53 MH – Jones (Bahntge, Misiak), PP, 16:59 Third Period: MH -- Blakey (O’Donoghue, Shiplo), 5:24 ARMY – Schultz (unassisted), SH, 16:16 MH – Bahntge (Misiak), 19:32 Shots: Army 15 (5-5-5); Mercyhurst 45 (13-15-17) Saves: Army 37 (Tadazak, 35:53, 12-8-x; Leets, 24:00, x-2-15; empty net, 00:07); Mercyhurst 14 (Strang, time, 5-5-4) Power Plays: Army, 0-5; Mercyhurst, 2-6 Penalties: Army, 6-12; Mercyhurst, 5-13 Attendance: 1,025 GAME #25 (2-10-13) AIC 3, Army 0 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. AIC 3, ARMY 0 AIC 1-1-1—3 ARMY 0-0-0—0 FIRST PERIOD: AIC – Pleskach (Peake), 10:25 SECOND PERIOD: AIC – Leitner (Peake, Pleskach), PP, 13:31 THIRD PERIOD: AIC – Puskar (Lubin), 6:39 Shots: AIC 34 (9-7-18); Army 36 (13-11-12) Saves: AIC 36 (Meisner, 60:00, 13-11-12); Army 31 (Tadazak, 59:50, 8-6-17; empty net, 00:10) Power Plays: AIC, 1-4; Army, 0-6 Penalties: AIC, 6-12; Army, 4-8 Attendance: 1,598 GAME #26 (2-15-13) Bentley 5, Army 3 John A. Ryan Skating Arena BENTLEY 5, ARMY 3 ARMY 1-0-2—3 BENTLEY 2-1-2—5 First Period: BEN – Grieve (Gensler), 10:20 BEN – Switzer (Gensler), 16:58 ARMY – Kozlak (Gehrt), 17:22 Second Period: BEN – Rickord (Kubiak), 10:24 Third Period: BEN – Fitzstephens (Bacon, Hartung), 2:21 ARMY – Zaremba (Hearn, Richards), 7:20 ARMY – Heller (Starczewski, Lalor), PP, 10:14 BEN – Gensler (Weinstein), EN, 19:47 Shots: Army 42 (10-16-16); Bentley 33 (14-9-10) Saves: Army 28 (Leets, 59:27, 12-8-8; empty net, 00:33); Bentley 39 (Komm, 60:00, 9-16-14) Power Plays: Army, 1-5; Bentley, 0-3 Penalties: Army, 3-6; Bentley, 5-1 Attendance: 601

GAME #27 (2-16-13) Army 2, Bentley 2 (OT) Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. ARMY 2, BENTLEY 2 (OT) BENTLEY 1-1-0-0—2 ARMY 0-2-0-0—2 First Period: BEN – Gensler (Switzer), 13:06 Second Period: BEN – Kubiak (Rickord), 2:13 ARMY – Starczewski (Kozlak, Alvarez), 17:28 ARMY – Lalor (Heller), 18:55 Third Period: None Overtime: None Shots: Bentley 25 (9-6-5-5); Army 56 (11-24-13-8) Saves: Bentley 54 (Komm, 65:00, 11-22-13-8); Army 23 (Tadazak, 64:43, 8-5-5-5; empty net :17) Power Plays: Bentley, 0-2; Army, 0-3 Penalties: Bentley, 3-6; Army, 3-17 Attendance: 2,195 GAME #28 (2-22-13) Connecticut 4, Army 3 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. CONNECTICUT 4, ARMY 3 UCONN 3-1-0—4 ARMY 2-1-0—3 First Period: UConn – Pauly (Gerling, Cooke), 5:21 ARMY – Schultz (Faust), 9:59 ARMY – Starczewski (Lalor, Kozlak), 12:29 UConn – Pauly (Gerling, Sharib), 13:09 UConn – Harris (Latta, Sims), 15:13 Second Period: UConn – Harris (Gerling, Ambrosie), PP, 6:27 ARMY – Faust (Schultz, Pomarico), PP, 17:10 Third Period: None. Shots: Connecticut 20 (8-5-7); Army 35 (14-9-12) Saves: Connecticut 32 (Grogan, 60:00, 12-8-12); Army 16 (Tadazak, 58:52, 5-4-7; empty net, 1:08) Power Plays: Connecticut, 1-8; Army, 3-5 Penalties: Connecticut, 8-16; Army, 6-23 Attendance: 1,877 GAME #29 (2-23-13) Connecticut 6, Army 3 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. CONNECTICUT 6, ARMY 3 UCONN 2-2-2—6 ARMY 0-3-0—3 First Period: UConn – Ambrosie (Harris), PP, 3:07 UConn – Smith (Smutek, Kirtland), 4:16 Second Period: ARMY – Alvarez (Starczewski, Kozlak), 3:34 ARMY – Pomarico (Heller, Jenkins), 5:42 UConn – Latta (Cooke), 6:10 ARMY – Clark (O’Leary, Hearn), 6:49 UConn – Ambrosie (Sims, Harris), PP, 8:08 Third Period: UConn – Harris (Ambrosie, Grogan), PP, 13:15 UConn – Sims (Huson, Harris), EN, 19:43 Shots: Connecticut 30 (8-13-9); Army xx (15-7-11) Saves: Connecticut 30 (Grogan, 59:55, 15-4-11; empty net, :05); Army 24 (Leets, 59:02, 6-11-7; empty net, :58) Power Plays: Connecticut, 3-7; Army, 0-6 Penalties: Connecticut, 7-14; Army, 8-16 Attendance: 2,626 GAME #30 (2-26-13) AIC 4, Army 1 Olympia Ice Center, Springfield, Mass. AIC 4, ARMY 1 ARMY 0-1-0—1 AIC 2-0-2—4 First Period: AIC – Porter (Mele), PP, 3:32 AIC – Sliwinski (Cyr), 8:07 Second Period: ARMY – Lalor (Hearn), 15:32 Third Period: AIC – Pleskach (Leitner, Peake), PP, 9:27 AIC – Peake (unassisted), 16:01 Shots: Army 32 (10-10-12); AIC 29 (10-6-13) Saves: Army 25 (Tadazak, 60:00, 8-6-11); AIC 31 (Meisner, 60:00, 10-9-12) Power Plays: Army, 0-3; AIC, 2-5 Penalties: Army, 5-21; AIC, 3-6 Attendance: 112

GAME #31 (3-1-13) Holy Cross 6, Army 3 Tate Rink, West Point, N.Y. HOLY CROSS 6, ARMY 4 HOLY CROSS 3-2-1—6 ARMY 2-0-1—3 First Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Kozlak), 9:45 HC – Beckman (McNamara, Stockton), PP, 11:15 HC – McNamra (Vos), 13:09 ARMY – Bobb (Clark, Richards), 14:59 HC – Beckman (unassisted), 16:29 Second Period: HC – McNamara (Youso, Vos), 3:15 HC – Vos (Zych), PP, 11:37 Third Period: HC – Stockton (Linsmayer, Nunn), 4:05 ARMY – Starczewski (Alvarez, Bobb), PP, 18:11 Shots: Holy Cross 37 (11-15-11); Army 28 (10-7-11) Saves: Holy Cross 25 (Ginn, 60:00, 8-7-10); Army 31 (Leets, 57:40, 8-13-10; Walsh, 2:20, x-x-0) Power Plays: Holy Cross, 2-4; Army, 1-4 Penalties: Holy Cross, 4-8; Army, 4-8 Attendance: 2,005 GAME #32 (3-2-13) Holy Cross 2, Army 0 Hart Center. Worcester, Mass. HOLY CROSS 2, ARMY 0 ARMY 0-0-0—0 HOLY CROSS 0-1-1—2 First Period: None. Second Period: HC – Schmidt (unassisted), 5:30 Third Period: HC – Schmidt (Sommer, Castan), PP, 7:23 Shots: Army 20 (6-7-7); Holy Cross 36 (10-10-16) Saves: Army 34 (Tadazak, 58:14, 10-9-15; empty net, 1:46); Holy Cross 20 (Ginn, 59:55, 6-7-7; empty net, 00:05) Power Plays: Army, 0-6; Holy Cross, 1-5 Penalties: Army, 13-26; Holy Cross, 9-18 Attendance: 1,025 GAME #33 (3-8-13) Mercyhurst 3, Army 1 AHA First Round Series Ice Center, Erie, Pa. MERCYHURST 3, ARMY 1 ARMY 1-0-0—1 MERCYHURST 0-0-3—3 First Period: ARMY – Starczewski (Richards, Lalor), 17:49 Second Period: None. Third Period: MH – Just (O’Donoghue, Mastrodicasa), 10:38 MH – Frischmon (O’Donoghue, Misiak), 14:34 MH – Bodo (Zay, Blakey), EN, 19:03 Shots: Army 21 (5-10-6); Mercyhurst 28 (11-8-9) Saves: Army 25 (Tadazak, 59:42, 11-8-6; empty net :18); Mercyhurst 20 (Tibbett, 60:00, 4-10-6) Power Plays: Army, 0-5; Mercyhurst, 0-6 Penalties: Army, 5-10; Mercyhurst, 6-12 Attendance: 1015 GAME 34 (3-9-13) Mercyhurst 5, Army 2 AHA First Round Series Ice Center, Erie, Pa. MERCYHURST 5, ARMY 2 ARMY 0-1-1—2 MERCYHURST 1-1-3—5 First Period: MH – Blakey (Zay, Bodo), 5:24 Second Period: MH – O’Donoghue (Just, Frischmon), 4:38 ARMY – Faust (Pomarico, Zaremba), PP, 13:39 Third Period: MH – Blakey (Just, Jones), 8:56 ARMY – Kozlak (Clark), 15:07 MH – O’Donoghue (Frischmon, Just), 16:28 MH – Misiak (Jones), EN, 19:10 Shots: Army 38 (11-18-9); Mercyhurst 39 (15-9-15) Saves: Army 34 (Tadazak, 59:13, 14-8-12; empty net, :47); Mercyhurst 36 (Strang, 60:00, 11-17-8) Power Plays: Army, 1-2; Mercyhurst, 0-0 Penalties: Army, 1-2; Mercyhurst, 3-6 Attendance: 912

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COLLEGE HOCKEY With the addition of the Big Ten and the National Collegiate Hockey Conference, the landscape in collegiate hockey has changed quite drastically. A look at the 2013-14 conferences. Atlantic Hockey Association (12) Air Force American International Army Bentley Canisius Connecticut Holy Cross Mercyhurst Niagara Rochester Institute of Technology Robert Morris Sacred Heart www.atlantichockeyonline.com

@Atlantic_Hockey youtube.com/atlantichockeyassoc pinterest.com/atlantichockey instagram.com/atlantichockey

Big 10 (6) Michigan Michigan State Minnesota Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin ECAC Hockey (12) Brown Clarkson Colgate Cornell Dartmouth Harvard Princeton Quinnipiac Rensselaer

USCHO.COM Team (First Place) Record ..............Pts 1 Yale (47) ..................... 22-12-3 ................ 993 2 Quinnipiac (3) ......... 30-8-5 .................. 951 3 Mass-Lowell ............ 28-11-2 ................ 894

Hockey East (11) Boston College Noston University Maine Massachusetts UMass Lowell Merrimack New Hampshire Northeastern Notre Dame Providence Vermont

4 St. Cloud State....... 25-16-1 .................837

National Collegiate Hockey Conference (8) Colorado College Denver Miami Minnesota Duluth Nebraska-Omaha North Dakota St. Cloud State Western Michigan

14 Denver...................... 20-14-5 ................349

5 Miami.......................... 25-12-5 ..................757 6 Minnesota................ 26-9-5 .................. 752 7 North Dakota .......... 22-13-7 ................. 647 8 Notre Dame ............. 25-13-3................. 610 9 Boston College ...... 22-12-4 ................. 579 10 Union ........................ 22-13-5 ................. 567 11 New Hampshire.... 20-12-7 .................539 12 Wisconsin............... 22-13-7 .................430 13 Minnesota St........ 24-14-3................. 418 15 Niagara ................. 23-10-5 .............298 16 W. Michigan........... 19-11-8.................. 270 17 Boston...................... 21-16-2 .................180 18 Providence ............ 17-14-7 .................. 139 19 Canisius ..............19-19-5............... 92 20 Michigan ................ 18-19-3 ................... 66 OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: Rensselaer 57, Brown 32, Colorado College 20,

Western Collegiate Hockey Association (10) Alabama-Huntsville Alaska Alaska Anchorage Bemidji State Bowling Green Ferris State Lake Superior State Michigan Tech Minnesota State Northern Michigan

Nebraska-Omaha 13, Robert Morris 7, Ferris State 2, Ohio State 1. USA TODAY/AMERICAN HOCKEY COACHES ASSOCIATION Team (First Place) Record ..............Pts 1 Yale (34) ..................... 22-12-3 ................. 510 2 Quinnipiac ................ 30-8-5 .................. 476 3 Mass-Lowell ............ 28-11-2 .................436 4 St. Cloud State....... 25-16-1 .................404 5 Minnesota ................ 26-9-5 ..................352 6 Miami ......................... 25-12-5 .................336

2013-14 Key Dates March 7-9: AHA First Round Series March 14-16: AHA Quarterfinal Series March 21: AHA Semifinals March 22: AHA Championship Game March 23: NCAA Tournament Selection Show March 28-30: NCAA Regionals Northeast | Worcester, Mass. (DCU Center) East | Bridgeport, Conn. (Webster Bank Arena) Midwest | Cincinnati, Ohio (U.S. Bank Arena) West | St. Paul, Minn. (Xcel Energy Center) April 10 and 12: Frozen Four Philadelphia, Pa. (Wells Fargo Center)

7 North Dakota .......... 22-13-7 ................. 270 8 Boston College ...... 22-12-4 .................248 9 Notre Dame ............. 25-13-3.................236 10 Union ........................ 22-13-5 .................226 11 New Hampshire.... 20-12-7 ................. 218 12 Minnesota St........ 24-14-3................. 126 13 Wisconsin............... 22-13-7 .................. 112 14 Denver...................... 20-14-5 ................... 74 15 Niagara ................. 23-10-5 ................ 42 OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: Western Michigan 8, Boston 4, Rensselaer, 2. 2012-13 Army opponents listed in BOLD

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(ECAC Hockey con’t) St. Lawrence Union Yale

FINAL 2012-13 NATIONAL POLLS


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

THE ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION Entering its 11th season, the Atlantic Hockey Association continues to grow and prosper under solid leadership and a strong nucleus of institutions, which embodies the diverse structure of the league. Atlantic Hockey is one of five NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey conferences which owns an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament for its league champion. The addition of Robert Morris and Niagara during the 2010-11 season brought the total number of member institutions to 12. During the 2012-13 season, the AHA had two teams qualify for the NCAA Tournament. Canisius won the league tournament and Niagara earned an at-large bid, the first for the conference. Air Force claimed the 2011-12 tourament championships and automatic NCAA bid, a year after RIT advanced all the way to the Frozen Four. Upset wins against Denver and New Hampshire helped the Tigers become the first AHA team to play in the Frozen Four. Prior to that, Air Force won three straight Atlantic Hockey Association Tournaments and pulled an upset in the NCAA Tournament four years ago. During the 2008-09 NCAA Tournament. Air Force dispatched top-seeded Michigan, 2-0, and nearly pulled a second upset, dropping an overtime contest against Vermont, 3-2 in the second extra session. The Falcons advanced to the NCAA Tournament with a 2-0 win against Mercyhurst in the Atlantic Hockey Association Tournament finals. The mission of the Atlantic Hockey Association is to provide its members with a positive NCAA Division I college hockey experience fostering competitive excellence, championship play and recognition of teams and individual student-athletes and coaches. Atlantic Hockey is committed to academic excellence, a high level of competitiveness, sportsmanship and fair play within the context of athletic integrity. CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS 2004 Holy Cross 4, Sacred Heart 0 2005 Mercyhurst 3, Quinipiac 2 2006 Holy Cross 5, Bentley 2 2007 Air Force 6, Army 1 2008 Air Force 5, Mercyhurst 4 (2 OT) 2009 Air Force 2, Mercyhurst 0 2010 RIT 6, Sacred Heart 1 2011 Air Force 1, RIT 0 2012 Air Force 4, RIT 0 2013 Canisius 7, Mercyhurst 2 IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT 2004 (1) North Dakota 3, Holy Cross 1 2005 (1) Boston College 5, Mercyhurst 4 2006 Holy Cross 4, (1) Minnesota 3 (2) North Dakota 5, Holy Cross 2 2007 (1) Minnesota 4, Air Force 3 2008 (2) Miami 3, Air Force 2 (OT) 2009 Air Force 2, (3) Michigan 0 Vermont 3, Air Force 2, (2 OT) 2010 RIT 2, (1) Denver 1 RIT 6, (3) New Hampshire 2 (2) Wisconsin 8, RIT 1 2011 (1) Yale 2, Air Force 1, OT 2012 (1) Boston College 2, Air Force 0 2013 North Dakota 2, Niagara 1 #1 Quinnpiac 4, Canisius 3

In 2007-08, Air Force beat Mercyhurst 5-4 in double overtime in the finals but fell to Miami (Ohio) 3-2 in overtime in the NCAAs. In 2006-07, Air Force beat Army 6-1 in the conference tournament championship game and then dropped a 4-3 contest to No. 1 ranked Minnesota. In 2005-06, Holy Cross made history as the first Atlantic Hockey school to win a game at the NCAA Tournament, defeating top-seeded Minnesota, 4-3. The overtime decision sent shock waves through the college hockey community and officially announced Atlantic Hockey’s presence on the national stage. Although the Crusaders bowed to regional host North Dakota, 5-2, in the regional final, the statement had already been made: Atlantic Hockey is here to stay. The conference added Air Force and Rochester Institute of Technology to its membership five seasons ago,. The Air Force Academy made the switch from College Hockey America and was reunited with service-academy rival Army. The two academies were members of CHA for the 1999-2000 season. RIT made the jump from Division III, where the Tigers made 13 NCAA Tournament appearances and won nine ECAC West titles. The addition of Robert Morris and Niagara has changed the scheduling in the AHA. The teams are split into geographic scheduling pods and teams in each of the “regions” will play three games against teams in their own “region,” while playing two crossover games against the other “regions” squads. Each team will play a total of 27 conference games with the standings including all 12 members. Robert Morris is a private school near Pittsburgh, Pa., with an enrollment of 5,000 and competed in College Hockey America. Niagara is a private liberal arts university the Niagara River overlooking the Canadian province of Ontario. The team was a member of CHA. Atlantic Hockey was formed when Fairfield University and Iona College dropped their programs and the nine remaining schools in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference decided to break away from the multi-sport conference and form their own “hockey only” league. That left just one full-time MAAC institution (Canisius). Although the MAAC Council of Presidents agreed to continue operating the league, its governance structure presented numerous challenges to the membership, and the schools chose to withdraw and seek their own path. The nine remaining members voted on June 30, 2003 to sever ties with the conference and former Merrimack College athletic director, Robert M. DeGregorio, Jr., was introduced as Atlantic Hockey’s first commissioner. DeGregorio oversees all aspects of running the hockey conference from the league’s offices in Haverhill, Mass.

COMMISSIONER ROBERT M. DEGREGORIO, JR. Robert M. DeGregorio, Jr., was introduced as Atlantic Hockey’s first commissioner on June 30, 2003. He oversees the 12 members of the league and all aspects of running the conference. DeGregorio is no stranger to guiding a major Division I ice hockey league. He served as commissioner of Hockey East from 199396, when he replaced Stuart P. Haskell, who resigned to devote full-time energies to his position as Commissioner of the North Atlantic Conference. DeGregorio, the former Director of Athletics at Merrimack College for 19 years, joined the staff at Merrimack as business manager for the Athletic Department and for the College’s S. Peter Volpe Physical Education Center in 1978. He was promoted to Director of Athletics in May of 1983. Throughout his tenure, many of the Warrior teams become national powers. The 15-sport Division II program reached its pinnacle in 1999-2000 when it captured the Northeast-10 President’s Cup, awarded for the top overall performance of all teams. DeGregorio was also Merrimack’s softball coach from 1982-1992, posting 211 victories in ten seasons and guided the Warriors to four Northeast-10 Conference titles. He was named Northeast-10 Conference Coach of the Year three times (1986, 1989, and 1992). The Warriors won the 1994 Division II National Softball Championship and the softball program has a total of five appearances in the national championship tournament. DeGregorio has sat on numerous committees and held many posts while at Merrimack, serving his institution nationally on various NCAA committees. He was a member of the NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Committee from 1994-98. DeGregorio served as director on the Northeast-10 Conference (NE-10) Board of Directors, Chairman of the NE-10 Men’s Basketball Championship and the NE-10 Finance Committees. He was a member of the NCAA Northeast Region Advisory Committees for both men’s basketball and baseball. DeGregorio also previously served as a director of the Eastern Football Conference and as the conference’s treasurer, member of the ECAC Finance Committee and chairman of the ECAC Investment Committee. A resident of Winthrop, Mass., where he resides with his wife Michele, DeGregorio graduated from Boston State College in 1973 with a bachelor’s degree in education. Bob has two children, Leah and Robert Michael III.

Eight of the original nine charter members now form Atlantic Hockey including: American International College, Army, Bentley College, Canisius College, University of Connecticut, College of the Holy Cross, Mercyhurst College and Sacred Heart University. The first official league contest took place on October 11, 2003, with Holy Cross defeating Canisius 3-1 in Buffalo, N.Y. Atlantic Hockey retained the MAAC’s automatic bid to the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Tournament and Holy Cross captured the first AHA postseason title in 2004. The inaugural AHA tournament was a success with the U.S. Military Academy serving as host for all eight games.

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THE ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION 2012-13 ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION STANDINGS CONFERENCE GP POINTS RECORD WIN% Niagara 27 42 20-5-2 0.778 Air Force 27 35 15-7-5 0.648 Holy Cross 27 33 15-9-3 0.611 Connecticut 27 31 14-10-3 0.574 Robert Morris 27 29 13-11-3 0.537 Mercyhurst 27 28 12-11-4 0.519 Canisius 27 26 12-13-2 0.481 RIT 27 26 11-12-4 0.481 American Int’l 27 24 9-12-6 0.444 Bentley 27 23 10-14-3 0.426 Army 27 19 7-15-5 0.352 Sacred Heart 27 8 2-21-4 0.148

GF 92 92 83 77 85 90 71 88 72 85 64 67

GA 60 56 79 70 85 73 69 89 78 87 92 128

OVERALL GP RECORD 38 23-10-5 37 17-13-7 37 20-14-3 37 19-14-4 38 20-14-4 41 19-17-5 43 19-19-5 38 15-18-5 35 12-17-6 35 12-20-3 34 7-22-5 36 2-30-4

WIN% 0.671 0.554 0.581 0.568 0.579 0.524 0.500 0.461 0.429 0.386 0.279 0.111

2012-13 ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS GF 116 120 111 102 118 128 113 122 88 108 73 83

GA 95 92 106 94 105 112 104 126 112 116 121 182

2012-13 ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION AWARD WINNERS

SCORING LEADERS

GOALTENDING LEADERS

PLAYER POINTS 1. Kyle Gibbons, Canisius................ 21-22-43 2. Adam Brace, Robert Morris....... 14-27-31 3. Brett Gensler, Bentley ................16-24-40 4. Matthew Zay, Mercyhurst .........13-26-39 5. Ryan Misiak, Mercyhurst...........18-20-38 6. Ryan Murphy, NIagara .................15-21-36 Kyle De Laurell, Air Force ............ 19-17-36 Dan O’Donoghue, Mercyhurst . 12-24-36 9. Giancarlo Iuorio, Niagara ........... 21-13-34 10. Matt Garbowsky, RIT..................... 11-22-33 Cody Wydo, Robert Morris ......... 21-12-33 12. Adam Pleskach, AIC .......................15-17-32 Eric Delong, Sacred Heart ..........13-19-32 Sean Ambrosie, Connecticut ... 10-22-32 Chris Saracino, RIT .........................11-21-32

PLAYER GAA 1. Carsen Chubak, Niagara .......................1.91 2 Matt Grogan, Connecticut .................. 1.93 3. Jason Torf, Air Force ...............................2.36 4. Tony Capobianco, Canisius ..............2.409 5. Jordan Tibbett, Mercyhurst ................2.51 6. Eric Levine, Robert Morris ..................2.55 7. Max Strang, Mercyhurst ......................2.59 8. Matt Ginn, Holy Cross ...........................2.63 9. Ben Meisner, AIC .................................... 2.98 10. Garrett Bartus, Connecticut............. 3.00 11. Rob Tadazak, Army .........................3.02 12. Josh Watson, RIT.................................... 3.03 13. Jordan Ruby, RIT ......................................3.05 14. Branden Komm, Bentley ...................... 3.12 15. Ryan Leets, Army ........................... 3.80

PLAYER GOALS 1. Giancarlo Iuorio, Niagara ........................ 21 Cody Wydo, Robert Morris ...................... 21 Kyle Gibbons, Canisius.............................. 21 4. Kyle De Laurell, Air Force .........................19 5. Chris Bodo, Mercyhurst ...........................18 Ryan Misiak, Mercyhurst.........................18 7. Brandon Nunn, Holy Cross .....................16 Brett Gensler, Bentley ..............................16 Preston Shupe, Canisius .........................16 10. Adam Pleskach, AIC ................................... 15 Ryan Murphy, Niagara ............................... 15 Brant Harris, Connecticut ....................... 15 Paul Chiasson, Mercyhurst .................... 15 14. Jeff Smith, RIT .............................................. 14 Adam Schmidt, Holy Cross ..................... 14 Adam Brace, Robert Morris.................... 14 Daniel Bahntge, Mercyhurst .................. 14

PLAYER SAVE PERCENTAGE 1. Carsen Chubak, Niagara ..................... .939 2. Matt Grogan, Connecticut ...................937 3. Tony Capobianco, Canisius ..................929 4. Eric Levine, Robert Morris ...................929 5. Jordan Tibbett, Mercyhurst ................925 6. Ben Meisner, AIC ......................................923 7. Max Strang, Mercyhurst ...................... .921 8. Jason Torf, Air Force ............................... .918 9. Matt Ginn, Holy Cross ........................... .915 10. Branden Komm, Bentley ...................... .915 11. Jordan Ruby, RIT ........................................911 12. Garrett Bartus, Connecticut............. .909 13. Rob Tadazak, Army..........................907 14. Josh Watson, RIT.................................... .905 15. Ryan Leets, Army ........................... .894

Quarterfinals Series Mercyhurst def. Holy Cross, 2-1 Niagara def. RIT, 2-0 Connecticut def. Robert Morris, 2-0 Canisius def. Air Force, 2-0 Semifinals Canisius 5, Niagara 3 Mercyhurst 4, Connecticut 1 Finals Canisius 7, Mercyhurst 2 NCAA Tournament North Dakota 2, Niagara 1 Quinnipiac 4, Canisius 3

2012-13 ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAM Name ......................... Yr. ........Pos. ..............School Kyle De Laurell ...........Sr. ......... F......................Air Force Giancarlo Iuorio ........Sr. ......... F........................Niagara Brett Gensler ..............Jr. .......... F....................... Bentley Adam McKenzie.........Jr. .......... D .....................Air Force Nick Jones ....................Jr. .......... D ...............Mercyhurst Chris Saracino............Sr. ......... D ................................RIT Carsen Chubak ..........Jr. .......... G .......................Niagara SECOND TEAM Name ......................... Yr. ........Pos. ..............School Ryan Misiak .................So. ........ F................Mercyhurst Adam Pleskach ..........Sr. ......... F.................................AIC Adam Brace .................Sr. ......... F.......... Robert Morris Dan Weiss ....................Sr. ......... D .......................Niagara Steve Weinstein ........So. ........ D ....................... Bentley Ben Meisner................Sr. ......... G ................................AIC THIRD TEAM Name ......................... Yr. ........Pos. ..............School Matthew Zay ...............So. ........ F................Mercyhurst Kyle Gibbons ...............Jr. .......... F...................... Canisius Eric Delong ..................Sr. ......... F............ Sacred Heart Kevin Ryan ...................Jr. .......... D .......................Niagara Jeff Ceccacci ..............Sr. ......... D ................................AIC Matt Grogan ...............Sr. ......... G ............. Connecticut ALL-ROOKIE TEAM Name ......................... Pos .............................School Joe Kozlak ............... Forward ...................... Army Andrew Gladiuk..........Forward ........................ Bentley Chris Poster ................Forward .................................AIC Matt Blomquist .........Defenseman .............. Bentley Karl Beckman .............Defenseman .............. Bentley

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Player of the Year ................................................................................................... Carson Chubak, Niagara Rookie of the Year .................................................................................................Andrew Gladiuk, Bentley Coach of the Year ................................................................................................ Dave Burkholder, Niagara Best Defensive Forward..........................................................................................Marc Zanette, Niagara Defensemen of the Year ................................................................................. Adam McKenzie, Air Force Individual Sportsmanship Award .............................................................. Eric DeLong, Sacred Heart Team Sportsmanship Award ....................................................................................................... Mercyhurst Regular Season Scoring Trophy ............................................ Matthew Zay, Mercyhurst (11-23-34) Regular Season Goaltending Trophy ..................................Matt Grogan, Connecticut (1.77 GAA) Regular Season Champions .................................................................................................................Niagara Tournament Champions.......................................................................................................................Canisius

First Round Series Mercyhurst def. Army, 2-0 RIT def. AIC, 2-0 Canisius def. Bentley, 2-0 Robert Morris def. Sacred Heart, 2-0


ARMY SECTION HOCKEY MARKER HISTORY

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

THROUGH THE YEARS The Army hockey team has established itself as one of the nation’s oldest and most respected programs and will continue to build on that tradition in this, its 108th year of intercollegiate hockey. Six seasons ago, the Black Knights became just the 13th school in NCAA history to reach 1,000 victories. That historic win came against service academy rival Air Force on Nov. 11, 2005. Last year, Army qualified for the playoffs for 10th straight year, coming on the heels of its first outright regular season championship in 2007-08 in which the team won the Atlantic Hockey Association with a 17-8-3 conference mark. During the 2007-08 season, the Black Knights earned the topseed in the conference tournament and dispatched American International in a first-round series before losing to Mercyhurst in the semifinals. The 2006-07 squad advanced to the title game of the Atlantic Hockey Association Tournament, its best finish since the conference went to a tournament format seven years prior. The Black Knights earned the No. 2 seed for the conference tournament with a 19-12-5 overall mark and a 15-8-5 slate in league games. Army has the third oldest program in the country, along with Princeton, behind Yale (112) and Harvard (109). The Black Knights have won 1,086 games and boast a winning percentage of .532. Army hockey has produced three players and one coach that have represented the United States in Olympic and other international competitions and also had a few individuals make name for themselves in the National Hockey League.

THE BEGINNING ON “THE PLAIN” From a frozen patch of raw ice on “The Plain” to venerable and perpetually frigid Smith Rink to the cozy confines of present day Tate Rink, Army has certainly carved its own niche in college hockey since the program’s inception in 1904. The first chapter of Army hockey was written in the first decade of the 20th century. Under the direction of coaches Capt. Edward King and Capt. Robert Foy, the program enjoyed immediate success in its early days, winning 17 of its first 19 games and outscoring its foes 8520. Eight of the first 17 wins came via shutout. King guided the Black Knights to a sturdy 5-1 record in that inaugural season of 1904, including a four-game winning streak to close out the year. Army posted seven or more goals in four of its six outings that season. Under Foy’s direction, with a 3-0 mark in 1905, Army’s win streak reached seven straight as the squad opened 3-0. A loss to St. Paul’s School brought that run to an end. However, Foy’s icemen followed that setback with four more victories. Those early games were held during the winter on “The Plain” in an area flooded with water in late fall so a rink could form by midwinter. Open-air rinks would serve as the team’s home until construction of Smith Rink was completed in 1931. The first-ever match up between Army and the Royal Military College of Canada, West Point’s counterpart north of the border, was held on the Academy’s open-air patch of ice in 1923. One year later, the Black Knights continued their blossoming series with RMC by taking a historic trip to Kingston, Ontario. That road trip was Army’s first in its hockey history, spanning 138 games and 20-plus seasons. In addition to King and Foy, the hockey program’s early history is replete with the efforts of others, like Talbot Hunter, who helped General Douglas MacArthur coordinate plans in 1922 and 1923 for the Army-RMC series; Ray Marchand, a Canadian native who helped the Black Knights finally beat RMC some 16 games into the series and was behind the Army bench for 20 seasons; and Dave Merhar who authored one of only two 100-point seasons in Academy history. Throughout its history, the West Point hockey program has built a strong reputation as a highly competitive opponent relying on hardnosed, fundamental hockey. However, the successes of Army hockey

Jack Riley after leading the 1960 U.S. men’s hockey team to Olympic gold.

has not been limited to the ice at West Point as many within the Army “family” have carried the Academy’s Black, Gold and Gray on to greater glory. Long-time head coach Jack Riley is perhaps the greatest example of such accomplishments. He guided the Black Knights to 542 victories during a 36-year coaching career that spanned four decades. When he retired, his 542 career wins trailed only the legendary John MacInnes, who amassed 555 wins at Michigan Tech. Today, his wins total still sits in the all-time Top 10. In 1949, the Academy elevated hockey to major sport status, helping turn the program into one of the Academy’s most successful. But it was not until the arrival of the feisty Irishmen with the surname of Riley that Army’s ice fortunes soared.

THE RILEY ERA IMPACT It is doubtful that any family can claim to have the impact on a single college athletics program that the Riley family has had at West Point for the last 59 years. From Jack Riley to his sons Rob and Brian, Army hockey has literally been defined by the family’s collaborative efforts for more than five decades. Hired in 1951 by legendary football coach Earl “Red” Blaik, who was also Army’s athletic director, Jack Riley assumed command of the Army program and turned it into a powerhouse squad featuring rugged, physical defensemen and explosive forwards. Riley boasted a wealth of hockey experience, having captained Dartmouth’s hockey team in 1947. Riley was a member of the United States Olympic Team that participated in the 1948 Games in St. Moritz, Switzerland. He served as player-coach of the 1949 U.S. national team that played in the World Championships in Stockholm, Sweden. Riley scored both goals as the U.S. dealt eventual champ Czechoslovakia a 2-0 loss, its lone defeat of the tournament. While at Army, Riley garnered NCAA “Coach of the Year” honors in 1957 and 1960. Following his selection in 1960, he was tabbed as head coach of the United States Olympic Team for the 1960 Games at Squaw Valley, Calif That team became the first American squad ever to beat the mighty Russian dynasty en route to the United States’ first-ever gold medal in hockey. Army goalie Larry Palmer was a reserve on that team and remains the only Army hockey player to participate in the Olympics. Palmer’s trip to Squaw Valley came after a splendid career in which he won 37 games and amassed 1,576 saves, both Academy records when he departed.

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ARMY SECTION HOCKEY MARKER HISTORY

A FATHER AND TWO SONS As expected, there were many changes in the program’s structure during Riley’s tenure. Army bounced from Division I to Division II and back again during the 1970s. The Black Knights entered into conference play in the 1980s, and moved into a brand new home in the fall of 1985. A move to the highly competitive Eastern College Athletic Conference in 1985-86 coincided with the arrival of Jack’s son, Rob, to West Point. However, after five hard-fought campaigns in the ECAC, Army returned to its independent status in 1991-92 and flourished once again. Under Rob’s tutelage, the Black Knights posted back-to-back 20win seasons as an independent, including a 24-9-1 ledger in 1995-96. However, Army again joined the conference ranks, affiliating itself with College Hockey America. The Black Knights would only spend one season in the CHA. In 2000-01, a move to the MAAC was made. That residence was short-lived as well when Army and eight other MAAC schools broke away from the predominantly basketball conference and formed a “hockey-only” conference. The Atlantic Hockey Association was born in July of 2003. Rob carried on the family tradition, picking up the torch when his father passed it off and emerged from his long shadow while leaving his own indelible mark on the West Point hockey program. The boy who grew up watching his father guide the Army hockey fortunes won his 300th career game on Jan. 3, 2004. Together, the Riley’s are the all-time winningest father-son tandem, racking up 848 career wins. In the summer of 2004, Rob Riley stepped down as head coach and turned over the program and the family legacy to his younger brother, Brian. The fourth in a family of five children, Brian won more games (11) in his first season behind the Black Knights’ bench than any other previous mentor. He also accomplished something his father and brother, were unable to – beating RMC on his first try. Brian began to establish his own legacy by earning three consecutive Atlantic Hockey Association “Coach of the Year” certificates and leading the Black Knights to the playoffs in each of his seasons as head coach.

and Joseph Tate, two brothers who died during World War II and for whom Tate Rink is named; and Henry “Hal” Beukema, team captain of the 1944 team who died during a training mission near Langley Air Force Base in 1954. The team’s “Most Valuable Player” award bears his name. There have been others as well, including defenseman Ed Hickey; forwards Dave Merhar, Dave Rost, Tom Rost, George Clark, Andy Lundbohm and Dan Hinote; and goalies Brad Roberts, Ron Chisholm, Dan Scioletti, Neil Mieras and Daryl Chamberlain. Merhar and Clark led the nation in scoring as seniors. Merhar posted Academy records with 107 points and 57 goals in his senior year of 1969. Clark, meanwhile, amassed 83 points in 1974-75, while posting 47 goals in his junior and senior campaigns. In 1976-77, Dave Rost surpassed Merhar’s single-season scoring record with 108 points on the strength of 65 assists – one shy of his own school-record of 66 established during the 1974-75 season. Rost became the second hockey alumni inducted into the Hall of Army Sports in November 2005. Lundbohm, a 1999 graduate and two-time Beukema Award winner, joined the professional hockey ranks. A free-agent signee out of college by the San Jose Sharks, Lundbohm spent two seasons in the American Hockey League with the Sharks’ top farm club before succumbing to a series of knee injuries, which forced his retirement from professional hockey a couple of years ago. Hinote, a former linemate of Lundbohm’s in 1995-96, was selected in the seventh round of the 1996 NHL entry draft by the Colorado Avalanche. The Minnesota native played a large role in the Avalanche’s victory over the New Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup Finals in 2001. He completed his fifth season in the NHL in 2003-04, helping Colorado to a second-place finish in the Northwest Division and the fourth best record in the Western Conference. Goalie Brad Roberts, who earned the Army Athletic Association Award, the Academy’s top athletic honor, also pursued a professional career. He competed for the Youngstown Steelhounds of the Central Hockey League for two seasons. He compiled a 23-12-4 record in 41 games two years ago and was named the team’s “Rookie of the Year” after finishing third in the CHL with wins. In 2007-08, he played in 13 games with a 6-5-1 mark before continuing his military career. Recently, goalie Josh Kassel became Army’s first Division I AllAmerican with a stellar junior season in goal while earning Atlantic Hockey Association Player of the Year honors following the 2007-08 season. Zach McKelvie, named the Defenseman of the Year that same season, became Army’s first two-time first-team Atlantic Hockey all-star with honors his junior and senior seasons and was signed to a free agent contract by the Boston Bruins organization before pursuing his military commitment. After completing his military requiresments, McKelvie re-signed with the Bruins and spent part of training camp in the NHL before before assigned to the American Hockey League. He is currently with the Calgary Flames’ affiliate Abbotsford Heat.

ARMY’S HOCKEY TRADITIONS Though the Riley name may be synonymous with Army hockey, a myriad of players have left their mark along the banks of the Hudson. Each has helped weave the fabric of a program long recognized for its place among the best in college hockey. Such standouts include: LeRoy Bartlett, the captain of Army’s first two teams who returned to coach in 1911 and 1912; Frederic

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Ed Crowley (USMA ’46) served as an alternate for the 1948 Olympic team, but did not dress for the games. The Black Knights have had other players compete internationally, most notably Paul DeGironimo, who performed for the 1988 U.S. Olympic Team on its pre-Olympic tour. Throughout his tenure at West Point, Riley continuously carved successful teams from the players he could glean from the Corps of Cadets. Among the finest hockey defensemen ever to pass through Riley’s program was Pete Dawkins, who won college football’s Heisman Trophy in 1958, and was First Captain of the Corps of Cadets. Dawkins graduated with 95 career points, a record for defensemen that has since been broken. After struggling through two dismal seasons at the opening of his tenure, Riley reversed the Army hockey slide by forging an 8-8 record in 1952-53 and a 10-7 showing in 1953-54. Including those initial two campaigns, Riley teams would post winning seasons in 29 of his 36 years behind the bench. The Academy bestowed upon Riley yet another prestigious honor, electing the legendary hockey mentor into the Hall of Army Sports as a member of its inaugural Class of 2004. “I never expected anything like this,” Riley said upon his induction into the Hall of Army Sports Hall of Fame. “It is the biggest thrill in all my years in sports.”


CAREER SECTION HAT MARKER TRICKS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

CAREER HAT TRICKS George Clark ........................................18 Dave Merhar ........................................14 Dave Rost ..............................................10 Ed Collazzo ..............................................9 Ted Crowley ............................................8 John Harrison ........................................8 Tom Rost .................................................8 Ed Cutting ...............................................6 John Ahlbrecht......................................5 Bob Birmingham ..................................5 Dan Cox ....................................................5 Tom Harvey .............................................5 Kenny Smith ...........................................5 Mike Symes ............................................5 Mike Thompson....................................5 Bart Barry ...............................................4 Greg Buckmeier ...................................4 Tony Curran ............................................4 Glen Giovanucci ....................................4 Ed Hickey .................................................4 Ed Roubian ..............................................4 Albie Symes............................................4 Cody Omilusik .......................................3 Mike Fairman .........................................3 Jim Knowlton .........................................3 Andy Lundbohm....................................3 Larry Pallotta.........................................3 Dick Peterson........................................3 Jerry Stonehouse ................................3 Scott Tardif ............................................3 Matt Wilson............................................3 Rick Berube............................................2 Rob Brenner ...........................................2 Mike Curran............................................2 Pete Dawkins ........................................2 Frank Fede ..............................................2 Tom Glenn ...............................................2 David Hettinger ....................................2 Dan Hinote ..............................................2 Kenny Hjelm ...........................................2 Gary Johnson .........................................2 Frank Keating ........................................2 Kevin Keenan .........................................2 Darryl MacDonald................................2 Garry McAvoy ........................................2 Leonard McCormack .........................2 Bill Morrison ..........................................2 Dan Murrett ...........................................2 Bob Nabb .................................................2 James O’Connor ...................................2 George Reynolds .................................2 John Roberts .........................................2 Biff Shea ..................................................2

Andy Starczewski ................................2 Ian Winer .................................................2 Warren Battis .........................................1 Al Brenner ................................................1 Bucky Burleigh.......................................1 Joe Carpenter ........................................1 Chris Casey .............................................1 Jack Dewar ..............................................1 Tucker Dooley.........................................1 John Dowalgo .........................................1 Mark Dube ...............................................1 Joe Dudek.................................................1 Jeff Eaton .................................................1 Dick Eklund ..............................................1 Ross Erzar ................................................1 John Farrell ..............................................1 K.C. Finnegan ..........................................1 Tim Fisher ................................................1 Byron Gates ............................................1 Bruce Graham ........................................1 Todd Graham ..........................................1 Ted Hanley ...............................................1 Dave Harkins...........................................1 Ken Hawes ...............................................1 Bryce Hollweg ........................................1 Marc Kapsalis ........................................1 Tyler King..................................................1 Dave Knowlton .......................................1 Justin Lambert ......................................1 Mike Landers ..........................................1 David Larr .................................................1 Tom LeBlanc............................................1 Kieran Lowry ...........................................1 Toby Lyon ..................................................1 Gene McLaughlin ..................................1 James Mellin ...........................................1 Owen Meyer ............................................1 George Monahan ..................................1 Ted Moran ................................................1 Steve O’Borsky ......................................1 Mike Palone.............................................1 Rick Randazzo ........................................1 Mark Stachelski ....................................1 Frank Vana ...............................................1

FOUR-GOAL GAMES Dave Merhar ......................................5 Bob Birmingham ............................. 3 Ed Collazzo ......................................... 3 Glen Giovanucci ............................... 3 George Clark ......................................2 Tom Harvey .........................................2 Tom Rost .............................................2 Kenny Smith .......................................2 Mike Thompson................................2 Warren Battis .................................... 1 Ted Crowley ........................................ 1 Tony Curran ........................................ 1 Ed Cutting ........................................... 1 Pete Dawkins .................................... 1 Mike Fairman ..................................... 1 John Farrell ......................................... 1 Byron Gates ....................................... 1 John Harrison .................................... 1 Kenny Hjelm ....................................... 1 Kevin Keenan ..................................... 1 Garry McAvoy .................................... 1 Leonard McCormack ..................... 1 Dan Murrett ....................................... 1 James O’Connor ............................... 1 Dick Peterson.................................... 1 George Reynolds ............................. 1 Dave Rost ............................................ 1 Ed Roubian .......................................... 1 Jerry Stonehouse ............................ 1 Albie Symes........................................ 1 Mike Symes ........................................ 1 Scott Tardif ........................................ 1 Matt Wilson........................................ 1 Ian Winer ............................................. 1 FIVE-GOAL GAMES Dave Merhar ...................................... 1 Larry Pallotta..................................... 1 Dick Peterson.................................... 1 Jerry Stonehouse ............................ 1 Albie Symes........................................ 1 SIX-GOAL GAMES George Clark ...................................... 1 SEVEN-GOAL GAMES George Clark ...................................... 1

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CAREER SECTION HAT MARKER TRICKS DATE ........PLAYER (GOALS)............ OPPONENT (H/A)........................RESULT 2/2/83 ......Garry McAvoy (4) ............... Williams (A) ..........................................10-2 W 11/26/82 ..Biff Shea (3) ......................... Union (A)................................................... 8-5 L 10/29/82 .Frank Vana (3) ..................... Kent State (H)..................................... 17-3 W 3/5/82 ......Ed Collazzo (3) .................... Eastern Michigan (N -- Kent St.) 10-5 W 2/22/82 ....Ed Collazzo (3) .................... American International (H)............9-3 W 1/22/82 ....Ed Collazzo (4) .................... Cortland State (H) ........................... 13-6 W 12/4/81 .....Ed Collazzo (3) .................... UMass-Boston (A) ............................. 11-1 W 2/28/81 ....Jim Knowlton (3) ................ UMass-Boston (A) .............................9-2 W 2/24/81 ....Ed Collazzo (3) .................... Holy Cross (H) ......................................... 7-5 L 2/21/81 .....Dan Cox (3) ........................... RMC (H)..................................................10-5 W 2/14/81 .....Robbie Craig (3) ................. Kent State (H).......................................9-2 W 1/23/81 .....Jim Knowlton (3) ................ Cortland State (H) ............................12-2 W 1/12/81 .....Ed Collazzo (3) .................... St. Anselm (H) .....................................14-5 W 1/12/81 .....Dan Cox (3) ........................... St. Anselm (H) .....................................14-5 W 1/9/81 .......Ed Collazzo (4) .................... Boston State (A) ..............................12-4 W 12/3/80 ....Dan Cox (3) ........................... Connecticut (H) .................................... 7-1 W 11/26/80 ..Ed Collazzo (4) .................... New Haven (A) ....................................10-6 L 11/2/80.....Tom LeBlanc (3) ................. Alaska-Fairbanks (A) .......................10-2 W 11/1/80 .....Dan Cox (3) ........................... Alaska-Anchorage (A) ........................ 9-6 L 3/1/80.......Tom Rost (3) ........................ Oswego State (H -- D-II Playoffs)12-6 L 2/2/80 ......Tom Rost (4) ........................ College Militaire Royal (H) .............14-1 W 2/2/80 ......Dan Cox (3) ........................... College Militaire Royal (H) .............14-1 W 1/16/80 ....Ed Collazzo (3) .................... Boston State (H) ...............................13-2 W 1/12/80.....Frank Keating (3)............... Bryant (H) ............................................ 10-4 W 1/12/80.....Bruce Graham (3) .............. Bryant (H) ............................................ 10-4 W 1/9/80.......Frank Keating (3)............... Framingham State (H) .......................9-1 W 1/7/80 .......Jim Knowlton (3) ................ Boston State (A) ..............................10-3 W 2/24/79 ....Glen Giovanucci (3) .......... Framingham State (A) ....................... 8-4 L 2/14/79 ....Glen Giovanucci (4) .......... UMass-Lowell (H) ..............................13-5 W 1/27/79 .....Glen Giovanucci (4) .......... RMC (H)..................................................12-4 W 12/8/78 ....Glen Giovanucci (4) .......... Massachusettes (A) ......................10-5 W 11/18/78...Ken Hawes (3) ..................... Norwich (H) ....................................6-5 (OT) L 2/28/78 ....John Harrison (3) ............... Holy Cross (H) .......................................6-3 W 2/22/78 ....John Harrison (3) ............... Babson (H) .............................................8-4 W 2/20/78 ....Tom Rost (3) ........................ Oswego State (A) ................................8-4 W 2/9/78 ......John Harrison (3) ............... New Haven (H) ..............................4-4 (OT) T 1/21/78 .....Dan Murrett (3) .................. Merrimack (H) ......................................4-3 W 12/14/77 ...John Harrison (4) ............... Connecticut (A) ................................ 10-6 W 11/25/77 ...Bob Birmingham (3) ......... Framingham State (H) ............. 9-8 (OT) L 3/12/77 .....Dave Rost (3)....................... RMC (H)...................................................11-2 W 3/5/77 .......Dave Rost (3)....................... AIC (D-II Playoffs) .................... 7-6 (OT) W 2/8/77 .......Dave Rost (4)....................... Princeton (H).........................................6-2 W 2/5/77 .......Tom Glenn (3) ...................... College Militaire Royale (A)..........15-2 W 2/5/77 .......Toby Lyon (3) ....................... College Militaire Royale (A)..........15-2 W 2/4/77 .......John Harrison (3) ............... College Militaire Royale (A)..........10-2 W 1/13/77......Dave Rost (3)....................... Elmira (H) ............................................. 10-4 W 1/8/77........Tom Glenn (3) ...................... St. Nick=s (H) .......................................14-3 W 12/17/76 ...Dave Rost (3)....................... Bryant (H) ..............................................11-2 W 12/17/76 ...John Harrison (3) ............... Bryant (H) ..............................................11-2 W 12/14/76 ..Dave Rost (3)....................... Wesleyan (H) ..........................................6-1 W 12/10/76 ..Dan Murrett (4) .................. Massachusetts (A) ............................ 7-2 W 12/8/76 ....Tom Rost (3) ........................ Bridgewater State (H) ................... 10-4 W 12/4/76.....Dave Rost (3)....................... New England (H) .................................. 7-2 W 12/1/76 .....Tom Rost (4) ........................ Plattsburgh State (H) ...................... 11-1 W 12/1/76 .....Dave Rost (3)....................... Plattsburgh State (H) ...................... 11-1 W 11/26/76 ..Dave Rost (3)....................... Framingham State (H) .....................11-5 W 11/26/76 ..Tom Rost (3) ........................ Framingham State (H) .....................11-5 W 3/2/76.......Bob Birmingham (4) ......... New England (H) ..................................9-2 W 2/15/76 ....John Harrison (3) ............... Babson (A) ............................................8-3 W 2/7/76 .......Larry Pallotta (5) ............... College Militaire Royale (H) ........ 10-0 W 2/7/76 .......Tom Rost (3) ........................ College Militaire Royale (H) ........ 10-0 W 2/6/76.......Bob Birmingham (4) ......... College Militaire Royale (H) .........12-2 W 12/13/75 ..Tom Rost (3) ........................ New Haven (A) .....................................8-5 W 12/6/75.....John Harrison (3) ............... UMass-Lowell (H) ............................. 10-6 W 2/25/75 ....George Clark (4)................. Norwich (H) ............................................ 7-4 W 2/22/75 ....George Reynolds (3) ........ Bridgewater State (A) ......................9-4 W 2/15/75.....Dave Rost (3)....................... College Militaire Royale (A)............6-5 W 2/14/75.....Bob Birmingham (4) ......... College Militaire Royale (A).......... 16-1 W 2/5/75 .......George Clark (7) ................. Wesleyan (H) .......................................13-2 W 1/24/75 .....George Reynolds (4) ........ Williams (A) ............................................8-2 W 12/14/74...George Clark (3)................. Massachusetts (A) ............................. 8-6 L

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DATE ........PLAYER (GOALS)............ OPPONENT (H/A)........................RESULT 10/19/12...Andy Starczewski (3)....... Sacred Heart (H) ................................. W, 5-2 11/5/11 ......Andy Starczewski (3)....... RIT (A) ........................................................L, 3-5 2/18/11 .....Mark Dube (3) ..................... AIC (H) ......................................................W, 6-4 2/5/11 ........Cody Omilusik (3) .............. UConn (A, Hartford)............................ W, 5-2 1/15/11 ......Cody Omilusik (3) .............. Air Force (A) ........................................... W, 5-4 11/20/09 ..Cody Omilusik (3) .............. Bentley (A)................................................5-1 W 11/16/07 ...Bryce Hollweg (3) .............. Bentley (H) ...............................................7-2 W 11/10/07 ...Owen Meyer (3) .................. AIC (H) ........................................................ 7-1 W 3/6/04 ......Chris Casey (3) ................... Connecticut (H) ..................................... 9-6 L 2/15/02 ....Chris Casey (3) ................... Fairfield (H) ............................................. 7-4 W 1/5/02 .......Joe Carpenter (3) .............. Connecticut (H) ......................................4-4 T 1/14/01 .....Mike Fairman (3) ............... Connecticut (A) ..................................... 7-5 L 11/17/00 ...Joe Dudek (3) ...................... Bentley (H) .............................................9-2 W 10/13/00 .Mike Fairman (3) ............... Seneca (H) ..............................................6-3 W 2/26/00 ...Tim Fisher (3) ...................... Findlay (H)............................................ 10-6 W 12/3/99 ....K.C. Finnegan (3)................ Assumption (H) ................................... 9-0 W 11/6/99 ....Mike Fairman (4)................ Bentley (H) .............................................6-2 W 1/30/99....Bucky Burleigh (3) ............ Scranton (A) ......................................... 7-0 W 2/20/98 ...Greg Buckmeier (3) .......... Quinnipiac (H) .......................................8-4 W 2/14/98 ....Greg Buckmeier (3) .......... Fairfield (H) ...........................................11-2 W 1/30/98....Greg Buckmeier (3) .......... Scranton (H) ........................................ 11-0 W 1/13/98 ....Andy Lundbohm (3) .......... Connecticut (H) .................................10-2 W 1/10/98 ....Andy Lundbohm (3) .......... Villanova (A) ............................................9-1 W 1/17/97 ......Frank Fede (3) ..................... Iona (H) ................................................13-3 W 2/17/96 .....Bill Morrison (3) ................. Air Force (H)........................................... 7-0 W 1/30/96....Dan Hinote (3)..................... Quinnipiac (H) .....................................10-2 W 1/7/96 .......Greg Buckmeier (3) .......... Brockport (N -- SNET Classic) .......5-4 W 12/5/95 ....Dan Hinote (3)..................... Villanova (H).......................................... 9-0 W 11/18/95 ..Andy Lundbohm (3) .......... Framingham State (H) ..................... 6-0 W 1/27/95 .....Bill Morrison (3) ................. Bentley (H) .............................................6-2 W 11/22/94 ..Frank Fede (3) ..................... Tufts (H) ................................................ 10-1 W 11/15/94...Ian Winer (3)........................ Scranton (H) .........................................12-1 W 11/5/94 .....Bill Morrison (3) ................. RPI (H) ......................................................5-2 W 2/4/94 ......Ian Winer (4)........................ Fairfield (H) ...........................................11-2 W 12/5/93 ....Mark Stachelski (3) ......... Scranton (A) ......................................... 8-1 W 2/27/93 ....Rick Randazzo (3) ............. St. Bonaventure (H) ..........................11-2 W 1/23/93 ....Justin Lambert (3) ............ Iona (H)....................................................8-2 W 1/16/93.....Mike Landers (3) ............... Fairfield (H) ........................................... 9-0 W 1/15/93.....Rick Berube (3) .................. Plattsburgh (H) ....................................5-3 W 10/31/92 ..Rick Berube (3) .................. Ryerson Tech (H) .................................9-2 W 2/21/92 ....Scott Tardif (3) ................... Connecticut (H) ...........................4-4 (OT) T 12/3/91 .....Ross Erzar (3)...................... Scranton (H) .........................................11-2 W 11/23/91 ...Scott Tardif (4) ................... Iona (H).................................................. 11-0 W 11/20/90 ..Scott Tardif (3) ................... Villanova (H).........................................12-2 W 11/16/90 ..Al Brenner (3) ...................... Dartmouth (H) ......................................6-3 W 1/3/87 .......Matt Wilson (3) .................. Clarkson (H) ...........................................6-3 W 1/14/86.....Rob Brenner (3).................. Cornell (A) ..............................................6-5 W 10/31/86..Matt Wilson (4) .................. St. Anselm (H) .......................................6-2 W 2/12/86 ....Ted Moran (3) ...................... American International (H)...........11-2 W 1/25/86 ....Kevin Keenan (3)................ RMC (A) .................................................... 9-7 W 11/23/85 ..Darryl MacDonald (3) ...... Dartmouth (A) ...................................... 6-5 L 2/9/85 ......Bob Nabb (3)........................ RMC (H)....................................................6-4 W 2/6/85 ......Marc Kapsalis (3) .............. Trinity (H) ................................................6-4 W 1/29/85 ....Mike Curran (3) .................. Williams (A) ........................................... 7-2 W 1/26/85 ....Ted Hanley (3) ..................... Hamilton (H) ..........................................9-3 W 1/19/85.....Kevin Keenan (4)................ Buffalo (A) ...........................................15-2 W 1/19/85.....Matt Wilson (3) .................. Buffalo (A) ...........................................15-2 W 11/23/84 ..Darryl MacDonald (3) ...... Harvard (H) ...............................................5-4 L 11/18/84 ..Mike Symes (3) .................. Cornell (A) ............................................... 6-4 L 10/27/84 ..Mike Curran (3) .................. Ryerson Tech (H) ...............................13-5 W 10/26/84 .Bob Nabb (3)........................ Ryerson Tech (H) .................................9-3 W 2/16/84 ....Steve O=Borsky (3) ........... American International (H)..........16-3 W 2/11/84 .....Rob Brenner (3).................. College Militaire Royale (H) .........12-2 W 2/4/84 ......Mike Symes (3) .................. St. Anselm (H) ....................................... 7-2 W 1/27/84 .....Mike Symes (3) .................. Buffalo (H) ............................................12-3 W 1/24/84 ....Mike Symes (4)................... Williams (H) ............................................6-2 W 1/20/84 ....Tyler King (3) ....................... Upsala (A) ..............................................15-1 W 1/20/84 ....Dave Knowlton (3) ............ Upsala (A) .............................................15-1 W 1/7/84 .......Biff Shea (3) ......................... Waterloo (H) .......................................... 7-4 W 11/10/83 ..Garry McAvoy (3) ............... Westfield State (H) ..........................13-3 W 10/28/83 .Mike Symes (3) .................. Brock (H) .................................................6-3 W


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

CAREER HAT TRICKS DATE ........PLAYER (GOALS)............ OPPONENT (H/A)........................RESULT 12/7/74 .....George Clark (3)................. UMass-Lowell (H) ..................................4-3 L 12/4/74 .....Larry Pallotta (3) ............... New Haven (H) ....................................12-3 W 2/16/74.....George Clark (6) ................ New Haven (A) .....................................12-1 W 2/1/74 .......George Clark (3)................. Connecticut (A) .................................. 7-3 W 1/19/74 .....George Clark (3)................. Amherst (H) ...........................................8-3 W 1/11/74 ......George Clark (3)................. College Militaire Royale (H) ........ 10-4 W 1/9/74 .......Byron Gates (4) .................. Holy Cross (H) .................................... 10-4 W 1/5/74 .......George Clark (3)................. American International (A) ...........8-5 W 12/15/73 ..Larry Pallotta (3) ............... Lake Forest (H) ................................... 9-0 W 12/14/73 ..George Clark (3)................. Lake Forest (H) ..................................10-2 W 12/8/73 ....Dave Rost (3)....................... MacDonald (H) ..................................... 7-4 W 12/7/73 .....Bob Birmingham (3) ......... MacDonald (H) .....................................9-2 W 3/3/73.......John Dowalgo (3) ............... Lake Forest (A) ......................................7-6 L 2/27/73 .....Ed Roubian (3) .................... Oswego State (H)................................9-2 W 2/15/73.....George Clark (3)................. Pennsylvania (H)................................... 8-4 L 1/23/73.....Ed Roubian (3) .................... Connecticut (H) ....................................9-1 W 1/6/73 .......George Clark (3)................. St. Nick=s (H) .......................................... 6-4 L 12/13/72...George Clark (3)................. Princeton (H).........................................6-4 W 12/9/72.....George Clark (3)................. MacDonald (H) .....................................9-2 W 12/8/72.....George Clark (4)................. MacDonald (H) ................................... 10-1 W 12/8/72.....Ed Roubian (3) .................... MacDonald (H) ................................... 10-1 W 12/6/72.....George Clark (3)................. Ithaca (H) ...............................................8-2 W 2/23/72 ....George Clark (3)................. Oswego State (H)................................ 7-3 W 3/4/72 .......George Clark (3)................. Lake Forest (H) ....................................6-2 W 2/15/71 .....Ed Roubian (4) .................... Connecticut (H) .................................12-0 W 2/15/71 .....Jeff Eaton (3)....................... Connecticut (H) .................................12-0 W 12/4/69 ....John Roberts (3) ................ American International (H)............8-2 W 3/22/69....Tony Curran (4) ................... Air Force (N -- St. Petersburg) ....12-4 W 3/22/69....Dave Merhar (3) ................. Air Force (N -- St. Petersburg) ....12-4 W 3/8/69 ......Dave Merhar (3) ................. RMC (H)....................................................5-2 W 2/24/69....John Ahlbrecht (3) ............ Connecticut (H) .................................10-2 W 2/21/69 ...Dave Merhar (4) ................. Williams (A) ..........................................11-2 W 2/14/69 ....Dave Merhar (4) ................. Hamilton (A)..................................8-7 (OT) W 1/25/69 ....Tony Curran (3) ................... Northeastern (H)..................................5-1 W 1/22/69 ....Dave Merhar (5) ................. Pennsylvania (A) ..................................9-6 W 1/18/69 ....Dave Merhar (4) ................. Bishop=s (H) ........................................ 10-1 W 1/18/69 ....John Ahlbrecht (3) ............ Bishop=s (H) ........................................ 10-1 W 1/4/69 .......John Roberts (3) ................ Dartmouth (A) ...............................7-7 (OT) T 12/29/68 .Dave Merhar (3) ................. Ohio (N -- RPI Tournament) ............9-4 W 12/29/68 .John Ahlbrecht (3) ............ Ohio (N -- RPI Tournament) ............9-4 W 12/7/68.....Dave Merhar (4) ................. Middlebury (H)......................................9-6 W 12/5/68 ....Dave Merhar (3) ................. American International (H)............ 7-3 W 2/21/68 ....Dave Merhar (3) ................. Williams (H) ............................................9-2 W 2/3/68 ......John Ahlbrecht (3) ............ Brown (H) ................................................4-2 W 1/29/68 ....Tony Curran (3) ................... Pennsylvania (H)................................ 10-1 W 1/25/68 ....John Ahlbrecht (3) ............ Vermont (H) ............................................6-1 W 1/13/68 ....Tony Curran (3) ................... St. Nick=s (H) .........................................8-3 W 1/6/68.......Dave Merhar (3) ................. Providence (H)......................................5-3 W 12/14/67 ..Ed Cutting (3) ...................... Hamilton (H) .......................................... 8-1 W 3/4/67 .......Ed Cutting (3) ...................... RMC (H).....................................................9-1 W 1/14/67 .....Dave Merhar (3) ................. Pennsylvania (H)............................... 14-0 W 1/14/67 .....Ed Cutting (3) ...................... Pennsylvania (H)............................... 14-0 W 1/7/67 ........Dave Merhar (3) ................. Providence (H).......................................5-1 W 1/5/67 .......Dave Merhar (4) ................. Massachusetts (H) .......................... 17-2 W 1/5/67 .......Ed Cutting (4) ...................... Massachusetts (H) .......................... 17-2 W 12/20/66 .Kenny Smith (3) ................. Ohio (H) ................................................. 14-0 W 12/15/66 ..Ed Cutting (3) ...................... American International (H)............6-2 W 2/18/66 ....Kenny Smith (3) ................. Providence (A) .....................................6-2 W 2/4/66 ......Mike Palone (3) .................. Hamilton (A) .......................................14-3 W 2/4/66 ......Dick Edlund (3) ................... Hamilton (A).........................................14-3 W 1/6/66.......Kenny Smith (4) ................. Massachusetts (H) ...........................12-1 W 12/17/65 ...Kenny Smith (4) ................. Ohio (H) ................................................. 10-4 W 12/11/65...Ed Cutting (3) ...................... Bowdoin (H) ....................................... 4-3 (OT) 2/10/65 ....Kenny Smith (3) ................. Colgate (H) ............................................. 7-3 W 1/16/65.....Mike Thompson (3) .......... Pennsylvania (H)............................... 13-0 W 1/9/65 .......Kieran Lowry (3) ................. Brown (H) .................................................. 7-3 L 12/18/64 ..Mike Thompson (4) .......... Ohio (H) ..................................................10-3 W 12/16/64 ..Mike Thompson (3) .......... American International (H)............8-4 W 12/11/64...Kenny Hjelm (3) .................. Middlebury (A) ......................................5-0 W 12/9/64 ....Bart Barry (3) ...................... Hamilton (H) ........................................12-0 W 2/29/64....Mike Thompson (4) .......... St. Nick’s (H) ..........................................6-4 W

DATE ........PLAYER (GOALS)............ OPPONENT (H/A)........................RESULT 2/18/64 ....Kenny Hjelm (4) .................. Williams (H) ..........................................12-0 W 2/3/64 ......Mike Thompson (3) .......... Ohio (H) ...................................................12-1 W 12/14/63 ..Dick Peterson (4) .............. Middlebury (H)..................................... 11-1 W 12/13/63 ..Bart Barry (3) ...................... Hamilton (H) .......................................... 8-1 W 12/11/63...Bart Barry (3) ...................... American International (H).......... 10-1 W 3/2/63 ......Warren Battis (4)............... RMC (H)....................................................9-4 W 2/6/63 ......Bart Barry (3) ...................... Massachusetts (H) ........................... 9-0 W 1/25/63 ....Gary Johnson (3) ................ MIT (A) .................................................... 8-0 W 12/12/62 ..Dick Peterson (3) .............. American International (H)............ 7-5 W 12/5/62 ....Dick Peterson (5) .............. Rutgers (H) ..........................................15-0 W 12/29/62..Jerry Stonehouse (3) ....... Western Michigan (H).....................14-3 W 12/29/62..Dave Harkins (3) ................ Western Michigan (H).....................14-3 W 1/22/62 ....Tucker Dooley (3) .............. Dartmouth (H) ......................................6-5 W 1/20/62 ....Gary Johnson (3) ................ Pennsylvania (H).................................. 7-0 W 12/20/61 ..Jerry Stonehouse (4) ....... Ohio (H) ................................................. 10-0 W 12/13/61...Albie Symes (5) .................. American International (H)......... 13-0 W 2/8/61 .......Albie Symes (4) .................. Hamilton (H) ....................................... 14-0 W 12/14/60 ..Jerry Stonehouse (5) ....... American International (H)........... 11-1 W 2/26/60 ...Gene McLaughlin (3)........ Cornell (H)............................................... 7-2 W 2/24/60 ...Albie Symes (3) .................. Pennsylvania (H)................................12-2 W 2/19/60 ....Ted Crowley (3)................... New Hampshire (A) ............................ 8-1 W 2/10/60 ....Ted Crowley (3)................... Hamilton (H) ..........................................9-5 W 2/6/60 ......Ted Crowley (4)................... Middlebury (H)......................................6-2 W 2/3/60 ......Ted Crowley (3)................... Amherst (H) ...........................................4-2 W 12/16/59 ..Albie Symes (3) .................. American International (H)............6-2 W 12/5/59 ....Jack Dewar (3) .................... Colgate (H) ............................................ 8-0 W 2/14/59 ....Pete Dawkins (4) ............... Colgate (H) ............................................14-1 W 2/14/59 ....John Farrell (4).................... Colgate (H) ............................................14-1 W 2/14/59 ....Ted Crowley (3)................... Colgate (H) ............................................14-1 W 12/6/58 ....Ted Crowley (3)................... MIT (H) ...................................................12-0 W 1/25/58 ....James Mellin (3) ................ American International (H)............ 7-2 W 1/14/58.....Ted Crowley (3)................... Holy Cross (H) ........................................9-1 W 1/11/58 .....David Hettinger (3)........... Brown (H) ................................................5-4 W 12/18/57 ..Ted Crowley (3)................... Norwich (H) ............................................5-2 W

Andy Starczewski ’13 is the most recent Black Knight to record a hat trick, doing so in 2012.

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SECTION ACADEMIC MARKER AWARDS CAPITAL ONE ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS Bryce Hollweg .............................Second Team Academic All-District Jay Clark ........................................Second Team Academic All-District Jay Clark ......................................... Third Team Academic All-American Ryan Leets ................................ Second Team Academic All-American Cheyne Rocha ............................... First Team Academic All-American

2007 2010 2010 2011 2012 2012 2013

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR Bryce Hollweg ...................................................................................... Forward Kyle Maggard ....................................................................................... Forward Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Cheyne Rocha .............................................................................Defenseman Cheyne Rocha .............................................................................Defenseman

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2010 2011 2011 2011 2012 2012 2013

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION ACADEMIC ALL-STAR TEAM Bryce Hollweg ..................................................................................... Forward Bryce Hollweg ...................................................................................... Forward Jay Clark ...........................................................................................Goaltender Jay Clark ...........................................................................................Goaltender Kyle Maggard ....................................................................................... Forward Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Kyle Maggard ....................................................................................... Forward Cheyne Rocha .............................................................................Defenseman Ryan Leets .......................................................................................Goaltender Cheyne Rocha .............................................................................Defenseman Cheyne Rocha .............................................................................Defenseman

2005 2006

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION ALL-ACADEMIC TEAM Aaron Anderson, David Andros, Chris Colvin, Luke Flicek, Bryce Hollweg, Ian McDougall, Brad Roberts, Matt Schachman Aaron Anderson, Chris Colvin, Brady Dolim, Luke Flicek, Bryce

2007

2008

2009 2010

2011

2012

2013

2011 2012

Hollweg, Josh Kassel, Ian McDougall, Chase Podsiad, Brad Roberts, Corey Rudd, Will Ryan, Matt Schachman Aaron Anderson, Chris Colvin, Brady Dolim, Luke Flicek, Josh Kassel, Ian McDougall, Zach McKelvie, Chase Podsiad, Ken Rowe, Will Ryan Aaron Anderson, Chris Colvin, Luke Flicek, Bryce Hollweg, Ian McDougall, Josh Kassel, Will Ryan, Zach McKelvie, Ken Rowe, Jay Clark, Matt Hickey, Biff McNally, Eric Sefchik, Joe Spracklen, Mark Tilch Jay Clark, Pat Copeland, Matt Hickey, Josh Kassel, Kyle Maggard, Will Ryan, Eric Sefchik Ryan Leets, Kyle Maggard, Marcel Alvarez, Jay Clark, John Clark, Danny Colvin, Pat Copeland, Bill Day, Mark Dube, Mike Hull, Cody Ikkala, Alex McRae, Cheyne Rocha, Pat Ryan, Chris Spracklen, Eric Sefchik Ryan Leets, Kyle Maggard, Cheyne Rocha, Marcel Alvarez, Jon Bobb, Jay Clark, John Clark, Danny Colvin, Pat Copeland, Bill Day, Mark Dube, Cody Ikkala, Pat Ryan, Mike Santee, Brian Schultz, Bryant Skarda, Chris Spracklen Ryan Leets, Cheyne Rocha, Marcel Alvarez, Jack Barnes, Jon Bobb, John Clark, Danny Colvin, Mark Dube, Mike Hull, Cody Ikkala, Bret Larson, Kyle Maggard, Alex McRae, Josh Richards, Pat Ryan, Brian Schultz, Bryant Skarda, Matt Walsh Cheyne Rocha, Jon Bobb, Willie Faust, Thane Heller, Cody Ikkala, Luke Jenkins, Joe Kozlak, Mac Lalor, Ryan Leets, Andrew O’Leary, Josh Richards, Mike Santee, Brian Schultz, Michael St. Denis, Rob Tadazak, Matt Walsh, Zak Zaremba LEADER-ATHLETE AWARD HIGHEST GPA AMONG ARMY’S NCAA SQUADS Hockey ........................................................................................................Overall Hockey ........................................................................................................Overall

Note - Current players listed in bold.

West Point Class of 2013 members Cheyne Rocha (far left) and Ryan Leets (far right) were honored prior to a game last season for their standout efforts in the classroom. Both were named to the Atlantic Hockey Association Academic All-Star Team.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

2008 2009 2010 2012 2013


AWARDS AND HONORS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

SPENCER PENROSE AWARD (COACH OF THE YEAR) 1957 ..................................................................................... Jack Riley 1960 ..................................................................................... Jack Riley

1977

ECAC PLAYER OF THE YEAR Dave Rost .................................................................... Forward

1977

ECAC FIRST TEAM Dave Rost .................................................................... Forward

1988

ECAC ALL-ROOKIE TEAM Rob Tobin..................................................................... Forward

1990 1991

ECAC HONORABLE MENTION Scott Schulze ...................................................Defenseman Todd Tamburino...............................................Defenseman

MAAC GOALIE OF THE YEAR 2003 Brad Roberts, Co-Goalie of the Year MAAC FIRST TEAM 2003 Brad Roberts .......................................................Goaltender MAAC SECOND TEAM 2003 Joe Dudek ................................................................... Forward MAAC OFFENSIVE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 2002 Chris Casey ................................................................ Forward

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION FIRST TEAM 2008 Josh Kassel ..........................................................Goaltender 2008 Zach McKelvie ..................................................Defenseman 2008 Luke Flicek.................................................................. Forward 2009 Zach McKelvie ..................................................Defenseman 2009 Owen Meyer ............................................................... Forward ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION SECOND TEAM 2006 Brad Roberts .......................................................Goaltender 2006 Tim Manthey .....................................................Defenseman 2007 Tim Manthey .....................................................Defenseman 2007 Josh Kassel ..........................................................Goaltender 2008 Owen Meyer ............................................................... Forward 2010 Cody Omilusik ........................................................... Forward 2010 Marcel Alvarez .................................................Defenseman 2011 Marcel Alvarez .................................................Defenseman ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION THIRD TEAM 2007 Luke Flicek.................................................................. Forward 2011 Cody Omilusik ........................................................... Forward ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION ALL-ROOKIE TEAM 2006 Tim Manthey .....................................................Defenseman 2007 Owen Meyer ............................................................... Forward 2009 Marcel Alvarez .................................................Defenseman 2013 Joe Kozlak ....................................................... Forward

MAAC DEFENSIVE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 2003 Brad Roberts .......................................................Goaltender

ATLANTIC HOCKEY SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD 2005 Chris Garceau ........................................................... Forward 2009 Army 2010 Army

MAAC ALL-ROOKIE TEAM 2002 Chris Casey ................................................................ Forward 2003 Brad Roberts .......................................................Goaltender

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION ALL-DECADE TEAM 2013 Zach McKelvie, Third Team ........................Defenseman Owen Meyer, Third Team ...................................... Forward

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONS

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION PLAYER OF THE YEAR 2008 Josh Kassel ..........................................................Goaltender

NCAA FROZEN FOUR SKILLS CHALLENGE PARTICIPANTS 2006 Brad Roberts ................................................................. Goalie 2008 Luke Flicek.................................................................. Forward 2009 Zach McKelvie ..................................................Defenseman 2010 Owen Meyer ............................................................... Forward 2010 Brian Riley ....................................................................... Coach

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION DEFENSEMEN OF THE YEAR 2008 Zach McKelvie

SENIOR CLASS AWARD 2008 Bryce Hollweg ...................................................... First Team 2013 Cheyne Rocha ..............................................................Winner

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION GOALIE OF THE YEAR 2008 Josh Kassel ..........................................................Goaltender

**Current players listed in bold.

2008

ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION COACH OF THE YEAR 2006 ...........................................................................BRIAN RILEY 2007 ...........................................................................BRIAN RILEY 2008 ...........................................................................BRIAN RILEY

PAGE 72 • @ARMY_HOCKEY


SECTION TEAM MARKER AWARDS BEUKEMA AWARD RECIPIENTS

Mike Hull

Defenseman Zach McKelvie was chosen following the 2008-09 season, the first defenseman to win the award since Joe Dudek in 2003. Both players were also team captains. McKelvie, a twotime, first-team all league choice, played in all situations, scored five goals and handed out 12 assists in his final collegiate season. Dave Merhar Forward Eric Sefchik claimed the honor following the 2010 season. The center and captain led the team in scoring with 35 points after tallying a team-best 24 assists and 11 goals. He scored two short-handed goals. Cody Omilusik, who shared the team scoring lead with 31 points and posted team-best totals of 18 goals and seven power play goals, collected the honor the following season, the second straight year a forward earned the honor. Mike Hull made it three straight seasons for a forward in 2011-12. Hull shared the team scoring lead with 25 points on eight goals and 17 assists. He scored three power play goals as well. Dave Rost A forward winning the prestigious honor conitnued in 2012-13 when Andy Starczewski was presented with the award. Starczewski led the team in scoring 26 points on 11 goals and 15 assists. He scored two power-play goals and netted one gamewinning tally.

1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997

Edward Hickey ............................. Forward Dirk Lueders ..................................... Goalie James O’Connor ......................... Forward Thomas Harvey ........................... Forward Larry Palmer ....................................Goalie* Ed Crowley .................................. Forward* John Dewar ................................. Forward* Ron Chisholm ................................... Goalie John Shepard ................................... Goalie Neil Mieras ........................................ Goalie Michael Thompson .................. Forward* Mike Palone .................................. Forward Parker Anderson ...................... Defense* David Merhar ............................... Forward David Merhar ............................. Forward* Clayton J. Roberts .....................Defense Dan Scioletti ...................................Goalie* Ken Vogel .......................................Defense Ed Roubian .................................... Forward George Clark .............................. Forward* George Clark .............................. Forward* Dave Rost ...................................... Forward Dave Rost ...................................... Forward David Yancey ................................Defense Toby Lyon .......................................Defense Tom Rost ...................................... Forward* Ed Collazzo .................................... Forward Jim Knowlton ............................. Forward* Dan Cox ........................................ Forward* Robbie Craig ............................... Forward* Mike Symes ................................ Forward* Ed Moran ...................................... Defense* Paul DeGironimo ............................. Goalie Vince Bono .................................. Defense* Rich Sheridan .............................. Forward Jerome Schulze ........................ Defense* Paul Haggerty .............................. Forward Scott Tardif ................................... Forward Rich Berube ................................... Forward Ian Winer ....................................... Forward Sean Hennessy ......................... Defense* Daryl Chamberlain ......................... Goalie Frank Fede .................................... Forward Leif Hansen ...................................Defense 1998 Andy Lundbohm .......................... Forward 1999 Andy Lundbohm ........................ Forward* 2000 Mike Fairman ............................... Forward 2001 Mike Fairman ............................. Forward* 2002 Joe Carpenter .............................. Forward 2003 Joe Dudek .................................... Defense* 2004 Jon Boyle....................................... Forward* 2005 David Andros ................................. Forward 2006 Brad Roberts .................................... Goalie 2007 Josh Kassel ........................................ Goalie 2008 Josh Kassel ........................................ Goalie 2009 Zach McKelvie ...................Defenseman* 2010 Eric Sefchik.................................. Forward* 2011 Cody Omilusik ............................. Forward* 2012 Mike Hull ....................................... Forward* 2013 Andy Starczewski ....................... Forward * Denotes Team Captain

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Henry “Hal” Beukema (USMA ’44) was the captain of the 1944 Army hockey team and the son of a distinguished department head at the Academy. Following his graduation from West Point, Beukema became an Air Force pilot and served overseas in Berlin as well as in the states at Barksdale AFB in Louisiana. He died in a crash near Langley AFB in Virginia on Jan. 19, 1954, after achieving the rank of major. George Clark The Beukema Award, which was initiated in 1955, is given each year in the memory of Maj. Beukema to the Army hockey team’s most valuable player. Ed Hickey was the first recipient of the Beukema Award. Over the past 58 years, the award has gone to the Army team Mike Fairman captain a total of 22 times. From 1982 to 1986, the award went to the Army captain each year. Mike Fairman (USMA ’01) became just the fifth player in Army history to receive the honor twice when he took home the award in 2000 and 2001. He joined the illustrious company Josh Kassel of former greats: Dave Merhar, 1968-69; George Clark, 1974-75; Dave Rost, 1976-77; and Andy Lundbohm, 1998-99. Joe Carpenter, Joe Dudek and Jon Boyle all epitomized the ideal of a team most valuable player, putting the best interests of the team ahead of their own personal aspirations. Both Carpenter and Dudek, recruited Andy Lundbohm forwards under former coach Rob Riley, switched to defense during their careers to help a unit that lacked depth. Carpenter and Dudek made the transition effortlessly, authoring all-star campaigns in the process. Boyle worked his way from role player to team captain in four seasons at West Point. Goalies had a run of three straight awards that ended in 2009. Following the stellar play of Brad Roberts, Josh Kassel was presented the award in two consecutive season. He is the sixth player to be honored in two consecutive seasons.


TEAM AWARDS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

HAGGERTY AWARD This honor is presented annually to the Army hockey player who displays courage, determination and perseverance throughout the season. The Army hockey program was hit with a devastating setback on April 13, 1998, when Paul Haggerty — a 1991 West Point graduate, three-year letterman for the Army hockey team and an assistant coach under Rob Riley since 1996 — died suddenly during a workout. A former Beukema Award winner, Haggerty led Army with 16 goals during his senior season and was second on the team with 25 points. A tough, hard-skating forward, he spent his senior season on the Black Knights’ top line. He appeared in 86 games during his four-year career, missing only four contests over his final three Ryan Leets seasons and registering 27 goals and 43 points. Prior to his call-up to the varsity, Haggerty spent time with the junior varsity during his freshman year. HAGGERTY AWARD RECIPIENTS 1999 Tim Murphy F 2000 Ford Lannan G 2001 Anthony Mitek F 2002 Bill Moss G 2003 Derek Hines F 2004 Chris MacLeod F 2005 Chad Fifield F 2006 Chris Migliaro F 2007 Michael Picone F 2008 Chase Podsiad D 2009 Mark Tilch D 2010 Eric Sefchik F 2011 Cody Omilusik F 2012 Marcel Alvarez D 2013 Ryan Leets G

HEINMILLER AWARD This award is presented to the team’s Outstanding Freshman of the Year in honor of former player John Heinmiller. Heinmiller had just completed his freshman season with the Army hockey team when he was tragically killed in a train accident in April, 2001. Heinmiller started his college hockey career with the junior varsity program at West Point, but worked his way onto the varsity squad. He appeared in one game his plebe season. Joe Kozlak The inaugural John Heinmiller Award was presented to freshman forward Chris Garceau in 2002. HEINMILLER AWARD RECIPIENTS 2002 Chris Garceau F 2003 Brad Roberts G 2004 Ryan Cruthers F 2005 Chase Podsiad D 2006 Tim Manthey D

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Owen Meyer Cody Omilusik Marcel Alvarez Cheyne Rocha Dax Lauwers Mac Lalor Joe Kozlak

F F D D D D F

GUNNING AWARD This accolade is presented in recognition of the Cadet who displays the qualities of “academic excellence, selfless dedication to his teammates, being a trusted friend, maintaining a sense of humor, playing through pain and adversity, and demonstrating a true love for hockey.” The Michael J. Gunning Award is named in honor of the late Cadet letterman that died Oct. 12, 1996, following a hitand-run accident in Dallas, Texas. Gunning, a 1996 USMA Cheyne Rocha graduate, was a 2nd Lt. stationed at Ft. Sill, Okla., at the time of his death. One of the team’s behind-the-scenes leaders, Gunning typified the rugged, aggressive brand of hockey for which Army teams are renowned. He also personified perseverance, spending two seasons on the junior varsity team before finally earning a shot with the varsity. He closed his career with a stellar senior year as the center on Army’s forechecking line. GUNNING AWARD RECIPIENTS 1997 Chris Perron F 1998 T.R. Coccaro F 1999 Andy Foss F 2000 Bill Griffith F 2001 K.C. Finnegan F 2002 Eric Joyce D 2003 Nic Serre F 2004 Mike McLean D 2005 Nick Cahill D 2006 Seth Beamer F 2007 Brady Dolim F 2008 Bryce Hollweg F 2009 Will Ryan F 2010 Ken Rowe F 2011 Pat Copeland D 2012 Kyle Maggard D 2013 Cheyne Rocha D

DEREK HINES AWARD The Derek S. Hines Award recognizes a person who has displayed an extraordinary amount of support toward the Army Hockey Program. Like Derek, this person has always cared more about giving than receiving, while displaying a great passion and love for Army Hockey. The Army hockey family added a fifth team award to its list of postseason honors in 2006 in order to recognize Hines, who was killed in action on September 1, 2005. A scrappy and hard-nosed player, who earned four varsity letters and graduated from the Academy in 2003, Hines was a

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fan favorite and one of the most respected players in the Black Knights’ locker room. The first Derek S. Hines Award was presented to Sid Rosner, a retired college hockey referee and long-time supporter of Army hockey. Rosner, a loyal fan and friend of Army hockey for more than 50 years, was also instrumental in starting the youth hockey program at West Point, along with Jack Riley and Charlie Weyant. Dave Weyant was honored with the second award for exemplifying those qualities through his involvement with West Point’s youth hockey program and his continued work as an off ice official at Tate Rink for Army’s home games. Athletic Trainer Tim Kelly was the third recipient of the Hines Award. A veteran of more than 20 years at West Point, Kelly was honored for his selfless and dedicated work with the hockey program. Cadet manager David Horvath was honored in 2009 for his tireless work ethic behind the scenes during his four years with the program. Chief Warrant Officer 5 Dan Jollota, the president of the Army Hockey Parents’ Association and an Officer Representative, was presented with the honor in 2010 before departing West Point to continue his military service. Jon Greaney, a four-year manager with the hockey program, was presented with the award in 2012. Col. Ed Naessens, who served as the head Officer Representative for the Col. Naessens hockey team before being moved to football was the 2013 honoree. HINES AWARD RECIPIENTS 2006 Sid Rosner 2007 Dave Weyant 2008 Tim Kelly 2009 Dave Horvath 2010 CW 5 Dan Jollota 2011 Ryan Yanoshak 2012 Jon Greaney 2013 Col. Ed Naessens

TOM KENNEDY AWARD The Major Tom Kennedy Award is named for the former Army player, Officer Representative and supporter of the Black Knights. The award is presented to a player who exemplifies the great characteristics of Major Kennedy: a hard worker who will do anything to help the team. The winner of this prestigious award goes to an unsung contributor who goes above and beyond to help his teammates and personifies what made “TK” such a great person. KENNEDY AWARD RECIPIENTS John Clark 2013 John Clark D


SCORING SECTION MARKER LEADERS ASSISTS Jim O’Connor .......................... 33 Dave Hettinger ..................... 32 Ted Crowley ............................ 23 Ted Crowley ............................ 35 Jack Dewar ............................. 35 Gerry Stonehouse ............... 22 Mike Thompson ....................27 Gary Johnson ......................... 44 Bart Barry ............................... 35 Mike Palone ........................... 40 Dave Merhar .......................... 36 Tony Curran ..............................31 Dave Merhar ............................31 1968-69 Tony Curran ............................ 55 1969-70 John Roberts ..........................16 1970-71 Geoff Champion ................... 24 1971-72 Ed Roubian ............................. 26 1972-73 Jeff Woloshyn ....................... 42 1973-74 Dave Rost ................................ 44 1974-75 Dave Rost ................................66 1975-76 Dave Rost .................................51 1976-77 Dave Rost ................................ 65 1977-78 Tom Rost ................................. 38 1978-79 Frank Keating ........................30 1979-80 Jim Knowlton ......................... 60 1980-81 Jim Knowlton ......................... 43 1981-82 Jim Knowlton ..........................41 1982-83 Robbie Craig ...........................37 1983-84 Biff Shea .................................. 45 1984-85 Biff Shea ................................. 25 1985-86 Rob Brenner ............................31 1986-87 Matt Wilson ........................... 23 1987-88 Rich Sheridan .........................18 1988-89 Rich Sheridan ........................ 28 1989-90 Rich Sheridan ........................17 1990-91 Kevin Darby ............................ 35 1991-92 Rick Randazzo ...................... 23 1992-93 Rick Randazzo ..................... 25 1993-94 Frank Fede ...............................17 1994-95 Ian Winer ................................. 36 1995-96 Ian Winer ................................. 28 1996-97 Frank Fede .............................30 1997-98 Andy Lundbohm ................... 25 1998-99 Joe Carpenter ....................... 23 1999-2000 Nate Mayfield ........................16 2000-01 Tim Fisher ...............................19 2001-02 Joe Dudek .................................17 2002-03 Nic Serre .................................. 23 2003-04 Seth Beamer.............................17 2004-05 Ryan Cruthers ..........................11 Justin Fagan .............................11 2005-06 Luke Flicek................................18 2006-07 Luke Flicek............................... 23 2007-08 Luke Flicek................................27 2008-09 Eric Sefchik ............................. 20 2009-10 Eric Sefchik ............................. 34 2010-11 Danny Colvin ........................... 22 2011-12 Mike Hull .....................................17 2012-13 Andy Starczewski ..................15 1956-57 1957-58 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 1967-68

POINTS Jim O’Connor ...........................61 Dave Hettinger ..................... 53 Ted Crowley ............................ 53 1958-59 Ted Crowley ............................ 35 1959-60 Ted Crowley ........................... 62 1960-61 Jack Dewar ............................ 56 1961-62 Gerry Stonehouse ................41 1962-63 Mike Thompson ....................41 1963-64 Mike Thompson ...................66 1964-65 Bart Barry ............................... 58 1965-66 Mike Palone ........................... 58 1966-67 Dave Merhar ......................... 63 1967-68 Dave Merhar .......................... 59 1968-69 Dave Merhar ........................ 107 1969-70 John Roberts ..........................27 1970-71 Geoff Champion ................... 35 1971-72 Ed Roubian ............................. 39 1972-73 George Clark ...........................72 1973-74 George Clark ...........................78 1974-75 Dave Rost .................................87 1975-76 Dave Rost ................................68 1976-77 Dave Rost ..............................108 1977-78 Tom Rost .................................60 1978-79 Glen Giovanucci ................... 52 1979-80 Tom Rost ..................................97 1980-81 Ed Collazzo ..............................72 1981-82 Ed Collazzo ..............................74 1982-83 Robbie Craig .......................... 63 1983-84 Mike Symes ........................... 82 1984-85 Bob Nabb ................................. 40 1985-86 Matt Wilson ........................... 50 Rob Brenner ........................... 50 1986-87 Matt Wilson ............................41 1987-88 Rich Sheridan ........................ 36 1988-89 Rich Sheridan .........................41 1989-90 Rich Sheridan .........................27 1990-91 Kevin Darby ............................ 40 1991-92 Rick Berube ............................37 1992-93 Rick Berube ........................... 52 1993-94 Ian Winer ................................. 32 1994-95 Ian Winer ..................................51 1995-96 Ian Winer ................................. 49 1996-97 Frank Fede .............................. 52 1997-98 Andy Lundbohm ................... 44 1998-99 Greg Buckmeier ................... 35 1999-2000 Mike Fairman ......................... 29 2000-01 Mike Fairman ......................... 40 2001-02 Joe Carpenter ........................27 Chris Garceau ........................27 Chris Casey ............................27 2002-03 Nic Serre ................................... 33 2003-04 Seth Beamer........................... 25 2004-05 Robb Ross .................................19 Ryan Cruthers .........................19 2005-06 Luke Flicek................................27 2006-07 Luke Flicek............................... 39 2007-08 Owen Meyer ............................ 39 Luke Flicek............................... 39 2008-09 Owen Meyer ............................ 33 2009-10 Eric Sefchik ............................. 35 2010-11 Danny Colvin ............................31 Cody Omilusik .........................31 2011-12 Mike Hull ................................... 25 2012-13 Andy Starczewski ................. 26 1956-57 1957-58

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GOALS Jim O’Connor .......................... 28 Ted Crowley ........................... 24 Pete Dawkins ........................ 16 Ted Crowley .............................27 Gerry Stonehouse .............. 25 Gerry Stonehouse ............... 19 Gary Johnson ......................... 18 Mike Thompson .................. 33 Mike Thompson ................... 31 Kenny Smith ......................... 30 Dave Merhar .......................... 27 Dave Merhar ......................... 28 Dave Merhar .......................... 57 John Roberts ...........................11 Geoff Champion ......................11 Pete Anderson ...................... 11 1970-71 Ed Roubian ............................. 12 Geoff Eaton ............................ 12 1971-72 George Clark ......................... 20 1972-73 George Clark ......................... 39 1973-74 George Clark .......................... 47 1974-75 George Clark .......................... 47 1975-76 Bob Birmingham ................. 24 Tom Rost .................................. 22 Larry Pallotta ........................ 22 1976-77 Dave Rost ............................... 43 1977-78 John Harrison ........................ 31 1978-79 Glen Giovanucci .................. 30 1979-80 Tom Rost ................................ 40 1980-81 Ed Collazzo ............................. 37 1981-82 Ed Collazzo ............................. 37 1982-83 Robbie Craig ......................... 26 1983-84 Mike Symes .......................... 38 1984-85 Bob Nabb ................................ 20 1985-86 Matt Wilson .......................... 22 1986-87 Matt Wilson ........................... 18 1987-88 Rich Sheridan ........................ 18 1988-89 Rob Tobin ................................ 15 1989-90 Rich Sheridan ........................ 10 Al Brenner ............................... 10 1990-91 Paul Haggerty ....................... 16 1991-92 Scott Tardif ............................ 18 1992-93 Rick Berube .......................... 34 1993-94 Ian Winer ................................. 16 1994-95 Frank Fede ............................. 22 Bill Morrison .......................... 22 1995-96 Joe Sharrock ........................ 23 1996-97 Frank Fede ............................. 22 1997-98 Greg Buckmeier .................. 22 Jason Choi ............................. 22 1998-99 Andy Lundbohm ................... 18 1999-2000 Mike Fairman ......................... 19 2000-01 Mike Fairman ........................ 23 2001-02 Joe Carpenter ....................... 17 2002-03 Chris Casey ............................ 17 2003-04 Chris Casey ..............................14 2004-05 David Andros ...........................13 2005-06 Luke Flicek..................................9 Seth Beamer..............................9 2006-07 Luke Flicek................................16 2007-08 Owen Meyer .............................21 2008-09 Owen Meyer .............................19 2009-10 Cody Omilusik .........................18 2010-11 Cody Omilusik .........................18 2011-12 Andy Starczewski ..................13 2012-13 Andy Starczewsk ....................11 1956-57 1957-58 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

GOALTENDING LEADERS/AAA AWARD Season 1956-57 1957-58 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 1967-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13

Leader Larry Palmer Larry Palmer Larry Palmer Ron Chisholm Ron Chisholm Ron Chisholm Jack Shepard Neil Mieras Dick Newell Dick Newell Dick Newell Lee Carlson Dan Scioletti Dan Scioletti Dan Scioletti Eric Gorzelnik Clair Olson Tom Garver Tom Garver Tom Garver Tom Garver Dan Dorsey Dan Dorsey Rick Isles Jeff Snow Jim Stenson Jeff Snow Jim Stenson Brian Drinkwine Paul DeGironimo Paul DeGironimo Brooks Chretien Brooks Chretien Brooks Chretien Brooks Chretien Brian Bolio Ron Adimey Brian Bolio Brian Bolio Daryl Chamberlain Daryl Chamberlain Daryl Chamberlain Scott Hamilton Corey Winer Scott Hamilton John Yaros Brad Roberts Brad Roberts Brad Roberts Brad Roberts Josh Kassel Josh Kassel Jay Clark Jay Clark Ryan Leets Rob Tadazak Rob Tadazak

Gm. 18 20 19 22 25 24 22 27 18 19 21 24 26 23 23 25 19 28 27 25 29 19 28 19 24 17 20 23 12 21 26 20 20 23 21 5 11 22 28 33 28 24 16 21 34 17 33 29 19 37 33 30 24 32 15 11 17

W-L-T 14-4-0 15-4-1 8-10-1 16-5-1 17-8-0 17-6-1 13-5-2 19-8-0 12-6-0 11-5-1 10-8-0 14-10-0 18-7-1 13-10-0 8-14-1 11-14-0 3-12-1 20-7-1 17-9-0 16-8-1 22-6-1 10-9-0 7-20-0 9-8-1 13-9-1 11-4-0 13-4-1 17-5-1 7-3-0 11-8-1 9-16-1 5-13-2 8-11-1 9-12-1 4-14-3 3-1-1 6-4-1 11-7-0 15-10-1 23-9-1 13-13-2 12-12-0 9-5-1 8-12-1 13-19-1 3-9-5 17-16-0 10-15-3 8-9-1 12-18-7 18-11-4 18-10-2 9-9-5 11-16-5 4-8-3 0-8-2 3-8-4

Saves 455 542 601 492 546 601 527 536 413 440 484 574 737 641 703 801 456 770 691 587 810 528 815 465 623 389 537 566 289 458 671 464 404 507 486 106 247 405 537 686 737 542 364 577 887 519 905 770 417 931 806 686 731 937 467 317 438

SV% .855 .899 .900 .888 .900 .919 .920 .901 .906 .892 .877 .874 .883 .904 .898 .904 .867 .877 .870 .872 .891 .848 .837 .866 .870 .872 .873 .889 .887 .863 .866 .842 .843 .876 .853 .862 .888 .849 .865 .907 .879 .880 .901 .904 .883 .912 .913 .903 .891 .908 .914 .925 .914 .908 .916 .908 .909

GA 77 61 67 62 61 53 46 59 43 53 68 83 98 68 80 85 70 108 103 86 99 95 159 72 93 57 78 71 37 73 104 87 75 72 84 17 31 72 84 70 101 74 40 61 117 50 86 82 51 94 76 56 69 95 43 32 44

GAA SHO 4.28 1 3.03 2 3.55 1 2.80 2 2.55 1 2.18 5 2.27 1 2.28 5 2.51 3 3.19 2 3.67 0 3.48 0 3.81 1 2.94 4 3.41 3 3.41 1 4.52 0 4.03 1 3.99 0 3.57 3 3.46 2 5.15 0 5.82 1 4.40 1 4.28 0 3.99 0 4.09 0 3.33 0 3.75 0 3.75 2 4.20 1 4.98 0 3.83 0 3.31 2 4.12 0 3.71 0 2.92 2 3.79 1 3.18 5 2.30 9 3.71 2 3.14 2 2.67 1 2.91 1 3.67 0 2.86 1 2.67 3 3.11 0 2.68 1 2.53 5 2.31 4 1.92 5 2.98 0 3.00 1 2.91 0 3.20 0 2.78 2

ARMY HOCKEY AND THE AAA AWARD One of the most prestigious awards Army presents to its senior cadet-athletes is the Army Athletic Association Award. The honor has been bestowed every year since 1904 and like most things involving athletics at West Point, Army hockey has a major presence. Twelve hockey players have been presented with the AAA Award, an honor given to the most outstanding athlete of the senior class. Defenseman Zach McKelvie is the most recent hockey player to earn the honor. McKelvie played in 136 games during his career, scored 14 goals and handed out 44 assists. One of the fastest skaters in recent memory, McKelvie was a fouryear contirbutor on special teams as well and was a two-time captain. McKelvie is the third hockey-only player to win the award. Brad Roberts, a four-year letterwinner and one of the greatest goaltenders in the history of the program, was the second hockey-only player to be recognized. Andy Lundbohm in 1999 was the first. Maurice Daly, a two-time letterman was the first hockey player to receive the award, in 1927. John Boretti also has his name on the trophy, along with 1959 recipient Pete Dawkins, who also won college football’s Heisman Trophy that same year. Under legendary head coach Jack Riley, a member of the hockey family twice won the Athletic Association’s top honor three times over a four-year period. A hockey star walked home with the athletic department’s highest honor three times between 1956 and 1959, and again between 1965 and 1968. ARMY HOCKEY AAA WINNERS Year Name 1927 Maurice Daly 1936 William Grohs 1956 Ralph Chesnauskas 1958 Thomas Harvey 1959 Pete Dawkins 1965 Robert Butterfield 1967 John Boretti 1968 Mike Palone 1971 Dan Scioletti 1999 Andy Lundbohm 2006 Brad Roberts 2009 Zach McKelvie

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SECTION CAREER RECORDS MARKER 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.

ASSISTS Dave Rost ’77 ................................. 226 Jim Knowlton ’82 .......................... 172 Tom Rost ’80 ................................. 169 Robbie Craig ’84............................135 Dan Cox ’83 .....................................133 Frank Keating ’82 ......................... 131 Biff Shea ’85 ...................................120 Tony Curran ’69 ..............................117 Dave Merhar ’69 ............................117 10. George Clark ’75 ............................ 113 11. Ed Collazzo ’83 ...............................103 12. Toby Lyon ’79...................................102 13. Larry Pallotta ’76 .......................... 101 14. Mike Symes ’85 ...............................99 15. John Harrison ’79 ............................96 16. Ian Winer ’96 ....................................93 17. Andy Lundbohm ’99.......................92 18. Garry McAvoy ’85 ............................89 19. Bart Barry ’65 ...................................88 20. Ted Crowley ’60 ................................ 87 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

PENALTY MINUTES Mark Stachelski ’95 ....................301 Tom Rost ’80 .................................284 Eric Joyce ’02 ................................. 264 Dave Yancey ’79 ............................ 244 John Harrison ’79 ......................... 242 Todd Tamburino ’91..................... 220 Chris Colvin ‘08..............................218 Sean Hennessy ’95 .......................211 Seth Beamer ’06 .......................... 199 Joe Sharrock ’97............................ 191

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

GOALIE WINS Tom Garver ’77 .................................. 75 Daryl Chamberlain ’98..................53 Ron Chisholm ’62 ............................50 Brad Roberts ’06 ............................ 47 Jeff Snow ’83 ....................................43 Jim Stenson ’85 ................................41 Dan Scioletti ’71...............................39 Josh Kassel ‘09 ...............................38 Larry Palmer ’59 .............................. 37 Brian Bolio ’95 ..................................36

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

SAVES Brad Roberts ’06 ......................3,013 Tom Garver ’77 ........................... 2,858 Jay Clark ‘11 ................................2,390 Daryl Chamberlain ’98............2,103 Dan Scioletti ’71.........................2,081 Scott Hamilton ’02.................. 2,054 Brooks Chretien ’91 ................. 1,861 Josh Kassel ‘09 ..........................1,817 Jeff Snow ’83 .............................. 1,795 Jim Stenson ’85 .........................1,656

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.

GOALS-AGAINST AVERAGE Jack Shepard ’63 ........................ 2.20 Neil Mieras ’64 ............................. 2.28 Josh Kassel ‘10 ............................ 2.42 Ron Chisholm ’62 ........................ 2.53 Brad Roberts ’06 .........................2.72 Corey Winer ’00 ............................2.97 Jay Clark ‘11 ...................................2.99 Daryl Chamberlain ’98..............3.00 Dick Newell ’67.............................3.04 Rob Tadazak ‘15 ....................3.07 Scott Hamilton ’02.....................3.30

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

SAVE PERCENTAGE Jack Shepard ’63 .........................920 Josh Kassel `09 ............................909 Jay Clark ‘11 ....................................908 Rob Tadazak ‘15 ................... .907 Brad Roberts ’06 .........................906 Ron Chisholm ’62 .........................905 Eric Gorzelnik ’72......................... .901 Corey Winer ’00 ............................899 Ryan Leets ‘13 .............................. .897 Neil Mieras ’64 ..............................896

SHUTOUTS Daryl Chamberlain ’98...................15 Brad Roberts ’06 ...............................9 Josh Kassel ‘10 ...................................9 4. Dan Scioletti ’71..................................8 Ron Chisholm ’62 ...............................8 6. Brian Bolio ’95 .....................................6 Tom Garver ’77 .....................................6 8. Dick Newell ’67....................................5 Neil Mieras ’64 ....................................5 10. Larry Palmer ’59 .................................4 1. 2.

ALL-TIME LEADING SCORERS PL. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 22. 23. 24. 25. 27. 28.

31.

35. 36. 37. 38. 40. 41. 42. 43.

46. 48. 49. 51.

54. 55.

NAME GRAD YEAR ......................G-A-P Dave Rost ’77 ................ 104-226-330 Tom Rost ’80................... 118-169-287 George Clark ’75 ............153-113-266 Jim Knowlton ’82............. 90-172-262 Dave Merhar ’69 .............112-117-229 Robbie Craig ’84 .............. 86-135-221 Ed Collazzo ’83 ................. 93-104-197 Frank Keating ’82 ............65-131-196 Dan Cox ’83.........................61-133-194 Biff Shea ’85 .....................68-120-188 Tony Curran ’69 ................. 59-117-176 Mike Symes ’85 .................. 75-99-174 John Harrison ’79 ................77-96-173 Andy Lundbohm ’99 ......... 76-92-168 Larry Pallotta ’76 ............. 66-101-167 Mike Thompson ’65 ......... 78-84-162 Ted Crowley ’60 ................. 63-87-150 Bart Barry ’65 ......................61-88-149 Ian Winer ’96 ...................... 55-93-148 Greg Buckmeier ’99 ......... 69-78-147 Garry McAvoy ’85 ...............58-89-147 Frank Fede ’97 .................... 58-85-140 Dan Murrett ’79 ................. 55-84-139 John Ahlbrecht ’69 .............57-78-135 Toby Lyon ’79......................29-102-131 Bob Birmingham ’78 .......... 57-74-131 Bill Morrison ’97 .................54-76-130 Joe Sharrock ’97.................. 57-71-128 Rich Sheridan ’90 ..............49-79-128 Marc Kapsalis ’85............... 51-77-128 Rob Brenner ’87 ...................55-72-127 Tom LeBlanc ’82 ................. 49-78-127 George Reynolds ’75 ........ 49-78-127 Jack Dewar ’61 .................... 49-78-127 Mike Palone ’68................. 38-85-123 Gary Johnson ’64 .............. 42-80-122 Gerry Stonehouse ’63 ......57-62-119 Ed Roubian ’73...................... 45-71-116 Luke Flicek ‘08 .................... 40-76-116 Rick Randazzo ’93 ..............43-72-115 Kenny Smith ’67.................. 62-52-114 Kevin Keenan ’87................45-68-113 Owen Meyer ’10 ...................56-55-111 Mark Stachelski ’95 ..........46-65-111 Matt Wilson ’87 ................... 50-61-111 Bob Nabb ’86 .......................41-68-109 Bill McCarthy ’84 ...............35-74-109 Cody Omilusik ‘11 ..............58-58-108 Darryl MacDonald ’86 ......47-60-107 Dave Hettinger ’58........... 44-63-107 Tim Fisher ’02 ..................... 49-56-105 Mike Fairman ’01 ................61-44-105 Jim O’Connor ’57 ................45-60-105 Ken Hjelm ’65 .....................38-64-102 Tony DiCarlo ’97 ..................53-48-101

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16. 17. 18. 19.

GOALS George Clark ’75 ............................153 Tom Rost ’80 .................................. 118 Dave Merhar ’69 ............................112 Dave Rost ’77 ..................................104 Ed Collazzo ’83 .................................93 Jim Knowlton ’82 ............................90 Robbie Craig ’84..............................86 Mike Thompson ’65 ....................... 78 John Harrison ’79 .............................77 Andy Lundbohm ’99....................... 76 Mike Symes ’85 ............................... 75 Greg Buckmeier ’99 ......................69 Biff Shea ’85 .....................................68 Larry Pallotta ’76 ............................66 Owen Meter ‘10 ...............................66 Frank Keating ’82 ...........................65 Ted Crowley ’60 ...............................63 Kenny Smith ’67...............................62 Mike Fairman ’01 ............................. 61 Dan Cox ’83 ....................................... 61 Bart Barry ’65 ................................... 61


SEASON RECORDS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

POINTS Dave Rost, 1976-77 .................................... 108 Dave Merhar, 1968-69..............................107 Tom Rost, 1979-80 .......................................97 Dave Rost, 1974-75 .......................................87 Jim Knowlton, 1979-80 .............................. 85 George Clark, 1974-75 ................................ 83 Mike Symes, 1983-84 .................................82 Tony Curran, 1968-69 ................................ 80 Tom Rost, 1976-77.........................................78 George Clark, 1973-74 .................................78

TEAM RECORDS Most Goals, Game .................................................................................27 vs. N.Y. Military Academy (1913) Most Goals, Season ...................................................................................................................... 260 (1981-82) Most Assists, Game ..........................................................................................31 vs. Kent State (10-29-82) Most Assists, Season .................................................................................................................... 411 (1981-82) Most Points, Game ..........................................................................................48 vs. Kent State (10-29-82) Most Points, Season ..................................................................................................................... 671 (1981-82) Most Goalie Saves, Games ......................................................................... 63 at Northeastern (2-27-59) Most Goalie Saves, Season .....................................................................................................1,052 (2001-02) Most Penalty Minutes, Game ......................................................................102 at Mercyhurst (2-25-06) Most Penalty Minutes, Season ...............................................................................................715 (2005-06) Most Games ...............................................................................................37 (1982-83; 2005-06, 2007-08) Most Wins ............................................................................................................................................. 28 (1983-84) Highest Winning Percentage................................................................................................... .838 (1983-84) Lowest Goals-Against Average ................................................................................................1.96 (2007-08) Highest Save Percentage ......................................................................................................... .923 (2007-08) Most Shutouts ....................................................................................................................................10 (1995-96) Most Overtime Games .................................................................................................11 (2001-02; 2005-06) Most One-goal Games ................................................................................................13 (2000-01; 2005-06) Most Wins at Home...........................................................................................................................22 (1983-84) Highest Win Percentage at Home...........................................................................1.000 (22-0, 1983-84) Most Goals Per Game ...................................................................................................................7.38 (1981-82) Highest Power Play Percentage .............................................................................................. .402 (1976-77) Lowest Power Play Percentage .............................................................................................. .112 (2004-05) Highest Penalty Killing Percentage ...................................................................................... .925 (1969-70) Lowest Penalty Killing Percentage......................................................................................... .614 (1978-79) Consecutive Wins ...............................................................................................................................17 (1983-84) Consecutive Home Wins ................................................................................................................. 27 (1982-85) Consecutive Road Wins .....................................................................................................................7 (1982-83) Consecutive Losses........................................................................................................................... 13 (1941-42) Consecutive Shutouts .................................................................................................................. 3 (1913, 1920) Consecutive Scoring Streak .........................................................................................149 games (1971-78) Shortest Time to Score Two Goals ......................................................................0:04, vs. RMC (2-18-84) Shortest Time to Score Three Goals .....................................................0:22, vs. MacDonald (12-8-72) INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Goals.........................................................................................................7, George Clark vs. Wesleyan, 2-5-75 Assists ...............................................................................................................7, Tom Rost vs. Bryant, 1-12-80 Points .............................................................................................................9, Dave Rost vs. Bryant, 12-17-76 ....................................................................................................................George Clark vs. New Haven, 2-16-74 Saves ........................................................................................63, Larry Palmer vs. Northeastern, 2-27-59 Consecutive Goal-Scoring Streak ................................................................ 15, Dave Merhar (1968-69) Most Hat Tricks, Season.........................................9, Dave Merhar (1968-69); Dave Rost (1976-77) Most Hat Tricks, Career ...................................................................................... 18, George Clark (1971-75) Consecutive Hat Tricks .........................................................................................4, George Clark (1972-73) Shortest Time to Score Hat Trick..........................0:25, Tom Rost vs. SUNY Plattsburgh (12-1-76) Penalty Minutes ................................................................................28, Dave Yancey vs. Bowdoin, 3-1-75 Consecutive Scoreless Minutes ........................................................ 202:19, Brad Roberts (2005-06)

GOALS Dave Merhar, 1968-69................................ 57 George Clark, 1974-75 ................................. 47 George Clark, 1973-74 ................................. 47 4. Dave Rost, 1976-77 .......................................43 5. Tom Rost, 1979-80 ...................................... 40 6. George Clark, 1972-73 ................................ 39 7. Mike Symes, 1983-84 ................................ 38 8. Ed Collazzo, 1981-82 .................................... 37 Ed Collazzo, 1980-81.................................... 37 10. Rick Berube, 1992-93 .................................34 Tom Rost, 1976-77.........................................34

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1. 2.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

ASSISTS Dave Rost, 1974-75 ...................................... 66 Dave Rost, 1976-77 .......................................65 Jim Knowlton, 1979-80 .............................. 60 Tom Rost, 1979-80 ....................................... 57 Tony Curran, 1968-69 .................................55 Dave Rost, 1975-76....................................... 51 Dave Merhar, 1968-69............................... 50 John Harrison, 1976-77 .............................. 48 Biff Shea, 1983-84 .......................................45 Mike Symes, 1983-84 .................................44 Tom Rost, 1976-77.........................................44 Dave Rost, 1973-74 .......................................44 Gary Johnson, 1963-64...............................44 PENALTY MINUTES John Harrison, 1976-77 .............................116 Matt Field, 2002-03 .................................. 114 Mark Stachelski, 1994-95 ......................110 Eric Joyce, 2000-01..................................... 93 Tom Rost, 1976-77......................................... 91 Mark Stachelski, 1992-93 ....................... 84 Mark Hill, 1987-88 ........................................ 81 Dave Yancey, 1976-77 ................................. 80 Sean Hennessy, 1994-95...........................78 Chris Colvin, 2005-06 ..................................77 SHUTOUTS Daryl Chamberlain, 1995-96 ...................... 9 Josh Kassel, 2007-08.................................... 5 Brad Roberts, 2005-06 ................................ 5 Brian Bolio, 1994-95 ...................................... 5 Neil Mieras, 1963-64 ..................................... 5 Ron Chisholm, 1961-62 ................................. 5 SAVES Jay Clark, 2009-10 ..................................... 937 Brad Roberts, 2005-06 ........................... 931 Brad Roberts, 2002-03 ...........................905 Scott Hamilton, 2000-01........................887 Dan Dorsey, 1978-79 ................................. 815 Tom Garver, 1976-77 .................................. 810 Josh Kassel, 2006-07.............................. 806 Eric Gorzelnik, 1971-72 ............................. 801 Tom Garver, 1973-74...................................770 Brad Roberts, 2003-04 ...........................760

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

GOALS-AGAINST AVERAGE Josh Kassel 2007-08............................... 1.92 Ron Chisholm, 1961-62 ........................... 2.18 Jack Shepard, 1962-63 .......................... 2.27 Neil Mieras, 1963-64 ...............................2.28 Daryl Chamberlain, 1995-96 ................2.30 Josh Kassel 2006-07................................2.31 Dick Newell, 1964-65 ...............................2.51 Brad Roberts, 2005-06 ..........................2.53 Ron Chisholm, 1960-61 ..........................2.55 Brad Roberts, 2002-03 .......................... 2.67 Scott Hamilton, 1998-99 ...................... 2.67 WINS Daryl Chamberlain, 1995-96 ....................23 Tom Garver, 1976-77 .....................................22 Tom Garver, 1973-74.....................................20 Neil Mieras, 1963-64 ................................... 19 Josh Kassell, 2006-07 ................................ 18 Dan Scioletti, 1968-69 ............................... 18 Josh Kassel, 2007-08.................................. 18

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SAVE PERCENTAGE Josh Kassel, 2007-08...............................925 Jack Shepard, 1962-63 ...........................920 Ron Chisholm, 1961-62 ........................... .919 Josh Kassel, 2006-07.............................. .914 Brad Roberts, 2002-03 .......................... .913 John Yaros, 2001-02 ................................ .912 Brad Roberts, 2005-06 ......................... .908 Jay Clark, 2009-10 .................................. .908 9. Rob Tadazak, 2012-13.................... .907 Daryl Chamberlain, 1995-96 ............... .907 11. Dick Newell, 1964-65 ............................. .906 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.


ALL-TIME SECTION RECORDMARKER VS. OPPONENTS W 22 2 2 4 2 1 56 14 2 7 5 0 23 1 2 3 4 4 8 4 4 1 3 1 17 4 4 1 19 3 0 9 18 19 1 1 2 2 28 14 1 1 10 0 1 1 4 1 1 18 0 3 0 9 36 2 5 1 1 29 25 1 3 0 1 8 2 1 6 7 0

L 32 7 1 2 0 1 21 6 0 5 4 4 17 0 1 37 0 31 6 2 0 0 1 0 25 1 0 0 20 24 1 4 36 4 1 1 0 0 26 14 0 0 44 1 0 0 6 0 0 2 1 1 1 2 4 0 29 1 0 30 4 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 1 0 1

T 5 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 6 0 1 0 0 0 8 1 0 0 5 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 8 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

PCT. .415 .222 .667 .667 1.000 .500 .711 .682 1.000 .583 .556 .000 .563 1.000 .667 .085 1.000 .135 .538 .667 1.000 1.000 .750 1.000 .411 .800 1.000 1.000 .488 .111 .000 .692 .324 .826 .500 .500 1.000 1.000 .516 .500 1.000 1.000 .211 .000 1.000 1.000 .417 1.000 1.000 .881 .000 .750 .000 .818 .890 1.000 .162 .500 1.000 .493 .850 1.000 .750 .500 1.000 .667 1.000 1.000 .857 1.000 .000

LAST ARMY W LAST OPP. W 2010-11 (5-4) 2012-13 (4-1) 1998-99 (2-1) 2006-07 (2-1) 1981-82 (7-2) 1980-81 (9-6) 1991-92 (1-0) 1993-94 (4-3) 1923 (1-0) ————— 1908 (3-1) 1907 (12-0) 2012-13 (3-2) 2012-13 (4-1) 1973-74 (8-3) 1974-75 (6-5) 1999-00 (9-0) ————— 1984-85 (3-2) 1995-96 (3-2) 1931 (7-1) 1929 (5-0) ————— 2007-08 (3-0) 2012-13 (3-2) 2012-13 (5-3) 1906 (4-0) ————— 1969-70 (3-2) 1970-71 (3-2) 1963-64 (5-1) 1994-95 (9-3) 1981-82 (14-4) ————— 1967-68 (5-2) 1992-93 (8-1) 1996-97 (4-3) 1983-84 (3-2) 1979-80 (4-2) 1978-79 (5-2) 1992-93 (4-1) ————— 1919 (1-0) ————— 1918 (7-0) 1909 (2-1) 1945 (5-2) ————— 1990-91 (3-2) 2012-13 (3-0) 1979-80 (10-4) 1977-78 (7-5) 1984-85 (6-3) ————— 1918 (2-1) ————— 2012-13 (1-0) 2012-13 (5-1) 1986-87 (6-3) 1991-92 (11-1) ————— 1946 (9-6) 1983-84 (5-2) 1966-67 (6-4) 2004-05 (3-2) 2010-11 (3-0) 1994-95 (7-0) 1978-79 (7-6) 1923 (5-1) 1915 (2-1) 1993-94 (4-3) 1991-92 (3-1) 1932 (10-0) ————— 1997-98 (2-1) ————— 2011-12 (4-2) 2012-13 (6-3) 1995-96 (4-1) 2004-05 (7-1) 1919 (2-1) ————— 1907 (7-1) ————— 1990-91 (4-3) 2008-09 (5-4) ————— 1992-93 (4-3) 1940 (6-3) —————. 1981-82 (10-5) ————— 1982-83 (7-3) 1991-92 (6-5) 1918 (2-0) ————— 1905 (2-0) ————— 2002-03 (4-2) 2002-03 (4-2) ————— 2005-06 (5-2) 1999-00 (10-6) 1999-00 (4-2) ————— 1918 (1-0) 1995-96 (6-0) 1978-79 (8-4) 1985-86 (5-4) 1981-82 (7-1) 1944 (8-3) ————— 1989-90 (4-3) 2010-11 (4-2) 1995-95 (6-2) 1994-95 (5-3) 1904 (8-0) ————— 2012-13 (7-2) 2012-13 (2-0) 2002-03 (3-1) 2001-02 (5-2) 1982-83 (10-3) ————— 1975-76 (7-2) 1974-75 (4-1) ————— ————— 1918 (4-0) ————— 1985-86 (8-3) 1993-94 (4-2) 1906 (8-1) ————— 1923 (9-1) ————— 1973-74 (9-0) 1972-73 (7-6) 1955 (11-2) ————— ————— 1907 (3-0)

OPPONENT SERIES STARTED MacDonald 1972-73 Manhattan (Club) 1946 Manhattanville College1999-00 Maine, Univ. of 1991-92 Marquette Univ. 1930 Mass. Agr. College 1914 Mass.-Amherst 1948 Mass.-Boston 1981-82 MIT 1908 Mass.-Lowell 1972-73 Massachusetts State 1934 Mercyhurst Univ. 2000-01 Merrimack College 1960 Miami (Ohio) 2008-09 Middlebury College 1926 Minnesota, Univ. of 1963-64 Minnesota-Duluth 1963-64 Minnesota-Mankato 1996-97 Mohegan Lake School 1904 Mt. Allison University 1993-94 MVM Battalion “A” 1915 Nebraska-Omaha 1997-98 New England College 1974-75 New Hampshire, Univ. of 1929 New Haven, Univ. of 1973-74 New Rochelle (Club) 1917 New York Military Acad. 1913 NYNG 7th Regiment 1908 New York State 1917 New York Univ. 1913 Newburgh Academy 1904 Newburgh Alumni 1904 Newburgh A.C. 1916 Newman School 1917 Niagara Univ. 1999-00 Nichols 1995-96 North Adams State 1974-75 North Dakota, Univ. of 1966-67 Northeastern Univ. 1951 Norwich Univ. 1913 Notre Dame, Univ. of 1985-86 Ohio Univ. 1961 Ohio State Univ. 2008-09 Pawling School 1908 Penn State Univ. 1944 Pennsylvania, Univ. of 1910 Princeton Univ. 1910 Providence College 1952 Queen’s College 1940 Quinnipiac Univ. 1995-96 Rensselaer Poly. Inst. 1906 Rhode Island, Univ. of 1953 Riverview A.C. 1904 Riverview Military Acad. 1905 Robert Morris 2010 Rochester Inst. Tech. 2006 Royal Bank (Canada) 1924 Royal Military College 1923 Rutgers Univ. 1962-63 Rye Hockey Club 1956 Ryerson Univ. 1982-83 Sacred Heart Univ. 1995-96 St. Anselm College 1971-72 St. Bonaventure Univ. 1992-93 St. Clair College 2002-03 St. Lawrence Univ. 1948 St. Michael’s College 1995-96 St. Nick’s (Club) 1922 St. Paul’s School 1905 St. Stephens 1929 Salem State 1973-74

W 4 1 1 0 0 4 17 3 13 6 3 9 15 1 28 0 1 1 2 5 0 4 7 16 5 0 3 3 2 1 3 2 1 1 1 3 6 0 13 20 7 8 0 0 3 12 18 8 2 6 17 2 1 2 2 2 0 41 1 1 15 22 11 2 3 2 5 17 1 4 3

PAGE 79 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

L 0 0 0 2 1 8 11 3 9 19 0 29 22 0 11 2 3 3 1 0 1 3 2 14 2 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 1 10 10 9 0 2 1 1 3 43 18 1 13 31 0 0 1 2 11 1 29 0 0 1 21 5 0 0 21 0 7 2 0 7

T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 2 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 5 0 7 0 0 0 6 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

PCT. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .333 .607 .500 .587 .240 .875 .261 .408 1.000 .707 .000 .250 .250 .667 1.000 .000 .571 .778 .533 .688 .000 .750 .600 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .100 1.000 1.000 .000 .565 .667 .438 1.000 .000 .250 .750 .765 .302 .315 .625 .325 .360 1.000 1.000 .667 .500 .250 .000 .577 1.000 1.000 .938 .510 .676 1.000 1.000 .104 1.000 .708 .333 1.000 .300

LAST ARMY W LAST OPP. W 1973-74 (7-4) ————— 1946 (7-1) ————— 1999-00 (6-1) ————— ————— 2012-13 (4-3) ————— 1930 (5-1) 1930 (5-3) 1931 (5-1) 1997-98 (5-0) 2008-09 (4-1) 1983-84 (11-2) 1992-93 (3-2) 1962-63 (8-0) 1938 (3-0) 1988-89 (5-3) 2001-02 (4-0) 1937 (4-1) ————— 2008-09 (4-3) 2012-13 (5-2) 1984-85 (2-1) 2012-13 (4-2) 2008-09 (3-2) -------------1985-86 (7-0) 1970-71 (5-4) ————— 1966-67 (12-1) 1996-97 (6-4) 1996-97 (3-0) 1996-97 (5-3) 1997-98 (7-2) 1905 (3-2) 1904 (4-1) 1996-97 (5-2) ————— ————— 1915 (2-1) 1998-99 (2-1) 2012-13 (5-1) 1997-98 (9-3) 1979-80 (10-8) 1965-66 (6-0) 1972-73 (7-2) 1979-80 (8-2) 1980-81 (10-6) ————— 1920 (5-1) 1920 (5-0) 1919 (1-0) 1917 (2-1) 1914 (7-4) 1920 (16-0) ————— 1913 (7-2) ————— 1907 (6-0) ————— 1905 (3-0) ————— 1916 (9-1) ————— 1917 (9-0) ————— 2010-11 (4-1) 2012-13 (4-1) 1998-99 (14-1) ————— 1994-95 (9-0) ————— ————— 1966-67 (7-3) 1997-98 (6-5) 1998-99 (5-1) 1986-87 (4-2) 1983-84 (5-3) 1990-91 (4-2) 2006-07 (3-0) 1968-69 (9-4) ————— ------------2010-11 (5-3) ————— 1908 (3-2) 1981-82 (10-3)2012-13 (5-0) 1969-70 (2-1) 1972-73 (8-4) 1988-89 (4-3) 1998-99 (4-1) 1967-68 (5-3) 1998-99 (6-2) 1991-92 (7-6) 1940 (9-1) 2002-03 (3-1) 2004-05 (2-0) 2011-12 (3-2) 2007-08 (3-1) 1954 (4-0) ————— 1904 (8-1) ————— 1908 (5-1) 1907 (3-0) 2012-13 (5-0) 2012-13 (4-1) 2008-09 (5-3) 2012-13 (4-2) ————— 1924 (7-3) 2012-13 (4-1) 2001-02 (3-2) 1962-63 (15-0) ————— 1956 (7-2) ————— 2005-06 (3-1) 1982-83 (5-4) 2012-13 (3-2) 2011-12 (5-3) 1997-98 (5-3) 1981-82 (8-3) 1992-93 (11-2) ————— 2004-05 (5-2) ––––––––– 1985-86 (4-6%) 2009-10 (5-2) 1999-00 (5-1) ————— 1981-82 (8-6) 1982-83 (3-2) 1906 (6-0) 1907 (2-0) 1932 (9-0) ————— 1991-92 (7-4) 1992-93 (3-2)

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

OPPONENT SERIES STARTED Air Force Academy 1968-69 Alabama-Huntsville 1991-92 Alaska-Anchorage 1980-81 Alaska-Fairbanks 1980-81 Albany Country Club 1922 Albany H.S. 1907 American Int’l 1954 Amherst College 1911 Assumption Coll. 1998-99 Babson College 1973-74 Bates College 1922 Bemidji State 1999-00 Bentley College 1981-82 Berkeley College 1906 Bishop’s Univ. 1968-69 Boston College 1919 Boston State 1979-80 Boston Univ. 1925 Bowdoin College 1957 Bridgewater State 1974-75 Brock 1983-84 Brooklyn (Club) 1919 Brooklyn Polytech. Inst. 1905 Brooklyn Torpedoes 1945 Brown Univ. 1943 Bryant College 1975-76 Buffalo, Univ. of 1983-84 Camp Upton 1918 Canisius College 1992-93 Clarkson Univ. 1927 Clinton Athletic Club 1946 Colby College 1952 Colgate Univ. 1917 College Militaire Roy. 1971-72 Columbia Univ. 1910 Concordia Univ. 1991-92 Connecticut Agr. College 1930 Connecticut College 1994-95 Connecticut, Univ. of 1968-69 Cornell Univ. 1907 Crescent A.C. 1919 Cutler School 1907 Dartmouth College 1914 Denver, Univ. of 1992-93 Duquesne Univ. 1940 Eastern Michigan 1981-82 Elmira College 1974-75 Erasmus H.S. 1918 Essex Troop, NJNG 1905 Fairfield Univ. 1992-93 Ferris State Univ. 2005-06 Findlay Univ. 1997-98 Flushing H.S. 1918 Framingham State 1976-77 Hamilton College 1921 Harrington Park 1944 Harvard Univ. 1931 Hobart College 1994-95 Holbrook 1904 Holy Cross, College of 1957 Iona College 1979-80 Iowa State 1982-83 Ithaca College 1972-73 Jamaica (Club) 1945 Jamaica H.S. 1918 Kent State 1980-81 Kingston Military Acad. 1904 Lafayette College 1923 Lake Forest College 1971-72 Lehigh Univ. 1940 London Field Club 1907


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

ALL-TIME SECTION RECORDMARKER VS. OPPONENTS OPPONENT SERIES STARTED Sands Point (Club) 1945 Scranton Univ. 1991-92 Seneca College 2000-01 Sherbrooke 1970-71 Springfield College 1922 Springfield Training 1910 Springfield YMCA 1915 Stevens Institute Tech. 1911 Stone School 1914 SUNY Brockport 1994-95 SUNY Cortland 1977-78 SUNY Geneseo 1983-84 SUNY Oswego 1971-72 SUNY Plattsburgh 1976-77 Switzerland Nat’l Team 1961-62 Syracuse Univ. 1926 Toronto Univ. 1946 Trinity College 1906 Tufts Univ. 1956-57 Union College 1924 Upsala 1979-80 Vermont, Univ. of 1930 Verona (Club) 1917 Villanova Univ. 1988-89 Waterloo 1968-69 Wesleyan College 1973-74 Westchester (Club) 1945 Western Michigan Univ. 1961-62 Westfield State 1979-80 Williams College 1911 Wisconsin, Univ. of 1965-66 Yale Univ. 1933

W 1 8 4 0 4 0 1 3 1 6 14 2 7 6 1 0 0 6 3 16 8 8 0 9 2 4 2 1 2 39 2 17

L 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 1 1 16 0 14 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 24 1 42

T 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1

PCT. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1.000 .250 .500 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .750 1.000 .000 .000 .833 .750 .500 1.000 .375 .000 1.000 .667 1.000 1.000 1.000 .400 .614 .667 .292

LAST ARMY W LAST OPP. W 1945 (9-5) ————— 1999-00 (10-1) ————— 2002-03 (4-3) ————— ————— 1970-71 (5-2) 1955 (7-2) ————— ————— 1911 (2-1) 1917 (4-3) 1915 (2-1) 1916 (4-1) ————— 1914 (9-0) ————— 1998-99 (5-2) ————— 1998-99 (10-1) ————— 1983-84 (4-0) ————— 1983-84 (7-3) ————— 1995-96 (4-3) 1978-79 (5-2) 1961-62 (5-4) ————— ————— 1926 (4-1) ————— 1946 (8-1) 1985-86 (6-2) 1906 (9-7) 1994-95 (10-1) 1956-57 (5-4) 1992-93 (6-5) 2011-12 (8-1) 1983-84 (15-1) ————— 1989-90 (3-0) 2002-03 (8-4) ————— 1917 (3-2) 1997-98 (9-1) ————— 1983-84 (7-4) 1968-69 (9-2) 1976-77 (6-1) ————— 1946 (18-4) ————— 1961-62 (14-3) ————— 1983-84 (13-3) 1982-83 (5-4) 1996-97 (5-4) 1986-87 (2-1) 1965-66 (4-2) 1966-67 (1-0) 1995-96 (2-0) 1999-00 (5-1)

ARMY HOCKEY ATLANTIC HOCKEY ASSOCIATION TOURNAMENT Date Opponent 2003-04 3/12 AIC 2004-05 3/9 AIC 3/12 at Quinnipiac 2005-06 3/1 at Bentley 2006-07 3/10 Bentley 3/16 vs. Connecticut 3/17 vs. Air Force 2007-08 3/7 AIC 3/8 AIC 3/15 vs. Mercyhurst 2008-09 3/13 at Mercyhurst 3/14 at Meryhurst 2009-10 3/12 at Air Force 3/13 at Air Force 2010-11 3/5 AIC 2011-12 3/2 at Holy Cross 3/3 at Holy Cross 2012-13 3/8 at Mercyhurst 3/9 at Mercyhurst

Result

Round

Head Coach

L, 3-4

First

W, 5-3 L, 0-2

First Second

Brian Riley Brian Riley

L, 3-4 2 OT

First

Brian Riley

W, 6-2 W, 3-1 L, 1-6

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals

Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley

W, 4-0 W, 5-2 L, 2-4

Quarterfinals Quarterfinals Semifinals

Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley

L, 2-6 L, 0-5

Quarterfinals Quarterfinals

Brian Riley Brian Riley

L, 0-3 L, 2-4

Quarterfinals Quarterfinals

Brian Riley Brian Riley

L, 3-6

First Round

Brian Riley

L, 2-3 L, 2-5

First Round First Round

Brian Riley Brian Riley

L, 1-3 L, 2-5

First Round First Round

Brian Riley Brian Riley

Rob Riley

Army is 5-14 in AHA Tournament games. Brian Riley has a 5-13 playoff record.

2013-14 Opponents listed in bold

ARMY HOCKEY RECORD AT TATE RINK Season 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 TOTALS

Coach Jack Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley 28 seasons

GP 19 15 16 18 15 16 19 17 18 22 21 20 19 22 20 17 17 16 19 18 17 17 19 15 14 17 15 15 493

W-L-T 13-6-0 6-8-1 3-11-2 11-6-1 6-7-2 7-8-1 12-6-1 12-4-1 11-7-0 15-6-1 18-2-1 14-5-1 12-7-0 13-7-2 9-10-1 10-6-1 8-5-4 11-5-0 8-10-1 10-6-2 8-5-4 11-2-4 14-4-1 6-4-5 7-4-3 6-8-3 0-12-3 4-10-1 265-181-47

Pct. .684 .433 .250 .639 .467 .469 .658 .735 .611 .704 .881 .725 .631 .636 .475 .618 .588 .688 .447 .611 .588 .765 .763 .567 .607 .441 .100 .300 .585

Head Coach Records: Jack Riley (13-6-0, .684, one season) Rob Riley ( 186-120-21, .601, 18 seasons) Brian Riley (66-55-26, .537, nine seasons)

PAGE 80 • @ARMY_HOCKEY

AHA Games

Pct.

3-5-1 5-5-2 6-4-4 8-2-4 11-2-1 6-3-5 7-4-3 6-5-3 0-11-2 4-9-1 56-50-26

.389 .500 .571 .714 .821 .708 .607 .535 .076 .321 .523


THE SECTION RMC MARKER RIVALRY ABOUT THE RIVALRY

proportions similar to the Army-Navy football contest. “The RMC game is a great experience because not only are you playing another military academy, but you are representing your country as well,” said Col. (Ret.) Jim Knowlton, former forward for the Black Knights. “(Army) always played with additional intensity, and the game was one of the most physical of the season. It is a great battle that takes everyone’s game to the next level.” The Military Academy also recognized the importance of the rivalry. Any athlete who participates in a win over RMC receives a gold maple leaf to be worn over his or her varsity “A” letter. Athletes who secure wins over Navy receive a gold star, while wins over Air Force earn a silver star. The idea of a hockey matchup between the Canadian and American service academies sprouted in 1921 from then Brig. General Douglas MacArthur. MacArthur, then the superintendent of the Military Academy, wrote a letter to Maj. Gen. Sir Archibald MacDonnell, commandant of RMC, to suggest that the two military schools play. Letters and ideas continued to be exchanged between the two academy leaders and details were finalized. On Feb. 23, 1923, a party of Royal Military College officers and cadets traveled to West Point for the first game. That inaugural contest was played on a natural rink adjacent to the West Point Gymnasium, now known as Arvin Gym. The Black Knights, who began playing hockey in

ARMY VS. RMC SERIES Overall Series: Army leads, 41-29-7 Army Record at West Point: 27-12-1 Army Record in Kingston: 14-17-6 1904, used that open-air surface until they moved into Smith Rink on Jan. 31, 1931. The Paladins won that first game, 3-0. The New York Tribune gave the following account of that first encounter, “Army was beaten at hockey today by the Royal Military College of Kingston, Ontario. The Canadian cadets excelled the Army men all the way, displaying the best all around form seen here in years. Hamilton and the two Carr-Harrises were the outstanding stars on the Canadian team. Beano (the Army goalie), was a busy man and made some truly remarkable saves ... The game was one of the cleanest fought contests staged here this winter, and was marked by a fine display of sportsmanship on both sides.” In commemoration of that first game, RMC presented a cup known as the “Challenge Trophy” to the United States Military Academy.

ARMY VS. RMC THROUGH THE YEARS Date ........ Score ...................................Site 02/23/23 . RMC 3, Army 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/16/24 . RMC 10, Army 5 ......Kingston, Ont. 02/22/25 . RMC 5, Army 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/19/27 . RMC 7, Army 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/18/28 . RMC 8, Army 3 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/23/29 . RMC 8, Army 3 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/22/30 . RMC 5, Army 3 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/07/31 . RMC 7, Army 5 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/05/32 . RMC 7, Army 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/25/33 . RMC 3, Army 1 ........Kingston, Ont. 1934 ......... RMC 6, Army 4 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/02/35 . Tie 4-4 .....................Kingston, Ont. 1936 ......... RMC 5, Army 2 ..... West Point, N.Y. 1937 ......... RMC 4, Army 1 ........Kingston, Ont. 1938 ......... RMC 1, Army 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 1939 ......... Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/06/42 . Army 3, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 1949 ......... Army 5, RMC 4 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/11/50 . RMC 6, Army 4 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/03/51 . Army 4, RMC 2 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/01/52 . RMC 7, Army 4 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/07/53 . Army 5, RMC 4 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/06/54 . Army 5, RMC 3 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/05/55 . RMC 3, Army 2 (OT)West Point, N.Y. 03/10/56 . Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/09/57 . Army 7, RMC 2 ..... West Point, N.Y.

Date ........ Score ...................................Site 03/08/58 . Army 5, RMC 1 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/07/59 . RMC 6, Army 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/05/60 . Army 7, RMC 5 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/04/61 . Army 7, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/03/62 . Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/02/63 . Army 9, RMC 4 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/07/64 . RMC 4, Army 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/06/65 . Army 6, RMC 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/05/66 . RMC 8, Army 3 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/04/67 . Army 9, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/09/68 . Army 4, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/08/69 . Army 5, RMC 2 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/07/70 . Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/06/71 . Army 6, RMC 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/11/72 . RMC 7, Army 4 ........Kingston, Ont. 03/10/73 . Tie 4-4 .................. West Point, N.Y. 03/02/74 . Tie 4-4 .....................Kingston, Ont. 03/08/75 . Army 2, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 03/13/76 . Tie 4-4 .....................Kingston, Ont. 03/12/77 . Army 11, RMC 2 ... West Point, N.Y. 02/18/78 . RMC 7, Army 6 ........Kingston, Ont. 01/27/79 . Army 12, RMC 4 ... West Point, N.Y. 01/26/80 . RMC 5, Army 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/21/81 . Army 10, RMC 5 ... West Point, N.Y. 02/06/82 . RMC 4, Army 3 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/19/83 . RMC 3, Army 2 ..... West Point, N.Y.

Date ........ Score ...................................Site 02/18/84 . RMC 8, Army 5 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/09/85 . Army 6, RMC 4 ..... West Point, N.Y. 01/25/86 . Army 9, RMC 7 ........Kingston, Ont. 01/24/87 . RMC 4, Army 3 ..... West Point, N.Y. 01/23/88 . Army 4, RMC 3 ........Kingston, Ont. 01/21/89 . Army 3, RMC 2 (OT)West Point, N.Y. 01/20/90 . Tie 3-3 (OT) .............Kingston, Ont. 01/26/91 . Army 11, RMC 1 ... West Point, N.Y. 01/25/92 . Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/06/93 . Army 6, RMC 2 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/12/94 . Army 6, RMC 0 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/11/95 . Army 6, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/10/96 . Army 2, RMC 0 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/08/97 . Army 7, RMC 3 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/07/98 . Tie 2-2 (OT) ..............Kingston, Ont. 02/06/99 . Army 3, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/12/00 . RMC 3, Army 0 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/10/01 . Army 7, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/09/02 . RMC 3, Army 2 (OT) Kingston, Ont. 02/08/03 . Army 4, RMC 0 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/07/04 . Army 3, RMC 2 ........Kingston, Ont. 02/05/05 . Army 6, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 02/11/06 . Tie 3-3 (OT) ..............Kingston, Ont. 02/04/11 . Army 9, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y. 01/26/13 . Army 4, RMC 1 ..... West Point, N.Y.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Rivalries make sporting events special. International rivalries make them personal. The Army-Royal Military College rivalry celebrated 75 years during the 2005-06 season and it was billed as a continuation of the “oldest continuous international rivalry in sports.” A brief hiatus followed the 3-3 tie in Kingston, Ontario on Feb. 11, 2006 but the rivalry has been renewed and at least two more games are scheduled. On the heels of Army’s 9-1 victory last season, RMC will again visit West Point on Jan. 26, 2012. The series will then shirt to Canada next season. A grudge match that spans international borders and began with Brig. Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Maj. Gen. Sir Archibald MacDonnell 78 years ago was as vibrant and fierce in the 21st Century as it was in the Roaring ’20s. Rob Riley, former coach and older brother to current head coach Brian Riley, tilted the international rivalry with their Canadian counterparts north of the border upon assuming the reins from his father, Jack, in 1986-87. Army authored a 12-game unbeaten streak (10-0-2) against RMC after a 4-3 setback in Riley’s first season. Since then, the Black Knights won six of the eight meetings to hold an 11-game advantage in the overall series. Included in Riley’s run of success was a streak of seven straight victories in which Army outscored RMC, 41-9. Over the years, the rivalry took on epic


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

THE SECTION RMC MARKER RIVALRY Although the trophy was expected to remain at West Point, a myth arose in the early years of the series that the trophy was presented to the losing team. The following winter, 1924, the Black Knights traveled to Kingston. Army had played hockey since 1904 (138 games) and this was the first contest away from West Point. In fact, with the exception of their trips to Canada every other year, Army continued to play only home games until 1941. Royal Military College won that 1924 tilt 10-5, ruining the homecoming of first-year Army coach Ray Marchand. The Pointer, the Corps newspaper, said of this game, “... Moreover, stronger opponents than the Canadian cadets could hardly have been found anywhere. That the men emerged on the short end of the score as close as ten to five is little short of miraculous. “The international contest was noteworthy also for the clean sportsmanship that prevailed. Not a foul marred the progress of the game, and both schools are eager to continue the annual meeting of the two service academies.” No penalties were called in the series until 1954. In that game, at the urging of Army coach Jack Riley, infractions were called. The first penalty came against Dirk Lueders, the Army goalie. The Paladins dominated the early series, winning 14 of the first 15 games, with the other ending in a 4-4 tie in 1935. Army earned its first victory in 1939, a 3-2 decision in Kingston. After a two-year break, the matchup resumed in 1942 with Army winning, 3-1. Royal Military College closed during World War II, and when the teams met again in 1949, the Black Knights secured a 5-4 win as parity finally seeped into the series. Riley took over the Army program in 1951 and the Black Knights quickly gained ground on their adversaries from the north. Army won 15 of the 20 games in the 1950s and 1960s to forge an 18-21-1 record in the overall series. “It is similar to the Army-Navy football game,” Riley said. “U.S. and Canadian ambassadors have been known to attend. It is always very intense.” The early 1970s was the “tie” era, with three of the four contests between 1973 and 1976 ending deadlocked. Interestingly, four of the six ties in the series happened to be 4-4. Overtime was not played during these years. The only previous overtime game went to RMC, 3-2, in 1955. In the early 1980s, it was decided that overtime would be reinstated. Until the 1998 game, the two most recent overtime contests had been in 1989 and 1990. Rich Sheridan’s last minute goal gave Army a 3-2 win in 1989, while his apparent last-second goal in regulation was disallowed in 1990 and the game finished deadlocked 3-3 following a scoreless extra session. The teams played evenly from the mid-

Former Army coach Jack Riley and former RMC mentor Danny MacLeod helped drop the first puck before a 9-1 Army win on Feb. 4, 2012 at West Point.

1970s through the mid-1980s, with each winning five games. When Riley retired in 1986, he had brought the Black Knights to within one game of overtaking RMC in the series. At that time, the Paladins held a slight 26-25-4 edge. But with the arrival of Riley’s son, Rob, to the bench, Army dominated its military brothers. The Black Knights did not lose to the Royal Military College of Canada in the 1990s. Two ties, in 1990 and 1998, were the only blemishes on an otherwise spectacular 10year run. RMC’s 3-0 win in 2000 ended a 12-game unbeaten streak and got the Paladins off to a good start in the new millennium. However, Army rebounded with a big win at Tate Rink in 2001 that tipped the scales in the Americans’ favor once again. In 2003 as a salute to both country’s men and women defending the world’s freedom overseas, the National Hockey League supplied officials for the contest held in the Kingston Memorial Centre. Former RMC head coach Danny MacLeod contacted the NHL, which was able to comply with the former coaching legend’s request as most officials enjoyed a weekend off for the professional league’s annual all-star game. Jack Riley, who coached Army Hockey from 1951 through 1986, was behind the bench for 22 victories, finishing his career with a 22-11-3 (.653) record against the Paladins. Rob etched a remarkable 13-3-2 (.778) account in his 18 seasons at the helm, while Marchand posted two victories and Len Patten added the other. In 2005, Brian Riley notched a victory in his first game versus RMC, accomplishing something his father and brother failed to do. Four years ago, Army and RMC skated to a 3-3

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draw in Kingston. Together, the Riley family has accounted for 37 of Army’s 39 wins in the history of the series. Brian Riley earned his second win during the 2011-12 season with a 9-1 victory. MacLeod and Jack Riley were part of a ceremonial puck drop as the series resumes. The younger Riley’s club proceeded to defeat RMC 4-1 in 2012-13 at Tate Rink. The team rivalry returns to Kingston this winter. Although the rivalry began as a hockeyonly battle, the rivalry has expanded over the years to include competition in rifle, pistol, men’s volleyball, karate, judo and debating. The annual encounter with RMC is billed as “RMC Weekend” at the military academy. The atmosphere in the arena always resembles that of an Olympic event, complete with spectators waving their country’s flag in support of their team.


ARMY SECTION ALL-AMERICANS MARKER

TOM GARVER (West Point, N.Y.)

DAVE ROST (Buffalo, N.Y.)

The only two-time first team All-East selection in Army hockey history, George Clark ranks third on the Black Knights’ alltime scoring charts (266 points) and first in career goals (153). He holds two other school records as well, having posted 18 career hat tricks and stringing together four consecutive three-goal games during the 1972-73 campaign.

A local product from West Point, N.Y., Tom Garver is the measuring stick by which all modern day Army goalies are judged. Garver entered the Academy in 1973 and started every game that season for the Black Knights. His 75 career victories and 2,858 career saves are both school records. Garver was selected to the second team All-East squad in 1977, the same season that Dave Rost was named first team AllEast.

Army’s all-time leading scorer (330 points) and the only Black Knight to reach 300 points and 200 assists in a career. Rost posted nine hat tricks during the 1976-77 season, a campaign that saw him break the school record for points in a single season (108). He was a first team pick in 1977.

All-East – 1974, 1975 Career Statistics (1971-75) GP G A PTS 108 153 113 266

All-East – 1977 Career Statistics (1973-77) GP W-L-T GAA Saves 109 75-30-3 3.76 2,858

All-East – 1977 Career Statistics (1973-77) GP G A PTS 114 104 226 330

JOSH KASSEL (Greensburg, Pa.) Goalie Josh Kassel became Army’s first Division I All-American selection with a phenomenal junior season in 2007-08. The 6-2, 180-pound Kassel earned second-team honors after posting an 1810-2 record that included five shutouts, a 1.92 goals against average and a .925 save percentage. Kassel beat No. 20 Air Force by identical 2-1 scores in a pair of games that were nationally televised. Twice, he registered back-to-back shutouts and was named the Atlantic Hockey Association Player of the Year, the first goalie to earn the honor. While the first Division I All-American, Kassel is the fourth Army player to be recognized on a national stage. Forwards George Clark and Dave Rost and goalie Tom Garver were all honored prior to the Black Knights’ Division I affiliation.

JOSH KASSEL, 2007-08 Opponent Min. GA Saves Result at Bemidji State 58:56 2 22 L, 1-2 RPI 59:17 3 19 L, 1-3 at Connecticut 60:00 1 15 W, 4-1 at Holy Cross 60:00 2 21 W, 5-2 at Holy Cross 58:56 3 25 L, 1-3 at American Int’l 60:00 3 15 W, 4-3 BENTLEY 60:00 2 20 W, 7-2 BENTLEY 58:54 3 28 L, 2-3 at RIT 64:27 2 34 T, 2-2 SACRED HEART 60:00 2 27 W, 4-2 at Sacred Heart 58:07 4 30 L, 2-4 at Connecticut 59:49 4 11 L, 1-4 at Merrimack 15:14 3 5 L, 1-4 CANISIUS 59:50 3 20 L, 0-3 CANISIUS 60:00 1 22 W, 2-1 AIR FORCE 60:00 1 34 W, 2-1 AIR FORCE 59:46 1 24 W, 2-1 CONNECTICUT 60:00 1 15 W, 3-1 CONNECTICUT 59:38 0 26 W, 6-0 HOLY CROSS 59:48 0 29 W, 2-0 HOLY CROSS 65:00 1 27 T, 1-1 AMERICAN INT’L 59:45 0 17 W, 4-0 at American Int’l 60:00 0 24 W, 4-0 at BENTLEY 58:46 2 24 L, 1-2 at BENTLEY 59:59 3 28 W, 6-3 at Sacred Heart 60:00 1 28 W, 6-1 SACRED HEART 59:52 2 21 W, 3-2 AMERICAN INT’L 59:53 0 24 W, 4-0 AMERICAN INT’L 60:00 2 28 W, 5-2 vs Mercyhurst 57:46 4 23 L, 2-4 30 Games 1753:43 56 686 18-10-2

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

GEORGE CLARK (Winnetka, Ill.)


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

TWO SEASONS TO REMEMBER During an era when hockey greatness was judged by 50 goals in 50 games, Army hockey established its own measuring stick when Dave Merhar scored 57 goals in 28 games and finished the season with 107 points. Eight years later, Dave Rost another Dave came along and surpassed Merhar’s seemingly unbreakable record by one point. Considered two of the finest hockey players ever to pass through the Academy’s iron gates, Dave Rost and Dave Merhar are the only cadets to top the 100-point plateau in a single season. Merhar and Rost are one of only 12 college hockey players ever to author a 100point campaign in NCAA history. Merhar was the first to do it, with a magical 57-goal, 50-assist campaign in just 28 games in 1968-69. Rost one-upped Merhar’s mark with a 108-point season (43G, 65A) that has stood as the Army record. Prior to Merhar’s 107-point season, the previous school record had belonged to Mike Thompson, who totaled 66 points in 1963-64. Surrounded by a solid supporting cast that included classmates Tony Curran and John Ahlbrecht, Merhar led the Black Knights to just their second 20-win season in 1968-69. Merhar had a point in all 28 contests and was held without a goal on just three occasions. ROST’S 1976-77 BREAKDOWN Opponent G A Pts. Result Norwich 1 2 3 5-4 W Framingham State 3 3 6 11-5 W SUNY Plattsburgh 3 4 7 11-1 W New England Coll. 3 0 3 7-2 W Bridgewater State 0 6 6 10-4 W at Massachusetts 1 3 4 7-2 W at Holy Cross 2 2 4 6-5 W Wesleyan 3 2 5 6-1 W Bryant 3 6 9 11-2 W St. Nick’s 2 2 4 14-3 W Elmira 3 3 6 10-4 W SUNY Oswego 0 3 3 4-2 W North Adams State 1 2 3 6-4 W at Air Force 1 1 2 3-6 L at Air Force 0 1 1 2-6 L New Haven 2 2 4 9-0 W at CMR 2 4 6 10-2 W at CMR 1 3 4 15-2 W Princeton 4 2 6 6-2 W at Salem State 0 1 1 4-3 W at St. Anselm 0 2 2 4-7 L Connecticut 1 0 1 5-2 W Boston College 0 1 1 2-4 L at UMass-Lowell 1 1 2 3-5 L Babson 0 2 2 5-0 W Merrimack 0 1 1 (OT) 4-4 T American Int’l 3 1 4 (OT) 7-6 W Union 0 4 4 4-11 L RMC 3 1 4 11-2 W Totals 43 65 108 22-6-1

He finished with six points or more seven different times during the season. He scored a season-high five goals at the University of Pennsylvania in a 9-6 win. His 100-point effort established a new NCAA single-season scoring record and made him a charter member of the 100-point club. Before 1968-69, no other college hockey player had ever scored 100 points in a single season. Merhar posted these amazing numbers against some of the top college hockey competition in the East. The Black Knights faced nine of the 10 schools that comprise the powerful Hockey East today. Boston College, Northeastern and New Hampshire all dotted Army’s schedule. The Ely, Minn., native registered 17 points in those nine contests. The demands of playing a challenging Division I schedule did not slow the progress of the Black Knights’ star forward. Merhar also set a number of school records, two of which still stand today. He strung together a streak of 15 consecutive games in which he scored a goal, stretching from Jan. 11 (vs. St. Nick’s) to Feb. 24 (vs. Connecticut). Army was 11-4 during that stretch. Merhar also turned in nine hat tricks during the season, a record that was tied by Rost during his recordsetting campaign but never surpassed. The 1976-77 season was also a terrific campaign for Army. Led by Rost’s recordsetting production, the Black Knights went 226-1 and outscored their opponents by a two-toone margin, 202-101. Tom Rost, Dave’s brother, and John Harrison gave the Black Knights more than just one weapon in Army’s arsenal. With 78 and 74 points, respectively, Tom Rost and Harrison authored two of the top 20 single season scoring efforts in Academy annals. In addition, Tom Rost posted 97 points (40G, 57A) in 1979-80, good for third highest in Academy history. That is the closest anybody has come to the century mark at Army since. Dave Rost scored nine times against Bryant in an early-season 11-2 victory. Like Merhar, Rost earned a point in every game that season. Rost was particularly destructive to the visitor’s from the north. He posted 10 points in a weekend series against Canada’s College Militaire Royal, and registered a hat trick along with an assist on the last day of the season against the Royal Military College. That performance pushed him past Merhar for the single-season record. Rost finished the 1976-77 campaign tied with Clarkson’s Dave Taylor as the nation’s leading scorer. Their 108 points that winter also broke Merhar’s NCAA single-season mark. Their standard would last another eight years until 1985. It was Rost’s late season push that eventually won him the school and NCAA record. Rost scored four points in each of his last three games, including two hat tricks. His 65 assists fell one shy of his own record of 66 set two years earlier. Rost tied Merhar’s record of nine hat tricks that season. His 43 goals is the fourth highest total in Academy history. The high-scoring

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Dave Merhar

forward became Army’s second AllAmerican. He finished his career as Army’s alltime leading scorer with 330 points, while also establishing an NCAA Division II record. In addition, Rost set the school’s single-season mark for assists in both a single season (66)

and a career (226). Rost became part of the Army Athletic Association’s second Hall of Fame class in November 2005 when he was inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame. Merhar was similarly honored in 2006, joining legendary coach Jack Riley as the first three predominantly associated with the hockey program to be honored.

MERHAR’S 1968-69 BREAKDOWN Opponent G A Pts. Result American Int’l 3 2 5 7-3 W Middlebury 4 1 5 9-6 W Princeton 1 1 2 3-1 W Norwich 1 3 4 5-2 W Rensselaer 1 1 2 2-5 L Waterloo 0 1 1 2-9 L Ohio 3 3 6 9-4 W at Dartmouth 0 1 1 (OT) 7-7 T St. Nick’s 2 0 2 5-3 W Bishop’s Univ. 4 2 6 10-1 W at Pennsylvania 5 1 6 9-6 W Northeastern 1 1 2 5-1 W at Providence 1 0 1 1-5 L at Brown 2 2 4 4-6 L Massachusetts 2 2 4 5-1 W Bowdoin 2 3 5 7-3 W at Yale 2 1 3 3-1 W at Hamilton 4 2 6 (OT) 8-7 W at Colgate 1 0 1 3-4 L Vermont 1 2 3 (OT) 3-2 W at Williams 4 3 7 11-2 W at Boston College 2 0 2 3-5 L Connecticut 1 6 7 10-2 W New Hampshire 0 4 4 5-7 L Merrimack 2 0 2 6-5 W RMC 3 2 5 5-2 W Air Force 3 4 7 12-4 W Air Force 2 2 4 8-0 W Totals 57 50 107 20-7-1


DECADE-BY-DECADE SECTION MARKER RESULTS GF 39 23 30 15 19 2 128

GA 9 7 13 27 7 3 66

Coach Capt. Edward King Capt. Robert Foy Capt. Robert Foy Capt. Robert Foy Lt. George Russell Lt. George Russell

Captain(s) LeRoy Bartlett LeRoy Bartlett Richard Park Richard Park Philip Gordon Philip Hayes

1910 0 4 3 .214 1911 1 3 0 .250 1912 2 1 1 .625 1913 5 1 0 .833 1914 2 5 0 .286 1915 1 4 0 .200 1916 2 1 1 .625 1917 6 5 0 .545 1918 6 3 0 .667 1919 2 2 0 .500 Decade Record: 27-29-5 (.484)

1 6 8 42 24 7 13 31 27 7

12 7 12 7 29 13 11 21 9 7 166

Lt. George Russell Lt. LeRoy Bartlett Lt. LeRoy Bartlett Lt. Philip Gordon Lt. Philip Gordon Lt. Frank Purdon Lt. Frank Purdon Lt. Frank Purdon Capt. Joseph Viner Capt. Philip Day 128

Meade Wildrick Millard Harmon Millard Harmon Joseph Viner Ralph Royce Robert Strong Latham Brundred Elbert Ford Henry Nichols Henry Nichols

1920 4 2 1 .643 1921 0 2 1 .167 1922 5 3 1 .611 1923 7 7 0 .500 1924 3 5 0 .375 1925 3 3 1 .500 1926 3 6 0 .333 1927 0 3 1 .125 1928 1 8 0 .111 1929 3 9 0 .250 Decade Record: 29-48-5 (.384)

26 6 26 36 23 16 17 7 9 23

11 11 15 39 30 17 30 20 44 61 189

Capt. Philip Day Talbot Hunter Talbot Hunter Talbot Hunter Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand 278

1930 6 3 2 .636 1931 4 6 0 .400 1932 5 4 0 .556 1933 5 4 0 .556 1934 4 6 0 .400 1935 4 5 1 .450 1936 5 4 0 .556 1937 5 5 0 .500 1938 5 4 1 .550 1939 6 4 0 .600 Decade Record: 49-45-4 (.520)

31 37 47 27 24 21 22 27 29 33

23 34 37 35 41 27 31 22 21 19 298

Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand 290

1940 6 2 2 .700 1941 4 6 1 .409 1942 1 11 0 .083 1943 3 8 0 .273 1944 5 4 0 .556 1945 7 2 1 .750 1946 7 6 0 .538 1947 4 9 1 .321 1948 11 4 1 .719 1949 8 7 0 .533 Decade Record: 56-59-6 (.488)

35 38 33 38 56 65 87 64 78 58

37 39 81 61 38 37 70 72 39 63 552

Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Ray Marchand Lt. Col. John Hines Maj. Robert Lutz Len Patten Len Patten Len Patten Len Patten 537

1950 3 9 0 .250 1951 2 10 1 .192 1952 3 12 0 .200 1953 8 8 0 .500 1954 10 7 0 .588 1955 8 8 0 .500 1956 11 5 0 .688 1956-57 14 4 0 .778 1957-58 15 4 1 .775 1958-59 9 10 1 .475 Decade Record: 83-77-3 (.518)

39 33 46 56 66 73 72 125 107 79

83 76 87 64 79 86 46 59 61 70 696

Len Patten Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley 711

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Henry Burgard Harry Stout James O’Connell Kevin O’Shea Lindsay Caywood Henry Westphalinger Willet Baird Mark Lewis Tito Moscatelli Normando Costello

Roy Linquist John Waters Thomas Darcy David Wagstaff Thomas O’Neil James Donohue William Grohs Maxwell Tincher William Blanchard Richard Curtin

George Larkin Willard Gilbert Frederic Tate Sidney Peterman, William Ray Henry Beukema George Casey Edward Crowley Patrick O’Connell Arthur Snyder Albert Austin

Charles Kuyk William Depew (none elected) David Pistenma Victor Hugo George Monahan Ralph Chesnauskas Edward Hickey Leonard McCormick Laurence Palmer

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Year W L T Pct. 1904 5 1 0 .833 1905 7 1 0 .875 1906 5 1 0 .833 1907 3 6 0 .333 1908 5 2 0 .714 1909 0 1 1 .250 Decade Record: 25-12-1 (.671)


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

DECADE-BY-DECADE RESULTS Year W L T Pct. 1959-60 16 5 1 .750 1960-61 17 8 0 .680 1961-62 17 6 1 .729 1962-63 17 6 2 .720 1963-64 20 8 0 .714 1964-65 17 7 0 .708 1965-66 17 7 1 .700 1966-67 15 12 0 .556 1967-68 14 10 0 .583 1968-69 20 7 1 .732 Decade Record: 170-76-6 (.687)

GF 119 139 111 120 154 131 132 151 110 167

GA 62 62 52 57 69 56 85 104 84 104 1334

Coach Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley 735

Captain(s) Edward Crowley John Dewar Paul Dobbins Gerald Stonehouse Gary Johnson Mike Thompson Laurence Hansen Parker Anderson Michael Palone Dave Merhar

Year W L T Pct. 1969-70 13 12 0 .520 1970-71 8 14 1 .369 1971-72 11 14 0 .440 1972-73 9 17 1 .352 1973-74 20 7 1 .732 1974-75 18 11 0 .621 1975-76 18 9 1 .661 1976-77 22 6 1 .776 1977-78 13 12 1 .519 1978-79 7 21 0 .250 Decade Record: 139-123-6 (.530)

GF 72 81 99 121 166 169 161 202 130 110

GA 79 80 88 136 115 119 101 101 129 184 1311

Coach Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley 1132

Captain(s) Dave Young Dan Scioletti Geoffrey Champion Ed Roubian George Clark George Clark Pat Sullivan Thomas Garver Kevin Walsh Kenneth Hawes

1979-80 19 12 1 .609 1980-81 21 13 1 .614 1981-82 25 11 0 .694 1982-83 25 11 1 .689 1983-84 28 5 1 .838 1984-85 17 13 0 .567 1985-86 18 11 1 .617 1986-87 9 19 1 .328 1987-88 9 19 2 .333 1988-89 13 16 1 .450 Decade Record: 184-130-9 (.584)

205 230 260 220 241 150 157 89 97 93

141 160 171 140 104 121 117 130 151 127 1742

Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Jack Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley 1362

Tom Rost Matt Bradley Jim Knowlton Dan Cox Robbie Craig Mike Symes Ted Moran Kevin Keenan Vinny Bono Brian Cox

1989-90 10 16 4 .400 1990-91 8 18 3 .328 1991-92 13 17 1 .435 1992-93 16 11 1 .589 1993-94 14 16 0 .467 1994-95 20 13 1 .603 1995-96 24 9 1 .721 1996-97 19 13 2 .588 1997-98 18 15 1 .544 1998-99 16 16 3 .500 Decade Record: 158-144-17 (.522)

93 104 138 133 123 173 164 158 156 133

113 121 163 86 121 106 81 119 106 104

Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley 1375

Scott Schulze, Rich Sheridan Todd Tamburino, Scott Williams Chris Mead, Chris Soucie Chad Sundem Mike Landers Craig Fellman, Sean Hennessy Ian Winer Mike Opdenaker Anthony Felice Greg Buckmeier, Andy Lundbohm 1120

1999-00 13 18 2 .424 2000-01 14 20 1 .414 2001-02 11 18 6 .400 2002-03 18 16 0 .529 2003-04 12 18 3 .409 2004-05 11 21 3 .357 2005-06 12 18 7 .419 2006-07 19 12 5 .597 2007-08 19 14 4 .568 2008-09 11 19 6 .388 Decade Record: 140-174-37 (.452)

102 112 109 93 82 79 83 102 101 92

98 132 114 92 107 103 97 88 73 125

Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Rob Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley 955

Paul Gonzalez, T.J. McMeniman Mike Fairman Tim Murphy Joe Dudek Jon Boyle, Mike McLean Chad Fifield, Seth Beamer Seth Beamer Casey Bickley Bryce Hollweg, Chase Podsiad Zach McKelvie 1029

2009-10 11 18 7 .403 2010-11 11 20 4 .371 2011-12 4 23 7 .221 2012-13 7 22 5 .279 Decade Record: 33-83-23 (.332)

98 86 65 73 322

114 115 120 121 470

Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley Brian Riley

Eric Sefchik Cody Omilusik, Pat Copeland Marcel Alvarez, Mike Hull Cheyne Rocha

Career

9068

7,972

(2,215 games played)

1,093 1000 122

.520

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YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS 1904 (5-1) COACH: CAPT. EDWARD KING Newburgh Academy ......................................................... W, 7-1 Mohegan Lake School......................................................L, 1-4 Newburgh Alumni .............................................................W, 4-3 Holbrook .............................................................................. W, 8-0 Kingston Military Acad. ............................................... W, 11-0 Riverview Athletic Club.................................................. W, 8-1 1905 (7-1) COACH: CAPT. ROBERT FOY Newburgh Alumni ............................................................ W, 3-0 Newburgh Academy ....................................................... W, 4-0 Brooklyn Poly. Inst...........................................................W, 6-2 St. Paul’s School.................................................................. L, 1-2 Riverview Military Acad. ................................................W, 2-0 Mohegan Lake School.....................................................W, 2-1 Essex Troop, NJNG ............................................................W, 2-0 Mohegan Lake School....................................................W, 3-2

1907 (3-6) COACH: CAPT. ROBERT FOY Trinity ..................................................................................... W, 1-0 Riverview Military Acad. .................................................L, 0-3 Newburgh Academy ....................................................... W, 6-0 London Field Club ..............................................................L, 0-3 Rensselaer............................................................................. L, 1-2 Cutler School ....................................................................... W, 7-1 Cornell.....................................................................................L, 0-4 St. Paul’s School................................................................. L, 0-2 Albany H.S. .......................................................................... L, 0-12 1908 (5-2) COACH: LT. GEORGE RUSSELL Cornell..................................................................................... L, 0-2 Albany H.S. ............................................................................W, 3-1 Trinity .................................................................................... W, 6-0 Riverview Military Acad. .................................................W, 5-1 MIT ...........................................................................................W, 2-1 NYNG 7th Regiment ......................................................... W, 1-0 Pawling School ................................................................... L, 2-3 1909 (0-1-1) COACH: LT. GEORGE RUSSELL Brooklyn Poly. Institute .................................................. L, 1-2 Pawling School .....................................................................T, 1-1 1910 (0-4-3) COACH: LT. GEORGE RUSSELL Princeton ................................................................................L, 0-1 Penn .........................................................................................T, 0-0 Springfield Training School ............................................T, 1-1 MIT ...........................................................................................L, 0-3 Rensselaer............................................................................L, 0-3 NYNG 7th Regiment ..........................................................L, 0-4 Columbia................................................................................T, 0-0 1911 (1-3) COACH: LT. LEROY BARTLETT Stevens Tech ..................................................................... W, 3-0 Amherst ................................................................................. L, 0-2 Springfield Training School ........................................... L, 1-2 Williams .................................................................................. L, 2-3 1912 (2-1-1) COACH: LT. LEROY BARTLETT Stevens Tech ......................................................................W, 5-0 Rensselaer............................................................................W, 2-1 MIT .........................................................................................L, 0-10 Amherst ...................................................................................T, 1-1

1915 (1-4) COACH: LT. FRANK PURDON Mass. Agr. College...............................................................L, 1-7 Springfield Y.M.C.A. ............................................................ L, 1-2 NYNG 7th Regiment ........................................................ W, 3-0 M.V.M., Batallion “A” ........................................................... L, 1-2 Columbia................................................................................. L, 1-2 1916 (2-1-1) COACH: LT. FRANK PURDON Stevens Tech ...................................................................... W, 4-1 Newburgh Athletic Club ................................................ W, 9-1 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 0-9 Rensselaer............................................................................T, 0-0 1917 (6-5) COACH: LT. FRANK PURDON Newman School ............................................................... W, 9-0 New York State College .................................................. W, 7-1 NYNG 7th Regiment ..........................................................W, 2-1 Colgate ................................................................................... L, 2-5 Springfield Y.M.C.A. ..........................................................W, 4-3 MIT ...........................................................................................W, 2-1 Mass. Agr. College.............................................................. L, 1-2 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 0-3 Rensselaer...........................................................................W, 2-0 New Rochelle Hockey Club ........................................... L, 0-2 Verona Hockey Club ......................................................... L, 2-3 1918 (6-3) COACH: CAPT. JOSEPH VINER Brooklyn Poly. Institute ................................................W, 7-0 Flushing H.S...........................................................................L, 0-1 N.Y. Military Academy...................................................... W, 8-1 Princeton ................................................................................L, 0-1 Williams .................................................................................. L, 2-4 Jamaica H.S. ....................................................................... W, 4-0 Erasmus H.S. .......................................................................W, 2-0 Mass. Agr. College.............................................................W, 2-1 Camp Upton .........................................................................W, 2-1 1919 (2-2) COACH: CAPT. PHILIP DAY Brooklyn Hockey Club .................................................... W, 1-0 Crescent Athletic Club ...................................................W, 2-1 Boston College ................................................................... L, 4-5 N.Y. Military Academy........................................................L, 0-1 1920 (4-2-1) COACH: CAPT. PHILIP DAY New York State College .............................................. W, 16-0 New Rochelle Hockey Club ............................................L, 1-5 Boston College ................................................................... L, 0-5 Penn ...........................................................................................T, 1-1 Rensselaer...........................................................................W, 2-0 N.Y. Military Academy......................................................W, 5-0 Williams ................................................................................. W, 1-0 1921 (0-2-1) COACH: TALBOT HUNTER Springfield Y.M.C.A. ........................................................... T, 3-3 Williams .................................................................................. L, 2-3 Hamilton .................................................................................L, 1-5

1922 (5-3-1) COACH: TALBOT HUNTER Albany Country Club........................................................W, 2-0 Colgate ................................................................................. W, 3-0 St. Nick’s .................................................................................L, 1-4 Hamilton .............................................................................. W, 3-0 Bates ...................................................................................... W, 4-1 Springfield ...........................................................................W, 7-0 Mass. Agr. College............................................................. L, 3-4 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 0-3 Williams .................................................................................. T, 3-3 1923 (7-7) COACH: TALBOT HUNTER Penn .........................................................................................W, 2-1 Amherst .................................................................................W, 2-1 Lafayette .............................................................................. W, 9-1 MIT ........................................................................................... L, 5-6 Bates ........................................................................................ L, 1-2 Albany Country Club........................................................ W, 1-0 Princeton ............................................................................... L, 2-6 F3 RMC ...................................................................................L, 0-3 Dartmouth ........................................................................... W, 1-0 Rensselaer...........................................................................W, 5-2 Mass. Agr. College.............................................................. L, 1-2 Columbia................................................................................W, 5-1 Williams ...................................................................................L, 1-5 Boston College ....................................................................L, 1-9 1924 (3-5) COACH: RAY MARCHAND J5 Royal Bank of Canada ................................................L, 3-7 J12 Penn .................................................................................. L, 1-2 J23 Bates ...............................................................................L, 0-1 F2 MIT....................................................................................W, 2-0 F9 Mass. Agr. College .....................................................W, 3-2 Union ......................................................................................W, 6-2 F16 at RMC ......................................................................... L, 5-10 F23 Boston College ..........................................................L, 3-6 1925 (3-3-1) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Union ...................................................................................... W, 4-1 MIT .............................................................................................T, 1-1 Bates .......................................................................................W, 5-1 Boston University.............................................................. L, 3-4 Amherst ................................................................................W, 2-0 Princeton ................................................................................L, 1-5 F22 RMC................................................................................. L, 0-5 1926 (3-6) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 1-5 Bates ......................................................................................W, 4-3 Boston College ....................................................................L, 3-7 Amherst ................................................................................W, 4-2 Boston University..............................................................L, 0-3 Mass. Agr. College.............................................................. L, 1-2 Syracuse .................................................................................L, 1-4 Middlebury............................................................................W, 3-1 Williams ..................................................................................L, 0-3 1927 (0-3-1) COACH: RAY MARCHAND MIT ............................................................................................L, 0-7 Clarkson ................................................................................. L, 4-5 Amherst ...................................................................................T, 1-1 F19 at RMC ............................................................................L, 2-7 1928 (1-8) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Clarkson ..................................................................................L, 0-1 Bates ....................................................................................... L, 0-2 Mass. Agr. College........................................................... W, 3-0 Boston University..............................................................L, 0-9 Dartmouth ........................................................................... L, 1-12 Middlebury.............................................................................L, 1-3 Amherst .................................................................................. L, 1-2 F18 RMC .................................................................................L, 3-8 Williams ...................................................................................L, 0-7

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1906 (5-1) COACH: CAPT. ROBERT FOY Kingston Military Acad. ................................................. W, 8-1 Rensselaer...........................................................................W, 3-2 Brooklyn Poly. Institute .................................................W, 2-1 St. Paul’s School............................................................... W, 6-0 Berkeley ............................................................................... W, 4-0 Trinity .......................................................................................L, 7-9

1913 (5-1) COACH: LT. PHILIP GORDON MIT ........................................................................................... L, 0-5 N. Y. Military Academy ................................................. W, 27-0 Amherst ................................................................................ W, 1-0 Trinity .................................................................................... W, 3-0 New York University ........................................................ W, 7-2 Norwich ................................................................................ W, 4-0 1914 (2-5) COACH: LT. PHILIP GORDON Mass. Agr. College............................................................. L, 0-5 Cornell.................................................................................... W, 1-0 NYNG 7th Regiment ...........................................................L, 4-7 Princeton ............................................................................... L, 3-5 Stone School ..................................................................... W, 9-0 Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 3-7 Amherst ................................................................................. L, 4-5


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1929 (3-9) COACH: RAY MARCHAND St. Stephen’s ......................................................................W, 5-2 Williams ................................................................................L, 0-10 Mass. Agr. College..............................................................L, 1-3 Bates ....................................................................................... L, 0-5 New Hampshire ...................................................................L, 1-5 MIT ........................................................................................... L, 2-5 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 0-9 Amherst ................................................................................. L, 3-4 Colgate ....................................................................................L, 1-8 Norwich ..................................................................................W, 3-1 F23 at RMC ...........................................................................L, 3-8 Rensselaer........................................................................... W, 4-1 1930 (6-3-2) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Conn. Agr. College ........................................................... W, 3-0 Williams ...................................................................................T, 2-2 Mass. Agr. College............................................................W, 5-3 Bates ......................................................................................W, 2-0 Colgate ....................................................................................T, 2-2 Vermont ................................................................................ W, 7-2 Marquette..............................................................................L, 1-5 New Hampshire .................................................................. L, 2-4 St. Stephen’s ..................................................................... W, 3-0 F22 RMC................................................................................. L, 3-5 Rensselaer........................................................................... W, 1-0 1931 (4-6) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Harvard .................................................................................L, 0-10 Mass. Agr. College..............................................................L, 1-5 Bates ....................................................................................... W, 7-1 Boston University.............................................................. L, 2-4 MIT ........................................................................................... L, 2-3 New Hampshire .................................................................. L, 0-2 Vermont ................................................................................W, 4-2 Rensselaer.......................................................................... W, 8-0 St. Stephen’s ..................................................................... W, 8-0 M7 at RMC .............................................................................L, 5-7 1932 (5-4) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Colgate ................................................................................. W, 6-4 Williams .................................................................................W, 4-2 St. Stephen’s ..................................................................... W, 9-0 Boston University..............................................................L, 3-8 Princeton .................................................................................L, 1-7 Conn. Agr. College ......................................................... W, 10-0 Vermont ............................................................................... W, 9-0 Clarkson .................................................................................L, 4-9 M5 RMC....................................................................................L, 1-7 1933 (5-4) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Williams .................................................................................W, 3-2 Boston University...............................................................L, 0-7 Yale ........................................................................................... L, 3-5 New Hampshire .................................................................W, 4-3 Hamilton ................................................................................W, 2-1 Williams .................................................................................W, 3-2 Princeton ..............................................................................L, 1-10 Union ................................................................................... W, 10-2 F25 at RMC ............................................................................L, 1-3 1934 (4-6) COACH: RAY MARCHAND MIT ............................................................................................L, 4-7 Colgate .................................................................................... L, 1-2 Union ......................................................................................W, 4-3 Mass. State College ........................................................W, 3-2 New Hampshire ..................................................................L, 0-3 Williams ..................................................................................W, 2-1 Princeton ................................................................................L, 1-9 Middlebury...........................................................................W, 3-2 Brown ...................................................................................... L, 2-6 RMC..........................................................................................L, 4-6

1935 (4-5-1) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Colgate ................................................................................... L, 0-2 MIT .......................................................................................... W, 1-0 Mass. State College ........................................................W, 4-3 Union ..................................................................................... W, 4-0 Boston University.............................................................. L, 2-5 Hamilton ................................................................................W, 2-1 Middlebury.............................................................................L, 1-3 Williams ...................................................................................L, 1-3 Brown ...................................................................................... L, 2-6 M2 at RMC ............................................................................ T, 4-4 1936 (5-4) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Union ......................................................................................W, 6-2 New Hampshire ..................................................................L, 4-8 Middlebury...........................................................................W, 4-2 Hamilton ...............................................................................W, 6-2 Boston University.............................................................. L, 2-5 Williams ..................................................................................L, 0-4 Colgate ..................................................................................W, 5-2 MIT ...........................................................................................W, 3-1 RMC.......................................................................................... L, 2-5 1937 (5-5) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Mass. State College ........................................................ W, 4-1 New Hampshire ................................................................... L, 1-2 Union ......................................................................................W, 3-2 Colgate .................................................................................... L, 1-2 Hamilton ................................................................................W, 5-1 Williams ...................................................................................L, 1-3 Boston University.............................................................. L, 3-5 Middlebury.......................................................................... W, 3-0 MIT ..........................................................................................W, 5-2 at RMC .....................................................................................L, 1-4 1938 (5-4-1) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Mass. State College ......................................................... T, 3-3 MIT ...........................................................................................L, 0-3 Williams ...................................................................................L, 1-3 Union ......................................................................................W, 3-2 Colgate ...................................................................................W, 2-1 Hamilton ............................................................................... W, 1-0 Rensselaer......................................................................... W, 12-1 Boston University.............................................................. L, 5-6 Cornell.....................................................................................W, 2-1 RMC...........................................................................................L, 0-1 1939 (6-4) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Middlebury.......................................................................... W, 3-0 Williams .................................................................................. L, 0-2 Union ................................................................................... W, 10-0 Boston University.............................................................. L, 3-5 MIT ..........................................................................................W, 4-2 New Hampshire ................................................................... L, 1-2 Colgate ................................................................................... L, 2-3 Hamilton ...............................................................................W, 3-2 Cornell.................................................................................... W, 4-1 at RMC ...................................................................................W, 3-2 1940 (6-2-2) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Queen’s ...................................................................................L, 1-9 Duquesne .............................................................................W, 6-3 Boston College ................................................................... T, 5-5 Lehigh .....................................................................................W, 5-1 Boston University...............................................................T, 2-2 Princeton ................................................................................L, 1-8 Cornell....................................................................................W, 4-3 Middlebury...........................................................................W, 4-3 Williams ................................................................................. W, 4-1 Colgate ..................................................................................W, 3-2 1941 (4-6-1) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Lehigh .................................................................................... W, 6-1 Cornell................................................................................... W, 8-4 Boston College ................................................................... L, 2-6 Princeton ............................................................................... L, 2-6

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Union ........................................................................................ L, 1-2 Williams ...................................................................................L, 1-3 Hamilton ...............................................................................W, 4-3 Boston University...............................................................T, 2-2 Middlebury........................................................................... W, 8-1 at Harvard ............................................................................. L, 2-5 Dartmouth ............................................................................ L, 2-6 1942 (1-11) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Yale ......................................................................................... L, 2-10 Williams .................................................................................. L, 3-4 Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-8 Colgate ................................................................................... L, 3-5 Princeton ................................................................................L, 1-6 Harvard ................................................................................... L, 2-6 Cornell.....................................................................................L, 6-8 Princeton ...............................................................................L, 4-9 at Harvard ............................................................................. L, 2-3 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 4-9 Dartmouth .......................................................................... L, 2-12 M6 RMC .................................................................................W, 3-1 1943 (3-8) COACH: RAY MARCHAND Cornell....................................................................................W, 8-3 Yale ............................................................................................L, 3-7 Princeton ............................................................................... L, 0-5 Colgate ................................................................................. L, 3-12 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 4-6 Harvard ....................................................................................L, 1-6 Princeton ..............................................................................W, 5-2 Williams ................................................................................ W, 4-0 at Harvard ..............................................................................L, 4-7 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 4-6 Yale ............................................................................................L, 2-7 1944 (5-4) COACH: LT. COL. JOHN HINES Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-6 Dartmouth ...........................................................................L, 4-11 Harrington Park.............................................................. W, 10-3 Cornell.................................................................................... W, 8-1 Clarkson ................................................................................W, 5-4 Yale ...........................................................................................L, 0-4 Colgate ................................................................................... L, 2-3 Harrington Park.................................................................W, 8-3 Penn State ........................................................................ W, 18-3 1945 (7-2-1) COACH: MAJ. ROBERT LUTZ Cornell.................................................................................. W, 13-1 Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 1-5 Yale ..........................................................................................W, 3-2 Cornell................................................................................... W, 8-4 Yale ..........................................................................................W, 5-2 Sands Point .........................................................................W, 9-5 Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 1-5 Jamaica Hawks ................................................................... T, 6-6 Westchester Vikings ....................................................W, 14-5 Brooklyn Torpedos ...........................................................W, 5-2 1946 (7-6) COACH: LEN PATTEN Westchester Vikings ................................................... W, 18-4 Lehigh .................................................................................. W, 17-3 Yale ........................................................................................... L, 4-5 Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 1-9 Colgate ............................................................................... W, 10-3 Princeton .............................................................................. W, 8-1 Cornell................................................................................... W, 9-4 Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-9 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 1-11 Toronto ....................................................................................L, 1-8 Harvard ..................................................................................W, 4-3 Clinton Athletic Club ........................................................L, 6-9 Manhattan Arrows ............................................................ W, 7-1 1947 (4-9-1) COACH: LEN PATTEN Lehigh .................................................................................. W, 12-1 Princeton ............................................................................... L, 2-5


YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS Cornell.................................................................................... W, 8-1 Hamilton .................................................................................T, 2-2 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 3-6 Dartmouth ............................................................................L, 3-8 Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-9 Clarkson ................................................................................. L, 3-4 Harvard ....................................................................................L, 1-8 Penn State .........................................................................W, 12-3 Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-9 at Harvard .............................................................................L, 3-9 Boston University.............................................................. L, 5-6 Williams ................................................................................. W, 8-1

1949 (8-7) COACH: LEN PATTEN J8 Brown ...............................................................................W, 5-3 J12 Princeton.......................................................................W, 3-1 J15 New Hampshire .........................................................W, 4-3 J19 Lehigh ..........................................................................W, 12-2 J22 Middlebury ..................................................................W, 5-2 J29 Boston University ..................................................... L, 3-4 F2 Clarkson ...........................................................................L, 1-4 F5 at Yale ...............................................................................L, 4-6 F12 Harvard .........................................................................L, 0-11 F16 Colgate .......................................................................... L, 4-5 F19 Williams ........................................................................W, 3-2 F23 Hamilton ..................................................................... W, 4-0 F26 at Dartmouth ..............................................................L, 1-9 M12 RMC ..............................................................................W, 5-4 Clarkson ..................................................................................L, 4-7 1950 (3-9) COACH: LEN PATTEN J7 Brown............................................................................... L, 3-12 J11 Yale....................................................................................L, 0-8 J14 Harvard ................................................................ W, 7-6 (OT) J21 Clarkson ......................................................................... L, 0-5 J28 at Princeton .................................................................L, 2-7 F4 Middlebury ....................................................................W, 6-5 F11 Boston University.................................................... L, 3-13 F18 Dartmouth ...................................................................L, 3-9 F22 Colgate ..........................................................................L, 3-6 F25 Hamilton ...................................................................... W, 7-3 M4 Williams...........................................................................L, 1-3 M11 at RMC ..........................................................................L, 4-6 1951 (2-10-1) COACH: JACK RILEY Middlebury............................................................................. L, 1-2 Princeton ............................................................................... T, 3-3 St. Lawrence ........................................................................ L, 2-4 Boston University.............................................................. L, 0-5 Dartmouth .............................................................................L, 2-7 Clarkson .................................................................................L, 4-6 Yale ............................................................................................L, 1-8 Hamilton .................................................................................L, 3-7 Brown ......................................................................................L, 3-9 Harvard ................................................................................. L, 2-10 Williams .................................................................................W, 6-2 Northeastern......................................................................L, 2-11 RMC.........................................................................................W, 4-2

1953 (8-8) COACH: JACK RILEY Rhode Island ......................................................................W, 5-2 Providence ............................................................................ L, 2-4 J10 Amherst ........................................................................W, 5-2 J14 Princeton......................................................................W, 5-4 J17 at Hamilton ................................................................. W, 8-0 J21 Springfield ...................................................................W, 4-2 J24 Boston University .....................................................L, 0-4 J28 Norwich ......................................................................... L, 2-6 J31 Clarkson..........................................................................L, 1-5 F4 Middlebury .....................................................................L, 0-6 F7 Massachusetts ........................................................... W, 8-1 F14 MIT..................................................................................W, 8-3 F18 Rensselaer ................................................................... L, 2-5 F21 at Yale ...........................................................................L, 0-10 F28 at Dartmouth ...............................................................L, 1-7 M7 RMC .................................................................................W, 5-4 1954 (10-7) COACH: JACK RILEY D12 Clarkson ...................................................................... L, 0-12 J9 at Princeton .....................................................................L, 1-7 J13 American Int’l ........................................................... W, 6-4 J16 Amherst ........................................................................W, 4-3 J23 Williams ........................................................................W, 6-3 J27 St. Lawrence ................................................................L, 0-9 J30 Springfield ..................................................................W, 6-3 F3 Yale......................................................................................L, 1-6 F6 New Hampshire...........................................................W, 8-2 F10 Middlebury ...................................................................L, 0-6 F12 at MIT ............................................................................W, 8-3 F13 at Boston Univ. ...........................................................L, 3-6 F17 Hamilton .......................................................................W, 3-2 F20 Massachusetts........................................................W, 9-5 F24 Rhode Island ............................................................ W, 4-0 F27 Dartmouth.................................................................... L, 2-4 M6 at RMC...........................................................................W, 5-3 1955 (8-8) COACH: JACK RILEY J8 Hamilton ..........................................................................W, 3-1 J12 Princeton........................................................................L, 1-6 J15 at Yale .............................................................................L, 0-8 J19 Amherst ..................................................................... W, 10-3 J22 Springfield................................................................... W, 7-2 J26 American Int’l.......................................................... W, 11-3 J29 MIT .............................................................................. W, 10-4 F2 New Hampshire ............................................................W, 3-1 F5 Boston Univ.....................................................................L, 4-7 F12 Middlebury ................................................................... L, 4-5 F16 Williams ........................................................................W, 2-0 F19 at Dartmouth ............................................................L, 4-10 F25 at Clarkson .................................................................L, 0-17 F26 at St. Lawrence ........................................................ L, 1-14 M1 Lehigh ........................................................................... W, 11-2 M5 RMC.........................................................................L, 2-3 (OT) 1956 (11-5) COACH: JACK RILEY Rye ........................................................................................... W, 7-2 J7 at Princeton ......................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) J14 Amherst ........................................................................W, 4-3

J18 Williams ......................................................................... L, 3-4 J21 Middlebury..........................................................W, 2-1 (OT) J28 Colby ..............................................................................W, 6-2 F1 Yale .....................................................................................W, 2-1 F4 American Int’l ............................................................... L, 2-6 F11 at Boston Univ. ...........................................................L, 4-6 F15 New Hampshire...................................................... W, 10-2 F18 Dartmouth ..................................................................W, 4-3 F22 St. Lawrence ...............................................................L, 0-6 F25 at Hamilton .................................................................W, 5-1 F29 Massachusetts...................................................... W, 12-1 M3 Norwich ........................................................................ W, 3-0 M10 at RMC ........................................................................W, 3-2 1956-57 (14-4) COACH: JACK RILEY D15 Holy Cross .................................................................W, 13-3 J5 Tufts................................................................................... L, 4-5 J9 Princeton........................................................................W, 5-2 J12 Norwich .........................................................................W, 5-2 J16 Williams ....................................................................... W, 8-4 J18 at Middlebury ........................................................... W, 6-4 J19 at Dartmouth .............................................................. L, 2-9 J26 American Int’l............................................................W, 3-2 F2 New Hampshire ........................................................... W, 9-1 F6 Hamilton .........................................................................W, 6-2 F9 Boston Univ.......................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) F16 at MIT........................................................................... W, 8-0 F20 Amherst .................................................................... W, 10-3 F23 Boston College ..........................................................L, 4-8 F27 Yale ................................................................................. W, 7-2 M1 at Bowdoin ................................................................. W, 12-1 M2 at Colby ....................................................................... W, 11-3 M9 RMC ................................................................................ W, 7-2 1957-58 (15-4-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D7 Tufts .................................................................................W, 8-5 D14 at Princeton ...............................................................W, 4-3 D18 Norwich ........................................................................W, 5-2 J8 Middlebury ..................................................................... L, 5-9 J11 Brown..............................................................................W, 5-4 J15 Holy Cross .................................................................... W, 9-1 J18 at Yale ................................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) J25 American Int’l ............................................................ W, 7-2 J29 Providence ..................................................................W, 5-0 F1 Colby .................................................................................W, 4-3 F5 Boston Univ....................................................................L, 3-9 F8 Boston College .................................................W, 5-4 (OT) F12 Hamilton .......................................................................W, 6-2 F15 Dartmouth.................................................................... L, 2-3 F19 Northeastern ............................................................ W, 6-0 F21 at Williams...................................................................W, 8-2 F22 at Amherst.................................................................. W, 7-2 F26 St. Lawrence ............................................................... L, 3-4 F28 New Hampshire ........................................................ W, 6-1 M8 at RMC............................................................................W, 5-1 1958-59 (9-10-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D3 Middlebury ....................................................................L, 1-11 D6 MIT ................................................................................ W, 12-0 D13 at Brown ......................................................................W, 5-2 D17 Hamilton ........................................................................W, 2-1 J9 at Norwich .......................................................................L, 1-6 J10 at Dartmouth .............................................................. L, 3-5 J14 Yale ................................................................................... L, 3-5 J17 Boston Univ....................................................................L, 1-5 J25 Providence ...................................................................W, 2-1 J28 American Int’l............................................................. W, 7-1 J31 Colby ...................................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) F3 Princeton .........................................................................L, 1-4 F7 Boston College .............................................................L, 4-8 F11 Williams ........................................................................ W, 4-0 F14 Colgate ....................................................................... W, 14-1 F18 Amherst........................................................................W, 6-2 F21 New Hampshire..........................................................W, 3-1 F27 at Northeastern ........................................................ L, 2-3 F28 at Tufts# ..............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) M7 RMC ...................................................................................L, 1-6 #Cambridge, Mass.

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1948 (11-4-1) COACH: LEN PATTEN J7 New Hampshire............................................................ W, 7-2 J10 Yale..................................................................................W, 4-3 J14 Colgate ...........................................................................L, 4-6 J17 at Cornell ..................................................................... W, 9-0 J21 Vermont...................................................................... W, 10-0 J24 Brown ............................................................................W, 3-2 J30 Boston University..................................................... L, 3-4 J31 St. Lawrence ................................................................W, 2-1 F7 at Harvard .........................................................................L, 1-7 F14 Lehigh ..........................................................................W, 12-2 F18 Massachusetts ....................................................... W, 4-0 F21 Dartmouth .................................................................... L, 2-5 F25 Middlebury ................................................................. W, 7-2 F28 Williams .........................................................................T, 2-2 M6 Clarkson.........................................................................W, 3-1 M13 at Princeton..............................................................W, 5-2 Note: Hockey was converted to major sport status starting with the 1949 season.

1952 (3-12) COACH: JACK RILEY J5 at Princeton ................................................................... L, 2-6 J12 Hamilton ........................................................................ L, 2-4 J16 Yale ..................................................................................L, 1-10 J19 Williams ....................................................................... W, 8-0 J23 Middlebury ................................................................... L, 2-4 J26 Dartmouth ....................................................................L, 1-3 F2 Amherst ............................................................................L, 5-7 F6 Colby ................................................................................ W, 7-3 F9 Boston University .......................................................L, 3-6 F13 Rensselaer ....................................................................L, 1-9 F16 Harvard ...........................................................................L, 1-9 F22 at St. Lawrence ......................................................... L, 2-8 F23 at Clarkson ....................................................................L, 1-7 M1 at RMC .............................................................................L, 4-7 Providence .......................................................................... W, 6-4


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS 1959-60 (16-5-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 Norwich ................................................................W, 4-3 (OT) D5 Colgate .......................................................................... W, 8-0 D12 at Princeton .................................................................L, 1-3 D16 American Int’l ...........................................................W, 6-2 D19 Merrimack ................................................................. W, 8-4 J6 Northeastern................................................................W, 8-3 J13 Brown ..............................................................................W, 5-1 J16 Boston Univ. ..................................................................L, 0-7 J23 Providence ................................................................... L, 2-3 J30 Dartmouth ..........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) F1 Colby ...................................................................................L, 1-4 F3 Amherst ..........................................................................W, 4-2 F6 Middlebury ....................................................................W, 6-2 F10 Hamilton.......................................................................W, 9-5 F13 Massachusetts ........................................................ W, 6-1 F17 Williams ........................................................................ W, 6-4 F19 at New Hampshire................................................... W, 8-1 F20 at Boston College ....................................................L, 3-6 F24 Penn .............................................................................W, 12-2 F26 Cornell .......................................................................... W, 7-2 F27 Tufts .............................................................................. W, 6-0 M5 at RMC ........................................................................... W, 7-5 1960-61 (17-8) COACH: JACK RILEY D3 Princeton.......................................................................W, 6-2 D9 at Yale .............................................................................W, 5-2 D10 at Brown ......................................................................W, 3-2 D14 American Int’l .......................................................... W, 11-1 D16 Ohio Univ...................................................................... W, 7-2 D17 Harvard ...........................................................................L, 1-3 D21 Penn ............................................................................ W, 12-0 D27 vs. Providence# ......................................................... L, 2-3 D28 at Boston Univ.# ....................................................... L, 3-4 D29 vs. Brown ....................................................................W, 5-2 J4 Colgate ............................................................................W, 8-2 J8 Northeastern ................................................................W, 5-1 J13 Middlebury ..................................................................L, 2-11 J14 Bowdoin ............................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) J18 Williams ........................................................................W, 6-3 J20 New Hampshire ........................................................W, 5-0 J21 St. Nick’s ....................................................................... W, 6-1 J28 at Dartmouth.............................................................. L, 3-4 F1 Massachusetts ........................................................... W, 6-1 F8 Hamilton....................................................................... W,, 4-0 F9 Amherst ......................................................................... W, 11-1 F11 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 4-2 F18 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-3 F28 Providence ...................................................................L, 2-7 M4 RMC.................................................................................. W, 7-1 #Boston Tournament 1961-62 (17-6-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D9 at Princeton ..................................................................L, 0-3 D13 American Int’l ........................................................ W, 13-0 D15 Norwich ..............................................................W, 5-4 (OT) D16 at Harvard .....................................................................L, 1-5 D20 Ohio Univ. ................................................................. W, 10-0 J3 Merrimack .....................................................................W, 4-2 J6 Boston Univ. ................................................................. W, 4-0 J10 Massachusetts......................................................... W, 4-1 J13 St. Nick’s (exh.) ........................................................... L, 2-5 J17 Williams .......................................................................... L, 2-3 J20 Penn ...............................................................................W, 7-0 J27 Dartmouth .........................................................W, 6-5 (OT) J29 Western Mich. .........................................................W, 14-3 J31 Yale ...................................................................................W, 3-1 F3 at Colgate ........................................................................L, 1-4 F7 Providence ..................................................................... W, 4-1 F9 at Hamilton ...................................................................W, 2-0 F10 at Middlebury ....................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F17 Boston College ..........................................................W, 5-2 F23 Northeastern ............................................................ W, 7-2 F24 New Hampshire ........................................................W, 5-3 F26 Swiss National Team .............................................W, 5-4 F28 Brown .............................................................................W, 5-1 M3 at RMC ...........................................................................W, 3-2 M6 at Harvard^ .......................................................... L, 1-2 (OT) ^ECAC Tournament

1962-63 (17-6-2) COACH: JACK RILEY D5 Rutgers ....................................................................... W, 15-0 D8 at Brown ..........................................................................L, 1-8 D12 American Int’l ........................................................... W, 7-5 D15 Hamilton ......................................................................W, 5-0 D17 Ohio Univ. ..................................................................... W, 6-1 D19 Harvard ................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) J3 vs. Yale .....................................................................L, 2-3 (OT) J5 Northeastern ................................................................W, 4-2 J9 Princeton........................................................................W, 3-2 J12 at Yale ............................................................................. L, 2-4 J19 Penn................................................................................. W, 7-1 J25 at MIT........................................................................... W, 8-0 J26 at Dartmouth............................................................ W, 6-4 J30 Merrimack ..................................................................W, 8-2 F2 Middlebury .................................................................... W, 4-1 F6 Massachusetts ......................................................... W, 9-0 F8 New Hampshire.................................................W, 3-2 (OT) F9 St. Nick’s.........................................................................W, 6-3 F13 Providence ....................................................................L, 0-1 F15 at Williams ...................................................................W, 5-1 F16 at Boston College..................................................... L, 2-4 F20 Colgate.................................................................. T, 1-1 (OT) F23 Boston Univ. ...............................................................W, 4-3 M2 RMC................................................................................ W, 9-4 M5 at Boston College^ ....................................................L, 1-3 ^ECAC Tournament 1963-64 (20-8) COACH: JACK RILEY D11 American Int’l .......................................................... W, 10-1 D13 Hamilton ...................................................................... W, 8-1 D14 Middlebury ................................................................ W, 11-1 D18 Harvard .........................................................................W, 5-1 D19 vs. Boston College+ ............................................... L, 2-10 D20 vs. Brown+ ....................................................................L, 1-4 D27 at Minn-Duluth ...........................................................L, 2-7 D28 at Minnesota .............................................................L, 3-6 J4 at Massachusetts .................................................... W, 8-0 J11 Bowdoin ...........................................................................L, 6-7 J18 Dartmouth ...................................................................W, 2-0 J22 Colby ..............................................................................W, 5-2 J25 Penn .............................................................................. W, 9-0 J26 New Hampshire ........................................................ W, 6-1 J29 Brown ........................................................................... W, 6-0 F1 Yale .....................................................................................W, 5-1 F3 Ohio University .......................................................... W, 12-1 F5 Merrimack ..................................................................... W, 6-1 F8 Providence ....................................................................W, 5-4 F11 at Princeton ................................................................ W, 4-1 F14 at Boston University ...............................................W, 3-1 F15 at Northeastern ....................................................... W, 7-3 F18 Williams ..................................................................... W, 12-0 F20 Colgate...........................................................................L, 1-4 F22 Boston College ..........................................................W, 5-1 F24 St. Nick’s ..................................................................... W, 6-4 M7 at RMC ............................................................................ L, 2-4 M10 St. Lawrence^............................................................ L, 2-3 +ECAC Holiday Tourn., New York, N.Y. ^ECAC Tournament, West Point, N.Y. 1964-65 (17-7) COACH: JACK RILEY D5 Princeton .......................................................................W, 6-3 D9 Hamilton ..................................................................... W, 12-0 D11 at Middlebury ............................................................W, 5-0 D12 at Harvard ...................................................................W, 5-2 D16 American Int’l .......................................................... W, 8-4 D18 Ohio University ...................................................... W, 10-3 D19 vs. Hamilton ...............................................................W, 7-0 J2 St. Nick’s ..........................................................................W, 2-1 J6 Massachusetts ........................................................... W, 8-1 J9 at Brown ...........................................................................L, 3-7 J16 Penn............................................................................. W, 13-0 J23 at Dartmouth ...............................................................L, 1-3 J25 Providence ......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) J30 at Yale .................................................................. L, 3-4 (OT) F6 Boston University ....................................................... L, 4-5 F8 New Hampshire........................................................... W, 6-1 F10 Colgate ......................................................................... W, 7-3 F13 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-6

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F17 Williams .........................................................................W, 5-2 F19 at Bowdoin ..................................................................W, 4-2 F20 at Colby ....................................................................... W, 6-0 F24 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 2-1 F27 Northeastern .................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) M6 RMC ............................................................................... W, 6-0 1965-66 (17-7-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D5 Middlebury................................................................... W, 4-0 D8 at Princeton ..................................................................L, 4-9 D11 Bowdoin ..............................................................W, 4-3 (OT) D14 American Int’l .......................................................... W, 9-6 D17 Ohio University ....................................................... W, 10-4 D18 Rensselaer ................................................................. W, 7-2 D28 at Wisconsin .............................................................W, 4-2 D29 at Wisconsin .............................................................W, 4-2 J1 St. Nick’s ..........................................................................W, 6-2 J6 Massachusetts ......................................................... W, 12-1 J8 Brown ..............................................................................L, 4-10 J15 Penn ................................................................................ W, 7-2 J22 Dartmouth............................................................ T, 1-1 (OT) J26 Colby ..............................................................................W, 5-2 J29 Yale .................................................................................W, 6-2 F4 at Hamilton .................................................................W, 14-3 F5 at Colgate .........................................................................L, 1-7 F8 New Hampshire.......................................................... W, 6-0 F12 Boston University ...................................................... L, 1-2 F18 at Providence ............................................................W, 6-2 F19 at Boston College..................................................... L, 2-6 F22 at Williams .................................................................. W, 7-3 F26 Northeastern ............................................................. L, 2-5 M1 Merrimack .....................................................................W, 3-1 M5 at RMC ............................................................................L, 3-8 1966-67 (15-12) COACH: JACK RILEY D3 Middlebury ....................................................................W, 5-1 D7 Princeton .......................................................................W, 5-3 D10 Bowdoin .......................................................................W, 9-2 D15 American Int’l ...........................................................W, 6-2 D17 at Rensselaer ..............................................................L, 6-7 D20 Ohio University...................................................... W, 14-0 D27 vs. Minnesota# ......................................................... L, 1-12 D28 vs. North Dakota# .....................................................L, 3-7 D29 at Minn.-Duluth ....................................................... L, 2-10 J1 St. Nick’s ........................................................................... L, 4-5 J2 Wisconsin .........................................................................L, 0-1 J5 Massachusetts ......................................................... W, 17-2 J7 Providence ......................................................................W, 5-1 J14 Penn ............................................................................. W, 14-0 J21 at Dartmouth ..............................................................L, 4-6 J25 at Yale............................................................................. L, 3-4 F1 Hamilton..........................................................................W, 6-2 F4 at Brown ..........................................................................W, 3-1 F6 New Hampshire.................................................. L, 4-5 (OT) F11 Colgate ...........................................................................W, 3-1 F13 Colby ...............................................................................L, 4-6 F17 at Northeastern ........................................................W, 4-2 F18 at Boston University ............................................. L, 2-12 F21 Williams ....................................................................... W, 9-4 F25 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-5 F28 Merrimack .................................................................. W, 7-2 M4 RMC................................................................................. W, 9-1 #St. Paul, Minn. Tournament 1967-68 (14-10) COACH: JACK RILEY D6 at Princeton ..................................................................L, 3-8 D8 at Norwich .....................................................................W, 2-1 D9 at Middlebury............................................................. W, 6-4 D12 American Int’l ............................................................L, 3-6 D14 Hamilton ...................................................................... W, 8-1 D16 Rensselaer .................................................................. L, 4-5 J6 Providence.....................................................................W, 5-3 J13 St. Nick’s .......................................................................W, 8-3 J20 Colgate .......................................................................... L, 2-3 J25 Vermont ........................................................................ W, 6-1 J27 Northeastern .....................................................L, 2-3 (OT) J29 Penn ............................................................................. W, 10-1 F3 Brown...............................................................................W, 4-2 F7 Dartmouth ...................................................................... L, 4-5


YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS F9 at Massachusetts..................................................... W, 6-1 F10 at New Hampshire.................................................... L, 2-9 F14 Yale..................................................................................W, 4-2 F17 Boston University.....................................................W, 5-2 F21 Williams ........................................................................W, 9-2 F23 at Bowdoin .................................................................W, 5-2 F24 at Colby .........................................................................L, 4-6 M2 Boston College .............................................................L, 1-7 M4 Merrimack .................................................................... L, 3-5 M9 at RMC...........................................................................W, 4-2

1969-70 (13-12) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 American Int’l..............................................................W, 8-2 D6 Middlebury ....................................................................W, 2-1 D9 at Princeton .................................................................W, 2-0 D13 at Bowdoin ..................................................................L, 0-4 D16 New Hampshire .......................................................... L, 1-2 D19 vs. Harvard# ................................................................L, 3-9 D20 vs. Brown# ................................................................... L, 2-9 J10 Bishop’s ........................................................................W, 3-2 J17 Penn .................................................................................W, 2-1 J24 at Northeastern .........................................................L, 4-7 J27 Providence...........................................................L, 2-3 (OT) J31 Brown .............................................................................. L, 3-5 F4 Williams ................................................................W, 3-2 (OT) F7 St. Nick’s ................................................................ L, 3-4 (OT) F10 Yale .......................................................................W, 3-2 (OT) F13 at Norwich .........................................................W, 5-4 (OT) F14 at Vermont ................................................................. W, 4-0 F17 Rensselaer.....................................................................L, 2-7 F19 Hamilton...................................................................... W, 3-0 F21 Colgate ..........................................................................W, 3-1 F23 at Connecticut .......................................................... L, 2-3 F25 Dartmouth ..................................................................W, 5-0 F28 Boston College ..........................................................L, 0-4 M2 Merrimack .................................................................... L, 4-5 M7 at RMC ...........................................................................W, 3-2 #ECAC Holiday Tourn., Boston, Mass. 1970-71 (8-14-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 at New Hampshire ....................................................L, 5-11 D5 at Middlebury ............................................................... L, 4-5 D9 Princeton....................................................................... W, 7-2 D12 Bowdoin ............................................................... L, 1-2 (OT) D18 at Sherbrooke............................................................ L, 2-5 D19 at Bishop’s................................................................... L, 2-3 J9 Norwich ........................................................................... W, 7-3

1971-72 (11-14) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 Middlebury.....................................................................W, 3-1 D8 at Princeton ........................................................ L, 4-5 (OT) D11 Harvard .......................................................................... L, 2-5 D17 College Mil. Royal.....................................................W, 8-2 D18 College Mil. Royal ..................................................... L, 2-3 J8 St. Nick’s ......................................................................... W, 6-1 J12 at Connecticut ..........................................................W, 4-2 J15 American Int’l ............................................................ W, 7-6 J22 Northeastern ...................................................W, 3-2 (OT) J25 Yale .................................................................................. L, 5-6 J28 at Providence ............................................................. L, 4-5 J29 at Colgate .......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) F4 Williams ..........................................................................W, 4-2 F5 St. Anselm....................................................................... L, 2-3 F8 Rensselaer ..................................................................... L, 3-4 F12 Brown.....................................................................L, 2-3 (OT) F18 at Norwich...................................................................W, 5-4 F19 at Vermont ................................................................... L, 3-5 F23 SUNY Oswego ............................................................ W, 7-3 F25 at Boston College ....................................................L, 3-6 F26 at Merrimack ..............................................................L, 1-3 F29 New Hampshire .........................................................L, 0-4 M3 Lake Forest ................................................................ W, 8-0 M4 Lake Forest .................................................................W, 6-2 M11 at RMC ...........................................................................L, 4-7 1972-73 (9-17-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D6 Ithaca .............................................................................W, 8-2 D8 MacDonald ................................................................. W, 10-1 D9 MacDonald ...................................................................W, 9-2 D13 Princeton.................................................................... W, 6-4 D15 at College Mil. Royal ...............................................L, 4-6 D16 at College Mil. Royal ..............................................W, 4-2 J6 St. Nick’s ..........................................................................L, 4-6 J9 at Williams .......................................................................L, 1-9 J13 Providence.....................................................................L, 1-6 J20 St. Anselm ....................................................................L, 4-6 J23 Connecticut................................................................ W, 9-1 J25 at Yale..............................................................................L, 1-6 J27 New Hampshire ...........................................................L, 2-7 J31 at Rensselaer..............................................................L, 3-9 F3 American Int’l ................................................................L, 7-8 F5 Vermont ..................................................................L, 2-3 (OT) F7 UMass-Lowell .................................................................L, 1-4 F10 at Brown........................................................................ L, 3-4 F12 Norwich ............................................................... W, 7-6 (OT) F15 Penn ................................................................................L, 4-8 F17 Colgate ...........................................................................L, 3-6 F19 at Northeastern ........................................................L, 3-9 F24 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-5 F27 SUNY-Oswego ............................................................W, 9-2 M2 at Lake Forest ............................................................W, 4-3 M3 at Lake Forest..............................................................L, 6-7 M10 RMC ............................................................................... T, 4-4 1973-74 (20-7-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 Ithaca ...................................................................W, 6-5 (OT) D7 MacDonald ....................................................................W, 9-2 D8 MacDonald ................................................................... W, 7-4 D12 at Princeton .............................................................. L, 4-13 D14 Lake Forest ............................................................. W, 10-2

D15 Lake Forest ............................................................... W, 9-0 D18 St. Nick’s .......................................................................W, 3-1 J3 Providence ......................................................................L, 3-8 J5 at American Int’l .........................................................W, 8-5 J9 Holy Cross ................................................................... W, 10-4 J11 College Mil. Royal ................................................... W, 10-4 J12 College Mil. Royal .................................................. W, 10-4 J19 Amherst ........................................................................W, 8-3 J21 Babson .......................................................................... W, 6-1 J23 Yale .................................................................................W, 3-2 J26 St. Anselm’s ................................................................ W, 7-4 J30 Salem State .................................................................L, 2-7 F1 at Connecticut ............................................................. W, 7-3 F2 at Wesleyan .................................................................. W, 4-1 F6 Williams ........................................................................... L, 4-5 F9 Brown ............................................................................... L, 3-5 F12 UMass-Lowell............................................................. W, 7-4 F15 at Norwich ...................................................................W, 4-3 F16 at New Haven........................................................... W, 12-1 F23 Boston College .......................................................... L, 4-5 F26 Merrimack ..................................................................W, 5-4 M2 at RMC ............................................................................ T, 4-4 M3 at Vermont^.................................................................L, 1-10 ^ECAC Div. II Tournament 1974-75 (18-11) COACH: JACK RILEY D4 New Haven ..................................................................W, 12-3 D7 UMass-Lowell................................................................ L, 3-4 D10 Elmira .............................................................................W, 5-1 D13 at Amherst .................................................................. L, 5-6 D14 at Massachusetts ...................................................L, 6-8 D21 vs. SUNY Oswego# ............................................L, 4-5 (OT) D22 at Elmira# .....................................................................L, 1-6 J4 St. Nick’s .........................................................................W, 5-3 J8 Holy Cross ............................................................W, 6-5 (OT) J11 Merrimack .................................................................... W, 4-1 J18 St. Anselm’s ................................................................ W, 7-4 J21 at Yale ............................................................................. L, 2-9 J24 at Williams ..................................................................W, 8-2 J25 at North Adams ..................................................... W, 10-4 J30 Connecticut .............................................................. W, 8-4 F1 Salem State.................................................................... L, 2-4 F3 Babson ............................................................................W, 3-2 F5 Wesleyan ......................................................................W, 13-2 F7 at SUNY Oswego .........................................................W, 5-3 F8 at Ithaca ..........................................................................L, 1-4 F11 Princeton ............................................................. L, 4-5 (OT) F14 at College Mil. Royal ............................................. W, 16-1 F15 at College Mil. Royal ...............................................W, 6-5 F17 New England College ..............................................W, 4-2 F21 at Boston College ......................................................L, 7-9 F22 at Bridgewater State ........................................... W, 9-4 F25 Norwich ........................................................................ W, 7-4 M1 at Bowdoin^ ..................................................................L, 4-8 M8 RMC .................................................................................W, 2-1 #Elmira, N.Y. Tournament ^ECAC Div. II Tournament 1975-76 (18-9-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D3 Ithaca ............................................................................. W, 7-2 D6 UMass-Lowell ........................................................... W, 10-6 D9 Bridgewater State .................................................. W, 14-1 D12 at Wesleyan ............................................................... W, 4-1 D13 at New Haven ............................................................W, 8-5 J3 St. Nick’s .........................................................................W, 6-2 J7 Holy Cross ....................................................................... L, 3-5 J17 Williams .........................................................................W, 6-3 J20 Bryant .......................................................................... W, 9-6 J23 Air Force ...................................................................... W, 3-0 J24 Air Force ........................................................................ L, 2-9 J28 North Adams ..............................................................W, 6-2 J31 SUNY Oswego ...............................................................L, 1-5 F3 Massachusetts............................................................ L, 2-6 F6 College Mil. Royal.....................................................W, 12-2 F7 College Mil. Royal .................................................... W, 10-0 F10 at Princeton .................................................................L, 3-7 F13 at Norwich .....................................................................L, 2-7 F15 at Babson ....................................................................W, 8-3 F18 St. Anselm’s ................................................................ W, 4-1 F21 Boston College...........................................................L, 4-6

PAGE 91 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1968-69 (20-7-1) COACH: JACK RILEY D5 American Int’l.............................................................. W, 7-3 D7 Middlebury ................................................................... W, 9-6 D11 Princeton ......................................................................W, 3-1 D14 Norwich ........................................................................W, 5-2 D27 at Rensselaer+........................................................... L, 2-5 D28 vs. Waterloo+ ............................................................. L, 2-9 D29 vs. Ohio University................................................. W, 9-4 J4 at Dartmouth.........................................................T, 7-7 (OT) J11 St. Nick’s........................................................................W, 5-3 J18 Bishop’s ...................................................................... W, 10-1 J21 at Penn ......................................................................... W, 9-6 J25 Northeastern ..............................................................W, 5-1 J31 at Providence ...............................................................L, 1-5 F1 at Brown...........................................................................L, 4-6 F5 Massachusetts............................................................W, 5-1 F8 Bowdoin.......................................................................... W, 7-3 F12 at Yale .............................................................................W, 3-1 F14 at Hamilton ....................................................... W, 8-7 (OT) F15 at Colgate..................................................................... L, 3-4 F17 Vermont...............................................................W, 3-2 (OT) F21 at Williams................................................................. W, 11-2 F22 at Boston College .................................................... L, 3-5 F24 Connecticut ............................................................ W, 10-2 M1 New Hampshire............................................................L, 5-7 M3 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 6-5 M8 RMC ................................................................................W, 5-2 M22 vs. Air Force# ..........................................................W, 12-4 M23 vs. Air Force#........................................................... W, 8-0 +RPI Tournament, Troy, N.Y. #St. Petersburg, Fla.

J13 at Penn ............................................................................L, 1-5 J16 St. Nick’s ...................................................................... W, 3-0 J23 Northeastern .............................................................W, 3-2 J26 at Williams ......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) J27 at Yale ................................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) J30 Providence ...................................................................L, 0-3 F2 at Rensselaer ..................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) F6 at Brown .......................................................................... L, 0-5 F11 Merrimack .................................................................... L, 3-5 F13 at American Int’l .......................................................W, 5-1 F15 Connecticut ............................................................. W, 12-0 F20 Colgate..........................................................................W, 3-1 F22 at Dartmouth ............................................................. L, 3-5 F28 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-5 M2 Vermont...........................................................................L, 1-4 M6 RMC ............................................................................... W, 6-0


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

F24 Salem State ................................................................W, 5-1 F27 at Connecticut ........................................................ W, 11-0 F28 at Merrimack ............................................................. L, 3-5 M2 New England ...............................................................W, 9-2 M6 at Union^ ......................................................................W, 3-2 M10 at Merrimack^ .......................................................... L, 2-8 M13 at RMC.......................................................................... T, 4-4 ^ECAC Div. II Tournament 1976-77 (22-6-1) COACH: JACK RILEY N20 Norwich .............................................................W, 5-4 (OT) N26 Framingham State ............................................... W, 11-5 D1 SUNY Plattsburgh ..................................................... W, 11-1 D4 New England College ............................................... W, 7-2 D8 Bridgewater State ................................................. W, 10-4 D10 at Massachusetts .................................................. W, 7-2 D11 at Holy Cross ..............................................................W, 6-5 D14 Wesleyan ..................................................................... W, 6-1 D17 Bryant .......................................................................... W, 11-2 J8 St. Nick’s .......................................................................W, 14-3 J13 Elmira .......................................................................... W, 10-4 J22 SUNY Oswego ............................................................W, 4-2 J26 North Adams ............................................................. W, 6-4 J28 at Air Force ..................................................................L, 3-6 J29 at Air Force .................................................................. L, 2-6 F1 New Haven .................................................................... W, 9-0 F4 at College Mil. Royal .............................................. W, 10-2 F5 at College Mil. Royal ...............................................W, 15-2 F8 Princeton .......................................................................W, 6-2 F11 at Salem State...........................................................W, 4-3 F12 at St. Anselm’s.............................................................L, 4-7 F16 Connecticut................................................................W, 5-2 F19 Boston College .......................................................... L, 2-4 F21 at UMass-Lowell ........................................................ L, 3-5 F23 Babson .........................................................................W, 5-0 F26 Merrimack ......................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) M5 American Int’l^ ................................................ W, 7-6 (OT) M9 Union^ ............................................................................L, 4-11 M12 RMC ............................................................................ W, 11-2 ^ECAC Div. II Tournament, West Point, N.Y. 1977-78 (13-12-1) COACH: JACK RILEY N19 at Norwich ......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) N25 Framingham State ........................................ L, 8-9 (OT) N28 Elmira ...........................................................................L, 4-11 N30 SUNY Plattsburgh ..................................................W, 6-5 D3 New England College ................................................ W, 7-1 D7 Massachusetts ...........................................................L, 0-4 D9 at Bryant .........................................................................L, 5-7 D10 at North Adams........................................................W, 6-3 D14 at Connecticut ...................................................... W, 10-6 D16 SUNY Cortland ..........................................................W, 5-3 J7 St. Nick’s................................................................W, 5-4 (OT) J21 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 4-3 J28 SUNY Oswego ............................................................W, 5-2 F1 Salem State.....................................................................L, 2-7 F3 College Mil. Royal ..................................................... W, 11-4 F4 College Mil. Royal% ................................................... W, 1-0 F9 New Haven............................................................ T, 4-4 (OT) F11 St. Anselm’s ...................................................................L, 1-5 F14 UMass-Lowell..............................................................L, 3-9 F18 at RMC ............................................................................L, 6-7 F20 at SUNY Oswego ..................................................... W, 8-4 F22 Babson ........................................................................ W, 8-4 F24 at Boston College .....................................................L, 4-7 F25 at Bridgewater State ..............................................L, 5-7 F28 Holy Cross...................................................................W, 6-3 M4 at SUNY Plattsburgh^ ..............................................L, 3-6 %Won by forfeit .............................................................................. ^ECAC Div. II Tournament 1978-79 (7-21) COACH: JACK RILEY N18 Norwich ............................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) N22 Princeton ......................................................................L, 1-8 N25 at Union .......................................................................W, 5-0 D6 Bryant .............................................................................W, 6-5 D8 at Massachusetts ................................................. W, 10-5 D9 at New England College .......................................... L, 2-6

D12 Connecticut ...................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) D15 SUNY Cortland ..........................................................W, 5-3 D16 Bridgewater State ................................................... L, 2-5 J3 St. Nick’s ........................................................................L, 3-10 J5 vs. American Int’l# ......................................................L, 3-6 J6 vs. Norwich# ......................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) J9 at Williams ......................................................................L, 3-6 J20 SUNY Oswego ..............................................................L, 1-4 J27 RMC ..............................................................................W, 12-4 J31 Salem State .................................................................L, 0-6 F2 at College Mil. Royal ..................................................L, 6-8 F3 at College Mil. Royal ...................................................L, 6-7 F9 Boston College ............................................................ L, 2-6 F10 St. Anselm’s ............................................................... W, 6-4 F14 UMass-Lowell............................................................ L, 5-13 F16 at SUNY Plattsburgh ............................................... L, 2-5 F17 at Elmira....................................................................... L, 2-13 F19 at New Haven.............................................................. L, 2-5 F23 at Babson..................................................................... L, 2-5 F24 at Framingham State .............................................L, 4-8 F27 Holy Cross ................................................................... L, 1-12 M1 Hamilton ........................................................................W, 5-3 #Merrimack Tournament, N. Andover, Mass. 1979-80 (19-12-1) COACH: JACK RILEY N10 Upsala........................................................................ W, 13-4 N14 Iona............................................................................. W, 10-4 N17 at Norwich ...........................................................L, 7-8 (OT) N21 at UMass-Lowell ..................................................... W, 3-0 N24 Union.............................................................................W, 9-2 N28 Bridgewater State .................................................W, 4-2 N30 at SUNY Cortland....................................................W, 8-2 D1 at SUNY Cortland .......................................................W, 7-0 D5 at Connecticut..................................................W, 5-4 (OT) D8 at Middlebury......................................................T, 3-3 (OT) D11 Williams ..........................................................................L, 7-8 J3 St. Nick’s .........................................................................W, 5-3 J5 vs. Framingham State# ............................................. W, 7-1 J6 at Holy Cross#.............................................................L, 4-10 J7 at Boston State ........................................................ W, 10-3 J9 Framingham State ..................................................... W, 9-1 J12 Bryant ......................................................................... W, 10-4 J16 UMass-Boston .........................................................W, 13-2 J19 Merrimack .....................................................................L, 2-7 J23 New England .............................................................L, 8-10 J26 at RMC ........................................................................... L, 2-5 J29 Westfield State ......................................................... L, 5-6 F1 College Mil. Royal ..................................................... W, 14-1 F6 Babson ............................................................................W, 4-3 F8 at Salem State ............................................................. L, 2-4 F9 at St. Anselm’s ........................................................... W, 8-6 F15 SUNY Oswego............................................................L, 4-10 F16 American Int’l ............................................................. L, 2-4 F20 New Haven ..................................................................W, 8-2 F23 Boston College ..........................................................L, 3-9 F26 at Hamilton .................................................................W, 3-1 M1 SUNY Oswego^........................................................... L, 6-12 #Holy Cross Tourn., Worcester, Mass. ^ECAC Div. II West Playoffs 1980-81 (21-13-1) COACH: JACK RILEY O31 at Alaska Anchorage ..............................................W, 2-1 N1 at Alaska Anchorage .................................................L, 6-9 N2 at Alaska Fairbanks............................................... W, 10-2 N3 at Alaska Fairbanks................................................W, 12-2 N8 Upsala............................................................................ W, 11-1 N11 at Westfield State .................................................... L, 4-5 N15 Norwich ........................................................................ L, 7-11 N19 Iona ...............................................................................W, 9-2 N21 vs. SUNY Cortland# .................................................W, 5-2 N22 at SUNY Oswego# .....................................................L, 2-7 N26 at New Haven ..........................................................L, 6-10 N29 at Union ...............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) D3 Connecticut .................................................................. W, 7-1 D5 Middlebury....................................................................W, 5-2 D6 at Williams ........................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) J3 St. Nick’s ........................................................................ W, 8-6 J7 at American Int’l .......................................................... L, 2-6 J9 at Boston State ........................................................W, 12-4

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J10 at Babson .....................................................................L, 0-6 J12 St. Anselm’s ...............................................................W, 14-5 J14 Framingham State ................................................... W, 7-3 J17 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 6-5 J21 Elmira ...............................................................................L, 7-8 J23 SUNY Cortland .........................................................W, 12-2 J24 SUNY Cortland .......................................................... W, 11-1 J30 Hamilton ......................................................................W, 4-3 J31 Salem State .................................................................L, 0-9 F4 UMass-Lowell................................................................ L, 5-9 F7 College Mil. Royal .......................................................W, 8-5 F13 Kent State ................................................................... W, 7-4 F14 Kent State ...................................................................W, 9-2 F21 RMC ............................................................................. W, 10-5 F24 Holy Cross .....................................................................L, 5-7 F27 at Boston College......................................................L, 1-5 F28 at UMass-Boston ....................................................W, 9-2 #Miller Invitational, Oswego, N.Y. 1981-82 (25-11) COACH: JACK RILEY O30 Kent State .................................................................W, 9-3 O31 Kent State ..................................................................W, 9-2 N7 at St. Lawrence.............................................................L, 5-7 N11 at Elmira .......................................................................W, 8-3 N14 at Norwich ..................................................................W, 5-2 N20 SUNY Oswego ............................................................L, 3-6 N22 Brown ..........................................................................L, 6-10 N24 at Yale.......................................................................... L, 3-12 N25 Alaska Anchorage................................................... W, 7-2 N27 Union .............................................................................W, 9-2 D1 Westfield State ...........................................................W, 8-5 D4 at UMass-Boston ..................................................... W, 11-1 D5 at Middlebury ..............................................................W, 7-0 D8 at Connecticut ..........................................................L, 4-10 D10 UMass-Boston ............................................................L, 5-7 D12 at Upsala .................................................................... W, 8-0 J2 St. Nick’s ....................................................................... W, 8-6 J4 at Boston State ....................................................... W, 14-4 J6 at Holy Cross ............................................................... W, 8-4 J7 at Framingham State ................................................W, 5-3 J9 at Northeastern ..........................................................L, 2-11 J16 St. Anselm’s..................................................................L, 3-8 J20 Williams ........................................................................W, 6-5 J22 SUNY Cortland ........................................................ W, 13-6 J23 SUNY Cortland ........................................................... W, 7-3 J26 at Iona ....................................................................... W, 13-6 J29 Bentley .........................................................................W, 8-2 F3 UMass-Lowell............................................................... W, 7-5 F6 at RMC ............................................................................. L, 3-4 F7 at Hamilton.......................................................................L, 1-7 F10 Upsala .........................................................................W, 12-3 F13 College Mil. Royal.................................................. W, 10-4 F20 Boston College ...........................................................L, 4-7 F22 American Int’l ...........................................................W, 9-3 M5 vs. Eastern Mich.# ................................................. W, 10-5 M6 vs. Penn State# ...................................................... W, 10-3 #Kent State (Ohio) Tournament 1982-83 (25-11-1) COACH: JACK RILEY O29 Kent State................................................................ W, 17-3 O30 Kent State .............................................................. W, 10-2 N3 Elmira .............................................................................. W, 7-3 N6 St. Lawrence ................................................................. L, 0-2 N11 at Westfield State .................................................... L, 4-5 N13 Norwich ......................................................................... L, 2-4 N19 at SUNY Oswego ..............................................T, 3-3 (OT) N21 at Brown .....................................................................L, 4-10 N24 at UMass-Lowell....................................................... L, 2-6 N26 at Union ........................................................................ L, 5-8 N30 Connecticut ..............................................................W, 5-4 D3 Bowdoin ........................................................................ W, 8-4 D4 Middlebury....................................................................W, 5-3 D10 Upsala.........................................................................W, 12-2 J3 St. Nick’s .......................................................................... L, 2-3 J5 at Framingham State ............................................ W, 10-3 J7 Ryerson......................................................................... W, 10-2 J8 Ryerson ............................................................................ L, 4-5 J11 Boston College............................................................ L, 2-6 J13 Colby............................................................................... W, 7-6 J15 at Merrimack................................................................L, 1-8


YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS J19 Iona ................................................................................W, 5-2 J21 at SUNY Cortland ..................................................... W, 8-4 J22 at SUNY Cortland .....................................................W, 5-3 J26 Brown ............................................................................W, 3-2 J27 Hamilton ...................................................................... W, 6-4 J29 Northeastern .............................................................W, 6-5 F2 at Williams.................................................................. W, 10-2 F5 at College Mil. Royal .............................................. W, 10-3 F8 Bentley............................................................................W, 6-3 F12 at St. Anselm’s.......................................................... W, 6-4 F16 at American Int’l ......................................................W, 8-3 F19 RMC ................................................................................. L, 2-3 F21 at Upsala ......................................................................W, 8-2 F23 Holy Cross ....................................................................W, 2-1 F25 vs. Iowa State#...................................................... W, 10-3 F26 vs. Lake Forest# .......................................................W, 5-4 #Kent State (Ohio) Tournament

1984-85 (17-13) COACH: JACK RILEY O26 Ryerson .......................................................................W, 9-3 O27 Ryerson ......................................................................W, 13-5 N3 at UMass-Lowell .........................................................L, 4-6 N8 Iona ................................................................................. W, 7-3 N10 Norwich ........................................................................W, 5-2 N13 at Union .......................................................................W, 5-3 N17 at Colgate..................................................................... L, 2-9 N18 at Cornell .....................................................................L, 4-6 N23 Harvard ......................................................................... L, 4-5 N24 Dartmouth ........................................................ L, 3-4 (OT) N27 Princeton ......................................................................L, 1-4 D1 Middlebury ..........................................................W, 3-2 (OT) D7 at Rensselaer ...............................................................L, 0-8 D8 at Vermont........................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) J4 Clarkson ........................................................................... L, 3-5 J5 St. Lawrence .................................................................. L, 4-5 J11 at Brown .........................................................................L, 3-6 J12 at Yale ............................................................................. L, 2-4 J19 Buffalo .........................................................................W, 15-2 J20 Buffalo ..........................................................................W, 6-3 J23 Babson ..........................................................................W, 3-2 J26 Hamilton ......................................................................W, 9-3 J29 at Williams .................................................................. W, 7-2 F2 St. Anselm’s ..................................................................W, 4-3 F6 Trinity .............................................................................. W, 6-4

1985-86 (18-11-1) COACH: JACK RILEY O25 Ryerson .......................................................................W, 5-0 O26 Ryerson ....................................................................... W, 7-2 N1 Elmira ................................................................................ L, 2-6 N9 at St. Anselm’s ....................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N10 at Norwich ........................................................ W, 7-6 (OT) N15 Colgate ......................................................................... W, 7-6 N16 Cornell ........................................................................... L, 3-4 N22 at Harvard ...................................................................L, 4-6 N23 at Dartmouth................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) D6 Rensselaer ....................................................................L, 3-6 D8 Vermont ...........................................................................L, 0-1 D10 at Princeton................................................................ L, 2-6 J3 at Clarkson ......................................................................L, 4-7 J4 at St. Lawrence% ........................................................ W, 1-0 J10 Brown .............................................................................. L, 3-4 J11 Yale.....................................................................................L, 1-5 J17 at Hamilton ..................................................................W, 5-4 J18 at Holy Cross ...............................................................W, 3-1 J25 at RMC .......................................................................... W, 9-7 J28 Williams ........................................................................W, 9-3 J31 Iona.............................................................................. W, 10-0 F5 Trinity ...............................................................................W, 6-2 F7 Notre Dame ................................................................... W, 7-5 F8 Notre Dame ..................................................................W, 6-3 F12 American Int’l .......................................................... W, 11-2 F17 at Middlebury .............................................................W, 7-0 F23 Babson .......................................................................... L, 2-5 F25 SUNY Plattsburgh............................................. W, 6-5 (OT) F28 Kent State ..................................................................W, 8-3 M1 Kent State ....................................................................W, 8-3 %Won by forfeit 1986-87 (9-19-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O31 St. Anselm’s................................................................W, 6-2 N7 Norwich...........................................................................W, 4-2 N14 at Cornell* ...................................................................W, 6-5 N15 at Colgate* .................................................................. L, 2-4 N21 Dartmouth*.................................................................W, 4-3 N22 Harvard* .......................................................................L, 3-6 N29 at Princeton* .................................................... L, 1-2 (OT) N30 Princeton* ......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) D5 at Vermont* ....................................................................L, 0-7 D6 at Rensselaer* ............................................................W, 4-3 J2 St. Lawrence*................................................................L, 2-11 J3 Clarkson* ........................................................................W, 6-3 J9 at Yale*..............................................................................L, 0-3 J10 at Brown* ............................................................ L, 3-4 (OT) J14 Holy Cross ............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J16 at Notre Dame ............................................................L, 4-6 J17 at Notre Dame ............................................................W, 4-2 J24 RMC ................................................................................. L, 3-4 J27 at Williams ..................................................................... L, 1-2 J30 Colgate* .......................................................................W, 2-0 J31 Cornell* ...........................................................................L, 0-6 F6 at Harvard* ......................................................................L, 5-7 F7 at Dartmouth* ............................................................... L, 2-3 F13 Rensselaer* ................................................................. L, 2-8 F14 Vermont* ........................................................................L, 1-3 F20 at Clarkson* .................................................................L, 4-7 F21 at St. Lawrence* ........................................................L, 3-8 F27 Brown* .............................................................................L, 5-7 F28 Yale* .....................................................................W, 6-5 (OT) *ECAC game 1987-88 (9-19-2) COACH: ROB RILEY O30 American Int’l ......................................................... W, 6-4 N6 vs. Holy Cross# ...........................................................W, 6-2 N7 at SUNY Plattsburgh# ................................................ W, 4-3 (OT) N13 Cornell*.......................................................................... L, 2-6 N14 Colgate* ........................................................................L, 0-3 N20 at Dartmouth* ..........................................................W, 3-2 N21 at Harvard* .................................................................. L, 2-6

N27 Princeton* .................................................................... L, 3-4 N28 at Princeton* ..............................................................L, 3-7 D4 Vermont* ................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) D5 Rensselaer* ................................................................... L, 2-8 D11 Iona ................................................................................W, 8-2 J2 at St. Lawrence* ..........................................................L, 1-10 J3 at Clarkson* ...................................................................L, 4-9 J8 Yale* ...................................................................................L, 0-6 J9 Brown* .....................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) J15 Notre Dame ...................................................................L, 1-6 J16 Notre Dame ..................................................................L, 4-8 J23 at RMC ..........................................................................W, 4-3 J26 Williams ........................................................................W, 5-4 J29 at Colgate* ....................................................................L, 1-5 J30 at Cornell* ....................................................................L, 3-8 F5 Harvard*............................................................................L, 1-5 F6 Dartmouth* .................................................................... L, 3-4 F12 at Rensselaer*.......................................................... L, 2-10 F13 at Vermont*.................................................................. L, 4-5 F19 St. Lawrence* .............................................................. L, 5-6 F20 Clarkson* .......................................................................L, 1-3 F26 at Brown* ................................................................... W, 6-4 F27 at Yale* ..........................................................................W, 8-3 *ECAC game #Cardinal Classic, Plattsburgh, N.Y. 1988-89 (13-16-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O29 Holy Cross .................................................................. W, 4-1 N4 UMass-Lowell ..............................................................W, 5-3 N11 at Colgate* ................................................................... L, 2-6 N12 at Cornell* .................................................................... L, 3-5 N18 Harvard*.........................................................................L, 1-6 N19 Dartmouth* ........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) N25 at Princeton*.....................................................L, 6-7 (OT) N26 Princeton* ..................................................................W, 4-3 D2 at Rensselaer* .............................................................L, 4-6 D3 at Vermont* ....................................................................L, 1-8 D9 Iona.................................................................................. W, 4-1 J2 Notre Dame ...................................................................W, 3-2 J3 Notre Dame .................................................................... L, 2-5 J6 Clarkson* .........................................................................L, 3-9 J7 St. Lawrence* ..................................................................L, 1-5 J13 at Yale*.............................................................................L, 1-3 J15 at Brown*......................................................................W, 3-2 J21 RMC.......................................................................W, 3-2 (OT) J27 Cornell*..........................................................................W, 4-3 J28 Colgate*..........................................................................L, 1-9 J31 at Williams ...................................................................W, 4-3 F3 at Dartmouth* ...............................................................L, 1-3 F4 at Harvard* .....................................................................L, 1-11 F10 Vermont* ....................................................................... L, 4-5 F11 Rensselaer* .................................................................W, 4-3 F17 at St. Lawrence* ......................................................... L, 3-4 F18 at Clarkson*..................................................................L, 1-4 F21 Villanova ...................................................................... W, 6-0 F24 Yale* ...............................................................................W, 5-2 F25 Brown* .......................................................................... W, 7-2 *ECAC game 1989-90 (10-16-4) COACH: ROB RILEY O27 Air Force ......................................................................W, 4-2 O28 Air Force ..................................................................... W, 4-0 N10 Colgate* ........................................................................ L, 0-2 N11 Cornell* .........................................................................W, 5-2 N17 at Harvard*..................................................................W, 4-3 N18 at Dartmouth* ........................................................... L, 2-3 N25 Iona ...............................................................................W, 4-3 N28 at Princeton* ............................................................. L, 3-5 D1 Rensselaer*...................................................................W, 5-3 D2 Vermont* ............................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) D8 at Clarkson* .................................................................. L, 2-9 D9 at St. Lawrence*...........................................................L, 3-7 J2 at UMass-Lowell .......................................................... L, 4-5 J5 Brown*............................................................................... L, 2-3 J6 Yale* ....................................................................................L, 2-7 J12 at Cornell* ..................................................................... L, 2-5 J13 at Colgate*...........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) J16 Princeton* ..................................................................... L, 2-3 J20 at RMC ..................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J26 at Notre Dame .......................................................... W, 7-4

PAGE 93 • WWW.GOARMYSPORTS.COM

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1983-84 (28-5-1) COACH: JACK RILEY O28 Brock ............................................................................W, 6-3 O29 Brock ............................................................................ W, 7-4 N2 at Elmira.................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N5 at St. Lawrence ...........................................................L, 6-9 N10 Westfield State......................................................W, 13-3 N13 at Norwich ................................................................... L, 2-5 N18 SUNY Oswego............................................................ W, 7-3 N21 Brown ............................................................................ W, 6-1 N25 Union.............................................................................W, 5-4 N30 Framingham State ................................................. W, 9-1 D2 at Colby ..........................................................................W, 5-2 D3 at Bowdoin .................................................................... L, 2-3 D9 Upsala ........................................................................... W, 10-1 D10 SUNY Cortland ......................................................... W, 11-1 J1 SUNY Geneseo ............................................................. W, 4-0 J4 at Holy Cross ................................................................W, 5-2 J6 Waterloo ......................................................................... W, 7-5 J7 Waterloo .......................................................................... W, 7-4 J12 Trinity ..............................................................................W, 5-1 J14 Merrimack ...................................................................W, 6-2 J17 at Iona ............................................................................W, 5-1 J24 Williams ........................................................................W, 6-2 J27 Buffalo .........................................................................W, 12-3 J28 Buffalo ..........................................................................W, 9-5 F1 UMass-Boston ........................................................... W, 11-2 F4 St. Anselm’s .................................................................. W, 7-2 F8 at Upsala...................................................................... W, 15-1 F11 College Mil. Royal ...................................................W, 12-2 F16 American Int’l ......................................................... W, 16-3 F18 at RMC ........................................................................... L, 5-8 F20 at Hamilton ................................................................W, 4-2 F24 at Boston College .....................................................L, 1-9 F26 at Middlebury............................................................ W, 7-4 M3 UMass-Lowell .............................................................W, 5-3

F9 RMC ................................................................................. W, 6-4 F14 at American Int’l ......................................................W, 6-5 F16 Merrimack....................................................................W, 2-1 F23 at Babson..................................................................... L, 3-5 F26 Holy Cross...................................................................W, 8-3


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

J27 at Notre Dame ...........................................................W, 5-2 J30 Williams ........................................................................W, 4-3 F2 Dartmouth* ...........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) F3 Harvard*........................................................................... L, 2-5 F9 at Vermont*.................................................................. W, 3-0 F10 at Rensselaer* ........................................................... L, 2-6 F16 St. Lawrence* .............................................................. L, 3-5 F17 Clarkson* ........................................................................L, 1-4 F23 at Yale*........................................................................... L, 5-6 F24 at Brown*......................................................................L, 3-6 *ECAC game 1990-91 (8-18-3) COACH: ROB RILEY O26 at Air Force ................................................................. L, 2-5 O27 at Air Force .........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N9 at Cornell* ...................................................................... L, 0-5 N10 at Colgate* .........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N16 Dartmouth* ................................................................W, 6-3 N17 Harvard* ........................................................................ L, 2-5 N20 Villanova ....................................................................W, 12-2 N24 Holy Cross .................................................................. W, 7-2 N27 Princeton* ....................................................................L, 3-6 N30 at Vermont* ................................................................ L, 3-5 D1 at Rensselaer* .............................................................. L, 3-5 D7 St. Lawrence* .......................................................T, 2-2 (OT) D8 Clarkson* .........................................................................L, 1-3 D30 Notre Dame ...............................................................W, 4-2 J4 at Brown* ......................................................................... L, 3-5 J5 at Yale* .............................................................................. L, 2-4 J11 Colgate* .......................................................................... L, 2-5 J12 Cornell* ........................................................................... L, 3-5 J15 at Princeton* ...............................................................L, 3-6 J19 Iona ............................................................................... W, 9-0 J26 RMC ............................................................................... W, 11-1 F1 at Harvard*.................................................................... L, 2-12 F2 at Dartmouth*....................................................W, 4-3 (OT) F8 Rensselaer* ....................................................................L, 4-7 F9 Vermont* ..........................................................................L, 1-3 F15 at Clarkson* ...................................................................L, 1-7 F16 at St. Lawrence* ........................................................L, 3-6 F22 Brown* ................................................................W, 3-2 (OT) F23 Yale* ................................................................................ L, 2-4 *ECAC game 1991-92 (13-17-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O25 Queen’s .......................................................................W, 5-2 O26 Queen’s .............................................................. W, 7-6 (OT) N1 at Providence+................................................................L, 1-7 N2 vs. Elmira+ ............................................................ L, 5-6 (OT) N8 American Int’l .............................................................W, 6-2 N9 Merrimack .....................................................................L, 6-9 N15 Alaska Fairbanks% .................................................. W, 1-0 N16 Alaska Fairbanks%.................................................. W, 1-0 N23 Iona ............................................................................. W, 11-0 N26 Villanova ....................................................................W, 12-5 N29 at Boston College ....................................................L, 1-4 N30 at Boston University.............................................. L, 2-3 D3 Scranton ...................................................................... W, 11-2 D6 at Merrimack ............................................................... L, 2-3 D27 vs. Clarkson^...............................................................L, 1-11 D28 vs. Colgate^ ..............................................................L, 3-10 J3 at Maine# ...................................................................... L, 5-15 J4 vs. Concordia#................................................................L, 1-3 J10 UMass-Boston ............................................................ L, 3-4 J11 Salem State ................................................................. W, 7-4 J17 at Notre Dame ............................................................. L, 3-5 J18 at Notre Dame ............................................................ L, 4-5 J25 at RMC ..........................................................................W, 3-2 J31 Alabama-Huntsville ........................................ L, 5-6 (OT) F1 Alabama-Huntsville ....................................................W, 6-2 F7 Air Force ............................................................................L, 3-7 F8 Air Force .........................................................................W, 5-4 F21 Connecticut ....................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) F22 New England .............................................................. W, 7-4 F28 Kent State ....................................................................L, 1-4 F29 Kent State ................................................................... L, 2-4 +USAir Classic, Providence, R.I. ^Syracuse Invitational #Maine Dexter Classic, Orono, Maine %Won by forfeit

1992-93 (16-11-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O24 Boston College ......................................................... L, 2-6 O30 Ryerson ........................................................................W, 5-1 O31 Ryerson ........................................................................W, 9-2 N7 at Union ..........................................................................W, 6-5 N13 Brock ............................................................................ W, 8-4 N14 Brock ............................................................................. W, 4-1 N21 UMass-Boston ........................................................... L, 2-3 N28 vs. Connecticut# ...................................................... L, 2-4 N29 vs. Canisius# ............................................................ W, 4-0 D4 at Villanova ...................................................................W, 7-0 D29 at Denver+ ................................................................... L, 3-4 D30 vs. Air Force+ .............................................................W, 5-3 J2 Boston University .........................................................L, 1-8 J9 at Salem State ............................................................. L, 2-3 J15 SUNY Plattsburgh.....................................................W, 5-3 J16 Fairfield ........................................................................ W, 9-0 J19 Connecticut ........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J22 Scranton ................................................................... W, 10-0 J23 Iona ................................................................................W, 8-2 J29 at Air Force .................................................................. L, 2-5 J30 at Air Force ...................................................................L, 1-4 F6 RMC ..................................................................................W, 6-2 F12 at Alabama-Huntsville .............................................L, 3-7 F13 at Alabama-Huntsville ............................................ L, 2-4 F19 New England College .............................................W, 5-3 F20 American Int’l ............................................................L, 4-6 F26 St. Bonaventure ....................................................... W, 4-1 F27 St. Bonaventure...................................................... W, 11-2 #Holy Cross Tourn., Worcester, Mass. +Denver (Colo.) Cup 1993-94 (14-16) COACH: ROB RILEY O16 at Providence..............................................................L, 3-7 O22 Ryerson .......................................................................W, 8-3 O23 Ryerson .......................................................................W, 6-2 O30 Rensselaer ................................................................. L, 2-9 O31 at Merrimack ............................................................. L, 5-6 N6 Union .................................................................................L, 3-7 N12 Concordia ....................................................................W, 4-3 N19 at Kent State ............................................................. L, 2-3 N20 at Kent State ............................................................. L, 2-4 N23 Villanova ......................................................................W, 8-2 N28 at Boston College ...................................................L, 0-9 D4 Bentley ............................................................................ W, 7-1 D5 at Scranton .................................................................. W, 8-1 D7 Connecticut ......................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) D29 vs. UMass-Lowell# ................................................... L, 2-6 D30 vs. Mt. Allison# .........................................................W, 3-2 J7 North Adams .................................................................W, 4-3 J9 at UMass-Lowell ............................................................L, 1-7 J14 Colgate ...........................................................................L, 0-6 J15 Iona................................................................................. W, 8-1 J21 Air Force ..........................................................................L, 3-7 J22 Air Force ...................................................................... W, 6-4 J29 Massachusetts ......................................................... L, 3-4 F4 Fairfield ......................................................................... W, 11-2 F5 Holy Cross......................................................................W, 4-2 F12 at RMC ......................................................................... W, 6-0 F18 at Alaska Fairbanks ................................................. L, 0-5 F19 at Alaska Fairbanks ................................................. L, 3-4 F25 Canisius ........................................................................ L, 2-3 F26 Canisius .......................................................................W, 4-2 #RPI Tournament, Troy, N.Y. 1994-95 (20-13-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O15 College Mil. Royal ....................................................W, 7-0 O16 College Mil Royal .....................................................W, 7-0 O21 Providence...................................................................L, 3-6 O22 Boston College .........................................................L, 3-9 O28 Mt. Allison (exh.).......................................................W, 3-1 O29 Mt. Allison (exh.)......................................................W, 5-3 N4 at Union........................................................................... L, 3-4 N5 at Rensselaer ..............................................................W, 5-2 N15 Scranton .................................................................... W, 12-1 N18 at Canisius .................................................................. L, 2-5 N19 at Canisius .................................................................W, 4-3 N22 Tufts ............................................................................ W, 10-1 N26 at Colgate ...................................................................L, 3-8

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D2 Hobart .............................................................................. L, 3-5 D3 at Villanova .................................................................. W, 4-0 D6 Connecticut .................................................................W, 4-2 D30 Torped Yaroslavl ....................................................... L, 0-2 J6 Merrimack ...................................................................... L, 2-5 J7 Williams ............................................................................W, 3-1 J13 UMass-Lowell ...............................................................L, 3-7 J15 at Cornell ....................................................................... L, 2-8 J17 North Adams .............................................................. W, 9-0 J20 Iona ............................................................................... W, 9-0 J21 SUNY Brockport ..................................................... W, 10-2 J24 at Massachusetts.................................................... L, 2-3 J27 Bentley ..........................................................................W, 6-2 J28 Elmira ....................................................................T, 5-5 (OT) F2 at Fairfield .................................................................... W, 6-0 F4 at Holy Cross ........................................................L, 2-3 (OT) F7 at Iona .............................................................................W, 5-0 F11 RMC ................................................................................. W, 6-1 F17 at Air Force ................................................................... L, 2-5 F18 at Air Force ..................................................................L, 6-9 F21 Connecticut College...............................................W, 5-2 F25 Fairfield ......................................................................W, 12-3 1995-96 (24-9-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O27 Massachusetts.........................................................L, 3-6 N3 Rensselaer .................................................................. W, 6-4 N4 Union ...................................................................... T, 0-0 (OT) N10 Canisius .......................................................................W, 5-4 N11 St. Michael’s .............................................................. W, 8-0 N17 Framingham State .................................................. W, 6-1 N18 Framingham State................................................. W, 6-0 N24 vs. Holy Cross# ......................................................... W, 6-1 N25 at SUNY Plattsburgh#...........................................W, 4-3 D1 Hobart .............................................................................W, 6-2 D2 at Fairfield..................................................................... W, 6-1 D5 Villanova ........................................................................ W, 9-0 D8 at Princeton ..................................................................L, 0-4 D9 Bentley ...........................................................................W, 5-2 J2 at Northeastern ........................................................... L, 2-3 J6 vs. Babson+ .................................................................... L, 2-3 J7 vs. SUNY Brockport+ ..................................................W, 5-4 J12 Cornell............................................................................ W, 4-1 J13 Colgate ........................................................................... L, 3-4 J20 SUNY Brockport ....................................................... W, 4-1 J21 at Yale ............................................................................W, 2-0 J23 Nichols .......................................................................... W, 4-1 J26 at Notre Dame ............................................................L, 3-7 J27 at Notre Dame ............................................................ L, 2-4 J30 Quinnipiac ................................................................ W, 10-2 F2 Fairfield ......................................................................... W, 11-0 F3 Sacred Heart ................................................................W, 7-0 F6 Iona .................................................................................. W, 8-1 F10 at RMC ..........................................................................W, 2-0 F16 Air Force ........................................................................W, 3-1 F17 Air Force ........................................................................W, 7-0 F20 Scranton ................................................................... W, 10-0 F23 at UMass-Lowell ..................................................... L, 3-12 F24 at Merrimack.............................................................. L, 2-9 #Cardinal Classic, Plattsburgh, N.Y. +SNET Classic, Simsbury, Conn. 1996-97 (19-13-2) COACH: ROB RILEY O11 at Minn.-Duluth ........................................................ W, 6-4 O12 at Minn.-Duluth..........................................................L, 0-3 O18 at Providence..............................................................L, 2-7 O22 Polish Nat’l Team (exh)W, 4-3(OT) O25 Mt. Allison.........................................................W, 5-4 (OT) O26 Mt. Allison ..................................................................W, 5-2 N1 at Dartmouth ................................................................L, 0-3 N2 at Rensselaer ............................................................... L, 2-6 N8 Minn.-Mankato ............................................................L, 4-6 N9 Minn.-Mankato ...........................................................W, 5-3 N15 St. Michael’s ............................................................. W, 8-0 N16 UMass-Lowell............................................................. L, 3-4 N22 at Massachusetts...................................................L, 0-8 N30 vs. Bowdoin+ ...................................................W, 4-3 (OT) D1 at Williams+ ...................................................................W, 5-4 D3 Villanova ........................................................................ W, 9-0 D6 Princeton.............................................................. T, 4-4 (OT) D7 at Fairfield ..................................................................... W, 8-1


YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS J3 Merrimack .......................................................................L, 1-5 J10 at Colgate ........................................................... L, 5-6 (OT) J11 at Cornell ............................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) J17 Iona ...............................................................................W, 13-3 J18 SUNY Brockport ....................................................... W, 6-4 J21 Holy Cross ....................................................................W, 6-3 J24 SUNY Cortland .......................................................... W, 8-0 J25 Yale .................................................................................. L, 3-4 J31 at Canisius................................................................... W, 7-4 F1 at Union .............................................................................L, 1-8 F8 RMC .................................................................................. W, 7-3 F14 Fairfield....................................................................... W, 11-2 F15 Northeastern ..............................................................W, 2-1 F21 Quinnipiac.................................................................... W, 6-1 F22 Sacred Heart .................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) F28 at Air Force.................................................................W, 6-3 M1 at Air Force.................................................................... L, 2-5 +Williams (Mass.) Tournament

1998-99 (16-16-3) COACH: ROB RILEY O23 Ala.-Huntsville...................................................L, 2-3 (OT) O24 Alabama-Huntsville .................................................W, 2-1 O30 at Colgate ................................................................... L, 3-4 O31 at Rensselaer...............................................................L, 1-7 N6 at Nebraska-Omaha .......................................W, 6-5 (OT) N7 at Nebraska-Omaha...................................................W, 2-1 N13 Merrimack ................................................................... L, 3-5 N14 UMass-Lowell ............................................................. L, 3-4 N20 SUNY Cortland........................................................ W, 10-1 N24 at Connecticut .......................................................... L, 2-4 N27 Holy Cross................................................................... W, 6-1 N28 Northeastern..............................................................L, 1-5 D1 Sacred Heart ................................................................W, 6-3 D8 Fairfield .......................................................................... W, 9-1 J2 vs. UMass-Lowell# ........................................................L, 1-6 J3 vs. Air Force# .................................................................. L, 1-2 J8 St. Michael’s ................................................................. W, 7-2 J9 SUNY Geneseo .................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) J12 Quinnipiac ..................................................................... L, 2-3 J15 SUNY Brockport ..............................................W, 5-4 (OT) J16 SUNY Brockport ........................................................W, 5-2 J19 at Sacred Heart .........................................................W, 2-1

1999-2000 (18-15-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O15 at Bemidji State* ...................................................... L, 2-5 O16 at Bemidji State* ......................................................L, 0-3 O22 vs. Fairfield^$ ....................................................T, 2-2 (OT) O23 vs. Iona^ .......................................................................L, 0-3 O29 Massachusetts ............................................... L, 0-1 (OT) O30 American Int’l ........................................................... L, 2-3 N6 Bentley ...........................................................................W, 6-2 N12 Manhattanville ......................................................... W, 6-1 N13 Connecticut ...............................................................W, 6-3 N16 at Sacred Heart ......................................................... L, 1-2 N19 Union ................................................................................L, 1-7 N20 Iona...............................................................................W, 4-2 N26 at Holy Cross .............................................................W, 3-1 N27 Rensselaer .................................................................. L, 2-5 N30 at Fairfield .................................................................W, 2-0 D3 Assumption ................................................................. W, 9-0 D7 Fairfield...........................................................................W, 6-2 J7 at Alabama-Huntsville* ............................................... L, 1-2 J8 at Alabama-Huntsville* ..............................................L, 1-5 J14 Providence.......................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) J15 Colgate ........................................................................... L, 2-5 J21 at Yale ..............................................................................L, 1-5 J22 at Iona ..........................................................................W, 5-3 J28 Scranton .................................................................... W, 10-1 F1 Sacred Heart................................................................. W, 4-1 F4 Niagara* ............................................................................L, 1-4 F5 Niagara* ........................................................................... L, 2-5 F12 at RMC ...........................................................................L, 0-3 F25 Findlay* .......................................................................... L, 2-4 F26 Findlay*...................................................................... W, 10-6 M3 Air Force* ....................................................................... L, 2-4 M4 Air Force* .......................................................................L, 0-3 *CHA game ^Quinnipiac Cup, Hamden, Conn. $Army won in shootout 2000-01 (14-20-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O13 Seneca..........................................................................W, 6-3 O20 at Iona* ........................................................................L, 3-6 O22 at Union .........................................................................L, 1-4 O27 at Quinnipiac*..............................................................L, 1-4 O28 at Rensselaer ............................................................L, 0-3 N10 at Bentley* .................................................................W, 5-2 N11 at Holy Cross* ............................................................. L, 2-3 N17 Bentley* ........................................................................W, 9-2 N19 UMass-Lowell..............................................................L, 0-7 N21 Fairfield* .......................................................................W, 2-1 N25 Connecticut* .............................................................. L, 2-3 N26 Holy Cross* ................................................................W, 3-2 D2 at Canisius* ................................................................... L, 2-5 D9 Mercyhurst* ................................................................... L, 1-2 D31 Queen’s.................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J5 Mercyhurst* ....................................................................L, 1-8 J6 at Sacred Heart* ..........................................................L, 0-4 J14 at Connecticut* ...........................................................L, 5-7 J19 American Int’l*...........................................................W, 6-5 J20 at American Int’l* ..................................................... L, 4-5 J23 Quinnipiac* .........................................................W, 2-1 (OT) J26 Canisius* ......................................................................W, 4-3 J27 Sacred Heart* ............................................................. L, 2-5 F2 at Bentley* ......................................................................L, 4-7 F3 Iona*.................................................................................W, 6-5 F10 RMC ................................................................................. W, 7-1 F13 at Holy Cross* ............................................................W, 4-3

F16 Sacred Heart* ............................................................ W, 4-1 F17 Fairfield* .........................................................................L, 1-4 F21 at Fairfield* .................................................................W, 6-2 F23 at Canisius* .................................................................L, 4-8 F24 at Mercyhurst* ...........................................................L, 1-3 M2 at Air Force ..................................................................W, 5-2 M3 at Air Force ................................................................... L, 3-4 M10 at Quinnipiac^ ................................................. L, 3-4 (OT) *MAAC game ^MAAC Tournament 2001-02 (11-18-6) COACH: ROB RILEY O12 Seneca...........................................................................W, 5-1 O13 Seneca..........................................................................W, 2-0 O19 at Niagara .......................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) O20 at Niagara ................................................................... L, 2-4 O26 Quinnipiac*.................................................................. L, 2-5 N2 at Iona* ........................................................................... L, 2-4 N3 American Int’l*............................................................ W, 7-2 N9 at Mercyhurst* ...................................................L, 2-3 (OT) N10 at Mercyhurst* .......................................................... L, 2-5 N16 Sacred Heart* ............................................................ L, 2-4 N17 at Sacred Heart* ........................................................L, 0-1 N23 at Connecticut* ...............................................T, 2-2 (OT) N24 at UMass-Lowell* .....................................................L, 0-4 N30 Bentley* ......................................................................W, 9-2 D1 at Bentley* ............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) D7 Air Force .......................................................................... L, 2-4 D8 Air Force.......................................................................... L, 4-5 J4 Connecticut*.........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J5 Connecticut*........................................................ T, 4-4 (OT) J11 at Holy Cross* .............................................................. L, 2-5 J12 Holy Cross* ......................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) J18 at Quinnipiac*.............................................................. L, 2-4 J19 Quinnipiac* ..................................................................W, 4-2 J25 at American Int’l* ....................................................W, 4-3 J26 American Int’l* ...........................................................W, 5-1 F1 at Canisius* .....................................................................L, 1-4 F2 at Canisius* .......................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) F9 at RMC ....................................................................L, 2-3 (OT) F15 Fairfield* ....................................................................... W, 7-4 F16 at Fairfield* .................................................................W, 3-2 F22 at Iona* ..............................................................W, 6-5 (OT) F23 Iona* ............................................................................... L, 2-5 M1 Mercyhurst*.................................................................W, 3-2 M2 Canisius* ...............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) M9 at Mercyhurst^ ............................................................ L, 1-2 *MAAC game; ^MAAC Tournament 2002-03 (18-16) COACH: ROB RILEY O18 Seneca .........................................................................W, 4-3 O25 Holy Cross*...................................................................L, 1-4 O26 Rensselaer..................................................................L, 0-3 N1 at Iona* .......................................................................... W, 3-0 N2 Iona* .................................................................................W, 3-1 N5 at Quinnipiac* ............................................................... L, 2-4 N8 at Sacred Heart*..........................................................L, 1-3 N9 Bentley* .......................................................................... L, 2-4 N15 at Mercyhurst* .......................................................... L, 3-5 N16 at Canisius*................................................................. L, 2-3 N22 Quinnipiac* ..................................................................W, 3-1 N23 St. Clair ........................................................................ W, 8-1 N30 at Vermont..................................................................L, 4-8 D6 at Connecticut*...........................................................L, 0-3 D7 at Fairfield* ....................................................................W, 3-1 J3 at American Int’l* .......................................................W, 4-2 J4 American Int’l* .............................................................W, 4-2 J10 Bentley* ............................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) J11 at Bentley* .....................................................................L, 1-5 J18 at Air Force ...................................................................W, 2-1 J19 at Air Force ...................................................................W, 2-1 J24 Connecticut* ...............................................................L, 4-6 J31 Holy Cross* ................................................................. W, 4-0 F1 at Holy Cross* ................................................................W, 3-1 F8 RMC ................................................................................. W, 4-0 F14 at Fairfield* .................................................................. L, 2-4 F15 Fairfield* .......................................................................W, 4-2 F21 Canisius* .......................................................................W, 3-1 F22 Mercyhurst* ...............................................................W, 6-3 F28 at Sacred Heart*....................................................... L, 0-2

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

1997-98 (18-15-1) COACH: ROB RILEY O17 Findlay ......................................................................... W, 11-3 O18 Findlay ..........................................................................W, 3-2 O25 Colgate ............................................................... L, 3-4 (OT) O31 Dartmouth .....................................................................L, 1-7 N1 Rensselaer ......................................................................L, 1-4 N5 at UMass-Lowell ................................................ L, 1-2 (OT) N14 Providence................................................................... L, 4-5 N15 St. Michael’s ..............................................................W, 4-2 N21 Nebraska-Omaha ......................................................W, 2-1 N22 Nebraska-Omaha .................................................... W, 4-1 N25 at Princeton ...............................................................L, 3-9 N28 vs. St. Anselm’s# .....................................................W, 5-3 N29 at New England# .....................................................W, 9-3 D6 at Merrimack ............................................................... L, 3-4 D29 at Rensselaer+ ..........................................................L, 0-4 D30 vs. Yale+ ........................................................................ L, 2-3 J3 Massachusetts ...........................................................W, 5-0 J10 at Villanova .................................................................. W, 9-1 J13 Connecticut ............................................................. W, 10-2 J17 at Minn.-Mankato ...................................................... L, 2-3 J18 at Minn.-Mankato.......................................................L, 2-7 J23 Union ...............................................................................L, 3-6 J24 at Yale..............................................................................L, 1-5 J27 at Connecticut College ..........................................W, 2-1 J30 Iona................................................................................ W, 8-1 J31 Scranton ..................................................................... W, 11-0 F7 at RMC .....................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) F13 at Northeastern .......................................................W, 6-5 F14 Fairfield....................................................................... W, 11-2 F17 Nichols ........................................................................ W, 10-0 N20 Quinnipiac ................................................................. W, 8-4 F21 at Sacred Heart ........................................................W, 5-2 F27 Air Force ........................................................................ L, 2-3 F28 Air Force ....................................................................... L, 3-5 #PAL Tournament, Manchester, N.H. +Rensselaer Tournament, Troy, N.Y.

J22 at Union ......................................................................... L, 0-2 J23 Yale ...................................................................................L, 1-5 J26 Princeton .......................................................................L, 1-4 J29 Nichols ........................................................................ W, 14-1 J30 at Scranton ................................................................W, 7-0 F6 RMC ...................................................................................W, 3-1 F12 at Providence.............................................................. L, 2-6 F14 Assumption................................................................. W, 4-1 F16 Iona ........................................................................T, 5-5 (OT) F19 at Massachusetts.................................................... L, 0-2 F20 Bentley .......................................................................... W, 7-1 F27 at Air Force .................................................................. L, 3-4 F28 at Air Force.........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) #Silverado Shootout, Duluth, Minn.


YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

M1 Sacred Heart* ....................................................W, 2-1 (OT) M9 at Quinnipiac*...............................................................L, 0-7 M15 at Holy Cross^ ........................................................... L, 2-3 *MAAC game; ^MAAC Tournament 2003-04 (12-18-3) COACH: ROB RILEY O10 Ryerson .........................................................................W, 3-1 O11 Ryerson.........................................................................W, 9-2 O18 American Int’l* ..........................................................W, 2-1 O24 at Bentley* ..................................................................W, 3-1 O25 at Rensselaer ............................................................L, 0-6 N1 at Bentley* ............................................................T, 2-2 (OT) N7 at Mercyhurst* ..............................................................L, 2-7 N8 at Canisius* ..................................................................W, 3-2 N14 Sacred Heart* .............................................................L, 1-4 N15 at Sacred Heart*........................................................L, 1-5 N21 Quinnipiac* .........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) N23 at American Int’l* .....................................................L, 1-4 D5 at Holy Cross*................................................................L, 1-3 D6 at Holy Cross* ..............................................................L, 0-3 J3 St. Clair .............................................................................W, 3-1 J9 American Int’l*.............................................................W, 5-2 J10 at American Int’l* .............................................T, 2-2 (OT) J16 Air Force........................................................................W, 4-3 J17 Air Force .........................................................................L, 0-3 J23 Quinnipiac* ................................................................... L, 0-2 J24 at Quinnipiac* .............................................................L, 0-3 J30 Canisius* ......................................................................W, 4-3 J31 Canisius*........................................................................W, 5-1 F7 at RMC .............................................................................W, 3-2 F13 Mercyhurst* ................................................................ L, 2-5 F14 Mercyhurst*.................................................................L, 3-6 F20 at Connecticut*......................................................... L, 2-3 F22 Holy Cross* .................................................................. L, 2-5 F27 at Connecticut* ........................................................W, 5-2 F28 Sacred Heart* ............................................................ L, 2-3 M5 Bentley*...........................................................................L, 1-5 M6 Connecticut* ...............................................................L, 6-9 M12 American Int’l^ ......................................................... L, 3-4 *AHA game; ^AHA Tournament 2004-05 (11-21-3) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O8 Ryerson ................................................................W, 3-2 (OT) O9 Ryerson ...........................................................................W, 5-1 O16 at Sacred Heart*........................................................L, 1-4 O22 at Bentley* .........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) O23 Rensselaer ...................................................................L, 1-5 O29 at Cornell .......................................................................L, 1-7 O30 at Colgate ..................................................................W, 3-2 N5 Mercyhurst* .................................................................. L, 0-2 N6 Canisius*......................................................................... L, 2-3 N12 at American Int’l* ..................................................... L, 0-2 N19 Holy Cross* .................................................................W, 2-0 N20 Holy Cross* ........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N27 at Quinnipiac* .............................................................L, 1-5 D3 at Holy Cross*............................................................... L, 2-3 D4 at Connecticut* ............................................................ L, 1-2 D30 St. Clair ........................................................................W, 5-2 J7 Connecticut* ...................................................................L, 0-1 J8 Connecticut* ................................................................ W, 1-0 J14 at Air Force ................................................................... L, 2-5 J15 at Air Force .................................................................... L, 1-2 J21 at Sacred Heart* .........................................................L, 1-5 J28 at Quinnipiac* ................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) J29 Quinnipiac* ................................................................... L, 3-4 F5 RMC .................................................................................. W, 6-1 F8 Sacred Heart* ................................................................ L, 1-2 F11 at Mercyhurst* ................................................. L, 4-5 (OT) F12 at Mercyhurst* ...........................................................L, 0-4 F18 Bentley* ........................................................................W, 3-2 F19 Bentley* .........................................................................W, 3-1 F25 American Int’l* ..........................................................W, 5-3 F26 American Int’l*..................................................T, 3-3 (OT) M4 at Canisius* .................................................................. L, 2-4 M5 at Canisius* .................................................................. L, 2-5 M9 American Int’l^ ..........................................................W, 5-3 M12 at Quinnipiac^ ........................................................... L, 0-2 *AHA game; ^AHA Tournament

2005-06 (12-18-7) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O14 at Nebraska-Omaha#.............................................. L, 2-3 O15 vs. Ferris State# ........................................................ L, 2-5 O21 Colgate ...........................................................................L, 1-6 O23 at Rensselaer ............................................................L, 0-4 O28 at Holy Cross*.............................................................L, 0-1 O29 at Holy Cross* ............................................................ L, 3-5 N4 at Canisius* .................................................................... L, 1-2 N5 at Canisius* ..........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) N11 Air Force ...................................................................... W, 3-0 N12 Air Force.............................................................W, 4-3 (OT) N18 at Bentley* .......................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) N19 at Bentley* ...................................................................L, 1-4 N26 at Connecticut* ........................................................W, 2-1 N29 at Sacred Heart* ...................................................... L, 2-4 D4 Sacred Heart*...............................................................W, 2-1 D8 American Int’l*....................................................T, 2-2 (OT) D29 at Connecticut*!.......................................................L, 0-3 D30 vs. Massachusetts!................................................. L, 1-2 J6 Mercyhurst* ..................................................................W, 5-0 J7 Mercyhurst*.........................................................W, 3-2 (OT) J13 Holy Cross* ................................................................... L, 3-4 J14 Holy Cross* ..................................................................W, 3-2 J17 at American Int’l*......................................................W, 2-0 J20 Canisius* ..................................................................... W, 3-0 J21 Canisius* ........................................................................ L, 0-2 J27 Bentley* ................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) J28 Bentley*................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F3 Sacred Heart* ............................................................. W, 4-0 F4 at Sacred Heart*..........................................................L, 0-3 F11 at RMC ...................................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F17 Connecticut*................................................................ L, 4-5 F18 Connecticut* ......................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F24 at Mercyhurst* .......................................................... L, 2-6 F25 at Mercyhurst* .........................................................W, 3-2 M3 at American Int’l* .....................................................W, 6-3 M4 American Int’l* ............................................................ L, 2-4 M11 at Bentley^ ......................................................L, 3-4 (2OT) *AHA game; ^AHA Tournament #Maverick Stampede, Omaha, Neb. ! Toyota/UConn Classic 2006-07 (19-12-5) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O6 Ryerson ..........................................................................W, 5-0 O7 Ryerson............................................................................W, 3-1 O13 American Int’l*..........................................................W, 2-0 O14 Sacred Heart*....................................................T, 2-2 (OT) O20 at Connecticut* .......................................................W, 5-4 O21 at Connecticut* ........................................................ W, 7-3 O27 vs. Notre Dame# .......................................................L, 0-3 O28 vs. Alabama-Huntsville# ........................................ L, 1-2 N3 at American Int’l* .......................................................W, 2-1 N4 American Int’l* ............................................................W, 4-2 N10 at Bentley* .................................................................W, 4-3 N11 at Bentley* ...................................................................L, 0-3 N17 at Holy Cross* ............................................................. L, 3-4 N18 at Holy Cross* ............................................................ L, 2-5 N21 at Sacred Heart* .............................................. T 3-3 (OT) N24 at Union .........................................................................L, 1-4 D6 Holy Cross* ...........................................................T, 2-2 (OT) D29 RIT* ................................................................................W, 2-1 D30 RIT* ................................................................................ L, 3-5 J5 at Canisius* ....................................................................W, 5-1 J6 at Canisius* .................................................................... L, 3-4 J12 Mercyhurst* ................................................................W, 6-3 J13 Mercyhurst* .................................................................W, 2-1 J19 at Air Force* ..................................................................L, 1-4 J20 at Air Force*................................................................W, 2-0 J26 Connecticut* ......................................................T, 2-2 (OT) J27 Connecticut* ............................................................. W, 3-0 J30 at American Int’l* .....................................................L, 0-3 F3 Holy Cross* ............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F16 Bentley* .........................................................................W, 3-1 F17 Bentley*.........................................................................W, 4-2 F23 Sacred Heart* ............................................................ L, 3-5 F24 at Sacred Heart* ......................................................W, 4-2 M10 Bentley^ ......................................................................W, 6-2 M16 vs. Connecticut^1 ....................................................W, 3-1 M17 vs. Air Force^! ..............................................................L, 1-6 *AHA Game; ^AHA Tournament

PAGE 96 • @ARMY_HOCKEY

#at Lightning College Hockey Classic, Tampa, Fla. !AHA Tournament Semifinals and Finals at Rochester, N.Y. 2007-08 (19-14-4) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O12 at Bemidji State ......................................................... L, 1-2 O13 at Bemidji State........................................................L, 0-3 O19 RPI....................................................................................L, 1-3 O27 Connecticut* ............................................................. W, 4-1 N3 at Holy Cross* .............................................................W, 5-2 N4 at Holy Cross*................................................................L, 1-3 N9 at American Int’l* ......................................................W, 4-3 N10 American Int’l* .......................................................... W, 7-1 N16 Bentley* ....................................................................... W, 7-2 N17 Bentley* ......................................................................... L, 2-3 N23 at RIT* ..................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) N24 at RIT* ................................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) N30 Sacred Heart*...........................................................W, 4-2 D1 at Sacred Heart*.......................................................... L, 2-4 D29 at Connecticut*#.......................................................L, 1-4 D30 vs. Brown#........................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) J5 Union.................................................................................. L, 2-3 J6 at Merrimack .................................................................L, 1-4 J11 at Mercyhurst* ............................................................L, 0-3 J12 at Mercyhurst* ........................................................... L, 2-4 J18 Canisius*........................................................................L, 0-3 J19 Canisius*........................................................................W, 2-1 J25 Air Force*.......................................................................W, 2-1 J27 Air Force* .......................................................................W, 2-1 F1 Connecticut* ..................................................................W, 3-1 F2 Connecticut* ............................................................... W, 6-0 F8 Holy Cross* ....................................................................W, 2-0 F9 Holy Cross* ............................................................. T, 1-1 (OT) F15 American Int’l* ......................................................... W, 4-0 F16 at American Int’l* ................................................... W, 4-0 F22 at Bentley* .................................................................... L, 1-2 F23 at Bentley*..................................................................W, 6-3 F29 at Sacred Heart*...................................................... W, 6-1 M1 Sacred Heart* .............................................................W, 3-2 M7 American Int’l!........................................................... W, 4-0 M8 American Int’l! ...........................................................W, 5-2 M15 vs. Mercyhurst@ ..................................................... L, 2-4 *AHA Game # Toyota/UConn Classic ! AHA Quarterfinal Playoff Series @ AHA Semifinals, Rochester, N.Y. 2008-09 (11-16-6) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O18 Merrimack ....................................................................L, 0-1 O24 at Connecticut* ........................................................ L, 3-4 O25 at Connecticut* ........................................................L, 3-6 O31 Sacred Heart* ...........................................................W, 6-3 N1 at Sacred Heart* ................................................T, 3-3 (OT) N7 at American Int’l* ....................................................... L, 3-4 N8 American Int’l*.............................................................W, 3-1 N14 at RIT* ..........................................................................W, 5-3 N15 at RIT* ...........................................................................L, 3-6 N21 at Mercyhurst* .......................................................... L, 2-6 N22 at Mercyhurst*..........................................................L, 3-6 N28 at Union........................................................................ L, 4-5 D6 at Canisius* ................................................................... L, 0-2 D7 at Canisius*...................................................................W, 4-3 D28 at #20 Dartmouth! ............................................L, 4-5 OT D29 vs. UMass! ....................................................................L, 1-4 J2 at Ohio State# ................................................................L, 1-6 J3 vs. #2 Miami# ................................................................W, 3-2 J9 Mercyhurst* ...................................................................W, 2-1 J10 Mercyhurst* ................................................................W, 4-3 J17 Holy Cross* ...........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J18 Holy Cross* ......................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) J23 at #20 Air Force* ........................................................L, 1-5 J24 at #20 Air Force*........................................................ L, 2-3 J30 Bentley*.........................................................................L, 0-6 J31 Bentley* ..........................................................................L, 1-4 F6 Canisius* ........................................................................ W, 4-1 F7 Canisius* .................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) F13 at Sacred Heart* ......................................................W, 4-3 F14 Sacred Heart* .............................................................W, 3-1 F20 RIT* ................................................................................. L, 2-3 F21 RIT* .......................................................................... T, 1-1 (OT)


YEAR-BY-YEAR SECTION MARKER RESULTS F27 American Int’l* ..................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F28 at American Int’l* .....................................................W, 3-1 M13 at Mercyhurst^......................................................... L, 2-6 M14 at Mercyhurst^ ......................................................... L, 0-5 *Atlantic Hockey contest ! Dartmouth Tournament, Hanover, N.H. with Dartmouth, Massachusetts, Bemidji State # Ohio State Tournament, Columbus, Ohio, with Ohio State, Clarkson, Miami ^ Atlantic Hockey quarterfinal series

2010-11 (11-20-4) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O9 vs. Colgate& ...................................................................L, 0-1 017 Holy Cross* ......................................................... L, 4-5 (OT) O23 Connecticut* .............................................................. L, 2-3 O29 at Canisius* ................................................................L, 0-4 O30 at Canisius* ................................................................W, 2-1 N5 at Massachusetts ....................................................W, 5-2 N12 at Mercyhurst* ..........................................................L, 0-4 N13 at Mercyhurst* ...........................................................L, 1-4 N19 AIC* ................................................................................W, 9-3 N20 Sacred Heart*.................................................. T, 4-4 (OT) N26 Niagara*.........................................................................L, 1-4 N27 Niagara* ....................................................................... W, 4-1 D4 Colgate ............................................................................L, 0-3 D10 Bentley* ........................................................................W, 3-1 D11 at #13 Union................................................................. L, 2-6 D28 Russian Junior (exh) ..............................................L, 4-11 D30 Merrimack ........................................................ L, 1-2 (OT) J1 vs. Harvard! ..................................................................L, 2-4 L J2 vs. Ohio State! ............................................................... L, 3-5 J7 RIT* ............................................................................. T, 1-1 (OT) J8 RIT* .................................................................................... L, 2-5 J14 at Air Force* ..................................................................L, 1-5 J15 at Air Force* ................................................................W, 5-4 J21 Robert Morris* ...........................................................W, 3-2 J22 Robert Morris* ..................................................T, 2-2 (OT)

2011-12 (4-23-7) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O8 #11 Union .........................................................................L, 1-8 O14 Connecticut*............................................................... L, 0-5 O15 at #13 Merrimack ..................................................... L, 2-3 O22 vs. #14/16 Colgate& .......................................T, 2-2 (OT) N4 at RIT*.....................................................................T, 2-2 (0T) N5 at RIT*.............................................................................. L, 3-5 N11 at Sacred Heart* .......................................................W, 2-1 N12 Bentley* .........................................................................L, 1-4 N18 at American Int’l*............................................T, 3-3 (OT) N19 Brown..................................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) N25 at Robert Morris*..................................................... L, 2-5 N26 at Robert Morris* ...........................................T, 3-3 (OT) D2 Mercyhurst* ................................................................... L, 1-2 D3 Mercyhurst* .........................................................T, 3-3 (OT) D10 at Holy Cross* .............................................................L, 1-3 D29 at Connecticut!*....................................................... L, 0-2 D30 vs. RPI!.........................................................................W, 3-2 J6 Canisius*.......................................................................... L, 2-4 J7 Canisius* ........................................................................... L, 1-2 J13 at Niagara*.....................................................................L, 1-5 J14 at Niagara*....................................................................L, 0-3 J20 Air Force* .............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J21 Air Force ......................................................................... L, 2-4 J27 Bentley* ......................................................................... L, 2-6 J28 at Bentley* ...................................................................W, 3-1 F4 Royal Military College .............................................. W, 9-1 F7 at Connecticut* ...........................................................W, 4-2 F10 Holy Cross*....................................................................L, 1-6 F11 Holy Cross* ................................................................... L, 2-4 F17 at American Int’l* ...................................................... L, 2-5 F18 American Int’l* ........................................................... L, 2-3 F24 at Sacred Heart* ....................................................... L, 3-5 F25 Sacred Heart*............................................................. L, 3-5 M2 at Holy Cross^ ............................................................. L, 2-3 M3 at Holy Cross^ ............................................................. L, 2-5 *Atlantic Hockey Association contest & Cape Cod Classic, Hyannis, Mass. ! Toyota/UConn Classic with Connecticut, RPI and UMass-Lowell ^Atlantic Hockey Association first round playoff series

D30 at Canisius* ......................................................W, 1-0 (OT) J4 #19 Robert Morris* ....................................................W, 5-0 J5 #19 Robert Morris* ......................................................L, 1-4 J11 at Air Force* ...................................................................L, 1-4 J12 at Air Force*# ......................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J18 RIT* .................................................................................. L, 5-6 J19 RIT* .................................................................................. L, 2-4 J26 Royal Military College% ........................................ W, 4-1 F1 at Mercyhurst*...................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) F2 at Mercyhurst* ..............................................................L, 1-8 F10 American Int’l* ...........................................................L, 0-3 F15 at Bentley* ................................................................... L, 3-5 F16 Bentley* ................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) F22 Connecticut*............................................................... L, 3-4 F23 Connecticut* ..............................................................L, 3-6 F26 at American Int’l* ......................................................L, 1-4 M1 Holy Cross* ....................................................................L, 3-6 M2 at Holy Cross*.............................................................. L, 0-2 M8 at Mercyhurst^ ............................................................L, 1-3 M8 at Mercyhurst^ ........................................................... L, 2-5 ! Icebreaker with Maine, Notre Dame ad NebraskaOmaha at Spring Center, Kansas City, Mo. *Atlantic Hockey Association contest #on CBS Sports Network %Exhibition contests ^ Atlantic Hockey Association first round playoff series

2012-13 (7-22-5) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O12 vs. Nebraska-Omaha!...............................................L, 1-5 O13 vs. #20 Maine!............................................................ L, 3-4 O19 Sacred Heart* ...........................................................W, 5-2 O20 at Sacred Heart* ............................................ T, 4-4 (OT) O26 Penn State .................................................................. L, 0-5 O27 at Holy Cross* ........................................................... W, 7-2 N9 Niagara* .......................................................................... L, 0-5 N10 Niagara* .........................................................................L, 1-4 N16 Sacred Heart* ...........................................................W, 3-2 N17 at Brown........................................................................L, 0-3 N29 at Bentley* .................................................................W, 3-2 D1 American Int’l* ............................................................W, 3-2 D7 at Connecticut* ..................................................T, 2-2 (OT) D11 at Merrimack .............................................................. L, 2-4 Dec. 27 Russian Junior All-Stars% ............................. L, 2-6 D29 at Canisius* .................................................................L, 1-5

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

2009-10 (11-18-7) COACH: BRIAN RILEY O9 at Nebraska-Omaha!.................................................L, 4-6 O10 vs. St. Lawrence! ...................................................... L, 2-5 O17 at Merrimack ..............................................................L, 3-6 O24 Mercyhurst* ......................................................T, 3-3 (OT) O25 Mercyhurst* ................................................................L, 1-4 O30 at Colgate ......................................................... T, 4-4 (OT) O31 at Rensselaer.............................................................W, 2-1 N16 at RIT* ............................................................................L, 1-6 N17 at RIT* ............................................................................. L, 1-2 N13 AIC* .................................................................................W, 2-1 N14 at AIC* ........................................................................... L, 0-2 N20 at Bentley* ..................................................................W, 5-1 N21 at Bentley*................................................................... L, 3-4 N27 Canisius* ..................................................................... W, 4-1 N28 Canisius* ..................................................................... W, 7-2 D4 Sacred Heart*...............................................................W, 2-1 D5 Sacred Heart*..............................................................W, 4-2 J2 at #18 Union .......................................................... L, 1-2 (OT) J8 at Sacred Heart* .................................................T, 3-3 (OT) J9 at Sacred Heart* .......................................................... L, 0-5 J15 at Canisius* .................................................................. L, 2-5 J16 at Canisius* ........................................................ T, 4-4 (OT) J22 Connecticut* ..............................................................W, 5-0 J23 Connecticut* ................................................................ L, 1-2 J29 Air Force* .....................................................................W, 4-2 J30 Air Force* .............................................................T, 3-3 (OT) F5 at Holy Cross* ............................................................... L, 3-5 F6 at Holy Cross* .............................................................. W, 4-1 F12 RIT* ..................................................................................L, 0-3 F13 RIT* .................................................................................. L, 2-5 F19 at Mercyhurst*................................................. T, 4-4 (OT) F20 at Mercyhurst* .......................................................... L, 2-4 F26 at AIC* ......................................................................... W, 8-6 F27 AIC*.........................................................................T, 2-2 (OT) M12 at Air Force^ ...............................................................L, 0-3 M13 at Air Force^ ............................................................... L, 2-4 *Atlantic Hockey contest ! Mutual of Omaha Icebreaker Tournament with Nebraska-Omaha, St. Lawrence and Massachusetts Lowell ^ Atlantic Hockey quarterfinal series

J28 at Bentley* .................................................................... L, 1-2 J29 at Bentley* ........................................................... T, 1-1 (OT) F4 Connecticut* ................................................................ L , 2-4 F5 at Connecticut*@ ......................................................W, 5-3 F11 at Holy Cross* ...............................................................L, 1-5 F12 at Holy Cross* .............................................................L, 0-6 F18 AIC* .............................................................................. W, 6-4 F19 at American Int’l*# .................................................. W, 4-1 F25 Sacred Heart*............................................................ W, 4-1 F26 at Sacred Heart*$ .....................................................L, 1-5 M5 AIC^ ..................................................................................L, 3-6 &Cape Cod Classic, Hyannis, Mass. *Atlantic Hockey Association game !Catamount Cup with Vermont, Harvard and Ohio State # at Rentschler Field, East Hartford, Conn. $ at Arena at Harbor Yards, Bridgeport, Conn. @ at Xcel Center, Hartford, Conn. ^Atlantic Hockey first round


ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS

2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Players currently on the Army roster are highlighted in Bold Non-graduates are listed in Italics. Players listed with the year in which they graduated. Non-graduates listed by class with which they entered West Point. Name (Pos.; Goals-Assists-Points), academic years lettered, grad class Substitute goals against average and save percentage for goalies. *statistics incomplete A-A-A Adimey, Ronald R., (G; 3.96; .861), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94 .................................. 1995 Ahlbrecht, John A., (F; 57-78-135), 1966-67, 67-68, 68-69 ............................ 1969 Aiken, John J., 1952-53....................................................................................... 1954 Alissi, John J., (F; 7-16-23), 1989-90, 90-91 ................................................................ 1993 Allard, Donald, (F; 7-16-23), 1976-77, 77-78, 78-79 .....................................................1981 Allen, Robert J., (D; 3-9-12), 1983-84 ..............................................................................1987 Alvarez, Maurice M., (D/F; 8-15-23), 2011-12, 12-13 .....................................2015 Alvarez, Marcel S., (D; 14-59-73), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ..........................2012 Anderson, Aaron F., (F; 13-22-35), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08................. 2008 Anderson, Norman L., (F; 4-7-11), 1963-64 .................................................................. 1964 Anderson, Parker T., (D; 19-42-61), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67 .................................1967 Anderson, Peter G., (F; 11-13-24), 1969-70 ...................................................................1972 Anderson, Reuben L., 1945-46, 46-47 .......................................................................... 1948 Andros, David T., (F; 13-7-20), 2001-02, 02-03, 04-05 ...........................................2005 Ammon, Joseph H. (F; 17-12-29), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11 ......................... 2011 Asbury, Larry K., (F; 27-50-77), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58 ........................................... 1958 Austin, Albert M., 1946-47, 47-48, 48-49 .................................................................... 1949 Avard, John J., (D; 3-22-25), 1964-65, 65-66 ...............................................................1967 Averill, Corey, (G; 4.22; .848), 1986-87, 87-88, 88-89, 89-90 ............................1990 Avis, Frederick P., (F; 11-14-25), 1959-60 ......................................................... 1962 B-B-B Backus, Kevin M., (D; 7-30-37), 1989-90, 90-91, 91-92, 92-93 ......................... 1993 Barko, James S., 1934-35, 35-36, 36-37.......................................................................1937 Barnes, Jack O., (F: 2-5-7), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12........................................2012 Barrett, Gordon W., 1942-43 .................................................................................. June 1943 Barry, Bartholomew D., (F; 61-88-149), 1962-63, 63-64, 64-65 ....................... 1965 Battis, Warren B., (F; 11-38-49), 1960-61, 61-62, 62-63 ....................................... 1963 Beamer, Seth P., (F; 30-39-69), 2002-03, 03-04, 04-05, 05-06 ..................... 2006 Beiser, George R., 1951-52 ..................................................................................................1952 Bell, William III, 1943-44.................................................................................................... 1944 Berry, Roy N., 1951-52 ............................................................................................................1952 Berube, Richard K., (F; 51-40-91), 1991-92, 92-93 .................................................. 1993 Beukema, Henry S., 1942-43, 43-44 .............................................................................. 1944 Bickley, Casey S., (D: 15-48-63), 2003-04, 04-05, 05-06, 06-07.....................2007 Bilec, Christopher R., (F: 6-10-16), 2004-05, 2005-06 ........................................ 2008 Bilafer, Martin F., (F; 24-28-52), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62 ....................................... 1962 Birmingham, Robert P., (F; 57-74-131), 1973-74, 74-75, 75-76, 77-78 ................1978 Birrell, William H., 1939-40................................................................................................. 1940 Blaik, Robert M., (15-15-30), 1949-50, 50-51 .................................................. 1952 Blair, Christopher J., (D; 1-10-11), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 .................... 2008 Blanchard, William H., 1935-36, 36-37, 37-38 ........................................................... 1938 Bobb, Jonathan W. (F; 1-3-4), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 ................................... 2013 Bolio, Brian C., (G; 3.42; .860), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94, 94-95 .......................... 1995 Bonfoey, Warner T., 1948-49, 49-50 .............................................................................. 1950 Bono, Vincent A., (D; 9-37-46), 1984-85, 85-86, 86-87, 87-88 ..........................1988 Boretti, John J., (D; 7-20-27), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67..............................................1967 Boudreau, Arthur F., (F; 10-10-20), 1953-54, 54-55, 55-56 ................................. 1956 Boyle, Jonathan M., (F; 17-21-38), 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03, 03-04....................2004 Boyle, Scott D., (G; 4.37; .838), 1990-91, 91-92, 92-93 ......................................... 1993 Boys, Richard C. Jr., (F; 2-8-10), 1958-59 ......................................................................1961 Bradley, Matthew S., (F; 11-17-28), 1977-78, 79-80, 80-81 ....................................1981 Brennan, Edward J., (F; 7-12-19), 1973-74, 74-75, 75-76...........................................1976 Brenner, Allen R., (F; 33-30-63), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91 ......................1990 Brenner, Robert A., (F; 55-72-127), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86, 86-87...................1987 Briggs, Warren M., 1943-44, 44-45................................................................................ 1945 Broshous, Charles R. Jr., (F; 20-43-63), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62........................ 1962 Brougham, Matthew G., (F;17-16-33), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01..................... 2001 Brougham, Robert J., (F; 0-0-0), 2002-03 .................................................................. 2006 Brown, Daniel R., (F; 1-0-1), 2002-03, 03-04 ............................................................. 2006 Bryde, Walter J., 1934-35 .................................................................................................... 1935 Buckley, Michael J., (F; 20-49-69), 1961-62, 63-64 ................................................ 1964 Buckmeier, Gregory A., (F; 69-78-147), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98, 98-99.......... 1999 Burleigh, Adrian A., (F; 3-3-6), 1998-99 ....................................................................... 2000 Burns, Robert J., (F; 1-6-7), 2012-13 ....................................................................2016 Burns, Richard A., (F; 18-17-35), 1972-73, 73-74, 74-75, 75-76.............................. 1977 Butler, Kevin M., (D; 16-23-39), 1975-76, 76-77, 77-78 .............................................1979 Butterfield, Robert R., (D; 10-23-33), 1962-63, 63-64, 64-65........................... 1965

C-C-C Cadieux, Anthony M. (G) 2010-11 ...................................................................... 2014 Cahill, Nicholas J., (D; 6-19-25), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04, 04-05........................2005 Cain, James A. Jr., 1930-31, 31-32 ................................................................................... 1932 Campbell, Dale G. Jr., (D; 22-32-54), 1958-59, 59-60, 60-61 ...............................1961 Carey, Daniel M., (F; 0-2-2), 1991-92 .............................................................................. 1993 Carlson, Lee C., (G; 3.42; .874), 1967-68, 68-69 ........................................................1970 Carpenter, Joseph R., (F; 29-54-83), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 ........2002 Carroll, Thomas F. III, (D; 21-41-62), 1958-59, 59-60, 60-61 ..............................1961 Carter, Marshall S., 1930-31 ...............................................................................................1931 Carter, Woodbury, 1944-45................................................................................................ 1945 Casey, Christopher J., (F; 42-34-76), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04.............................2005 Casey, George W., 1942-43, 43-44, 44-45 .................................................................. 1945 Casey, Robert F., (D; 3-10-13), 1966-67, 67-68 ..........................................................1968 Cauble, David W., (F; 0-1-1), 1985-86 ...............................................................................1987 Cerow, Donald A., 1946-47, 47-48 ................................................................................... 1948 Chaffee, Frederic H., 1928-29........................................................................................... 1929 Chamberlain, Daryl A., (G; 3.00, .887), 1994-95, 95-96, 96-97, 97-98 ...........1998 Champion, Geoffrey M., (F; 31-53-84), 1969-70, 70-71, 71-72 ..............................1972 Chenette, Michael W., (F; 16-14-30), 1985-86, 86-87, 87-88 .............................1988 Chesnauskas, Ralph J., (D; 4-3-7), 1953-54, 54-55, 55-56 ................................... 1956 Chiacchia, Leonard A. Jr., (D; 6-16-22), 1968-69, 69-70, 70-71 ............................1971 Chisholm, Ronald J., (G; 2.52; .901), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62................................ 1962 Choi, Jason I., (F; 48-36-84), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98, 98-99 ............................. 1999 Chretien, Brooks R., (G; 3.99; .854), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91 ...............1991 Christopherson, George, (D; 13-47-60), 1973-74, 74-75 ..................................1977 Clark, George D., (F; 153-113-266), 1971-72, 72-73, 73-74, 74-75 ........................1975 Clark, Jay, C. (G; 2.99, .908), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11 ................................. 2011 Clark, John L. (D; 1-20-21), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 ......................................... 2013 Clapprood, Darren M., (D; 15-57-72), 1994-95, 95-96, 96-97, 97-98 ..............1998 Coccaro, Thomas R., (F; 7-13-20), 1997-98 .................................................................1998 Coffman, Eugene D., (F; 15-30-45), 1965-66 ................................................... 1968 Colburn, James E., 1945-46 ................................................................................................1947 Coleman, Donald J., (F; 5-10-15), 1968-69, 69-70, 70-71 .........................................1971 Collazzo, Edward C., (F; 93-104-197), 1979-80, 80-81, 81-82 ............................. 1983 Colvin, Christopher M., (D; 2-14-16), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ............. 2008 Colvin, Daniel E., (F; 23-57-80), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ..............................2012 Compton, John A., (D; 2-16-28), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94 ........................................ 1994 Concannon, Brian P., (F; 10-20-30), 1976-77, 77-78, 78-79 ....................................1979 Conlon, Warren S., 1942-43, 43-44 ................................................................................ 1944 Connor, John P., 1935-36, 36-37 .......................................................................................1937 Copeland, Patrick, J., (D; 0-9-9), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11 ......................... 2011 Corcoran, Edward L., 1941-42 ........................................................................................... 1942 Costello, Normando A., 1928-29 ..................................................................................... 1929 Cota, Norman D. Jr., 1941-42.............................................................................January 1943 Cotter, Edward J., 1929-30, 30-31 ...................................................................................1931 Cotter, Michael B., (F; 43-44-87), 1979-80, 80-81, 81-82, 82-83 ..................... 1983 Cowart, James B., (G; 3.46; .874), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67....................................1967 Cox, Brian M., (F; 30-28-58), 1985-86, 86-86, 87-88, 88-89 ............................1989 Cox, Daniel A., (F; 61-133-194), 1979-80, 80-81, 81-82, 82-83 ........................... 1983 Craig, Robert J. Jr., (F; 86-135-221), 1980-81, 81-82, 82-83, 83-84 ................ 1984 Crowley, Edward F., (F; 36-44-80), 1943-44, 44-45, 45-46 ................................. 1946 Crowley, Edward M., (F; 63-87-150), 1957-58, 58-59, 59-60 ..............................1960 Cruthers, Ryan T., (F: 15-27-42), 2003-04, 04-05 ...........................................2007 Cullen, James A. Jr., (F; 7-11-18), 1958-59, 59-60.......................................................1961 Curran, Anthony K., (F;59-117-176), 1966-67, 67-68, 68-69................................. 1969 Curran, Michael J., (F; 30-49-79), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86 ..................................1986 Curtin, Richard D., 1936-37, 37-38, 38-39 .................................................................. 1939 Custer, Scott D., (D; 5-22-27), 1984-85, 85-86, 86-87 ..........................................1988 Cutting, Edward B. Jr., (F; 48-51-99), 1965-66, 66-67, 67-68 .............................1968 Cyr, Clarence W., 1942-43, 43-44.................................................................................... 1944 D-D-D Daly, Maurice F., 1925-26, 26-27 ......................................................................................1927 Darby, Kevin G., (F; 16-49-65), 1988-89, 89-90, 90-91 .................................. 1992 Darcy, Thomas C., 1930-31, 31-32 ................................................................................... 1932 Darmody, Donald J., (D; 9-12-21), 1966-67, 67-68 ....................................................1968 Darragh, Sean J., (F; 5-10-15), 1979-80 ......................................................................... 1983 Davis, Courtneay C. Jr., 1946-47, 47-48, 48-49......................................................... 1949 Davis, John J., 1932-33, 33-34, 34-35 ........................................................................... 1935 Davis, Lawton, 1941-42, 42-43 .............................................................................. June 1943 Dawkins, Peter M., (D; 40-55-95), 1956-57, 57-58, 58-59 ................................... 1959 Day, William J., (F; 6-9-15), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12........................................2012 DeCosty, Fiore, (F; 3-5-8), 1987-88, 88-89 .................................................................1990 DeGironimo, Paul B., (G; 3.99; .866), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86, 86-87 ..............1987 de la Mater, Lyall D. Jr., 1942-43, 43-44 ....................................................................... 1944 Depew, William L., (F; 7-5-12*), 1948-49, 49-50, 50-51 ........................................... 1951 Deveans, Thomas M., (F; 12-39-51), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 ................1997 Devens, W. George, 1945-46 ............................................................................................. 1946 Devlin, Francis T., 1938-39, 39-40 .................................................................................. 1940 Dewar, John D., (F; 49-78-127), 1958-59, 59-60, 60-61 ..........................................1961

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ALL-TIME SECTION LETTERWINNERS MARKER Goodwin, William P., (G; 5.65; .851), 1972-73 ...............................................................1973 Gorzelnik, Greg A., (F; 10-34-44), 1975-76, 76-77 ....................................................... 1977 Gorzelnik, Karl E., (G; 3.56; .901), 1971-72 .....................................................................1972 Goymerac, Paul J., (F; 1-1-2), 1984-85............................................................... 1988 Graham, Bruce I., (F; 36-44-80), 1977-78, 78-79, 79-80 .......................................1980 Graham, Todd P., (F; 20-19-39), 1953-54, 54-55 ....................................................... 1955 Grant, Walter H., 1935-36, 38-39 .................................................................................... 1939 Grayton, Robert J., (D; 1-13-14), 1976-77, 77-78 ............................................... 1980 Griffin, John V., (F; 6-7-13), 1988-89, 90-91 ..................................................................1991 Griffith, William J. IV, (F; 9-7-16), 1997-98, 98-99, 99-00 ................................... 2000 Grohs, William R., 1934-35, 35-36 .................................................................................. 1936 Groves, Richard N. Jr., (F; 5-12-17), 1956-57, 57-58 .................................................. 1958 Grygiel, Joseph S., 1939-40, 40-41.................................................................................. 1941 Guarino, Robert S., (F; 2-4-6), 1980-81 ......................................................................... 1982 Gunning, Michael J., (F; 5-11-16), 1994-95, 95-96 .................................................... 1996 H-H-H Haggerty, Paul J., (F; 27-16-43), 1988-89, 89-90, 90-91 .......................................1991 Hamacher, Bradley, (D; 8-30-38), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91 ....................1991 Hamilton, Scott A., (G; 3.30; .891), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 ............2002 Hamm, Nicholas K,. (D; 2-6-8), 2002-03, 03-04 .............................................2006 Hanley, Theodore R., (F; 23-22-45), 1984-85, 85-86 ..............................................1986 Hansen, Laurence N., (F; 28-31-59), 1963-64, 64-65, 65-66 ............................. 1966 Hansen, Leif A., (D; 32-48-80), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 ..........................1997 Harkins, David V., (F; 30-34-64), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62 ...................................... 1962 Harris, Richard L., 1950-51 .................................................................................................. 1951 Harrison, John A., (F; 77-96-173), 1974-75, 75-76, 76-77, 77-78.............................1979 Hartley, Robert J., (F; 3-6-9), 1971-72 ................................................................1974 Hartline, Franklin H., 1937-38 ........................................................................................... 1938 Harvey, Thomas H. Jr., (D; 40-59-99), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58 ............................. 1958 Haskell, Andrew J., (D; 1-4-5), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01 ..................................... 2001 Hausmann, Fritz J., (D; 11-31-42), 1967-68, 68-69, 69-70 .....................................1970 Hawes, Kenneth A., (F; 19-10-29), 1976-77, 77-78, 78-79 ........................................1979 Hayes, Brandon C., (G; 5.05; .814), 1988-89, 89-90, 90-91, 91-92 .................. 1992 Hazeltine, Charles B., 1937-38, 38-39, 39-40........................................................... 1940 Hazlett, Scott D., (F; 3-7-10), 1977-78, 79-80..............................................................1980 Healey, Dustin J., (F; 6-4-10), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04 ............................................2004 Healy, Edmund G., (F; 20-27-47), 1973-74, 74-75, 75-76 ..........................................1976 Hearn, Jonathan S., (F; 4-7-11), 2012-13 ............................................................2016 Heidner, Alvin A., 1925-26 ................................................................................................... 1926 Heidtke, Lyman O., 1938-39, 39-40 ............................................................................... 1940 Heller, Thane R., (F; 9-6-15), 2012-13 ..................................................................2016 Henderson, Michael D. (F; 7-3-10), 2010-11, 11-12 .....................................................2014 Hennessy, Sean P., (D; 13-50-63), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94, 94-95 ................... 1995 Hettinger, David A., (F; 44-63-107), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58 ................................. 1958 Hickey, Edward I., (D; 46-44-90), 1954-55, 55-56, 56-57 .....................................1957 Hickey, Matthew J., (D; 6-14-20), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 08-09 ................... 2009 Higgins, Richard G., (D; 5-33-38), 1960-61, 61-62, 62-63 .................................... 1963 Hill, Mark C., (D; 5-10-15), 1984-85, 85-86, 86-87, 87-88 ....................................1988 Hines, Derek S., (F; 12-20-32), 1999-00, 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03 .....................2003 Hines, John B. R., 1935-36, 36-37.....................................................................................1937 Hingston, William E. Jr., (F; 34-44-78), 1960-61, 61-62, 62-63........................... 1963 Hinote, Daniel C., (F; 21-24-45), 1995-96 ......................................................... 1999 Hjelm, Kenneth E., (F; 38-64-102), 1962-63, 63-64, 64-65................................. 1965 Hocking, Timothy H., (F; 4-4-8), 1992-93 ..................................................................... 1995 Hollweg, Bryce A., (F: 29-59-88), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ................... 2008 Holterman, Gordon H., 1934-35, 35-36 ........................................................................ 1936 Houmiel, Michael W., (F; 2-6-8), 1987-88......................................................................1991 Howard, Bradley A., (F: 3-4-7), 2004-05...........................................................2008 Howatt, Brody J., (F; 13-20-33), 1995-96, 97-98, 98-99....................................... 1999 Hoyt, Francis R., 1951-52, 52-53 ...................................................................................... 1953 Hudak, Mark, (D; 7-23-30), 1985-86, 86-87, 88-89 ................................................1989 Huffer, Derek, (F; 1-2-3), 1991-92 ..................................................................................... 1994 Huglin, Harvey P., 1930-31 .................................................................................................. 1932 Hugo, Victor J. Jr., (D; 4-19-23), 1951-52, 52-53, 53-54 .......................................... 1954 Hull, Michael E., (F; 29-70-99), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ...............................2012 I-I-I Ikkala, Cody D. (D; 1-5-6), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 .......................................... 2013 Isles, Richard R., (G; 4.40, .866), 1979-80 ...................................................... 1983 Iverslie, Karl B., (F; 0-4-4), 1980-81 ............................................................................... 1982 J-J-J Jamison, Joel R., (D; 4-35-39), 1995-96, 96-97, 98-99 ......................................... 1999 Jenkins, Luke T., (D; 1-3-4), 2012-13 ....................................................................2016 Jensen, Jorg D., (G; 2.98, .847), 1995-96, 96-97....................................................... 1999 Johnson, Gary R., (F; 42-80-122), 1961-62, 62-63, 63-64 .................................... 1964 Johnson, Malcolm D., 1948-49, 49-50.......................................................................... 1950 Johnson, Roger F., 1949-50 ................................................................................1951 Joyce, Eric J., (D; 5-15-20), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02.............................2002 K-K-K Kapsalis, Marc A., (D; 51-77-128), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84, 84-85 ..................... 1985 Kapsner, Paul D., (F; 5-12-17), 1983-84, 84-85 ..........................................................1986 Kassel, Joshua B., (G; 2.42, .909), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 0-8-09................ 2009

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

DiCarlo, Anthony M., (F; 53-48-101), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 ...............1997 Dickie, Jason S., (D; 1-16-17), 1992-93, 93-94, 94-95, 95-96 ............................. 1996 DiGiovanni, Richard H., (D; 1-16-17), 1977-78, 78-79, 79-80, 80-81 ....................1981 Dillon, Robert E. Jr., (F; 0-2-2), 1972-73 ..........................................................................1974 Dobbins, Paul J., (D; 16-61-77), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62 .......................................... 1962 Dolim, Brady J., (F: 11-15-26), 2003-04, 04-05, 05-06, 06-07 ............................2007 Donohoe, Patrick J., 1947-48, 48-49 ............................................................................. 1949 Donohue, James M., 1932-33, 34-35 ............................................................................. 1935 Donohue, Joseph P., 1938-39, 39-40 ............................................................................ 1940 Dooley, Thomas F., (F; 36-46-82), 1961-62, 62-63, 63-64 ................................... 1964 Dorrer, Marc C., (F; 9-10-19), 1992-93, 94-95 ............................................................ 1996 Dorsey, Daniel K., (G; 5.51; .842), 1976-77, 77-78, 78-79..........................................1981 Dowalgo, John E., (D; 21-62-83), 1970-71, 71-72, 72-73 ............................................1973 Doyle, Edward J., (F; 24-32-56), 1966-67, 67-68, 68-69 ....................................... 1969 Drago, Alfred J., (G; 2.05; .887), 2005-06, 06-07 .................................................... 2009 Drinkwater, Edward C. Jr., 1944-45, 45-46 ................................................................. 1946 Drinkwine, Brian M., (G; 3.38; .888), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86 ............................1986 Drum, James H., 1934-35, 35-36, 36-37 .......................................................................1937 Dudek, Jospeh F. Jr., (F; 23-51-74), 1999-00, 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03 .............2003 Duffey, Joseph P., (F; 3-7-10), 1978-79 ........................................................................... 1982 Duffy, Donald K., (D; 1-4-5), 1969-70 .................................................................1972 Dugan, Michael E., (F; 15-19-34), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98, 98-99...................... 1999 Dube, Mark R., (25-13-38), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12.......................................2012 Dunlap, Norman E., 1950-51................................................................................................ 1951 Dunn, James W., (D; 0-1-1), 1956-57 .................................................................................1957 Dwan, Robert A., (F; 4-16-20), 1984-85............................................................ 1988 Dwyer, Robert J., 1927-28 ................................................................................................... 1928 E-E-E Eaton, Geoffrey F., (F; 25-26-51), 1969-70, 70-71, 71-72 .........................................1972 Eaton, Matthew H., (D; 19-61-80), 1970-71, 71-72, 72-73 ........................................1973 Edlund, Peter J., (D; 0-5-5), 1997-98, 98-99 .............................................................. 2001 Edwards, John C., 1938-39 ................................................................................................. 1939 Eigner, Troy J., (F; 14-35-49), 1993-94, 94-95............................................................ 1995 Eklund, Richard A., (F; 6-4-10), 1964-65, 65-66 ....................................................... 1966 Elsberry, Robert V., 1940-41 ............................................................................................... 1941 Emore, Kevin P., (D; 1-10-11), 2000-01, 01-02 .............................................................2003 Enwright, Charles E., (D; 3-9-12), 1968-69, 69-70, 70-71 ........................................1971 Erzar, Ross A., (F; 22-10-32), 1989-90, 90-91, 91-92 .............................................. 1992 Esposito, Curt V., 1962-63.................................................................................................. 1963 Esposito, Phil, (F; 6-4-10), 1989-90 .................................................................. 1993 Evans, John G., (D; 6-14-20), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58................................................ 1958 F-F-F Fagan, Justin M., (D; 4-28-32), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04, 04-05 .........................2005 Fairman, Michael A., (F; 61-44-105), 1997-98, 98-99, 99-00, 00-01 .............. 2001 Farnham, John, (F; 1-2-3), 1986-87 ................................................................... 1990 Farrell, John H., (F; 17-46-63), 1956-57, 57-58, 58-59 ............................................ 1959 Faust, William R., (F; 5-7-12), 2012-13 ................................................................2016 Fearing, Jeffrey J., (F: 13-30-43), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08.................... 2008 Fede, Frank P. Jr., (F; 58-82-140), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 .....................1997 Felice, Anthony P., (D; 9-29-38), 1994-95, 95-96, 96-97, 97-98 .......................1998 Fellman, Craig W., (F; 13-7-20), 1991-92, 93-94, 94-95 ......................................... 1995 Fiedler, John P., (F; 0-3-3), 1972-73 ..................................................................................1975 Field, Matthew G., (D; 12-22-34), 2001-02, 02-03 ...................................................2005 Fifield, Chad T., (F; 10-13-23), 2001-02, 03-04, 04-05 ...........................................2005 Fink, Rudolph, 1928-29 ........................................................................................................ 1929 Finnegan, Kevin C., (F; 25-23-48), 1997-98, 98-99, 99-00, 2000-01 ............. 2001 Fisher, Timothy J., (F; 49-56-105), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 .............2002 Flanagan, Brendan F., (F; 3-4-7), 1978-79......................................................................1979 Flanagan, Timothy J., (F; 3-4-7), 1973-74, 76-77.......................................................... 1977 Flicek, Luke D., (F: 40-76-116), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ......................... 2008 Foss, Andrew M., (F; 7-6-13), 1995-96, 98-99 ........................................................... 1999 Frankosky, James O., 1941-42 ..........................................................................January 1943 Funck, Brett T., (D; 5-18-23), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94.............................................. 1994 G-G-G Gable, Charles W., (F; 0-0-0), 2002-03 ............................................................2006 Gal, Lyle M., (F: 5-14-19), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ..................................... 2008 Galgay, Peter E., (F; 9-23-32), 1969-70, 70-71, 71-72 ................................................1972 Gallo, Jeffrey D., (F; 3-8-11), 1997-98, 98-99 .............................................................. 2001 Galui, Jason J., (G; 1.80; .867), 1998-99 ....................................................................... 2000 Garceau, Christopher L., (F; 31-51-82), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04, 04-05.........2005 Gardiner, Scott T., (F; 3-10-13), 1990-91, 92-93 ........................................................ 1993 Garneau, Paul R., 1953-54 .................................................................................................. 1954 Garver, Thomas H., (G; 3.77; .878), 1973-74, 74-75, 75-76, 76-77 ......................... 1977 Garvin, Charles H., 1941-42 ................................................................................................ 1942 Gates, Byron E., (F; 21-23-44), 1972-73, 73-74 ............................................................1976 Gehrt, Jonathan D., (D; 3-6-9), 2012-13 .............................................................2016 Gengler, Michael, (F; 12-19-31), 1986-87, 87-88, 88-89, 89-90 ........................1990 Gilbert, Willard R., 1939-40, 40-41 .................................................................................. 1941 Giovanucci, Glen R., (F; 30-22-52), 1978-79 ..................................................... 1982 Glenn, Thomas O. IV, (F; 34-47-81), 1975-76, 76-77, 77-78, 79-80 .....................1980 Gonzalez, Paul D., (F; 13-26-39), 1996-97, 97-98, 98-99, 99-00 ..................... 2000 Goodrich, Walker R., 1929-30, 30-31, 31-32 ............................................................... 1932


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS Keating, Frank G., (F; 65-131-196), 1978-79, 79-80, 80-81, 81-82 .................... 1982 Keating, Kenneth J., 1950-51, 51-52................................................................................1952 Keenan, Kevin P., (F; 45-68-113), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86, 86-87 ......................1987 Keiser, David R., (F; 5-6-11), 1997-98.............................................................................. 2001 Kelley, Kevin C., (F; 12-10-22), 1964-65 ......................................................................... 1966 Kelsey, Michael L., (F; 0-3-3), 1989-90 ............................................................ 1992 Kenady, Frederick R., (F; 3-5-8), 1970-71, 71-72, 72-73 ............................................1973 Kennedy, Michael C., (D; 4-5-9), 1987-88, 88-89 .............................................1991 Kennedy, Terrence J., (D; 7-18-25), 1965-66, 66-67, 67-68..................................1968 Kennedy, Thomas E., (D; 0-2-2), 1997-98 .................................................................... 2000 Kettwick, Treye D., (G: 3.39-.888), 2003-04 ...................................................2007 Kindgren, Chris. J., (F; 19-19-38), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91......................1991 Kindgren, Eric J., (F; 3-16-19), 1990-91, 91-92 ........................................................... 1993 King, Arthur R., 1940-41, 41-42......................................................................................... 1942 King, William T., (F; 53-42-95), 1980-81, 81-82, 82-83, 83-84 ........................... 1984 Knieriem, John P. IV, (F; 6-10-16), 1986-87, 87-88 ...................................................1989 Knowlton, David A., (F; 28-56-84), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84, 84-85 .................. 1985 Knowlton, James A., (F; 90-172-262), 1978-79, 79-80, 80-81, 81-82 .............. 1982 Kobes, Frank J. IV, (F; 14-7-21), 1963-64, 64-65, 65-66 ........................................ 1966 Kohlbeck, Christopher M., (F; 0-3-3), 1985-86 ................................................ 1989 Kozlak, Joseph A., (F; 7-10-17), 2012-13 .............................................................2016 Kuyk, Charles F.G. Jr., (F; X-X-77*), 1946-47, 47-48, 48-49, 49-50...................... 1950 Kuyk, David D., 1950-51 ..................................................................................... 1953 L-L-L Lalor, Maclean, J., (D; 10-18-28), 2011-12, 12-13 ............................................2015 Lambert, Howard L. Jr., 1940-41 .....................................................................January 1943 Lambert, Justin L., (F; 23-17-40), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94 ..................................... 1995 Lammersfeld, Mark E., (F; 7-13-20), 1976-77 ................................................... 1980 Landers, Michael H., (D; 18-41-59), 1990-91, 91-92, 92-93, 93-94.................. 1994 Lane, John J., 1932-33 .......................................................................................................... 1933 Lannan, Ford M., (G, 3.28, .843), 1999-00, 2000-01 .............................................. 2001 Larkin, George T., 1937-38, 38-39, 39-40 ................................................................... 1940 Larr, David R., (F; 19-31-50), 1953-54, 54-55, 55-56 ............................................... 1956 Larson, Bret R., (D; 0-3-3), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 .......................................2012 Lauwers, Dax E. (D; 1-2-3), 2010-11 .................................................................. 2014 Lawlor, John D., 1932-33...................................................................................................... 1934 Leahy, William J., (F; 4-3-7), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 08-09 ............................... 2009 LeBlanc, Thomas G., (D; 49-78-127), 1978-79, 79-80, 80-81, 81-82................. 1982 Leetch, Eric W., (F; 6-10-16), 1994-95............................................................................ 1995 Leets, Ryan S., (G; 3.40, .897), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 ................................ 2013 Lensky, Scott A., (D; 2-15-17), 1998-99, 99-00..........................................................2002 Lentini, Paul E., (G; 5.54; .863), 1987-88 .......................................................................1991 Lewando, Vincent P., 1946-47, 47-48............................................................................. 1948 Lewis, Mark K. Jr., 1924-25 ..................................................................................................1927 Lind, Roger C., 1949-50 ....................................................................................................... 1950 Lindell, Kermit O., 1942-43 ................................................................................................. 1944 Lindquist, Roy E., 1927-28, 28-29, 29-30 .................................................................... 1930 LoConte, Louis Jr., 1947-48 ................................................................................................ 1948 Loehlein, Harold J., 1949-50, 50-51 .................................................................................1952 Lowry, Kieran J. III, (F; 7-10-17), 1964-65 .........................................................1967 Lueders, Dirk H., 1953-54, 54-55, 55-56...................................................................... 1956 Lundbohm, Andrew A., (F; 76-92-168), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98, 98-99 .......... 1999 Lynch, Edward T. Jr., 1952-53............................................................................................. 1953 Lyon, Charles M., (D; 29-102-131), 1975-76, 76-77, 77-78, 78-79 .........................1979 M-M-M MacDonald, Darryl M., (F; 47-60-107), 1982-83, 83-84, 84-85, 85-86 ..........1986 Mackey, Donald F., 1950-51 .............................................................................. 1953 MacLaughlin, Robie, (F; 18-23-41), 1991-92, 92-93 ................................................ 1995 MacLeod, Chris. P., (F; 13-32-45), 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03, 03-04....................2004 Maddalena, William J., (G; 5.36; .851), 1979-80 ........................................................ 1983 Maggard, Kyle J. (F; 17-20-31) 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ................................2012 Malloy, Gerald P.J., (D; 15-19-34), 1982-83, 83-84 ................................................... 1984 Mangels, Robert L., 1951-52.............................................................................................. 1953 Mansell, Michael R., (D; 10-70-80), 1992-93, 93-94, 94-95, 95-96 ................ 1996 Mansell, Robert R., (F; 23-35-58), 1990-91, 91-92, 92-93 ................................... 1993 Manthey, Timothy T., (D; 17-36-53), 2005-06, 06-07 .....................................2009 Marston, Roy L., 1943-44, 44-45..................................................................................... 1945 Mattson, Steven M., (F; 3-8-11), 1973-74 ..........................................................1977 Maude, Raymond C., 1925-26 ........................................................................................... 1926 Mayer, Adolph E., 1951-52, 52-53 .................................................................................... 1953 Mayfield, Charles A., (F; 25-47-72), 2001-02, 02-03, 03-04 ................................2005 Mayfield, Nathan C., (F; 31-63-94), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 ...........2002 Maxwell, Andrew S., (D; 0-0-0), 2007-08, 08-09 ...................................................... 2011 McAvoy, Garrett J., (F; 58-89-147), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84, 84-85.................. 1985 McCaffrey, William J., 1936-37, 37-38, 38-39 ............................................................ 1939 McCarthy, William J., (D; 35-74-109), 1980-81, 81-82, 82-83, 83-84............ 1984 McCormack, Leonard R., (F; 25-56-81), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58......................... 1958 McCormick, Daniel J., (F; 5-6-11), 1985-86, 86-87 ....................................................1987 McCulloch, John J., 1944-45 .............................................................................................. 1945 McDougall, Ian S., (D: 2-5-7), 2004-05, 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08 ...................... 2008 McGarry, Francis P., (D; 2-26-28), 1971-72, 72-73, 73-74, 74-75...........................1975 McGill, John L., (D; 11-15-26), 1967-68, 68-69, 69-70 ..............................................1970 McKelvie, Zach D., (D; 14-44-54), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 08-09................... 2009

McKenna, Casey P., (F; 0-1-1), 2000-01 .........................................................................2004 McLaughlin, Eugene J., (F; 29-37-66), 1957-58, 58-59, 59-60...........................1960 McLean, John M., (D; 6-14-20), 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03, 03-04 .........................2004 McMeniman, Thomas J., (D; 8-29-37), 1997-98, 98-99, 99-00 ....................... 2000 McMullen, John N., (D; 0-5-5), 1960-61......................................................................... 1963 McNally, James P., (F; 0-0-0), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08........................... 2008 McNamara, Andrew T. Jr., 1926-27, 27-28 .................................................................... 1928 McNulty, James D., (F; 0-0-0), 2012-13 ..............................................................2016 McRae, Alex M., (F, 2-5-7), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ........................................2012 McWain, Timothy, (F; 11-15-26), 1985-86, 86-87, 87-88, 88-89........................1989 Mead, Christopher W., (D; 12-29-41), 1988-89, 89-90, 90-91, 91-92............. 1992 Melanson, Edward, (F; 19-20-39), 1985-86, 86-87, 87-88 ..................................1988 Mellin, James P., (F; 7-8-15), 1955-56, 56-57, 57-58 ................................................ 1958 Melly, Brendan J., (G; 6.15, .750), 1997-98 ................................................................... 2001 Merhar, David M., (F; 112-117-229), 1966-67, 67-68, 68-69 ................................ 1969 Messina, Mark S., (F; 11-10-21), 1980-81, 82-83 ...................................................... 1984 Meyer, Nicholas J., (F; 2-2-4), 1990-91 ............................................................. 1993 Meyer, Owen, F (F; 66-66--132), 2006-07, 07-08, 08-09, 09-10....................... 2010 Mieras, Cornelius E., (G; 2.28; .896), 1963-64 .......................................................... 1964 Migliaro, Christopher S., (F; 14-16-30), 2002-03, 03-04, 04-05, 05-06 ...... 2006 Migliaro, Michael A., (F; 0-0-0), 2005-06, 06-07 .................................................... 2009 Miller, Fred R., 1950-51 ......................................................................................................... 1951 Miller, Wayne D., 1950-51 ..................................................................................................... 1951 Milliken, Walter R., 1948-49 .............................................................................................. 1949 Minihane, Neil, (D; 1-16-17), 1986-87, 87-88, 88-89, 89-90 ................................1990 Monahan, George L. Jr., (F; 16-35-51), 1951-52, 52-53, 53-54, 54-55 ............. 1955 Moran, Edward H., (D; 21-60-81), 1982-83, 83-84, 84-85, 85-86 ....................1986 Moran, Paul E., (F; 16-16-32), 1972-73, 73-74, 74-75 .................................................1975 Morino, Joshua G., (D; 13-30-43), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 ..............2002 Morrison, Robert C., 1949-50 ........................................................................................... 1950 Morrison, William J., (F; 54-76-130), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97................1997 Moscatelli, Tito G., 1926-27 ............................................................................................... 1928 Moses, Oliver IV, 1943-44, 44-45 ................................................................................... 1946 Moss, Raymond, 1947-48, 48-49 .................................................................................... 1949 Moss, William T., (G; 3.19-.909), 2002-03, 03-04 ....................................................2004 Murphy, Timothy P., (F; 11-25-36), 1998-99, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 .............2002 Murray, James K., (F; 5-9-14), 1968-69, 69-70 ...........................................................1970 Murrett, Daniel P., (F; 55-84-139), 1975-76, 76-77, 77-78................................1979 N-N-N Nabb, Robert A., (F; 41-68-109), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86 .....................................1986 Negley, John M., (D; 29-66-95), 1978-79, 79-80, 80-81, 81-82 .......................... 1982 Ness, Robert A. Jr., (D; 3-14-17), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86 ......................................1986 Newell, Richard T., (G; 3.09; .890), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67..................................1967 Nolan, Daniel A., 1937-38, 38-39 ..................................................................................... 1939 Norby, Wayne A., 1946-47, 47-48, 48-49 ...................................................................... 1949 0-0-0 O’Borsky, Steven A., (F; 38-52-90), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84 ................................ 1985 O’Connell, Patrick J., 1945-46, 46-47 .............................................................................1947 O’Connor, James R., (F; 45-60-105), 1954-55, 55-56, 56-57 ................................1957 O’Keefe, Patrick J., (F; 5-11-16), 1966-67, 67-68 ........................................................1968 O’Leary, Andrew A., (F; 2-1-3); 2012-13 ...............................................................2016 Olson, Alan D., (F; 10-27-37), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67 ..............................................1967 Olson, Clair E., (G; 4.47; .867), 1972-73 ..............................................................1975 Olson, Gregory M., (F; 4-12-16), 1962-63, 63-64....................................................... 1964 Omilusik, Cody M., (F; 58-50-108), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11 .................... 2011 O’Neil, Thomas A., 1932-33, 33-34.................................................................................. 1934 Opdenaker, Michael A., (D; 3-19-22), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 ..............1997 Osness, Brett R., (F; 1-5-6), 2002-03 ...............................................................2006 P-P-P Pallotta, Lawrence M., (F; 66-101-167), 1972-73, 73-74, 74-75, 75-76 ..............1976 Palmer, Laurence J., 1956-57, 57-58, 58-59 ............................................................... 1959 Palodichuk, Chad M., (F; 3-1-4), 1991-92 ...................................................................... 1995 Palone, Michael F., (F; 38-85-123), 1965-66, 66-67, 67-68 .................................1968 Patton, George S., 1945-46 ............................................................................................... 1946 Perron, Christopher J., (F; 12-25-37), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97..............1997 Peterman, Sidney C., 1940-41, 41-42, ..........................................................January 1943 Peterson, Craig M., (D; 0-0-0), 1990-91 ........................................................................1991 Peterson, Richard E., (D; 40-46-86), 1961-62, 62-63, 63-64 ............................. 1964 Picking, Daniel H., (F; 1-1-2), 1987-88 .............................................................................1988 Picone, Michael J., (F: 12-15-27), 2003-04, 04-05, 05-06, 06-07 .....................2007 Pieper, Bradford W., (F; 13-12-25), 1996-97, 97-98, 98-99 ................................. 2000 Pierson, Thomas D., (F; 6-10-16), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11........................ 2011 Pietrzak, Christopher L., (F; 1-0-1), 1984-85, 85-86, 86-87 ................................1988 Pilarski, David A., (F; 8-18-26), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94 .......................................... 1994 Pistenma, David A., (F; 21-30-51), 1950-51, 51-52, 52-53 ..................................... 1953 Plume, Stephen K. Jr., 1940-41 .......................................................................................... 1941 Podsiad, Chase M., (D: 14-40-54), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ................. 2008 Pomarico, John C., (D; 2-2-4), 2012-13 ...............................................................2016 Porter, Kenneth M., (D: 1-0-1), 2004-05, 2005-06, 06-07 .................................. 2008 Pressley, Milton H., 1928-29 ..............................................................................................1931 Prosser, Christian E., (F; 6-12-18), 1980-81 ..................................................... 1984 Prossner, Leslie T., (D; 3-7-10), 1955-56 ....................................................................... 1956 Pyne, Robert M., (D; 0-1-1), 1978-79................................................................................ 1983

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ALL-TIME SECTION LETTERWINNERS MARKER Spracklen, Joseph R., (G, 2.85, .908) 2006-07, 08-09 .......................................... 2010 Stachelski, Mark E., (F; 46-65-111), 1991-92, 92-93, 93-94, 94-95 ................ 1995 Staples, Jon M., (G; 5.06; .831), 1985-86, 86-87, 87-88 .......................................1988 Starczewski, Andrew J., (F; 39-40-79), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 ................ 2013 Stenson, James F., (G; 3.69; .885), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84 ................................ 1985 Stonehouse, Gerald F., (F; 57-62-119), 1960-61, 61-62, 62-63........................... 1963 Strong, Gordon M., 1945-46, 46-47 ................................................................................1947 Sturgis, Barry B., (F; 15-18-33), 1954-55, 55-56, 56-57..........................................1957 Sullivan, Patrick T., (D; 14-41-55), 1972-73, 73-74, 74-75, 75-76 ..........................1976 Sundem, Chad R., (F; 38-45-83), 1989-90, 90-91, 91-92, 92-93 ...................... 1993 Sussmann, William A., 1936-37, 37-38 .......................................................................... 1938 Swanson, Carl A. Jr., (G; 4.65; .825), 1975-76 .............................................................. 1977 Sweeney, Walter C., 1928-29 ............................................................................................ 1930 Syfko, Thomas A., (F; 7-2-9), 1971-72 .................................................................1974 Symes, Albert R., (F; 35-43-78), 1959-60, 60-61, 61-62 ....................................... 1962 Symes, Michael T., (F; 75-99-174), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84, 84-85 ................... 1985 T-T-T Tadazak, Robert E., (G; 3.07/.907), 2011-12, 12-13........................................2015 Tamburino, Todd, (D; 15-42-57), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91 ........................1991 Tanzer, John B., 1952-53 ...................................................................................................... 1953 Tapping, Field H., 1929-30, 30-31.....................................................................................1931 Tardif, Scott B., (F; 30-31-61), 1989-90, 90-91, 91-92 ........................................... 1992 Tate, Frederic H.S., 1939-40, 40-41, 41-42.................................................................. 1942 Tate, Joseph S., 1940-41....................................................................................................... 1941 Telford, Sidney T., 1931-32, 32-33, 33-34 .................................................................... 1934 Thatcher, Herbert B., 1931-32 .......................................................................................... 1932 Thiebaud, Kenneth E., 1926-27 .........................................................................................1927 Thomas, Gary P., (F; 32-20-52), 1951-52, 52-53, 53-54 ......................................... 1954 Thompson, Michael H., (F; 78-84-162), 1962-63, 63-64, 64-65........................ 1965 Thompson, Michael R., (D; 2-4-6), 1972-73 ..................................................................1973 Tighe, Terry M., (D; 5-10-15), 1968-69, 69-70, 70-71 .................................................1971 Tilch, Mark D., (D; 1-10-11), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 08-09 ................................ 2009 Tilton, Robert C., 1956-57 ....................................................................................................1957 Tincher, Maxwell A., 1935-36, 36-37...............................................................................1937 Tobin, Robert S., (F; 30-31-61), 1987-88, 88-89 ...............................................1991 Toftey, Jonathan E., (F; 15-22-37), 1997-98, 99-00, 2000-01, 01-02 ..............2002 Toomey, Charles J., (D; 2-3-5), 1976-77..........................................................................1980 Traczyk, Todd J., (F; 10-19-29), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90 ........................................1990 Tumperi, John R.E., 1952-53 ............................................................................................... 1953 Tyson, Ian J., (F; 14-19-33), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98 ........................................ 1999 V-V-V Vana, Frank M. Jr., (F; 11-5-16), 1982-83 .......................................................... 1986 Van Nostrand, William S., 1932-33 ................................................................................. 1934 Vogel, Kenneth L., (F; 18-32-50), 1969-70, 70-71, 71-72 ..........................................1972 Vogel, Kyle R., (F; 0-0-0), 2012-13 ........................................................................2016 VonWald, James L., (D; 4-8-12), 1982-83.......................................................... 1986 W-W-W Wagstaff, David Jr., 1930-31, 31-32, 32-33 ................................................................. 1933 Walsh, Kevin P., (F; 3-31-34), 1974-75, 75-76, 76-77, 77-78 .....................................1978 Walsh, Matthew J., (G; 0.00/.000), 2011-12, 12-13 ................................................... 2013 Wanish, Mark J., (F; 3-1-4), 1995-96 ...............................................................................1998 Ward, Morgan P., (F; 2-4-6), 2002-03, 03-04 .................................................2006 Ward, William F., 1949-50 ................................................................................................... 1950 Wardrop, Daniel H., 1949-50, 50-51 ................................................................................ 1951 Warren, Robert B., 1932-33, 33-34 ................................................................................ 1934 Waters, John K., 1929-30, 30-31.......................................................................................1931 Wayne, Robert E., 1944-45, 45-46 .................................................................................. 1946 Weber, Robert I., 1948-49, 49-50 .................................................................................. 1950 Wegner, Dean D., (F; 0-1-1), 1991-92 ............................................................................... 1993 West, William I., 1945-46, 46-47 ......................................................................................1947 Wheeler, Wayne R., (D; 7-31-38), 1961-62, 62-63, 63-64 ...................................... 1964 Whipple, Sherburne Jr., 1932-33 ..................................................................................... 1933 Whittington, William E., 1943-44, 44-45...................................................................... 1945 Wilkinson, Thomas C., (F; 17-27-44), 1953-54, 54-55 ............................................. 1955 Williams, John T., (D; 11-34-45), 1996-97, 97-98, 98-99....................................... 2000 Williams, Scott T., (D; 5-26-31), 1987-88, 88-89, 89-90, 90-91 .........................1991 Wilson, Harry S. Jr., 1950-51, 51-52 ..................................................................................1952 Wilson, Matthew E., (F; 50-61-111), 1983-84, 84-85, 85-86, 86-87 .................1987 Winer, Corey D., (G; 2.97; .899), 1966-97, 97-98, 98-99, 99-00 ....................... 2000 Winer, Ian S., (F; 55-93-148), 1992-93, 93-94, 94-95, 95-96 ............................ 1996 Wojciehoski, Gerald J., 1946-47 ........................................................................................1947 Woloshyn, Jeffrey J., (F; 27-67-94), 1971-72, 72-73 ..........................................1976 Woodruff, Roscoe B., 1940-41 ........................................................................................... 1941 Y-Y-Y Yancey, David T., (D; 11-48-59), 1974-75, 75-76, 76-77, 77-78 ................................1979 Yaros, John D., (G; .912-2.86), 2001-02............................................................2005 Yost, Joseph B., 1934-35, 35-36 ...................................................................................... 1936 Young, Crawford, 1941-42 ........................................................................................ June 1943 Young, David J., (F; 28-49-77), 1967-68, 68-69, 69-70 ...........................................1970 Z-Z-Z Zaremba, Zachariah E., (F; 12-11-23), 2011-12, 12-13 ...................................2015 Zitzman, Kenneth F., 1931-32 ............................................................................................ 1932

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2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

Q-Q-Q Quinlan, Timothy M., (F; 7-17-24), 2001-02, 02-03 ...................................................2005 Quinn, Matthew S., (D; 1-1-2), 1986-87 ...........................................................................1987 R-R-R Randazzo, Richard A., (F; 43-72-115), 1989-90, 90-91, 91-92, 92-93.............. 1993 Ray, Thomas H., 1940-41, 41-42 ....................................................................................... 1942 Ray, William J., 1941-42 ............................................................................................. June 1943 Regan, David M., (F; 7-8-15), 1984-85, 85-86 ............................................................1986 Register, Charles L., 1935-36, 36-37 ..............................................................................1937 Reynolds, George T., (F; 49-78-127), 1971-72, 72-73, 73-74, 74-75 ......................1976 Rhoades, John H., (F; 13-29-42), 1979-80 ........................................................ 1983 Richards, Joshua M., (F; 6-12-18), 2011-12, 12-13..........................................2015 Riley, Philip D., (F; 13-44-57), 1963-64, 64-65, 65-66 ............................................ 1966 Ritteman, Ralph A., 1949-50 ............................................................................................. 1950 Rizzo, Christopher J., (F; 35-56-91), 1980-81, 81-82, 82-83, 83-84 ................ 1984 Roberts, Brad J., (G; 2.72, .906), 2002-03, 03-04, 04-05, 05-06 .................... 2006 Roberts, Clayton J., (D; 35-49-84), 1967-68, 68-69, 69-70 .................................1970 Roberts, Joshua A., (F; 0-3-3), 2012-13..............................................................2016 Robinson, Charles F., (D; 21-75-96), 1980-81, 81-82, 82-83, 84-85 ................ 1985 Rocha, Cheyne (D; 4-15-19), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13..........................2013 Rogers, Clifton E., (G; 0.00/.000), 2002-03 .............................................................. 2006 Rogosheske, Alexander W., (F; 3-11-14), 2000-01 ...........................................2004 Rose, Robert D., (F; 23-20-43), 1950-51, 51-52, 52-53 .......................................... 1953 Ross, Robert J., (F: 30-35-65), 2004-05, 05-06, 06-07, 07-08 ........................ 2008 Rost, David C., (F; 104-226-330), 1973-74, 74-75, 75-76, 76-77........................... 1977 Rost, Thomas P., (F; 118-169-287), 1975-76, 76-77, 77-78, 79-80 ......................1980 Rothemich, Mark A., (F; 1-1-2), 1998-99 ....................................................................... 1999 Rothschild, Jacquard H., 1928-29, 29-30.................................................................... 1930 Roubian, Edward J., (F; 45-71-116), 1970-71, 71-72, 72-73........................................1973 Rowe, Ken J., (F; 15-11-26), 2006-07, 07-08 ................................................................ 2010 Rudd, Corey C., (D; 3-7-10), 2002-03, 03-04, 04-05, 05-06............................... 2006 Ryan, John B., (F; 11-18-29), 1967-68, 68-69, 69-70 ................................................1970 Ryan, Patrick J., (D; 1-0-0), 2009-10, 10-11, 11-12 ......................................................2012 Ryan, Will R., (F; 10-19-29), 2005-06, 06-07, 07-08, 08-09 ............................... 2009 S-S-S St. Denis, Michael G. (F, 0-0-0), 2012-13 ..........................................................2016 Salisbury, Lloyd R., 1939-40, 40-41................................................................................. 1941 Santee, Michael L. (F, 9-10-10), 2009-10, 10-11 ........................................................ 2013 Sarner, Brian G., (F; 6-3-9), 1999-00 ..............................................................................2003 Sawicky, Charles A., (F; 21-25-46), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98, 98-99 .................. 1999 Sawyer, Edward W., 1933-34, 34-35 .............................................................................. 1935 Sawyer, John A., 1926-27, 27-28 ....................................................................................... 1928 Schachman, Matthew D., (D: 0-0-0), 2003-04, 04-05, 05-06 ...........................2007 Scheiffler, Frederick F., 1924-25, 25-26....................................................................... 1926 Schick, John L., (D; 1-7-8), 1952-53, 53-54, 54-55 .................................................... 1955 Schlotterbeck, Walter B., 1947-48 ................................................................................. 1948 Schoeppach, John T., (F; 2-5-7), 1985-86, 86-87 ......................................................1988 Schorr, Donald M., 1928-29 ............................................................................................... 1929 Schroeder, Mark V., (F; 25-31-56), 1976-77, 77-78, 78-79, 79-80 .......................1980 Schulze, Jerome S., (D; 19-53-72), 1986-87, 87-88, 88-89, 89-90 ..................1990 Schultz, Brian C., (F; 6-7-13), 2010-11, 11-12, 12-13 .......................................2014 Schumacher, Francis J., (D; 5-23-28), 1982-83, 83-84 ......................................... 1984 Schuster, John N., (F; 6-6-12), 1980-81 ......................................................................... 1984 Schweiger, Frederic M., (F; 14-32-46), 1952-53, 53-54......................................... 1954 Scioletti, Daniel C. Jr., (G; 3.38; .894), 1968-69, 69-70, 70-71..............................1971 Scott, Douglas C., (F; 6-9-15), 1994-95, 95-96 .........................................................1998 Scott, John F. III, (F; 8-17-25), 1969-70-70-71 .............................................................1971 Sefchik, Eric R, (F; 25-56-81), 2006-07, 07-08, 08-09, 09-10............................ 2010 Serre, Nicholas J., (F; 21-63-84), 1999-00, 2000-01, 01-02, 02-03 ................2003 Seward, Lawrence M., (F; 2-4-6), 1991-92 ................................................................... 1994 Shea, Francis L. III, (F; 68-120-188), 1981-82, 82-83, 83-84, 84-85 ........... 1985 Sharrock, Joseph B., (F; 57-71-128), 1993-94, 94-95, 95-96, 96-97 ................1997 Shepard, John T., (G; 1.89; .922), 1962-63 ................................................................... 1963 Sheridan, Rich. V. III, (F; 49-79-128), 1986-87, 87-88, 88-89, 89-90 ............1990 Shotwell, James H., (F; 9-4-13), 1961-62 ...................................................................... 1963 Simenson, Clifford G., 1932-33, 33-34.......................................................................... 1934 Sisson, Donald C., (D; 3-26-29), 1995-96, 96-97, 97-98 ....................................... 1999 Skarda, Bryant L., (F; 21-31-52), 2008-09, 09-10, 10-11, 11-12 ............................2012 Smith, Edward P., 1937-38, 38-39 .................................................................................. 1939 Smith, James T., (D; 2-10-12), 1998-99............................................................. 2001 Smith, Kenneth W., (F; 62-52-114), 1964-65, 65-66, 66-67..................................1967 Smith, Lawrence J., (F; 4-10-14), 1980-81 .................................................................... 1984 Smith, Lucas A., (D; 0-4-4), 1996-97 ............................................................................. 2000 Smith, Milton S., (D; 11-20-31), 1990-91, 91-92, 92-93.......................................... 1994 Snead, William K., 1952-53................................................................................................. 1953 Snow, Jeffrey J., (G; 4.26; .866), 1979-80, 80-81, 81-82, 82-83 ........................ 1983 Snyder, Arthur Jr., (F; 44-38-82), 1945-46, 46-47, 47-48...................................... 1948 Snyder, Francis, (F; 24-29-53), 1950-51, 51-52, 52-53........................................... 1953 Snyder, Howard M. Jr., 1934-35, 35-36......................................................................... 1936 Soucie, Christopher P., (D; 5-10-15), 1990-91, 91-92 .............................................. 1992 Spinks, James M. Jr., (F; 1-0-1), 1970-71 .........................................................................1972 Spiridigliozzi, Robert J., (D; 1-20-21), 1973-74, 75-76 ...............................................1976 Spracklen, Christopher M., (F, 3-2-5), 2007-08, 08-09, 09-10, 10-11.............. 2011


2013-14 ARMY HOCKEY MEDIA GUIDE

SECTION MEDIA ROSTER MARKER

#3 CHRISTIAN POMARICO

So. • D • 6-0 • 200 Simsbury, Conn.

#4 RYAN NICK Fr • D • 5-10 • 190 Plymouth, Mich.

#5 CONNOR COSTELLO Fr • D • 6-1 • 205 Londonderry, N.H.

#7 ANDREW O’LEARY So. • F • 6-1 • 210 Norwich, Vt.

#8 KYLE VOGEL So. • F • 6-2 • 200 Richland, Wash.

#11 BRIAN SCHULTZ Sr. • F • 5-10 • 180 Aurora, Ohio CAPTAIN

#13 C.J. REUSCHLEIN Fr. • F • 6-1 • 205 Flint, Mich.

#14 JOE KOZLAK So. • F • 6-2 • 190 Duluth, Minn.

#15 CLINT CARLISLE Fr. • F • 5-10 • 170 Dallas, Texas

#16 MICHAEL ST. DENIS So. • F • 5-9 • 175 Auburn, Maine

#17 JOE BRUCKLER Fr. • F • 5-9 • 170 Burlington, Mass.

#19 JOSH RICHARDS Jr. • F • 5-11 • 170 Lee, N.H. ALTERNATE CAPTAIN

#20 JONATHAN GEHRT

#21 GARRET PETERSON Fr. • D • 6-2 • 196 Coppell, Texas

#22 THANE HELLER So. • F • 6-2 • 210 Elizabethtown, Pa.

#23 LUKE JENKINS So. • D • 5-10 • 180 River Falls, Wis.

#24 MAURICE ALVAREZ Jr. • D • 6-2 • 220 Cleveland, Ohio

#1 ROB TADAZAK Jr. • G • 6-0 • 200 Lapeer, Mich.

#2 JAMES MCNULTY So. • F/D • 6-4 • 215 Howell, Mich.

#10 ZAK ZAREMBA Jr. • F • 6-1 • 195 Parma, Ohio

#18 MAC LALOR Jr. • D • 6-0 • 185 Needham, Mass. ALTERNATE CAPTAIN

So • D • 5-11 • 180 Woodbury, Minn.

#25 KYLE PLAGEMAN Fr. • F • 5-11 • 185 Cleveland, Ohio

#26 SHANE HEARN So. • F • 5-10 • 185 Auburn, Maine

#27 WILLIE FAUST So. • F • 5-10 • 180 Stillwater, Minn.

#28 JOSH ROBERTS So. • F • 5-11 • 185 Southport, Conn.

#30 TANNER CREEL Fr. • G • 5-10 • 160 Kildeer, Ill.

#35 PARKER GAHAGEN Fr. • G • 6-2 • 193 Buffalo, N.Y.

BRIAN RILEY Head Coach 10th Season

TREVOR LARGE Assistant Coach 6th Season

ERIC LANG Assistant Coach 2nd Season

TOM DORAN Director of Hockey Ops 11th Season

2LT RYAN LEETS Athletic Intern

2LT CHEYNE ROCHA Athletic Intern

PAGE 102 • @ARMY_HOCKEY




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