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:: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Table of Contents

University Directory...... 2 Credits Media Information...... 3 2008-09 Schedule...... 4 The 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Media Guide was written, 2008-09 Roster...... 5 designed and produced by the Harvard University Office of Athletic Communications, 65 North Harvard Street, , MA 02163. Harvard University Front and back cover photos by David Silverman Photography and President ...... 6 Action Photography. Nichols Family Director of Athletics Bob Scalise...... 6 Additional photos by Harvard News Office, Jet Commercial Welcome to Harvard...... 7 Photography, Tim Morse, Dick Raphael, John Quackenbos, Dave Prominent Harvard Alumni...... 11 Einsel/NCAA Photos, Getty Images, USA Hockey, Rudy Winston, San Athletics at Harvard...... 14 Jose Sharks, , , , Bright Hockey Center...... 18 Panthers, Steve Babineau, Brian Babineau and David Silverman. A Timeline of Tradition...... 20 The guide was printed by Evans Printing, Concord, N.H. Copies of Remembering Kevin McInnis...... 24 this media guide are available for $15 by calling the Harvard Athletics Crimson in the Community...... 24 Ticket Office at 877-GO-HARVARD or by sending payment with a Hockey Staff written request to the Office of Athletic Communications. Robert D. Ziff Head Coach ’91...... 26 Office of Athletic Communications(617-495-2206) Assistant Coaches...... 28 Director of Athletic Communications...... Kurt Svoboda Hockey Support Staff...... 30 Email...... [email protected] Sports Medicine...... 31 Assistant Director (Men’s Ice Hockey Contact)...... Casey Hart Strength & Conditioning...... 32 Phone...... 617-495-7692 Meet the Crimson Fax...... 617-495-2130 Returning Players...... 34 Email...... [email protected] Newcomers...... 52 Assistant Director...... Heather Palmer Crimson, White and Blue...... 56 Email...... [email protected] Opponents Assistant Director...... Tim Williamson 2008-09 Opponents...... 58 Email...... [email protected] All-Time Series Results...... 64 Publications Coordinator...... Jason Gerdom Email...... [email protected] Year in Review 1 Athletic Communications Intern...... Michael Bello 2007-08 Recap...... 72 2007-08 Results...... 73 Email...... [email protected] 2007-08 Statistics...... 74 Athletic Communications Intern...... Matthew Scheerer ECAC Hockey...... 75 Email...... [email protected] ...... 76 Record Book Men’s Ice Hockey Quick Facts Individual Records...... 78 Nickname...... Crimson Goaltending Records...... 82 Enrollement Team Records...... 84 ...... 6,715 Year-by-Year Leaders...... 85 Colors...... Crimson, Black and White Year-by-Year Records...... 86 Affiliation...... NCAA Division I Year-by-Year Results...... 87 Conference...... ECAC Hockey League, Ivy League History Arena (capacity)...... Bright Hockey Center (2,776) Ice size Captains...... 96 ...... 204 x 87 Team Awards...... 97 2007-08 overall record...... 17-13-4 Major Harvard Awards...... 100 ECAC Hockey (finish)...... 12-7-3 (third) Crimson Bloodlines...... 101 Ivy League (finish)...... 7-2-1 (second) All-Time Letterwiners...... 102 2008-09 captains...... Jimmy Fraser and Brian McCafferty Ivy League Hockey History...... 106 First season...... 1897-98 ECAC Hockey Regular-Season History...... 108 All-time record...... 1,271-785-103 (.613) ECAC Hockey Championship History...... 110 NCAA championships...... 1 (1989) ECAC Hockey All-Decade Teams...... 113 NCAA tournament appearances NCAA Championship History...... 114 ...... 21 (1955, ’57, ’58, ’69, ’71, 1989 NCAA Championship...... 116 ’74, ’75, ’82, ’83, ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88, Tournament...... 118 ’89, ’93, ’94, 2002, ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06) Memorial Award...... 120 ECAC regular-season titles...... 13 (1963, ’73, ’75, ’82, ’83, ’84, ’86, Head Coaches...... 122 ’87, ’88, ’89, ’92, ’93, ’94) ’56...... 123 ECAC championships...... 8 (1963, ’71, ’83, ’87, ’94, All-Americans...... 124 2002, ’04, ’06) Olympians and National Team Members...... 125 Ivy League championships...... 21 (1956, ’57, ’58, ’61, ’62, ’63, ’74, Draft Picks...... 126 ’75, ’82, ’83, ’84, ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90, ’93, ’94, 2000, ’06) Harvard and the National Hockey League...... 128 Beanpots...... 10 (1952, ’55 ’60, ’62, ’69, ’74, ’77, ’81, ’89, ’93)

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University University Directory

Administration Coaching Staff President...... Drew Gilpin Faust : Joe Walsh...... (617) 495-2629 Provost...... Steven E. Hyman MD ’80 Men’s : ...... 495-4856 Dean of Faculty of Arts and Sciences...... Michael D. Smith Women’s Basketball: Kathy Delaney-Smith...... 495-9321 Dean of the ...... Evelynn Hammonds, Ph. D.’93 Men’s Heavyweight Crew: Harry Parker...... 495-4836 Associate Deans of the College Women’s Heavyweight Crew: Bob Doyle, John F. Gates, Georgene B. Herschbach ’63, Ph.D. ’69, Liz O’Leary...... 495-9249 Judith H. Kidd, Suzy M. Nelson, Monique Rinere Men’s Lightweight Crew: Charley Butt...... 495-7775 Dean of Freshmen...... Thomas Dingman ’67, Ed.M. ’73 Women’s Lightweight Crew: Heather Cartwright...... 495-9249 Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Men’s/Women’s Cross Country: Jason Saretsky...... 495-2218 William R. Fitzsimmons ’67, Ed.M. ’69, Ed.D. ’71 Men’s/Women’s Fencing: Peter Brand...... 495-1991 Chair, Faculty Standing Committee on Athletics...... Jerry Green Field Hockey: Sue Caples...... 495-5262 Football: Timothy L. Murphy...... 495-2207 Department of Athletics Men’s Golf: Jim Burke...... 495-4848 Nichols Family Director of Athletics Women’s Golf: Kevin Rhoads...... 496-0686 Robert L. Scalise MBA ’89...... (617) 495-2204 Men’s Ice Hockey: Ted Donato ’91...... 495-2418 Senior Associate Director of Athletics Women’s Ice Hockey: ...... 495-2281 Patricia Henry...... 495-2201 Men’s : Senior Associate Director of Athletics John Tillman...... 495-4890 Geradine Mahoney...... 495-2781 Women’s Lacrosse: Lisa Miller...... 495-5245 Associate Director of Athletics Coed/Women’s Sailing: Mike O’Connor...... 495-3434 Jeremy Gibson...... 496-8769 Men’s/Women’s Alpine Skiing: Tim Mitchell...... 495-1916 Associate Director of Athletics Men’s/Women’s Nordic Skiing: Chris City...... 495-4848 Diane Metcalf...... 495-4525 Men’s Soccer: Jamie Clark...... 495-4549 Associate Director of Athletics Women’s Soccer: Ray Leone...... 495-3776 Sheri Norred...... 495-2202 : Jenny Allard AM ’99...... 495-9398 Associate Director of Athletics Men’s/Women’s Squash: Satinder Bajwa...... 495-4851 Susan Byrne...... 496-9404 Men’s Swimming and Diving: Timothy D. Murphy...... 495-2268 Assistant Director of Athletics Women’s Swimming and Diving: Stephanie Wriede-Morawski ’92....495-1989 2 Neil Murphy...... 496-8769 Assistant Director of Athletics Men’s Tennis: Dave Fish ’72...... 495-2695 Nathan Fry...... 495-4992 Women’s Tennis: Traci Green...... 496-2460 Assistant Director of Athletics Men’s/Women’s Track and Field: Jason Saretsky...... 495-2218 Jon Lister...... 384-8426 Men’s Volleyball: Brian Baise...... 495-4848 Assistant Director of Athletics Women’s Volleyball: Jennifer Weiss...... 496-7390 Tim Wheaton...... 496-4221 Men’s/Women’s Water Polo: Erik Farrar...... 496-1875 Director of Human Resources Wrestling: Jay Weiss...... 495-1968 Cheryl Alexis ’76...... 496-1180 Director of Athletic Communications Additional Numbers Kurt Svoboda...... 495-2206 University Information/Directory Assistance...... 495-1000 Director of Strength & Conditioning General Athletic Information...... 495-4848 Craig Fitzgerald...... 496-6803 University News Office...... 495-1585 Manager of Marketing Medical Room...... 495-2200 Sarah Jarvis...... 495-7492 Equipment Room...... 495-2217 Manager of Ticketing Harvard Ticket Office...... 495-2211 Erin Hobin-Audet...... 495-2211 Bright Hockey Center Press Box...... 495-3775 Manager of Equipment Operations Athletic Administration Fax...... 496-9950 Alex Ferguson...... 495-2217 Manager of Financial Services Men’s Ice Hockey Office Fax...... 496-6555 Christy Krant...... 495-5134 General Athletics Fax...... 495-3475 Manager of Recreational Services Athletic Communications Fax...... 495-2130 To be named...... 495-4790 Official Athletics Website...... GoCrimson.com Manager of Athletic Events Duane Reeves...... 496-6767 Mailing Address Manager of Athletic Facilities Harvard University Dick Nerden...... 495-3163 Department of Athletics Executive Director of the Harvard Varsity Club Murr Center Bob Glatz ’88...... 495-3750 65 North Harvard Street Medical Staff...... 495-2200 Boston, MA 02163 Dr. Arthur L. Boland, Team Physician, Head Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Mark Steiner ’72, Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Frank Wang, Doctor of Internal Medicine Brant Berkstresser, Head Athletic Trainer

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Media Information

Working press and radio are assigned space in the working press area. Please note that “standing room” passes are not distributed. Scouts are not permitted in the press box. Line charts and notes are available to scouts at the base of the press box stairs. Shot charts are available to all members of the working press at the conclusion of each period, and out-of-town scores are posted on the rear wall of the press box throughout the game. Complete game packets, which include shot charts and a game summary, are available in the press box no later than 20 minutes after the conclusion of the contest. Phone lines and Internet access are available for filing stories from Bright Hockey Center. Parking Members of the media are advised that parking is limited in the vicinity of the Bright Hockey Center. A parking pass can be mailed if the credential request is received five working days prior to the contest. Radio Broadcasts Covering the Crimson Stations wishing to broadcast Harvard men’s ice hockey games The 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Media Guide is designed must make arrangements through Casey Hart in the Office of Athletic to assist you in the coverage of the Crimson and collegiate ice hockey. Communications no later than a week prior to the game. One phone line Harvard welcomes hockey coverage by accredited writers, broadcasters will be given to each school free of charge, while each additional broadcast and photographers under the guidelines below. Accredited members of the outlet will be charged a $100 line fee per game. One analog phone line is media can receive press releases via email by contacting Casey Hart in the available for each station. A maximum of three credentials will be provided Office of Athletic Communications at [email protected]. for any broadcast crew. Interviews Photographers/TV Crews Interviews with members of the coaching staff and players must be Space is available on the concourse level, and photographers are asked arranged through Casey Hart. Player and coach interviews can be set up not to block the view of patrons in seats by photographing from the aisles. for before or after practice. Head coach Ted Donato will be available for Arrangements can be made with Casey Hart in the Office of Athletic telephone interviews Monday-Thursday between 10 a.m. and noon. Communications to shoot from ice level (in the visitor’s box) for a maximum of one period. Please note that student-athletes’ telephone numbers will not be released 3 to the media per Department of Athletics policy. If a telephone interview is necessary, arrangements will be made for the student-athlete to call the requesting outlet. Players will not be available for interviews on gameday Broadcast Information until the conclusion of the contest. The Crimson on TV Postgame Procedures Several Harvard games in the 2008-09 season will be carried live At the conclusion of games at the Bright Hockey Center, interviews on local or national broadcasts. Check the schedule on page 4 and with the visiting coach and players will be available following a 10-minute GoCrimson.com for specific game information. cooling-off period. These interviews will be under the direction of the road team’s SID outside the visitors’ locker room. Coach Donato and requested The Crimson on the Internet Harvard players will be available immediately following in the lounge Live streaming video for all Harvard hockey home games and outside the Harvard varsity locker room. Writers on deadline will be given live audio for all away games will be available with a subscription to first preference for questions. Crimson Central on GoCrimson.com. On the road, Harvard coaches and players will comply with postgame procedures set by the home team. Please see Casey Hart to request specific players for postgame interviews. Harvard will maintain a closed locker room policy both at home and on the road. Media Credentials All credential requests to cover Harvard men’s ice hockey should be received at least 48 hours in advance. Requests should be directed to Casey Hart in the Office of Athletic Communications by mailing him at Murr Center, 65 North Harvard Street, Boston, MA 02163; calling 617-495- 7692 or emailing [email protected]. Harvard reserves the right to accept or reject credential requests for any reason. Scouts must purchase tickets through the ticket office (877-GO- HARVARD), as they will not be issued press credentials. Credentials can be picked up at the ticket office at Bright Hockey Center, which opens an hour before each game. The press box is located at the west The Crimson on Radio end of the arena, and a valid press credential is required for entry, both into Harvard student station WHRB-FM (95.3) continues its coverage of the arena proper and into the press box. Everyone is reminded that the Crimson hockey. Games can be heard live in the Boston area. WHRB’s Bright press box is a working press area, and cheering is strictly prohibited. broadcast schedule can be found online at www.whrb.org. Cheering or any abuse of media credentials is grounds for removal.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University 2008-09 Schedule

Date Opponent Location Time TV Friday, Oct. 24 Québec-Trois-Rivières (Exh.) Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. Schedule Notes Friday, Oct. 31 Dartmouth * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. • Harvard sees its first competition Oct. 24 against Saturday, Nov. 1 U.S. National Under-18 Team (Exh.) Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. Québec-Trois-Rivières in the first of two exhibitions. Tuesday, Nov. 4 Rensselaer * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. The Crimson also hosts the U.S. National Under-18 Friday, Nov. 7 at Rensselaer * Troy, N.Y. 7 p.m. Team for the second straight year Nov. 1. Saturday, Nov. 8 at Union * Schenectady, N.Y. 7:30 p.m. TWA Friday, Nov. 14 Clarkson * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. • The Crimson opens the season against an Ivy League opponent for the 27th time in the last 29 years as it Saturday, Nov. 15 St. Lawrence * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. hosts Dartmouth. Harvard’s only non-Ivy openers Tuesday, Nov. 18 at Brown * Providence, R.I. 7 p.m. since 1979 came in 1991 at Union (a 7-5 win) and Friday, Nov. 21 at Cornell * Ithaca, N.Y. 7 p.m. last season at Clarkson (a 3-1 loss). Saturday, Nov. 22 at Colgate * Hamilton, N.Y. 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28 at Chestnut Hill, Mass. 4 p.m. • Harvard takes on two of the four teams from last Friday, Dec. 5 North Dakota Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. season’s NCAA Frozen Four back-to-back. The Saturday, Dec. 6 North Dakota Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. Crimson visits defending national champion Boston College Nov. 28 and could face the Eagles again in Badger Hockey Showdown Saturday, Dec. 27 vs. Lake Superior State Madison, Wis. 1 5 p.m. the second round of the 57th Beanpot tournament Ala.-Huntsville at Wisconsin Madison, Wis. 1 8 p.m. Feb. 9 at TD Banknorth Garden. Harvard hosts Sunday, Dec. 28 Championship/Consolation Madison, Wis. 1 5 p.m. NCAA semifinalist North Dakota for a pair of non- Championship/Consolation Madison, Wis. 1 8 p.m. FSNW league games Dec. 5-6 at Bright Hockey Center. Friday, Jan. 2 at Quinnipiac * Hamden, Conn. 7 p.m. NESN • Looking for its second straight final berth and 11th Saturday, Jan. 3 at Princeton * Princeton, N.J. 7 p.m. overall title, the Crimson opens the Beanpot Feb. Friday, Jan. 9 Brown * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. 2 against . Harvard fell to Boston Saturday, Jan. 10 Yale * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. College, 6-5, in in last year’s thrilling Sunday, Jan. 25 at Dartmouth * Hanover, N.H. 4 p.m. ESPNU championship game after topping Northeastern, 3-1, Friday, Jan. 30 Union * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. in the opening round. 57th Annual Beanpot • The Crimson’s other non-conference games come Monday, Feb. 2 vs. Boston University Boston, Mass. 2 5 p.m. NESN Boston College vs. Northeastern Boston, Mass. 2 8 p.m. NESN in the Badger Hockey Showdown Dec. 28-29 in 4 Madison, Wis. In the opening round, Harvard Friday, Feb. 6 at Yale * New Haven, Conn. 7 p.m. takes on Lake Superior State for the first time since 57th Annual Beanpot the 1994 NCAA Frozen Four. The Crimson will Monday, Feb. 9 Consolation Boston, Mass. 2 5 p.m. meet host Wisconsin or Alabama-Huntsville in the Championship Boston, Mass. 2 8 p.m. NESN championship or consolation game. Friday, Feb. 13 Colgate * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 14 Cornell * Bright Hockey Center 8 p.m. CBSCS • The slate includes up to 10 games against six teams Friday, Feb. 20 at St. Lawrence * Canton, N.Y. 7 p.m. that finished last season ranked in the USCHO.com/ CSTV national poll. North Dakota was ranked third Saturday, Feb. 21 at Clarkson * Potsdam, N.Y. 7 p.m. in the final poll, followed by Boston College at No. 7, Friday, Feb. 27 Quinnipiac * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. No. 11 Clarkson, No. 13 Princeton, No. 15 Boston Saturday, Feb. 28 Princeton * Bright Hockey Center 7 p.m. University and No. 17 Wisconsin. 48th Annual Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship Fri-Sun, March 6-8 First Round (Best of Three) Campus Sites 7 p.m. • Harvard plays back-to-back games against Rensselaer Fri-Sun, March 13-15 Quarterfinals (Best of Three) Campus Sites 7 p.m. Nov. 4 and 7, Tuesday at Bright Hockey Center and Friday, March 20 Semifinal No. 1 Albany, N.Y. 3 Friday at . Semifinal No. 2 Albany, N.Y. 3 Saturday, March 21 Consolation Albany, N.Y. 3 • Following the Beanpot, the Crimson has an imposing Championship Albany, N.Y. 3 six-game stretch to close the regular season. Harvard 62nd Annual NCAA Championship plays home games against each of its three fellow Fri-Sat, March 27-28 East Regional Bridgeport, Conn. 4 2008 ECAC Hockey semifinalists (Colgate, Cornell Fri-Sat, March 27-28 West Regional , Minn. 5 and Princeton), visits each of the league’s last Sat-Sun, March 28-29 Midwest Regional Grand Rapids, Mich. 6 two regular-season champions (St. Lawrence and Sat-Sun, March 28-29 Northeast Regional Manchester, N.H. 7 Clarkson) and hosts a rematch of last year’s ECAC Thursday, April 9 Frozen Four (Semifinals) Washington, D.C. 8 quarterfinal series against Quinnipiac. Saturday, April 11 Frozen Four (Final) Washington, D.C. 8 • Harvard looks to regain the when Home games (bold) played at Bright Hockey Center 1 Kohl Center the Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship * ECAC Hockey game 2 TD Banknorth Garden begins March 6. The Crimson has played in six of (Exh.) indicates 3 the last seven title games and is 24-7 in those seven TWA indicates game televised by Time Warner Albany 4 Bridgeport Arena at Harbor Yard FSNW indicates game televised by Fox Sports Net Wisconsin 5 Mariucci Arena tournaments. NESN indicates game televised by Sports Network 6 Van Andel Arena ESPNU indicates game televised by ESPNU 7 Verizon Wireless Arena • The Crimson looks to get back to the NCAA CBSCS indicates game televised by CBS College Sports 8 Verizon Center Championship for the sixth time in eight seasons. All times are Eastern Harvard has made 21 appearances in the tournament. Schedule is subject to change

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey 2008-09 Roster

No. Name Cl. Pos. Ht. Wt. S/C Hometown High School 1 John Riley So. G 5-11 190 L Lake Forest, Ill. Loyola Academy 2 Brian McCafferty (c) Sr. D 6-0 205 L Lexington, Mass. 3 (a) Jr. D 5-11 195 R Montreal, Que. Salisbury School 6 Ryan Grimshaw Fr. D 6-0 195 R Rochester, N.Y. Ann Arbor Pioneer 7 Chad Morin Jr. D 6-0 210 L Auburn, N.Y. North 8 Ian Tallett Jr. D 6-2 207 L St. Louis, Mo. Ladue 9 Jimmy Fraser (c) Sr. F 5-11 185 R Port Huron, Mich. Ann Arbor Huron 10 Eric Kroshus Fr. F 6-1 197 R Calgary, Alta. Edge School 11 Daniel Moriarty Fr. F 5-9 187 R Estevan, Sask. Estevan Comprehensive School 12 Colin Moore Fr. F 5-10 183 R Medfield, Mass. Ann Arbor Pioneer 13 Michael Del Mauro So. F 6-1 195 R Watchung, N.J. Deerfield Academy 14 Peter Starrett Fr. D 6-3 210 R Bellingham, Mass. Catholic Memorial School 15 Doug Rogers Jr. F 6-1 195 R Watertown, Mass. St. Sebastian’s School 16 Nick Coskren Sr. F 5-11 205 R Walpole, Mass. St. Sebastian’s School 18 Sam Bozoian So. F 6-0 185 L St. Charles, Mo. Choate Rosemary Hall 19 Steve Rolecek Sr. F 5-10 195 R Bedford, N.H. Phillips Academy Andover 20 Bill Keenan Sr. F 6-1 180 R , N.Y. Collegiate School 21 Fr. F 6-1 195 L Montreal, Que. Deerfield Academy 22 Joe Smith So. F 6-1 210 R Woburn, Mass. Phillips Academy Andover 23 Matt McCollem So. F 6-1 205 L Somerville, Mass. Belmont Hill School 24 Rence Coassin Fr. F 6-1 200 R Hamden, Conn. Choate Rosemary Hall 27 Michael Biega So. F 5-11 195 L Montreal, Que. Salisbury School 28 Chris Huxley So. D 5-11 202 L Weymouth, Mass. Noble and Greenough School 5 34 Matt Hoyle Fr. G 6-2 205 L North York, Ont. Park Tudor School 35 Ryan Carroll So. G 5-11 170 L Hackensack, N.J. Tabor Academy 39 Pier-Olivier Michaud So. F 5-10 180 L Mont-Joli, Que. École Polyvalente le Mistral

(c) (a) Assistant Captain Head Coach Ted Donato, fifth season (Harvard ’91) Assistant Coaches Sean McCann, seventh season (Harvard ’94) Patrick Foley, second season (New Hampshire ’04) Volunteer Assistant Geographic Breakdown Bruce Irving, seventh season (Cornell ’85) (19) Athletic Trainer (1)...... Rence Coassin Chad Krawiec (Boston University ’97) Illinois (1)...... John Riley Equipment Manager (8)...... Nick Coskren, Chris Huxley, John O’Donnell Brian McCafferty, Matt McCollem, Colin Moore, Doug Rogers, Joe Smith, Peter Starrett Pronunciation Guide (1)...... Jimmy Fraser Missouri (2)...... Sam Bozoian, Ian Tallett Alex/Michael Biega...... bee-EGG-ah New Hampshire (1)...... Steve Rolecek Sam Bozoian...... buh-ZOY-in New Jersey (2)...... Ryan Carroll, Michael Del Mauro Rence Coassin...... COE-ah-sin New York (3)...... Ryan Grimshaw, Bill Keenan, Chad Morin Chad Morin...... MORE-in (7) Pier-Olivier Michaud...... mee-SHOW Alberta (1)...... Eric Kroshus Ontario (1)...... Matthew Hoyle Steve Rolecek...... ROLL-eh-check Quebec (4)...... Alex Biega, Michael Biega, Peter Starrett...... STAIR-it Alex Killorn, Pier-Olivier Michaud Ian Tallett...... TAL-it Saskatchewan (1)...... Daniel Moriarty

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University Drew Gilpin Faust President of Harvard University Drew Gilpin Faust, an of university policy. A devoted teacher and nonprofit boards and in a range of professional eminent historian and mentor, she is currently leading an undergraduate societies. She is a trustee of the Andrew W. Mellon the founding dean of the seminar on the Civil War and Reconstruction. Foundation, the National Humanities Center Radcliffe Institute for In the spring of 2005, she oversaw the work and Bryn Mawr College, where she chaired the Advanced Study, became of Harvard’s Task Forces on Women Faculty trustee committee on student life from 1998 to the 28th president of and on Women in Science and Engineering. In 2003. She also serves on the educational advisory Harvard University July 2004, she served on the Task Force on board of the Guggenheim Foundation. She was 1, 2007. Undergraduate Life. president of the Southern Historical Association Under Faust’s leadership, Radcliffe emerged as Before coming to Harvard, Faust served for in 1999-2000, vice president of the American one of the nation’s foremost centers of scholarly 25 years on the faculty of the University of Historical Association from 1992 to 1996 and an and creative enterprise, distinctive for its . She was appointed as assistant executive board member of both the Organization multidisciplinary focus and the exploration of new professor in the Department of American of American Historians and the Society of knowledge at the crossroads of traditional fields. Civilization in 1976, associate professor in 1980 American Historians from 1999 to 2002. Since coming to Harvard, Faust has continued and full professor in 1984. She was named the Faust has also served on numerous editorial to write and lecture on the history of the Stanley Sheerr Professor of History in 1988, then boards and selection committees, including the American South and the Civil War. Her sixth served as the Annenberg Professor of History jury for the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1986, book, This Republic of Suffering, forthcoming in from 1989 to 2000. She chaired the Department 1990 and 2004. She is an elected member of the 2008, considers the impact of the Civil War’s of American Civilization for five years, and was American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the enormous death toll on the lives of 19th-century director of the Women’s Studies Program from American Philosophical Society and the Society of Americans. Her fifth book, Mothers of Invention: 1996 to 2000. She was twice honored at Penn for American Historians. Women of the Slaveholding South in the American her distinguished teaching, in 1982 and 1996. Faust is married to Charles Rosenberg, one of Civil War (1996), was awarded the Society of Raised in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, the nation’s leading historians of medicine and American Historians’ Francis Parkman Prize, Faust went on to attend Concord Academy in science, who is Professor of the History of Science honoring the year’s best nonfiction book on an Massachusetts. She received her bachelor’s degree and Ernest E. Monrad Professor in the Social American theme. in history from Bryn Mawr College in 1968 Sciences at Harvard. As dean of Radcliffe, Faust has been an and her master’s degree (1971) and doctoral Faust and Rosenberg live in Cambridge. They influential member of Harvard’s Academic degree (1975) in American civilization from the have two daughters, Jessica Rosenberg, a 2004 Advisory Group, which brings together the University of Pennsylvania. graduate of Harvard, and Leah Rosenberg, Faust’s president, provost and deans to consider matters Faust has been active both as a member of stepdaughter, a scholar of Caribbean literature. 6 Robert L. Scalise Nichols Family Director of Athletics Robert L. Scalise was coach of the Harvard men’s lacrosse and women’s the nation’s first women’s collegiate soccer coach to introduced as Harvard’s soccer programs. amass 100 victories. He finished with a 113‑38‑11 Nichols Family Director of A 1971 graduate of Brown, Scalise was selected overall record. Athletics in July 2001 after three times to the All-Ivy League lacrosse team and Scalise left coaching in 1987 to enroll in the five years as associate dean twice named All-America and All-New England. , where in 1989 he was and senior executive officer He led the nation in scoring (47 goals) as a junior, awarded a Master in Business Administration. Later of the Harvard Business then co-captained the squad in 1971 when he set that year, he became director of MBA placement School. a New England record by scoring 11 times against services, managing processes and products serving Scalise, the seventh person to hold the director Connecticut while helping the Bears advance to the the Business School community. He held that post of athletics post at Harvard, oversees the nation’s inaugural NCAA men’s lacrosse tournament. until 1992, when he accepted a position at Bain & largest Division I athletics program with 41 varsity As a senior, Scalise was also the recipient of the Company to become director of recruiting, career sports, two dozen junior varsity teams, more than Sportsmanship Award and the development and alumni relations. While there, he 1,500 intercollegiate athletes and a broad array of Sports Illustrated Award of Merit, and was inducted developed strategic and operational initiatives to wellness and recreation programs and facilities. into the Brown Hall of Fame in 1991. He entered build people assets for the firm, and prepared and In just six years as director of athletics, Scalise the coaching ranks at Brown in the fall of 1971 as managed an operating budget of approximately has seen Harvard win nine national team an assistant for the men’s soccer and lacrosse teams. $4 million. Scalise returned to the Business School championships and 43 Ivy League titles. The 2007- Scalise was just 24 years old when he was named in 1995 as its executive director of MBA program 08 season saw Harvard win five Ivy League crowns head coach of Harvard’s men’s lacrosse team in administration before assuming his current post in while the women’s hockey team achieved a number- 1974. He led the Crimson to the 1980 Ivy League the department of athletics. one national ranking for eight weeks. championship — the program’s first league title The 55-year-old Scalise was born in New York Under Scalise, Harvard has played host to several in nearly two decades — and an accompanying City and graduated from Uniondale (N.Y.) High high-level NCAA tournaments including the 2006 NCAA tournament bid. He coached 17 All- School in 1967. He is married to Maura Costin women’s basketball Final Four at the TD Banknorth America selections and completed his tenure in Scalise ’80, an All-Ivy swimmer at Harvard who Garden and the 2008 men’s lacrosse championships 1987 with a 98-79 overall record. coached the Crimson women’s swimming and at . Harvard will again play host to Scalise was also the first coach of Harvard’s diving team to Ivy League and national prominence the lacrosse championships this coming spring. women’s soccer program, which began varsity play during her tenure. Along with his business background, Scalise in 1977. He led that team to Ivy League crowns The Scalise family resides in Nahant, Mass., and has extensive ties to Ivy League athletics as an All- in 1978, 1979 and 1981, and NCAA tournament includes four children: Michael (age 19), Mark America lacrosse player at Brown and later as head berths in 1982 and 1984. In 1985, Scalise became (17), Matthew (14) and Rosemary (10).

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Welcome To Harvard Since its founding days more than 360 years ago, Harvard has stood as a leader in all aspects of higher education

foreign countries, one that brings together a grand diversity of social, ethnic and economic backgrounds. Student Life Both academically and residentially, is fully coeducational. The centers of campus life are the residential houses. The house system, established in 1930, provides a small college atmosphere within the university. Each house has several faculty members and a staff of residential tutors associated with it, as well as dormitories, dining halls, libraries, intramural athletic teams and a number of social events. There are 12 residential houses, while a 13th unit, Dudley House, provides a parallel life for the students who live off-campus. All freshmen live in or next to . “The Yard” is the center of the university, and the hub of Harvard’s activity. Resident adult advisers help students explore the academic and non-academic opportunities of their first year. A A Broad Curriculum to developing leaders among people. Thus, its wide range of programs are designed especially At the foundation of Harvard’s lofty enrollment is not comprised of 6,700 “geniuses.” for first-year students—in the arts, intramural reputation is a liberal arts curriculum taught Instead, the University prides itself on attracting athletics and Freshman Seminars. by some of the world’s great scholars. Nobel the best all-around young individuals—those Students run nearly 200 organizations laureates and Pulitzer Prize-winning authors with the energy, innovation and creativity to and programs on campus. Last year, 80 plays teach introductory and Core courses, and all enliven a classroom. and musicals were produced and directed by faculty are readily available for students. Some students show unusual academic students. There are men’s, women’s and mixed Now equally well-known for its professional promise through experiences or achievements voiced choruses, plus over half a dozen a 7 schools, Harvard originally received recognition in study or research. Others are more “well- cappella groups. Two major orchestras, smaller as the country’s first and finest undergraduate rounded” and have contributed in many different ensembles, chamber groups and rock bands also institution. It has long been committed to ways to the lives of their schools or communities. thrive. There are two student newspapers and reforming college curricula and, in fact, Still others could be called “well-lopsided,” numerous political, feminist, ethnic, cultural the whole elective system began here over a with demonstrated excellence in one particular and religious journals. A majority of students century ago. Today, Harvard maintains its endeavor. And many students bring perspectives participate in community service by the time strong commitment to the undergraduate with formed by unusual personal circumstances or of their graduation, both through the Phillips one of the broadest programs in existence. experiences. Brooks House Association and the House and Students may concentrate in any of 44 fields, The end result is an undergraduate Neighborhood Development (HAND) program. including Afro-American studies, computer and population drawn from every state and many environmental sciences, government, classics, and folklore and mythology. The majority of courses offered at Harvard have fewer than 20 students, and most departments feature a “tutorial” system of teaching and learning. Tutorials are directed study courses in a student’s field of concentration, taught either in small groups or individually. Harvard has a graduation rate of over 97 percent, and over 70 percent of students graduate with honors. Nine out of 10 undergraduates who apply succeed in gaining admission to a medical school, with similar rates for other graduate schools. Contributing to these figures are first-class facilities such as a 12 million-volume library that is the largest university library in the world, numerous art and cultural museums, and 25 science/laboratory centers. The Harvard Student While Harvard has long been a leader among universities, it is equally committed

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Faculty of interest. components of the undergraduate program Harvard’s faculty is large, diverse, and by any Harvard’s philosophy has long been that an together fulfill the fundamental aims of a liberal measure, an accomplished group of women and undergraduate education ought to have structure arts education. men. and coherence while allowing for maximum There is no firm distinction in the Faculty of Each faculty member is both a noted teacher flexibility and individual choice. Arts and Sciences between undergraduate and and scholar, for first-rate scholarship is an Each student takes four courses in both the fall graduate courses. Students may progress in the essential ingredient of great teaching. Harvard and spring semesters. Harvard students spend, curriculum as rapidly as their preparation permits students learn in classrooms and labs from on average, 12 hours per week in class and enjoy and may enroll in graduate-level courses in the professors who are leading authorities in their wide latitude in setting priorities for study and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. fields. In this academic community, all members free time. Most of Harvard’s 10 graduate schools allow of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, including Course choices are made in close consultation students to cross-register and to participate in the most prominent scholars, expect to teach with an academic adviser over a week-long special programs. A reciprocal arrangement with undergraduates as well as graduate students. shopping period at the start of both semesters. MIT, our Cambridge neighbor, also permits Faculty members also instruct students outside Over the four-year undergraduate program, each Harvard students to cross-register in courses the classroom. In addition to professors’ weekly student will fulfill the requirements of a field offered there. office hours, students often spend time with of concentration (on average, half of a student’s While some of Harvard’s most popular courses their professors before or after class. There are total coursework) and the Core Curriculum are taught in grand lecture halls to accommodate also many occasions when professors take meals (about one-quarter of the plan of study). significant student interest, the majority of in Harvard’s residential dining halls, attend The remaining quarter of a student’s courses are taught in more intimate settings of 20 gatherings in the residences of House Masters, coursework is chosen freely from courses or fewer students. who are themselves senior faculty members, and offered throughout the university. These three Among Harvard’s most valuable intellectual participate in other programs and special events. Over the course of a year, hundreds of Academic Divisions students work closely with faculty members Afro-American Studies Government on their own or their professors’ research. Anthropology American Government, Public Law, and The opportunities for formal and informal Archaeology, Biological Anthropology, Social Administration; Comparative Government; relationships with Harvard faculty are plentiful Anthropology International Relations; Political Thought and rewarding, resulting in lifelong friendships as Applied Mathematics and Its History well as professional collaborations that can enrich Astronomy and Astrophysics History students’ lives and careers. Biochemical Sciences Asia, Africa and Australia; Ancient Medieval Facilities Biology and Renaissance; Modern Europe; United Beyond the mentorship of a faculty actively Molecular and Cellular Biology, States Neurobiology, Organismic and Evolutionary History and Literature 8 involved in undergraduate life, Harvard students have access to other extraordinary academic Biology Britain and America, Early Modern Europe, resources. Celtic Languages and Literatures France and America, Middle Ages, Modern By a wide margin, Harvard’s library system, Chemistry Europe with about 100 central and auxiliary collections Chemistry and Physics History of Art and Architecture and nearly 14 million volumes, is the world’s Classics History of Science largest university library. More than two dozen Comparative Literature Linguistics university buildings are used exclusively for Computer Science Literature scientific research, including laboratories for Mind, Brain, and Behavior Program Mathematics astronomy; biology; biochemistry; chemistry; Earth and Planetary Sciences Music computer science; electrical; computer, and Environmental Geoscience, Geological Near Eastern Languages and Civilization systems, and mechanical engineering, geology, as Sciences, Geophysical Sciences Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical Studies, well as physics and applied physics. East Asian Studies Islamic Civilizations, Postbiblical Jewish Harvard’s computing facilities are likewise History and Language of China, Japan, Studies extensive and state-of-the-art. A fiber-optic data Korea, Thailand, Vietnam Philosophy network links labs, libraries and faculty and Economics Physics administrative offices. Students can connect to General Economics and Economic Theory, Psychology Harvard’s high-speed data network, the library’s Environmental Economics, International Cognitive Neuroscience; Mind, Brain, and online catalog, the Internet and the rest of the Economics, Monetary and Fiscal Theory and Behavior Program world from ethernet connections in their rooms. Policy, Quantitative Methods Study of Religion Finally, the university’s many museums include Engineering Sciences Ancient Near Eastern; Buddhist; Christian; one of the world’s most distinguished university Biomedical Sciences and Engineering; Greek, Hellenistic and Roman; Hindu; art collections and a natural history museum Electrical, Computer, and Systems Islamic; Judaic whose scope and importance make it similarly Engineering; Engineering and Applied Romance Languages and Literatures renowned. Sciences; Environmental Sciences and Sanskrit and Indian Studies Engineering; Mechanical and Materials Slavic Languages and Literatures The Undergraduate Program Science and Engineering Social Studies Harvard offers students everything necessary English and American Literature and Sociology for a liberal education in virtually every Language Special Concentrations imaginable field. Environmental Science and Public Policy Statistics The sheer number of curricular choices — the Folklore and Mythology Visual and Environmental Studies catalog includes about 3,500 courses — opens Germanic Languages and Literatures Drawing, Film, Painting, Photography, doors for the exploration of widely disparate Sculpture, Stage Design fields and also for concentration in special areas Women’s Studies

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey assets are its students. Although they come from the best-represented undergraduate institution at Our faculty is committed to admissions and many different places and backgrounds and Harvard’s graduate schools. financial aid policies that help us attract a truly have a striking variety of talents, ambitions and While some students select fields of diverse student body. We make admissions convictions, all possess a passion for learning. concentration commonly associated with certain decisions without regard to a student’s financial That energy can be felt in and out of the careers, many discover they can study in areas of circumstances or citizenship, and we meet the classroom. At least as much learning occurs intellectual rather than professional interest and full financial need of each student who qualifies in dorm rooms and dining halls as in labs still be superb candidates for jobs and graduate for aid. and course lectures. Because undergraduate schools. The Committee on Financial Aid determines enrollment is comparatively small, there are At Harvard, students can concentrate in aid packages — in the form of scholarships, many opportunities to get to know fellow history and go to medical school, or study loans, and term-time jobs — based solely on students well. Late night talks and dinner engineering and earn a graduate degree in law. need using a full range of family income and table debates are very much part of the daily asset information. Admission and Financial Aid experience of the women and men at Harvard Over the past several years, Harvard has College. There is no formula for gaining admission launched two major financial aid initiatives to to Harvard. Academic accomplishment in benefit all students. As a result, students with Postgraduate Plans high school is important, but the Admissions financial need will now face less educational Harvard is committed to providing whatever Committee also considers many other criteria debt on graduation and will have more time to guidance or assistance students may need. Given such as community involvement, extracurricular concentrate on academic and extracurricular the university’s extraordinary resources, students’ activities and work experience. Last year’s opportunities. needs are met swiftly and fully. freshman class of 1,650 was culled from an These initiatives have featured significant Perhaps as a result, Harvard’s graduation rate is applicant pool of 20,972. annual increases in the undergraduate schoarship 97 percent, among the very highest in the nation. Strength of character, ability to overcome budget, reduced loan and term-time job Similarly high percentages of graduating seniors adversity, and other personal qualities often play obligations, and an outside award policy which and alumni express their satisfaction by stating in a part in admissions decisions. allows students to use the full amount of their surveys that they would attend Harvard if they Grades and test scores are relied on to help outside awards to reduce loans. had to choose a college again. assess academic promise, but they are by no Together, with the College’s longstanding Although Harvard’s academic programs means relied on exclusively. Evidence that you are commitment to need-blind admissions and need- are not “preprofessional” in the sense that willing and able to take on academic challenges based aid, these plans will continue to keep a they provide vocational training, Harvard or that you possess strengths not fully revealed Harvard education accessible to students from all students are very well prepared for admission in objective information is also of interest to the economic backgrounds. to professional schools (business, law and Admissions Committee. medicine) and graduate programs. Our students Believing that cost should not play a primary Student Housing enjoy an extraordinarily high rate of admission role in the selection of a college, Harvard has Harvard guarantees every student College to graduate and professional schools of their worked for many decades to attract students housing for four years, and nearly all students 9 choice. And Harvard College is almost always from all economic backgrounds. choose to live on campus for their full

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undergraduate careers. the number and nature of organizations change Latifah, Jackie Chan, Andy Garcia, and Halle All 1,650 first-year students live in or adjacent constantly as students’ interests evolve. Berry. to Harvard Yard. The Freshman Dean’s Office Casual beginners to accomplished masters Cambridge, Boston, and New England assigns roommates carefully among 17 freshman find opportunities at all levels. You do not have dorms. Numerous proctors (adult residential to study music in order to play in a orchestra, Cambridge combines the attractions of a advisors) and deans live among first-year students nor must you have had experience in drama or cosmopolitan city with the charm of a New to help them explore Harvard’s broad academic journalism to act in a play or write for a student England town. Organized around traditional and extracurricular opportunities. publication. town greens, tree-lined squares, and the grassy One highlight of freshman year is dining in College facilities include concert halls, theaters banks of the , Cambridge is one of Annenberg Hall, where all first years gather to with large stages and others with more intimate metropolitan Boston’s vital urban centers. eat. Each house has several faculty members surroundings, dance studios, rehearsal spaces One-of-a-kind shops, international restaurants, and a staff of residential tutors associated with and practice rooms. Creative students may enjoy bookstores, street cafés, and cavernous music it, as well as dormitories, dining halls, libraries, the visual arts as a satisfying hobby or a serious stores occupy the streets surrounding the College. intramural athletic teams and social events. academic pursuit. Sporting events, theater concerts, and colorful As sophomores, students move from the Yard There are plenty of opportunities at Harvard street performers also draw neighbors and visitors to one of the 12 Houses — small residential to become a journalist, poet, disc jockey, or to Harvard Square. communities of 330 to 450 students. Each editor. Several campus newspapers have a wide While Boston is full of history and colonial House has its own dining hall, library, common readership, and there are political, academic, charm, with its cobblestone streets and colonial rooms, rehearsal spaces and other resources. and literary journals to complement the humor church spires, it is also a modern city whose Houses also provide students with a wide magazines, yearbook, and radio stations. liveliness is apparent in its ranging architectural range of extracurricular programs. A senior styles, thriving industries, diverse cultures, and Cultural and Ethnic Initiatives faculty member serves each House as a Master. important arts centers. Masters make each House a home by hosting There are more than 50 cultural, ethnic, and Boston Harbor, famous for its Revolutionary frequent open houses in their private residences international student organizations at Harvard, War “tea party,” is home to many new and busy and by selecting an extensive staff of both as well as communities representing nearly every waterfront restaurants and shops. The waterfront resident and nonresident tutors and faculty major religion. also boasts a world-renowned aquarium, science fellows. Together, Masters and House staff set The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural museum, and numerous opportunities to walks the tone for the House in its activities and in its and Race Relations sponsors many activities through historic districts or cruises to its many functioning as a close-knit community within throughout the year that celebrate the ethnic islands and recreational areas. the context of a larger college and university and cultural diversity at Harvard. One of the Within easy reach of Boston and Cambridge most anticipated events is Cultural Rhythms, are the beaches of the Atlantic, cozy seaside Life Outside the Classroom a festival that highlights the talents of Harvard villages from Cape Cod to Maine, ski slopes, Extracurricular opportunities at Harvard are students and offers ethnic foods from around the forests, and historical sites recalling America’s 10 virtually unlimited. There are more than 300 world. The “Cultural Artist of the Year,” emcees past. official student organizations at the College, and the event, and past hosts have included Queen

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Prominent Alumni Graduates of Harvard and Radcliffe have impacted all facets of society Aerospace Peter Bynoe ’72 MBA ’76 W.E.B. DuBois 1890 AM 1891 PhD 1895 Harrison Schmitt PhD ’64 First minority owner of NBA team (Denver Writer and teacher; Founder of NAACP U.S. Astronaut, NASA Nuggets); Member of Harvard Board of Overseers Hanna H. Gray PhD ’57 Melvin J. Gordon ’41 Former president, University of Chicago; Arts CEO, Tootsie Roll Industries Member of Harvard Board of Overseers John Adams ’69 Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Donald E. Graham ’66 Helen Keller 1904 Chairman and CEO, Washington Post Author; Crusader for the disabled Leonard Bernstein ’39 Composer; Conductor James R. Houghton ’58 MBA ’62 Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. ’38 Chairman Emeritus, Corning, Inc.; Author, historian Ray Hornblower ’70 Member of Harvard Corporation Highly acclaimed tenor; Member of Harvard’s B.F. Skinner ’30 PhD ’31 undefeated 1968 football team Walter Isaacson ’74 Influential leader in behavioral psychology President and CEO, Aspen Institute Lincoln Kirstein ’30 Entertainment Founder, New York City Ballet Edward Crosby Johnson ’54 Chairman, Fidelity Management and Research Corp. Paris Barclay ’79 Yo Yo Ma ’76 Emmy Award-winning director, NYPD Blue, World-renowned cellist Jim Koch ’71 JD ’78 MBA ’78 Cold Case Founder, Boston Beer Company Frederick Law Olmstead 1894 Susanne Daniels ’87 Landscape architect; Designed Boston park system Minoru B. Makihara ’54 AMP ’77 President, Entertainment, Lifetime Entertainment and New York’s Central Park Chairman, Mitsubishi International Corporation Services

Joshua Redman ’91 Raymond J. McGuire ’79 Matt Damon ’92 Award-winning jazz artist Managing director, Merrill Lynch Actor and Academy Award-winning screenwriter

Peter Sellars ’80 Scott McNealy ’76 Rob Cohen ’71 Theater director Co-founder and CEO, Sun Microsystems Director, The Fast and the Furious, XXX 11

Daniel Troob ’70 Sumner Redstone ’43 LAW ’47 Rivers Cuomo ’99-06 Academy Award-winning orchestrator for Disney Chairman and CEO, Viacom Musician, Weezer

Lindsay Crouse ’70 Business Tom Stemberg ’71 MBA ’73 Chairman Emeritus, Staples; Co-chair of Friends of Actress, House of Games, Places in the Heart Steve Ballmer ’77 Harvard Basketball Chief executive officer, Microsoft; Former Harvard Al Franken ’73 Football manager Humorist and author Education and Humanities Lloyd Blankfein ’75 LAW ’78 Jill ker Conway PhD ’69 Tommy Lee Jones ’69 CEO, Goldman Sachs Former president, ; Trustee of Academy Award-winning actor; Hampshire College, New England Medical Center All-America football player; and Northfield Mt. Hermon School Member of Harvard’s undefeated 1968 team

Steve Ballmer ’77 Yo Yo Ma ’76 W.E.B. DuBois 1890 John Adams 1755

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Jack Lemmon ’47 John Hancock 1754 David Souter ’61 LAW ’66 Academy Award-winning actor President of Continental Congress; First person to Supreme Court Justice sign the Declaration of Independence John Lithgow ’67 Literature Actor, 3rd Rock From The Sun, Ricochet; Mufi Hannemann ’76 Member of Harvard Board of Overseers Mayor of Honolulu, Hawaii; John Ashbery ’49 Former Harvard basketball player Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Tom Morello ’86 Musician, Audioslave, Rage Against The Machine Oliver Wendell Holmes 1861 Peter Benchley ’61 Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court Author, Jaws Conan O’Brien ’85 Host, Late Night with Conan O’Brien Edward M. Kennedy ’54 William S. Burroughs ’36 U.S. Senator from Massachusetts; Novelist, essayist, social critic; Natalie Portman ’03 Harvard football letterman Author, Naked Lunch Actress, Star Wars prequels, Garden State John F. Kennedy ’40 Michael Crichton ’64 MD ’69 Bonnie Raitt ’72 Thirty-fifth President of the United States Author, Jurassic Park, Rising Sun; Grammy Award-winning singer Creator of television series ER Robert F. Kennedy ’47 Mira Sorvino ’89 U.S. Senator and Attorney General; e.e. cummings ’16 Academy Award-winning actress, Mighty Aphrodite Harvard football letterman Poet, writer

Tom Werner ’71 ’50 AM ’52 PhD ’54 T.S. Eliot ’10 Co-founder, Carsey-Werner Productions; Former secretary of state; Poet; Nobel Prize for Literature Co-owner, Nobel Peace Prize recipient Ralph Waldo Emerson 1821 Edward Zwick ’74 Barack Obama LAW ’91 Essayist and poet Director, Glory, The Last Samurai U.S. Senator from Illinois David Halberstam ’55 Journalist and author, The Powers That Be, Government Masako Owada ’85 Crown Princess of Japan The Summer of ’49, The Fifties, The Teammates John Adams 1755 Second President of the United States Deval Patrick ’78 LAW ’82 Norman Mailer ’43 Governor of Massachusetts Pulitzer Prize-winning author 12 John Quincy Adams 1787 Sixth President of the United States William Rehnquist AM ’49 George Plimpton ’48 Former Chief Justice of the United States Noted author and commentator George W. Bush MBA ’75 Forty-third President of the United States Janet Reno LLB ’63 Henry David Thoreau 1837 Former U.S. Attorney General Writer, philosopher, naturalist Michael Chertoff ’75 LAW ’78 U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security John Roberts ’76 John Updike ’54 Litt.D. ’92 Chief Justice of the United States Pulitzer Prize-winning author Hamilton Fish 1910 Longtime U.S. Representative from New York; Franklin D. Roosevelt ’04 Elizabeth Wurtzel ’89 Two-time football All-America Thirty-second President of the United States Author, Prozac Nation

Al Gore ’69 Theodore Roosevelt 1880 Former Vice President of the United States Twenty-sixth President of the United States

John Quincy Adams 1787 Theodore Roosevelt 1880 Franklin D. Roosevelt 1904 John F. Kennedy ’40

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Media Walter Gilbert ’53 Bill Cleary ’56 ’89 Winner, 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; 1960 Olympic gold medalist, ice hockey; Executive Producer, Today, NBC; Co-founder of Biogen Former Harvard hockey coach and athletic director Former Harvard football player Roger Kornberg ’67 Caryn Davies ’05 James Brown ’73 Winner, 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2008 Olympic gold medalist, rowing Sports Broadcaster, CBS Television; Three-year Harvard basketball letterman Philip Leder ’56 MD ’60 Ted Donato ’91 Winner, 1989 National Medal of Science 1992 Olympian, ice hockey; 13-year NHL veteran Jim Cramer ’77 LAW ’84 Current Harvard hockey coach Host of CNBC’s Mad Money James Nelson ’61 MD ’65 Professor of radiology and director of the Diagnostic -Strong ’98 Lou Dobbs ’67 Imaging Sciences Center at the University of Professional basketball player Anchor and television host, CNN Washington Medical School Ryan Fitzpatrick ’05 William Kristol ’73 Andrew Weil ’63 MD ’68 Plays for NFL’s Editor and publisher, The Weekly Standard World-renowned physician and advocate of alternative medicine remedies Craig MacDonald ’99 Seamus Malin ’62 Plays for NHL’s National soccer commentator; Kenneth Wilson ’56 Former Harvard soccer player; Winner, 1982 Nobel Prize in Physics Mary McCagg ’89 Former director, Harvard International Office Board of directors, U.S. Olympic Committee Sports Soledad O’Brien ’88 A.J. Mleczko ’97-99 Anchor, CNN’s American Morning Craig Adams ’99 1998 Olympic gold medalist, ice hockey Plays for NHL’s ; Linda McVeigh Mathews ’67 JD ’72 Won in 2006 ’02-04 Former national editor, The New York Times; First 1998 Olympic gold medalist, 2002 silver medalist female managing editor of The Matt Birk ’98 and 2006 bronze medalist, ice hockey Plays for NFL’s Minnesota Vikings; Frank Rich ’71 Six-time Pro Bowl selection Tammy Shewchuk ’01 Editorial columnist, The New York Times 2002 Olympic gold medalist (Canada), ice hockey James Blake ’01 ’69 Tennis player; ranked as high as No. 4 in the world Matthew Silverman ’98 13 Journalist, host, Fox News Sunday President, ’02-03 Jeff Zucker ’86 2002 and 2006 Olympic gold medalist and 1998 Ben Smith ’68 Executive producer, NBC News silver medalist (Canada), ice hockey Former coach, U.S. Olympic women’s ice hockey team Dick Button ’52 LLB ’55 Science, Medicine and Health Two-time Olympic gold medalist, figure skating; ’88 Robert Coles ’50 Commentator, ABC Sports Director of hockey operations and player Physician/psychiatrist; development, Boston Bruins Pulitzer Prize-winning author Peter Chiarelli ’87 General manager, Boston Bruins Sandra Whyte ’92 Leda Cosmides ’79 Ph.D. ’85 1998 Olympic gold medalist, ice hockey Pioneer in evolutionary psychology ’06-07 2002 silver medalist and 2006 bronze medalist, ice Paul Wylie ’91 hockey 1992 Olympic silver medalist, figure skating

Tommy Lee Jones ’69 Conan O’Brien ’85 James Blake ’01 James Brown ’73

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Leadership and Competitive Excellence in , the National Hockey Division I Athletics League, the National Basketball Association, In parallel to Harvard’s educational and professional tennis opportunities, the university provides the tours (WTP, ATP). Still more compete in the student-athlete with the infrastructure and Olympic Games, while countless others move on facilities to excel at the highest competitive level. to ownership and management roles in amateur A pioneer of intercollegiate athletics — and professional athletics. Harvard and Yale rowed in the nation’s first 2007-08 In Review college sporting event in 1852 — Harvard offers Harvard continued to remain at the forefront 41 varsity sports and has nearly than 1,500 of Division I athletics in a 2007-08 season that student-athletes, more than any other Division saw a return to glory for some teams, while I school. others continued their long legacies of success. The position given athletics within the Five Harvard teams won Ivy League University framework is both idealistic and championships and qualified for NCAA realistic. Harvard is a member of the Ivy tournament competition, while seven others League, along with Brown, Columbia, Cornell, either qualified individuals or received at-large Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton and Yale. Under invitations to their respective NCAA fields. the League’s founding document, the Presidents’ Fourteen Harvard teams finished the season Agreement of 1954, there are no athletic ranked among the national top 25 in their scholarships. Financial aid to student-athletes — respective sports. as with all students — is based solely on need. Women’s lightweight crew finished sixth in This structure has allowed Harvard teams to its national championship competition, and the succeed both within the Ivy League and on a heavyweights, chosen to compete in the NCAA national level. Harvard has won a total of 138 championships for the 11th time in 12 years, ran national collegiate championships in 18 different away with the first varsity eight petite final to sports, beginning with the men’s track and field finish ninth overall. title of 1880 and extending to the 2006 NCAA The fall season saw both Harvard soccer teams crown in fencing. Women’s ice hockey standout was grab national attention, as the men were ranked one of 14 Harvard athletes to earn All-America status Alumni of Harvard’s athletics programs have as high as sixth nationally and the women had in 2007-08. She also received the Patty Kazmaier gone on to succeed in , the 14 Memorial Award as the nation’s top player. one of the nation’s best turnarounds of the

Harvard rolled through the Ivy League on the way to its 12th league championship and fourth under head coach Tim Murphy.

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by the men’s swimming and diving team, which went 2007-08 At A Glance undefeated in dual meets National and placed itself among the Record Rank nation’s best. Senior Geoff Baseball 10-30 Rathgeber powered the team, Men’s Basketball 8-22 graduating as a 21-time Ivy Women’s Basketball 18-11 League champion in 10 Men’s Heavyweight Crew 5-1 11 events as well as a six-time Women’s Heavyweight Crew 11-3 7 All-America honoree. Men’s Lightweight Crew 2-4 The spring featured a Women’s Lightweight Crew 3-3 6 return to championship form Men’s Cross Country 3-2 by the Crimson men’s tennis Women’s Cross Country 2-3-1 team, which carved its way to Men’s Fencing 7-4 7 an undefeated Ivy season and Women’s Fencing 10-3 6 enjoyed considerable success Field Hockey 8-9 against a schedule laden with Football 8-2 20 national powers. Men’s Golf — There were also plenty of Women’s Golf — highlights for those teams Men’s Ice Hockey 17-13-4 16 that didn’t win Ivy titles. The Women’s Ice Hockey 32-2 4 men’s and women’s fencing Men’s Lacrosse 6-8 teams remained ranked in the Women’s Lacrosse 9-7 top 10 all year and finished Coed Sailing — 7 sixth at the combined NCAA Women’s Sailing — 15 Championships. Meanwhile, Skiing — the women’s track and field Men’s Soccer 12-4-2 t-25 program continued its steady Women’s Soccer 10-6-1 rise by placing fourth at Softball 25-22 both the indoor and outdoor Men’s Squash 6-5 4 Heptagonals. Women’s Squash 5-4 5 Individually, Sarah Men’s Swimming & Diving 9-0 22 Vaillancourt was one of 14 Women’s Swimming & Diving 7-2 Ivy League Rookie of the Year and Freshman All- Harvard athletes to earn All- 15 American Katherine Sheeleigh helped the Crimson Men’s Tennis 15-7 to the fifth-most improved season in Division I. America status in 2007-08. Women’s Tennis 2-17 She also received the Patty Men’s Indoor Track & Field 0-1 Kazmaier Memorial Award Women’s Indoor Track & Field 1-0 year. The men, powered by a pair of as the nation’s top collegiate Men’s Outdoor Track & Field 0-1 All-Americans, earned a against women’s hockey player, the sixth Women’s Outdoor Track & Field 1-0 then-defending national champion time a Harvard player has earned the Men’s Volleyball 9-10 UC Santa Barbara and hosted a honor in the 11-year history of the Women’s Volleyball 8-18 first-round game in the NCAA award. Men’s Water Polo 15-15 tournament. The women, by winning Vaillancourt and wrestling’s Women’s Water Polo 12-12 seven more games than they did J.P. O’Connor were named Ivy Wrestling 2-10-1 in 2006, had the nation’s fifth-best League players of the year, while improvement. coed sailing’s Kyle Kovacs was the Ranked 20th nationally by year’s NEISA Sailor of the Year. Katherine end, the football team capped a Sheeleigh (women’s soccer), June stirring season with a 37-6 drubbing Tiong (women’s squash) and Jess of previously unbeaten Yale on the Halpern (women’s lacrosse) were road to complete a sweep of the Ivy league rookies of the year, while ice League and claim its 12th conference hockey goalies Kyle Richter (men) title. and (women) ruled The story of the winter was the the creases as ECAC of Crimson women’s ice hockey team. the year. Harvard won its first 11 games before An astounding 110 athletes rattling off 21 straight victories to were named to all-academic teams bring a 32-1 record and an eight- in 2007-08. For their prowess in week standing as the nation’s No. 1 the classroom and in competition, team into the Frozen Four, where it 16 Crimson student-athletes were bowed to Wisconsin in the national recognized as ESPN The Magazine semifinals. Academic All-District selections. The men’s team, meanwhile, Emerging from the district level were advanced to the final of the ECAC football’s Andrew Berry and Noah Hockey Championship and was Van Niel, who earned spots on the ranked 16th nationally at year’s end. Geoff Rathgeber finished his career as a 21-time Ivy League champion in 10 publication’s Academic All-America different events as well as a six-time All-America honoree. More highlights were delivered team.

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more than 600 Harvard football games as well as hundreds of other athletic and non-athletic events, including Olympic soccer, NFL football, rock concerts and political rallies. The Stadium is a horseshoe containing architectural elements of a Greek stadium and Roman circus and is considered an engineering marvel. It was the world’s first massive reinforced concrete structure and the first large permanent arena for American . With a seating capacity of 30,323, is praised for its outstanding sightlines. The Stadium was upgraded in 2006 with the addition of a FieldTurf playing surface, permanent lighting and a removable all-weather bubble which allows for use of the facility throughout the calendar year. Harvard supports its varsity student-athletes rooms were completely renovated in 2007. One of Harvard’s newest intercollegiate with a wide range of playing, practice, training Named for former Harvard hockey player facilities, Jordan Field was built in 2000 and and strength and conditioning facilities. Alec Bright ’19, the facility seats 2,800 people, serves as the home of Harvard’s field hockey and The majority of the athletic facilities are with additional space for some 500 standees. The men’s and women’s lacrosse teams. located in the Soldiers Field complex, located on skating surface is 204 feet long by 87 feet wide. The facility was given by Gerald Jordan ’61, a the Boston side of the Charles River, a short walk Dillon Field House former Crimson football player. from most of the Houses. The facilities range The synthetic turf playing surface allows for an Dillon Field House is one of Harvard’s most from the oldest — and according to many, the inclement weather practice option for Harvard’s recognized buildings. It has served the Harvard finest — stadium in the nation to other varsity programs. The turf was completely Athletics community for more than 70 years. a relatively new indoor squash and tennis center. replaced for the 2006-07 academic year. The facility houses Harvard’s varsity Jordan Field has a permanent seating capacity Beren Tennis Center equipment room and sports medicine center as 16 of 900, with room for portable bleachers as well. The Beren Tennis Center is the outdoor home well as locker rooms and offices for a number A press box can accommodate up to 12 working of Harvard’s men’s and women’s tennis programs. of men’s teams, including football and men’s ice media members. Following the facility’s renovation in 2000, hockey. the Beren Center is among the finest outdoor The second floor of the facility features the facilities in college athletics. Dillon Lounge, a multipurpose function room The Ray Lavietes ’36 Pavilion at the Briggs The center boasts 18 courts, including six that that overlooks the athletic quad. Athletic Center is the home of Harvard’s feature stadium seating, a two-tiered pavilion Gordon Indoor Track & Tennis Center men’s and women’s basketball programs. It was with locker rooms, a media center, offices and dedicated solely for basketball in 1982. The Albert H. Gordon Track and Tennis court-viewing areas. The seating capacity of Lavietes Pavilion is Center is one of the foremost indoor track The Beren Center is a perennial site for 2,050. The facility was completely refurbished facilities in the nation. NCAA tournament competition, including prior to the 1995-96 season, and more The track is a six-lane banked oval with an the first two rounds of both the men’s and improvements and amenities were added for the adjacent 80-yard sprint straight. Inside the track women’s tournaments in 2004 and the women’s 2002-03 basketball season. tournament in 2005. are two long and triple jump pits, The facility is named for Robert M. Beren a pole vault runway, and multiple ’47 MBA ’50, who was instrumental in both high jump aprons. the creation of the center in 1983 and its recent Adjacent to the oval are two renovation. throwing circles and a weightlifting cage. Blodgett Pool Gordon Track has recently been Blodgett Pool was a gift of the late John W. the site of both the Heptagonal Blodgett, Jr. ’23. Regarded among the finest Championships as well as the collegiate swimming facilities in the nation, it ECAC and IC4A Championships. serves as the home of Harvard’s varsity swimming Harvard Stadium and diving and water polo teams. The pool has permanent spectator seating The centerpiece of Harvard’s for 1,200, and there is room on the pool deck outstanding athletic facilities is to accommodate 500 swimmers, coaches and Harvard Stadium, which has stood officials. as a Boston landmark for more than a century. Bright Hockey Center Harvard Stadium was The Alexander H. Bright Hockey Center has constructed in 1903 and hosted been home of the Crimson men’s and women’s its first game Nov. 14 of that year. hockey programs since 1979. Its pro-style locker Since then, the Stadium has hosted

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Malkin Athletic Center Located on the Cambridge side of the Charles River, just outside of Harvard Square, the is the home of Harvard’s varsity volleyball, wrestling and fencing teams. The main gymnasium can accommodate 1,400 spectators for volleyball and wrestling, while the fencing programs compete in a facility that is considered one of the best in the world. Built in 1930 and renovated in 1985, 2004 and again in 2008, funding for the initial improvements came from Peter L. Malkin ’55. McCurdy Track The McCurdy Outdoor Track & Field, which was completed in 1996, provides Harvard’s varsity athletes with a magnificent complement to the Gordon Indoor Track. Enclosed by a wind screen, the facility includes eight running lanes which encompass double runways for long and triple jumps, throwing circles for the shot, discus and hammer, a javelin runway and a multidirectional high jump apron. and also houses a newly revamped strength and conditioning facility with a golf simulator Ohiri Field is the home of Harvard’s that serves as an indoor training ground for the The elder statesman among Charles River prominent men’s and women’s soccer teams. The Crimson’s golf programs. boathouses, Newell Boathouse has maintained facility is named for Chris Ohiri ’64, a soccer and The showpiece of the Murr Center is the Lee its charm, beauty and practicality for more than track standout who succumbed to cancer while Family Hall of Athletic History, which features a century. attending classes at Harvard Business School. a timeline of Harvard’s long and rich athletic The home of Harvard’s renowned men’s The Ohiri Field complex consists of two tradition with free-standing displays of trophies rowing programs, Newell was built in 1900 separate 120-yard by 75-yard natural grass fields. and memorabilia of the nation’s oldest college and named for Crimson rower and football One pitch is used as the game field, while the athletics program. star Marshall Newell 1894. It was a gift of the other serves as a practice site. Meticulously maintained and groomed for a . O’Donnell Field high level of play, Ohiri Field has been host to a 17 The facility contains two indoor rowing tanks Set behind historic Harvard Stadium, and modern practice equipment, a video room, number of NCAA tournament matches in both O’Donnell Field is as fine a playing facility as men’s and women’s soccer. space to house all the crews’ shells, a workshop, exists in New England. Harvard has played meeting rooms and locker facilities. baseball on the site since 1898. Sailing Center Murr Center The field is named for Joseph J. O’Donnell Located near the lower basin of the Charles ’67, MBA ’71, a longtime supporter of The Murr Center opened in May 1998 and River on Memorial Drive, Harvard’s sailing Harvard baseball who also played a large role in serves as the home of Harvard’s state-of-the-art center supports the Crimson’s coed and women’s implementing the Harvard Stadium bubble.. indoor squash and tennis facilities. varsity sailing teams. O’Donnell Field was renovated in the summer The Murr Center services the entire The center features the unique hanging boat of 2004 with new dugouts and a new backstop. intercollegiate athletics program. It is a centrally storage system that enables solo launchings, a The facility seats 1,600 spectators. located home for the department’s administration large meeting facility, an instruction room and a fleet maintenance shop. Soldiers Field Soldiers Field has been the home of Harvard’s softball program since its inception in 1981. Located in the shadow of Harvard Stadium, the field has undergone several renovations in recent years, making it one of the finest facilities in New England. The most recent renovation was completed when spacious new dugouts were added for the 2006 spring season. Weld Boathouse, which serves as the home of Radcliffe’s varsity crews, was donated and built by the George Walker in 1906. It is an architectural highlight of Harvard and part of the rowing legacy of the Charles River. Weld also hosts Harvard’s recreational sculling and intramural house crew programs. It is located just a short walk from campus and serves as an integral part of the University’s landscape.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University Bright Hockey Center

While hockey at Harvard began 109 years ago at in Boston, the Crimson has called the Alexander H. Bright Hockey Center home since 1979. The Bright Hockey Center was dedicated November 19, 1979, when the Crimson hosted the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. More than 3,000 spectators turned out for the opening of Harvard’s third new athletic facility in three years. From 1956 to 1978, Harvard played its hockey games at the Donald C. Watson Rink, a facility loved by hockey players for its good, hard ice but cursed by many spectators for its cold temperatures. Harvard made plans for expansion of facilities in the early 1970s with a brand new ice rink to be constructed at Soldiers Field. Costs soared, however, and the project had to be revised. The new rink, estimated to cost somewhere around $5 million, would not be built after all. Watson would instead be renovated. While Harvard men’s and women’s teams played out of local rinks in 1978-79, the a home-ice winning streak of 29 games. Since “renovation” of Watson Rink took place. Bright opened, the Crimson boasts an impressive Watson’s concrete walls were knocked down and home record of 266-108-26 (.698), including rebuilt 10 feet out in each direction. The wooden unbeaten marks in 1985‑86, 1988-89 and 1993- ceiling of Watson remained, but a new roof 94. The March 16 finale of the 2008 ECAC Directions to Bright topped it. quarterfinal series against Quinnipiac was the Named after former Harvard hockey player 400th Harvard has played at Bright. From the West 18 Alec Bright ’19, the Bright Center seats nearly Four locker rooms exist beneath the stands, Take the Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90) 2,800 people, up more than 800 from Watson’s one each for the men’s varsity, women’s varsity, east to Exit 18 (Allston/Cambridge). After capacity. There is additional space for some 500 men’s junior varsity and opposing teams. These paying toll, bear left at fork toward Allston/ standees. Longtime Harvard coach Bill Cleary carpeted rooms are supplemented by rooms for Brighton. Turn right at the second set of ’56 chose to lengthen the playing surface by five officials, coaches and equipment storage. The lights (Hess gas station on right) onto North feet to emphasize the skating game he favored. equipment room, renovated in summer 2008, Harvard Street. Proceed approximately one The skating surface is now 204 feet by 87 feet. has a stick room with a humidity monitor to mile to Harvard Stadium. Turn left into The Bright ice has been more than friendly prevent sticks from drying out. Gate 6, and follow along the road behind the to Crimson skaters through the years. During In the arena proper, the walls paint a pictoral Stadium. Bright Hockey Center is ahead on one stretch from 1985-87, Harvard put together history of the more than 100 years of the the left. From the North Take I-93 south to the Storrow Drive exit. Take Storrow Drive west for approximately five miles. Exit at Harvard Square/North Harvard Street. At end of exit, turn left onto North Harvard Street. Go approximately 1/4 mile and turn right into Harvard Stadium Gate 6. Follow the road behind the Stadium, and Bright Hockey Center is ahead on the left. From the South Take I-95 north to I-93 north. Take I-93 to Exit 20 (Massachusetts Turnpike). Take Mass. Pike (I-90) west to Exit 20 (Allston/ Cambridge). After paying toll, bear left at fork toward Allston/Brighton. Turn right at the second set of lights (Hess gas station on right) onto North Harvard Street. Proceed approximately one mile to Harvard Stadium. Turn left into Gate 6 and follow the Stadium to the left. Bright Hockey Center is ahead on the left.

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Crimson’s proud hockey tradition. In addition to photos of each Harvard team dating back to the inception of both the men’s and women’s programs, there are photos of each of Harvard’s All-America hockey players and a trophy case proudly displaying tournament trophies. Hanging from the ceiling at the west end of the arena is perhaps the most prominent statement in the entire building: side-by-side banners commemorating the men’s 1989 national championship and the women’s 1999 AWCHA national championship. Other reminders include banners that hang from the rafters depicting Harvard insignias and banners representing the success that the men’s and women’s hockey programs have enjoyed over the years: league titles, Beanpot crowns and NCAA tournament appearances. Hanging at the opposite end of the arena is a Crimson “4” – the retired number of former Crimson skater, hockey coach and director of athletics Bill Cleary. The number, retired in 2001, is the only number from any of Harvard’s 41 varsity sports to be taken out of circulation. This season, Bright becomes the first ECAC Hockey arena with a video board. The four- screened scoreboard will hang over center ice to provide video and instant replays. Several other improvements have been made at Bright in recent seasons, including a complete renovation of the locker rooms and installation of a new, energy-efficient lighting system before last season. A new public address and sound system was installed in 2003. New dasher boards, 19 seamless GlassFlex and protective end netting were added a year earlier. The Crimson’s varsity locker room was renovated in summer 2007. Custom-crafted Canadian maple wood lockers; new ceiling, lighting and plumbing fixtures; carpeting; rubber flooring and new audio and video technologies are some of the improved features of the new locker room. Palmer Dixon Strength and Conditioning Center

The renovation of the Palmer Dixon Strength and Conditioning Center was completed in March 2007, transforming the facility from an indoor athletics practice space to one of the premier strength and conditioning facilities in the country. The 24,000-square-foot building features a wide variety of training equipment as well as a 12-lane, 40-yard track for speed and agility training. The center was further renovated in summer 2008, with the the installation of a 14-lane sprint track in the center of the facility. The state-of-the-art track surface took the place of a previously open Astroturf area and gives student- athletes an ideal location to work on explosive training and sprints. A detailed list of the center’s features and description of the Harvard strength and conditioning program is on page 32.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University A Timeline of Tradition It began on a local pond a short time before the war — the Spanish-American War. Today it is one of the proudest programs in a that grows with every season. Since the beginning, Harvard has been a leader in the evolution of the game. Here is a look at some memorable events in Crimson hockey history. January 19, 1898 — Harvard plays its first Spring 1910 — George Peabody Gardner ’10 college hockey game when Brown defeats the becomes the first Harvard man to be awarded Crimson on Boston’s . The rivalry 11 varsity letters. He receives three minor letters is the oldest continuous hockey series in the in tennis, three major letters each in hockey and country. track, one major letter in baseball, and a major H in lawn tennis for winning the Intercollegiate Singles title in 1907. Winter 1911 — Harvard plays Princeton and Yale for the first time on what could be considered “home grounds” — the Boston Arena. March 14, 1913 — The athletic committee votes to make ice hockey a major sport. March 1917 — Alfred Winsor, Harvard’s first head coach, steps down. He would again share coaching duties in 1921-22, and remains the all- Alfred Winsor ’02, the first coach time leader in winning percentage at a Division I school. He won 76.1 percent of his games (86- Winter 1928 — John Chase ’28 completes his 27) over 13 seasons, including 1921-22. Harvard hockey career with a combined 24-6-2 1918 — The formal ice hockey program is varsity record, including six straight wins against suspended due to World War I. The team would archrival Yale. Chase would go on to captain the resume play in 1919, but go back to playing at 1932 U.S. Olympic Team and coach Harvard outdoor rinks and at the Pavilion Rink across from 1942 until 1950. from MIT, as the Boston Arena burned down in March 12, 1930 — Harvard and Yale complete the fall of 1918. The Arena would be rebuilt and a three-game series with a 2-2 tie at the Boston reopen in the fall of 1921. Garden, allowing the storied rivals to share the 20 March 3, 1923 — Harvard head coach William intercollegiate title. A record crowd of more than H. Claflin and multi-sport letterman George 14,000 attends the game, which was called at Owen ’23 change the game of hockey forever midnight due to the “Blue Laws.” Harvard ends with their innovation of substituting entire the season with an 11-4-1 overall record. forward lines instead of individuals. The March 7, 1936 — Harvard records an 11-0 win revolutionary tactic, later to become known over Yale, clinching the “Ivy League” title. While as the shift change, helps Harvard defeat the formal Council of Ivy Group Presidents Yale, 2-1, in overtime. agreement — the formal formation of the league From The Boston Globe, Jan. 20, 1898

February 26, 1900 — Harvard’s hockey team meets Yale for the first time. The Elis win the black-tie affair, 5-4, at the St. Nicholas Rink in New York, but the Crimson answers back in the rematch the following winter, 4-0. January 10, 1903 — A 4-3 victory over MIT starts the Harvard men’s ice hockey team on a 22-game win streak that would span nearly six seasons. The Crimson defeats Yale eight straight times during the streak. December 1904 — Two ice hockey rinks are constructed inside Harvard Stadium, which was built the previous year. The team first played on rinks on Holmes Field, located behind the Law School. In 1901, a wooden rink was constructed on Soldiers Field, but was deemed inadequate and the team moved back to Holmes Field the following year. Constructing these two rinks inside the Stadium allowed for the consideration of spectators — some old bleachers were moved up to the side of the rink, and admission was Rinks were constructed inside Harvard Stadium in the early 1900s. charged for some of the more important games.

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— didn’t go into effect until the 1955-56 season, its beginning is traced back to the creation of Quadrangular League in 1933-34 (Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Dartmouth). The addition of Army in 1946-47 would make the Pentagonal League. Brown would replace Army in 1948-49. Cornell would join the group in 1958, with Penn becoming a member from 1967 until dropping its hockey program in 1978. Harvard has won 21 official and four unofficial Ivy League titles in all. February 22, 1937 — The Crimson fails to claim the International Trophy with a 7-2 loss to McGill. This loss snaps a 19-game winning streak (going back to the previous season) and is the lone blemish in a 15-1 campaign. Fall 1938 — Joseph Stubbs ’20 steps down as head coach after recording a 95-43-6 record in 11 seasons. Stubbs led the team to four seasons of double-digit wins, including a career-best 15-1 mark in 1936-37. The first Beanpot MVP, Walter Greeley ’53 (center), with George Chase ’53 (left) and Amory Hubbard ’53 March 10, 1943 — Harvard defeats Yale, 5-3, to cap a 14-3-1 campaign under the direction of Boston University, 7-4, in the championship Canada, Russia and Czechoslovakia en route to first-year coach John P. Chase ’28. The next two game at the Boston Arena. Captain Walter F. the gold. seasons, there will be no formal program due to Greeley ’53 is named tournament MVP. World War II. Harvard, with Chase at the helm, January 4, 1962 — The Crimson defeats resumes a formal team in 1945-46. February 7, 1955 — Bill Cleary ’56 scores four Northeastern, 6-1, at Watson Rink for the 500th goals in the first period against Northeastern win in the history of the program. 1944 — With the hockey program on hiatus in the Beanpot, a mark that still stands as a because of the war, George Wood “Skeets” March 9, 1963 — Led by captain Tim Taylor school and Beanpot record. Cleary leads the Canterbury ’01 ends his nearly 40-year career ’63, the Crimson captures its first ECAC title. nation in scoring with an amazing 89 points in as Harvard’s goaltending coach. Sixteen years Gene Kinasewich ’63 scores the game-winner just 21 games as Harvard makes its first NCAA later, the Canterbury Society is formed — an in overtime to give Harvard a 4-3 victory over tournament appearance in men’s ice hockey. organization which is comprised entirely of (and Boston College. The win is the 200th in the More than five decades later, Cleary’s total 21 open exclusively to) former Harvard goaltenders. coaching career of Cooney Weiland. still stands as the Harvard single-season record. Now in its sixth decade, the Society’s sole Cleary and classmate Chuck Flynn become February 10, 1969 — Sophomore Joe Cavanagh purpose is “to provide a forum for the promotion Harvard’s first All-Americans. ’71 is named tournament MVP as the Crimson of fellowship and the exchange of information captures its first Beanpot title in seven years and February 1956 — and stories about ice hockey goaltending.” To At the Olympic Games in fifth title overall. Considered one of Harvard’s this day, the Society meets for an informal dinner Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Billy Cleary stars for all-time greats, Cavanagh would graduate with annually before one of Harvard’s home games. the silver-medal U.S. men’s ice hockey team while Robert B. Ridder ’41 is the team manager. Spring 1950 — Chase resigns after an eight-year, six-season term with a 53-43-3 record. He is March 7, 1956 — The Donald C. Watson Rink replaced by Ralph “Cooney” Weiland, a former is dedicated before a game against Princeton. scoring champion who won Stanley Cups as both The Crimson defeated the Tigers, 2-1, on a a player and a coach with the Boston Bruins. by John Copeland ’58. Built in 1955 and He is the first non-alumnus to guide the hockey named after a former Harvard quarterback, the program. rink had operated for a year without a roof, but the inclement New England weather made one December 27, 1952 — Harvard captures the necessary. inaugural Beanpot hockey tournament, defeating March 1957 — After compiling a 21-5 overall record and earning a berth in the NCAA tournament, Harvard dominates the All-Ivy League team, as the first team is comprised entirely of Crimson players: goalie James Bailey ’57; defensemen Bob Owen ’58 and Daniel Ullyot ’58 and forwards Bob McVey ’58, Bob Cleary ’58 and Lyle Guttu ’58. February 1960 — Four Harvard players are on the gold-medal winning U.S. men’s ice hockey team at Squaw Valley, Calif.: brothers Bill ’56 and Bob Cleary ’58, Bob McVey ’58 and Bob Owen ’58. The team captain is John “Jack” Kirrane, who would become known to the Harvard community as the manager of the Bright Hockey Center. The United States defeats Billy Cleary is a two-time Olympian, winning gold Donald Watson at Squaw Valley in 1960.

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victory, making him only the second coach in April 3, 1989 — Two-time first-team All- school history to reach that plateau. American Lane MacDonald becomes the November 19, 1979 — After the team spent a third Harvard player to earn the Hobey Baker year playing out of local rinks, Watson Rink’s Memorial Trophy. MacDonald would graduate renovations are revealed as the building is with four school scoring records and among the rededicated as the Alexander H. Bright ’19 top five in 11 categories. Hockey Center. Bright was a driving force in the April 1, 1990 — One year to the day after building of Watson Rink and was a loyal friend coaching Harvard men’s hockey to the NCAA to Harvard Athletics for many years. championship, Bill Cleary ’56 formally starts his March 6, 1982 — With the backing of a tenure as director of athletics. Cleary headed the raucous student section, the Crimson defeats hockey program for 19 seasons, won 324 games Dartmouth, 7-4, at the Bright Center. The and took the Crimson to the Frozen Four on win guarantees the Crimson a spot in the seven occasions. Cleary is replaced as coach by ECAC tournament, ending a seven-year playoff longtime assistant Ronn Tomassoni. drought. (Harvard has qualified for the ECAC February 1, 1992 — Harvard becomes just the tournament every year since.) The team knocks second program in college hockey history to win off powerhouse Clarkson in the semifinals before 1,000 games when it defeats Union, 7-3, at the falling to crosstown rival Northeastern in the Bright Center. championship game. March 8, 1993 — ’93 is named March 27, 1983 — ’83 wins the tournament MVP as the Crimson captures its Hobey Baker Award, presented to the nation’s 10th Beanpot title. Drury, who had skated in outstanding men’s collegiate hockey player. His the 1992 Olympics in Albertville, went on to Cooney Weiland walks onto the ice play helps put Harvard into the NCAA final play for the United States two years later in to accept the 1971 ECAC Championship trophy after (against Wisconsin) for the first time in school Lillehammer — one of four former Harvard the Crimson defeat Clarkson, 7-4. Weiland retired at history. Fusco would graduate as perhaps the players to skate in two Olympic games. the end of that season. most decorated of any Crimson skater, earning March 26, 1994 — Harvard defeats New the Tudor Cup as team MVP, first team All-Ivy Hampshire, 7-1, to advance to the NCAA more than a Beanpot MVP on his resume: He and All-ECAC distinction and All-America status was the first three-time All-American in school semifinals. The Crimson finishes the year with three times each in his career. Joe Cavanagh ’71 is an impressive 24-5-4 record and wins the ECAC history and finished as the second-leading scorer Harvard’s only other three-time All-American. in Harvard history (187 points). tournament championship for the first time since June 1985 — Defenseman Chris Biotti ’89 1987. Captain Sean McCann ’94 sets the school December 12, 1970 — Cooney Weiland wins his becomes the first Harvard player selected in the record for goals in a season by a defenseman (22) 22 300th game, a 5-0 shutout of Brown. first round of the NHL Entry Draft when he is and is a Hobey Baker Award finalist. March 20, 1971 — Cooney Weiland coaches his taken 17th overall. To date, 76 Crimson skaters February 2, 1998 — Freshman Chris Bala ’01 final game after 21 years at the helm of Harvard’s have been selected in the draft, including a record scores the overtime game-winner against Boston men’s hockey program. He directs the Crimson nine on the 2004-05 team. College to send the Crimson to the Beanpot final to 315 victories, six Ivy League championships April 7, 1986 — ’85-86 duplicates for the first time since 1994. Four days later, Bala and five NCAA appearances. Harvard wins the his brother’s Hobey feat, earning college hockey’s would tie Bill Cleary’s school record with four ECAC title in Weiland’s final season behind the highest individual honor. Fusco, who would goals in the first period against Vermont. bench. Weiland, who had a distinguished career leave as the school’s all-time leading scorer (240 as a player and coach with the Boston Bruins, is points), helps the Crimson advance to the NCAA inducted to the in 1971. championship game, where the team drops a March 31, 1971 — It takes only 11 days after heartbreaking 6-5 decision to Michigan State. Cooney Weiland’s last game to find a worthy December 12, 1988 — C.J. Young ’90 scores successor. Bill Cleary is elevated from his position the fastest three goals in Harvard men’s hockey as an assistant coach to become just the third history, collecting a hat-trick in a span of 49 Crimson coach in the modern era and ninth seconds during the Crimson’s 10‑0 win over overall. He coaches his first game Dec. 4, an 11-3 Dartmouth. Even more amazing is that all three win at Penn. goals are shorthanded. March 7, 1975 — Harvard defeats Cornell, 6‑4, February 17, 1989 — Bill Cleary records his in an ECAC semifinal to win a then-school 300th coaching win with a 5-3 victory over record 23rd game of the season. The Crimson Vermont at Gutterson Field House. would lose to Boston University in the final the next day and finish fourth in the NCAA April 1, 1989 — Ed Krayer ’89 scores “The tournament after falling to Minnesota and the Goal” as Harvard captures the NCAA title with same BU squad. Harvard was captained by All- a 4-3 overtime victory over Minnesota in the American Randy Roth ’75, who in 1974 became championship game. Sophomore Ted Donato the Crimson’s first ECAC Player of the Year. ’91, who had a goal and an assist in the final, is named tournament MOP, while defenseman November 1977 — Former men’s Joe ’92, forward Lane MacDonald Bertagna ’73 leads a collection of undergraduates ’88-89 and goalie Allain Roy ’92 are also all- who form a women’s hockey club team. One year tournament team picks. The team sets the school later, the sport attains varsity status. Mark ’83 (left) and Scott Fusco ’85-6 are the only record for wins in a season (31), and would visit brothers to win the Hobey Baker Award. March 5, 1977 — A 5-3 victory over Yale in the White House as well as throw out the first New Haven gives Bill Cleary his 100th coaching pitch at before a Red Sox game.

GoCrimson.com Harvard University :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Life After Harvard True, life after Harvard for many spells a career in law, medicine or politics. For some former Crimson skaters, it is a career in professional sports, both on and off the ice, which awaits. Below is a sampling of some former Harvard Crimson players who have hung up the skates but are still involved in the game: Joe Bertagna ’73 Commissioner, Association Lyman Bullard ’77 Chairman and Governor, Peter Chiarelli ’87 General Manager, Boston Bruinss Ted Donato ’91 Head Coach, Harvard University

Bill Cleary jokes with then-President George H.W. Bush during the 1989 Crimson’s visit the White House after Philip Falcone ’84 its national championship run. Minority Owner, Jason Karmanos ’96 February 21, 1998 — Mike Ginal ’00 makes deficit in the second period, and team captain Executive Director of Hockey Operations, college hockey history as the first player with a Kenny Smith ’04 nets the game-winner with 38 Carolina Hurricanes prosthetic limb to play in a Division I hockey seconds to play. ’77 game. Ginal, whose left foot was amputated at July 2, 2004 — Ted Donato ’91 is named just the CEO/Alternate Governor, Portland Pirates age four as the result of a birth defect, plays the sixth head coach in the modern era of Harvard final four minutes of a 6-1 victory over Colgate. hockey, replacing , who led the Neil Sheehey ’83 and Allain Roy ’92 July 16, 1999 — Mark Mazzoleni is introduced Crimson to three NCAA tournaments and two Player Agents as just the fifth coach in the modern era of ECAC titles in five years at the helm. Donato is Kevin Sneddon ’92 Harvard hockey. In his first season, he leads the the eighth Harvard alum to coach the Crimson. Head Coach, 23 Crimson to the Ivy League title. March 22, 2005 — Dov Grumet-Moris ’05 stops Don Sweeney ’88 March 2, 2001 — Senior netminder Oliver Jonas a career-high 46 shots in Harvard’s 4-3 double- Director of Hockey Operations and Player ’01 becomes the school record-holder for saves in overtime win again Colgate in the semifinals of Development, Boston Bruins a season with 1,021, breaking the record of 844 the ECAC Hockey League Championship at set by J.R. Prestifilippo ’00 (whom Jonas backed the Pepsi Arena in Albany, N.Y., his record 16th Tim Taylor ’63 up his first three varsity seasons). Jonas would victory in a league tournament contest. Kevin Assistant Coach, U.S. National Team graduate with four single-season goaltending Du ’07 scores the game-winner at 96:01 to Development Program records: saves, games played (32) games started vault Harvard into its fourth consecutive ECAC Tripp Tracy ’97 (32), and minutes played (1,904). tournament final. Grumet-Morris graduates with Television Analyst, Carolina Hurricanes March 31, 2001 — Defenseman Don Sweeney a 16-2 overall mark in ECACHL tournament ’88 appears in his 900th game in the NHL. games. In addition, he is a finalist for the Hobey John Weisbrod ’91 Twenty-two former Crimson skaters have made Baker Award and the recipient of the Walter Director of Collegiate Scouting, Boston Bruins it to the NHL. Sweeney appeared in more than Brown Award. 1,000 NHL contests with the Boston Bruins. March 26, 2005 — Harvard makes its 20th March 16, 2002 — The longest championship appearance in the NCAA tournament, and game in ECAC history (96:11) and the fourth straight, against New Hampshire in the Crimson’s third straight overtime game ends Northeast Regional in Amherst, Mass. Tom with a wrist shot by Tyler Kolarik ’04 as Cavanagh ’05 played in the 138th game of his Harvard claims its sixth tournament title, 4-3 career in the 3‑2 overtime loss to the Wildcats. against Cornell. The team makes its first NCAA His total ranks fourth in the history of the appearance since 1994 and plays a school-record ECAC Hockey League, and he is the only player fourth consecutive overtime game in a 4-3 loss to in Crimson history to play in every game of his national finalist Maine. four-year collegiate career. March 18, 2006 — March 20, 2004 — Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 The Crimson sets a league becomes the ECAC tournament’s winningest playoff record with 28 goals — including 24 goaltender as he backstops the Crimson to in its final three games — to capture its third its second Whitelaw Trophy in three seasons ECACHL championship in five years with a 6-2 with a dramatic 4-2 victory over Clarkson. win against Cornell. Goaltender John Daigneau Grumet-Morris sets the ECAC record for wins ’06 is named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player and is one of five Harvard selections to the Peter Chiarelli ’87 was named GM of the in a tournament (six) and improves to 13-1 Boston Bruins in 2006. all-time in ECAC playoff games. Classmate Tom all-tournament team as the Crimson secures its Cavanagh ’05 scores two goals to erase a 2-0 fifth straight NCAA bid.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Harvard University Crimson in the Community Crimson City Hockey, Inc. Founded six summers ago by former Harvard forward and Hockey Humanitarian finalist Rob Fried ’04, the Crimson City Hockey Clinic is a nonprofit ice hockey clinic providing free ice time, inexpensive equipment and positive role models to Boston youth. On and off the ice, the organization is run completely by Harvard hockey players, so in addition to helping the Boston community, it provides real-world business experience for the student-athletes involved. The student-athletes are responsible for fund-raising, scheduling, insurance, tax-exemption and other filings and on-ice instruction. In 2008, under the direction of president Brian McCafferty and vice president Doug Rogers, the clinic met for eight hour-long ice sessions at Boston University’s . For more information or to support CCHC, contact [email protected]. Pictured are Jon Pelle ’08 and former Harvard women’s player Jodi Krakower ’08 giving instructions to players at a 2007 CCHC session. Allston-Brighton Youth Hockey Clinic

Since 1989, the Crimson has been hosting a clinic for young hockey players in the Allston and Brighton communities. Pictured are Steve Rolecek (left) and Jimmy Fraser, working with groups of youth players.

24

Remembering Kevin McInnis

The Harvard men’s hockey team lost a friend and a part of the team when equipment manager Kevin McInnis passed away suddenly May 24 at his home in Rockland, Mass. He had served as the head equipment manager for the Crimson for seven years. “This is a sad day for everyone associated with Harvard athletics and for the larger hockey community,” said Nichols Family Director of Athletics Bob Scalise. “Kevin’s commitment to the men’s hockey team and to the department are tremendously appreciated and Kevin will be greatly missed.” Kevin was born in Boston, son of the late A. Joseph and Alice (Colbert) McInnis and was raised and educated in Dorchester. He was a 1974 graduate of Don Bosco High School. Kevin had made his home in Rockland for the past 16 years. He had previously been employed for 28 years as the manager of the former Adams Sporting Goods store in Dorchester. Kevin was an avid sports fan. He is survived by his wife Marilyn A. (Meady) McInnis and his daughters Kristy A. Romer and her husband Scott of Auburn, Niki M. McInnis and Stephanie E. McInnis both of Rockland. He was the brother of Patricia Pfeiffer of Dorchester and Jim T. McInnis and his wife Pat of Plymouth. Also surviving are his grandson Benjamin J. Romer and several nieces and nephews. Donations in his memory may be made to the Kevin McInnis Scholarship Fund, c/o Rockland Trust Co., 288 Union Street, Rockland, MA 02370.

GoCrimson.com Coaching Staff 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Coaching Staff Ted Donato ’91 Robert D. Ziff Head Coach of Men’s Ice Hockey

Following success as a player at the collegiate, and All-Ivy League accolades while serving as the 95th professional and international levels, Ted Donato has captain of Harvard hockey in his 1990-91 senior season. begun piling up a long list of accomplishments in Donato was named Most Outstanding Player four years as head coach at his alma mater. The former of the 1989 NCAA Frozen Four, where Harvard Crimson captain has guided Harvard to its first back- downed Minnesota, 4-3, in overtime in the NCAA to-back 20-win seasons since 1992-93 and 1993-94, championship game. That contest, held in the Gophers’ captured ECAC Hockey and Ivy League championships, backyard (St. Paul, Minn.), saw Donato net a pair of claimed two NCAA tournament berths, led his team goals, one that tied the game at 1-1 midway through the to three league championship games, coached two All- second period and another that gave the Crimson a 3-2 Americans and set a new standard for wins by a Harvard lead with seven minutes to go. Donato scored three goals coach in his first three seasons. and added a pair of assists in the tournament. The owner of a 73-52-11 (.577) career record, Donato He earned the Donald Angier Hockey Trophy as the accumulated 56 victories in his first three team’s most improved player in 1989 and accepted the years. He is the third Harvard coach to Ralph “Cooney” Weiland Award for spirit and devotion The Next Level total 50 wins in his first three seasons, to Harvard hockey in 1991 Donato is one of seven former NHL players joining Bill Cleary ’56 (51 wins), who A native of nearby Dedham, Mass., Donato was a who are active Division I head coaches. He caoched Donato at Harvard and Ronn member of seven United States national teams, including ranks second among them in NHL games, Tomassoni (50). the 1992 Olympic team. He tied for the team lead in goals, assists and points. Coach, School Coaching Record , Michigan...... 644-298-68 “Obviously this is a special place for me. I embrace the history and tradition of Harvard hockey and 987 NHL games, 658 points (261g, 397a) the quality of people who are involved with the program. Harvard is the greatest combination of Ted Donato, Harvard...... 73-52-11 superior academics and competitive athletics in all of college sports, and that is a tradition that I 796 NHL games, 347 points (150g, 197a) hope to carry on. I have the opportunity to work with a number of outstanding people, and I’m very Mike Eaves, Wisconsin...... 123-95-30 excited about the future of this program.” 324 NHL games, 226 points (83g, 143a) , Ala.-Huntsville...... 6-21-4 318 NHL games, 118 points (58g, 60a) Donato, who won an NCAA scoring with four goals and three assists in eight games 26 , Ohio State...... 242-234-46 championship as a Crimson player, played in the Olympics and posted 11 goals and 22 assists in 55 NHL games, 21 points (11g, 10a) in the Olympics and enjoyed a 13-year the pre-Games schedule. He also played in the World Scott Sandelin, Minn. Duluth....122-160-37 NHL career, was introduced as the Robert Championships in 1997 (4-2-6 in 8 GP), 1999 (2-6-8 in 25 NHL games, 4 points (4a) D. Ziff Head Coach of Harvard Men’s Ice 8 GP) and 2002 (1-3-4 in 7 GP) and in the 1988 World Jim Culhane, Western Michigan... 136-182-33 Hockey July 2, 2004. Junior Championship (3-2-5 in 7 GP). 6 NHL games, 1 point (1a) Donato, a 1991 graduate, is just Donato was selected by the Boston Bruins in the fifth Harvard’s sixth head coach since 1950. He round of the 1987 NHL Entry Draft (98th overall), Back to School is the eighth Harvard alum to serve as the and he signed with his hometown club in March 1992 program’s head coach. The appointment is following the Olympic Games. His 13-year pro career Donato is one of 25 Division I head coaches Donato’s first coaching position. included stops in New York (with the Rangers and at the helm of their alma maters. He ranks He did not look like a rookie coach Islanders), Los Angeles, Ottawa, Anaheim and St. Louis. eighth in that group in winning percentage. in his debut season behind the bench He returned to the Bruins as a free agent in July 2003. Coach, School Win Pct. in 2004-05, leading the Crimson to a His NHL career spanned 796 games, in which Red Berenson, Michigan...... 671 21-10-3 record, runner-up finishes in the he scored 150 goals with 197 assists for 347 points. 644-298-68 ECACHL regular season and tournament Donato had eight goals, 18 assists and 26 points in 58 , New Hampshire...... 656 and an NCAA tournament appearance. career Stanley Cup playoff games. He scored 25 goals in 424-207-66 record Donato’s 2005-06 Harvard squad followed 1996-97, becoming the first U.S.-born player to lead the Dave Hakstol, North Dakota...... 645 with another 21-win season, captured the Bruins in goals in a season. 108-56-15 ECACHL and Ivy League championships Donato played at Catholic Memorial School, where Scott Owens, Colorado College...... 638 and made another NCAA appearance. he graduated as the school’s all-time leading scorer. 285-283-55 Donato is the only head coach to take The son of Michael and Mary Donato, Ted and his , Boston College...... 636 Harvard to the NCAA tournament in each three brothers were all active in intercollegiate athletics. 311-169-42 at BC (803-515-84 overall) of his first two years. Brother Michael played baseball at Princeton; Chris , Boston University...... 603 As an undergraduate, Donato etched played hockey, baseball and football at Williams; and 780-407-97 his name alongside Harvard’s all-time Dan played hockey and baseball at Boston University. Bob Matzko, St. Cloud State...... 582 greats. He finished his career 11th on the Their sister, Paula, is a plastics engineer. 63-43-16 Crimson’s career scoring chart (50 goals, Donato is a resident of Scituate, Mass., with his wife, Ted Donato, Harvard...... 577 94 assists, 144 points) and remains 12th Jeannine, and their four children: Ryan, Jack, Nolan and 73-52-11 in that category. He earned All-ECAC Madelyn. , Miami...... 569 187-138-28 Mike Eaves, Wisconsin...... 556 123-95-30

GoCrimson.com Coaching Staff :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

The Donato File Hometown • Dedham, Massachusetts Education • Harvard University; Bachelor of Arts in history, 1991 Coaching Highlights • Won more games (56) in first three seasons than any previous Harvard coach. • Guided Harvard to the ECAC Hockey Championship final in three of his first four years (2005, ’06 and ’08), winning the league title in 2006. The 2005-06 team also won the Ivy League championship and went 21-12-2. • Won the most game by a first-year Crimson mentor (21-10-3) and finished second in the ECACHL regular season and tournament. • First Harvard coach to reach NCAA tournament in each of his first two seasons. • Led the Crimson to first consecutive 20-win seasons since 1992-94. • Defenseman ’05 and goaltender Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 earned All-America honors under Donato in 2004-05. Collegiate Highlights • Four-year letterwinner as a forward. • Served as the 95th captain of Harvard hockey as a senior. • Graduated as the Crimson’s 11th all-time leading scorer with 50 goals and 94 assists for 144 points and currently ranks 12th on that list. The 94 assists are ninth-best in school history. Played 106 games, amassing 114 penalty minutes. • An All-ECAC and All-Ivy League selection as a senior. • Most Outstanding Player at the 1989 NCAA Frozen Four. Scored three goals and two assists in the tournament, including a pair of tallies in the 4-3 overtime victory over Minnesota in the title game. • Earned the Donald Angier Hockey Trophy as the team’s most improved player as a sophomore in 1989 and the Ralph “Cooney” Weiland Award as a senior in 1991 for spirit and devotion to Harvard hockey. International Highlights • 1992 U.S. Olympian in Albertville, France. Led the team with four goals and 27 tied for the team lead with seven points (4-3-7) in eight contests. Had 11 goals and 22 assists in 52 games on the pre-Olympic schedule. • Played in the World Championships in 1997 (8 GP, 4-2-6, 8 PIM), 1999 (8 GP, 2-6-8, 6 PIM) and 2002 (7 GP, 1-3-4, 2 PIM). • Member of the 1988 U.S. team at the World Junior Championships in Moscow, netting three goals and two assists with 18 penalty minutes in seven games. Professional Highlights • Drafted by the Boston Bruins in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft. Sixth Bruins pick, fifth round, 98th overall. • Signed with the Bruins March 7, 1992, at the conclusion of the Olympic Games, and played his first NHL game the following day at Chicago. • Thirteen-year NHL career included stops in New York (Islanders and Rangers), Ottawa, Anaheim, Los Angeles and St. Louis. He signed with his hometown Bruins as a free agent for the final year of his career (2003-04). • Appeared in 796 NHL contests, scoring 150 goals and adding 197 assists (347 points). Scored eight goals and recorded 18 assists in 58 career playoff games. • Only U.S.-born player to lead Boston in goals in a season with 25 in 1996-97. • Was the Bruins representative to the NHL Players Association from 1993-98. • Earned the Bruins Seventh Player Award in 1996-97 for performance above and beyond expectations. • Boston Bruins’ 2003-04 nominee for the NHL’s Masterson Trophy, given for perseverance and dedication to hockey. Background • Born Edward Paul Donato on April 28, 1969. One of Michael and Mary Donato’s four boys: Michael played baseball at Princeton; Chris played hockey, baseball and football at Williams; and Dan played hockey and baseball at Boston University. Sister, Paula, is a plastics engineer. Father played professionally in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization and was a major college football official. • Played scholastically at Catholic Memorial, where he graduated as the all-time leading scorer in school and Catholic Conference history and helped his team win two state championships. Was the first Catholic Conference player to earn All-Star honors all four years. In 1986 and 1987, was the Boston Globe Division I Player of the Year and a Boston Herald All-Scholastic pick. Ted and Jeannine Donato with their children Ryan (12), • Resides in Scituate, Mass., with his wife, Jeannine, and their four children. Jack (10), Nolan (9) and Madelyn (5).

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Coaching Staff Sean McCann ’94 Assistant Coach

Sean McCann, a former Crimson A.B. in history in 1994. He was a standout defenseman from 1990-94 and captain and Hobey Baker Award finalist, was Harvard’s 98th captain. McCann appeared in 120 games, notching 32 serves his seventh season behind the goals and 43 assists for 75 points. He holds the school record for goals by a bench as an assistant coach at his alma defenseman in a season (22). mater in 2008-09. His day-to-day McCann’s best collegiate season was his final one. He scored 22 goals, responsibilities for the Harvard hockey totaled 39 points and earned All-ECAC, All-New England and All-America program include off-campus recruiting, honors in addition to being a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award. Over his working with the Crimson defense and four-year career, the Crimson was 74-30-16 with one Beanpot, three ECAC assisting with special teams. regular-season championships and one ECAC tournament title and made McCann has helped develop a strong two NCAA tournament appearances. For his efforts, McCann was named defensive unit at Harvard. The 2004-05 Crimson finished second in the to the ECAC All-Decade team for the 1990s. nation with a goals-against average of 1.88. That squad surrendered just 64 He was the first pick overall () in the 1994 NHL goals, the fewest goals allowed by a Harvard team since the early 1970s. In Supplemental Draft and went on to a seven-year career in the IHL and four of his six seasons, the Crimson has ranked among the top 20 nationally AHL. In more than 500 professional games, McCann scored 117 goals and in team defense, including fourth in 2002-03 with a goals-against average recorded 174 assists (291 points). He was the IHL Rookie of the Year with of 2.29, 18th (tie) in 2003-04 (2.61) and 11th in 2007-08 (2.32). Harvard the Cincinnati Cyclones in 1994-95 and served as an assistant captain with ranked 23rd nationally in scoring defense in 2005-06 (2.63) and 26th in three teams. Twice he earned an “Iron Man” award, in 1995-96 with the 2006-07 (2.73). Greensboro Monarchs (AHL) and in his final season (2000-01) with the One of McCann’s strongest coaching attributes comes from his being Houston Aeros (IHL). a former student-athlete at Harvard. This allows him to share first-hand McCann is married to the former Emily Buxton ’94, who was a standout knowledge with recruits and players, drawing on his experience of success women’s lacrosse and field hockey player for the Crimson as an undergrad. both in a Crimson sweater and beyond. The McCanns reside in Needham, Mass., with their children, Cooper and A native of North York, Ont., McCann graduated from Harvard with a twins Emma and Chase.

The McCann File Hometown • North York, Ontario 28 Education • Harvard University; Bachelor of Arts in history, 1994 Coaching Highlights • The Crimson has ranked among the nation’s top five in scoring defense twice in his six years: second in 2004-05 (1.88 goals against per game) and fourth in 2002-03 (2.29). • Harvard appeared among the top 30 in team defense in the other years under McCann: 11th in 2007-08, tied for 18th in 2003-04 (2.61), 23rd in 2005-06 (2.63) and 26th in 2006-07 (2.73). • Defenseman Noah Welch ’05 earned All-America honors in 2002-03 and again in 2004-05. Welch plays for the NHL’s Florida Panthers, and five of McCann’s former defensemen ( ’05, David MacDonald ’08, ’07, Kenny Smith ’04 and Tom Walsh ’06 played in the AHL last season. Collegiate Highlights • Four-year letterwinner on the Crimson blue line. • The 98th captain of Harvard hockey as a senior. • Earned All-ECAC, All-Ivy, All-New England and All-America honors. • Hobey Baker Memorial Award finalist in 1994. • Holds school record for goals by a defenseman in a season (22). • Named to the ECAC All-Decade team for the 1990s. Professional Highlights • Seven-year professional career in the IHL and AHL. • Appeared in over 500 professional games, scoring 291 points (117g, 174a). • Two-time winner of a team’s “Iron Man” award. Background • Graduate of De La Salle College in suburban Toronto as a four-year letterwinner in hockey; also a football and softball letterman. • Played junior hockey for the Thornhill Thunderbirds, earning the Tridel Cup as the Ontario Hockey Association’s player best demonstrating a commitment to excellence. • Resides in Needham, Mass., with his wife, Emily, and their three children.

GoCrimson.com Coaching Staff :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Patrick Foley Assistant Coach

Patrick Foley, a former USA Hockey Off the ice, Foley was in charge of evaluation and recruitment of assistant coach and three-year captain at potential players. A former NTDP player himself, Foley spoke to hockey New Hampshire, is in his second season associations across the nation on behalf of USA Hockey, served as the as an assistant coach with the Crimson. alumni liaison to the NTDP and monitored players’ host families and Foley directs the Crimson’s penalty- academic progress. He twice served as a USA Hockey level 4 coaching kill unit. Harvard killed 84.9 percent certification symposium speaker. He also served as the director of the of the power plays it faced in his first NTDP Summer Hockey School. season, good for 24th nationally. In Foley was the second UNH player ever to serve as captain for three ECAC Hockey play, the Crimson had the straight seasons. He helped the Wildcats to Hockey East titles and trips to league’s top penalty kill at 91.3 percent. the Frozen Four in 2002 and ’03. He was a finalist for the 2004 Hockey He also served as an an assistant coach for the U.S. National Junior Team at Humanitarian Award, played for the 2000 U.S. National Junior Team and the 2008 International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship was drafted by the in 2000. in the Czech Republic. A Dean’s List and Hockey East All-Academic honoree, Foley earned a A native of Milton, Mass., Foley came to Harvard following two kinesiology degree from New Hampshire in 2004. While in school, he years as an assistant coach with the U.S. National Team Development founded Team 25, a charitable organization. In that role, he organized Program, where he helped guide Team USA to a gold medal in the 2006 an auction that raised money for a teen center and arranged for UNH IIHF Under-18 World Championship and a silver medal at the 2007 hockey players to take stuffed animals to children in hospitals. Foley also championship. participated in the first NCAA conference and seminar on celebratory Foley worked primarily with NTDP forwards during practice, with behavior and rioting among college sports fans. responsibility for team defense and penalty killing. He helped groom a Foley attended St. Sebastian’s School in Needham, Mass., before moving group of 13 NTDP players chosen in the 2006 National Hockey League to Michigan and graduating from Pioneer High School while playing for Entry Draft and saw NTDP forwards taken with the first two overall picks the U.S. National Under-18 Team. Following his UNH graduation, Foley in the 2007 draft. He helped direct NTDP teams to a gold medal at the returned to the Boston area and worked in the community relations office 2005 Four Nations tournament in Finland and a silver medal at the 2006 of the Boston Red Sox. Five Nations in Russia. Foley resides in Charlestown, Mass.

The Foley File 29 Hometown • Milton, Massachusetts Education • University of New Hampshire; Bachelor of Science in kinesiology, 2004 Coaching Highlights • Under his direction, Harvard ranked 24th nationally in penalty killing (.849, 135 for 159) and first in ECAC penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in 2007-08. • Assistant coach for the 2008 U.S. National Junior Team. • Spent two years as assistant coach for the U.S. National Team Development Program. Helped Team USA win gold at IIHF U-18 World Championship in 2006 and 2005 Four Nations. • Had 13 NTDP players chosen in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft and saw NTDP forwards taken with the first two overall picks of the 2007 draft. • Directed NTDP Summer Hockey School and spoke around the nation on behalf of USA Hockey. Collegiate Highlights • Four-year letterwinner and three-year captain at New Hampshire. • In both 2001-02 and 2002-03, captained UNH to Frozen Four appearances and Hockey East regular-season and playoff championships. • Helped Wildcats to a 101-39-21 (.693) record in his four seasons as a player, including a 78-30-15 (.695) mark during his three years as captain. • Finalist for 2004 Hockey Humanitarian Award. • Hockey East All-Academic selection and Dean’s List honoree and the founder of the Team 25 charitable organization. • Finished his collegiate career with 47 points on 23 goals and 24 assists. International Highlights • Played for 2000 U.S. National Junior Team. • Skated for U.S. National U-18 Team before attending New Hampshire. Background • Attended St. Sebastian’s School in Needham, Mass., before moving to Michigan to participate in the NTDP.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Coaching Staff

Bruce Irving The Irving File Volunteer Assistant Coach Hometown • Newbury, Massachusetts Bruce Irving returns for his seventh season with the Crimson program. Education Irving serves as the head coach for the • ; Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering, 1985 junior varsity program in addition to • ; Master of Business Administration, 1991 his duties as an assistant with the varsity Coaching Highlights squad, focusing his time with the team’s • Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 earned All-America honors and was a finalist for the goaltenders. Hobey Baker Award under Irving’s guidance in 2004-05. He played three With Irving’s coaching last seasaon, seasons under Irving, finishing as Harvard’s all-time leader in saves (3,081). Kyle Richter earned the • Mentored first-year starter John Daigneau ’06 in 2005-06, when Daigneau Award as ECAC Hockey’s top goalie. was named team MVP, honorable mention All-Ivy League and ECACHL He was selected to the All-ECAC and All-Ivy League first teams and was Championship Most Outstanding Player. a New England All-Star after posting ECAC Hockey’s top goals-against • Justin Tobe ’07 led the Ivy League and ranksed second in the ECACHL in average (1.82) and save percentage (.935) in league play. goals-against average (2.26) in 2006-07. • Kyle Richter earned the Ken Dryden Award as the top ECAC Hockey Irving helped mentor Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 to a standout career, goaltender in 2007-08 after leading the league in goals-against average (1.82) culminating in an brilliant 2004-05 campaign. Grumet-Morris was a and save percentage (.935) in ECAC games. Hobey Baker Award finalist, an AHCA All-American and the Walter Brown • 42-32-10 record as head coach at Triton High School (Newbury, Mass.). Award recipient as the top U.S.-born player in New England. Grumet- Morris closed the season second in the nation with a 1.63 goals-against Background average. He played three of his four seasons under Irving, finishing as • President and CEO of ENPRO Services, a family-owned environmental Harvard’s all-time leader in saves (3,081) and second on the career goals- services contracting company. against average list at 2.25. • Resides in Newburyport, Mass., with his wife, Janice, and their two sons. The graduation of Grumet-Morris left the Crimson without an experienced goalie heading into 2005-06, but under the guidance of Irving, Irving has worked various camps as a goaltender coach and coached at John Daigneau ’06 had a outstanding season. He led Harvard to an ECAC Triton Regional High School from 1985-2001, first serving as an assistant Hockey League title, earning Most Outstanding Player honors in the before being promoted to head coach in 1998. An alumnus of the school, conference tournament. he coached the Vikings to a 42-32-10 record over four seasons. In 2006-07, Justin Tobe ’07 ranked second in the ECACHL with a 2.26 Irving is the co-owner, president and CEO of ENPRO services, a family- goals-against average under the guidance of Irving. owned environmental services contracting company in Newburyport, Mass. A native of Newbury, Mass., Irving was a goaltender at Cornell while 30 Irving and his wife, Janice, reside in Newburyport, Mass., with their pursuing his degree in electrical engineering, which he received in 1985. sons, Jackson and Carson. Irving also earned an M.B.A. from Northeastern in 1991. Hockey Support Staff

Equipment Manager Staff Assistant Student Manager Assistant Athletics Director Assistant Athletics Director John O’Donnell Megan Whitaker Dominic Pellegrini ’09 Neil Murphy Scott Anderson

Associate Athletics Director, Assistant Director, Assistant Director, Staff Assistant, Ticket Office Rink Manager Marketing and Sales Communications Harvard Varsity Club Greg Collins David Pereira Susan Byrne Casey Hart Michele McLaughlin

GoCrimson.com Coaching Staff :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Chad Krawiec Athletic Trainer

Chad Krawiec is in his fourth season as hockey, men’s and women’s track and field and field hockey. He was a a member of the Harvard sports medicine graduate assistant while at Penn State, working with women’s soccer, men’s staff. Krawiec works with men’s hockey, gymnastics, men’s and women’s track and field and men’s and women’s football and men’s swimming and diving. tennis. A 1997 graduate of Boston University In addition to his athletic training responsibilities, Krawiec is a lecturer with a B.S. in athletic training, Krawiec and clinical instructor in the athletic training curriculum programs at received an M.S. in motor control from Northeastern University and Boston University, as well as Harvard’s site Penn State in 1999. coordinator for clinical athletic training students from those programs. Krawiec joined the Crimson staff Krawiec is a licensed athletic trainer in Massachusetts and an active after spending six years as an assistant member of the National Athletic Trainers Association, Eastern Athletic athletic trainer at Northeastern, where he worked with men’s and women’s Trainers Association and Athletic Trainers of Massachusetts. Sports Medicine The aim of Harvard University Sports Medicine is to provide the highest quality care for varsity and junior varsity undergraduate intercollegiate 2008-09 Sports Medicine Staff student-athletes. These services are provided by a trained and licensed Dr. Arthur Boland, Team Physician, Head Orthopedic Surgeon professional staff in a professional and ethical environment using the most Dr. Frank Wang, Physician current concepts and technologies. From the first preseason practice in Dr. Mark Steiner ’72, Physician the fall through the last event of the spring season, the athletic trainers Dr. Lars Richardson ’91, Orthopedic Surgeon/Physician and sports medicine professionals provide prevention, treatment and Brant Berkstresser, Head Athletic Trainer rehabilitation as well as emergency care for nearly 1,500 athletes involved in Gary Geissler, Director of Clinical Rehabilitation Harvard’s intercollegiate varsity and junior varsity programs. TK Kennedy, Assistant Athletic Trainer The staff is comprised of seven nationally certified athletic trainers, John King, Assistant Athletic Trainer two board-certified physical therapist/certified athletic trainers, an x-ray Catie Kopischke, Assistant Athletic Trainer technician, one orthopedic surgeon, one orthopedic physician and one Chad Krawiec, Assistant Athletic Trainer internal medicine physician. It is a teaching affiliate of the Harvard Medical Helena Malczewka, Assistant Athletic Trainer School, Boston University’s Sargent College, Massachusetts General Tim Smith, Assistant Athletic Trainer 31 Hospital Institute of Health Professions and Northeastern University’s Stephen Traynor, Assistant Athletic Trainer Bouve School. The staff also has orthopedic physician consultants who Randy Widtfeldt, Assistant Athletic Trainer specialize in the hand and the spine. The main athletic training and sports medicine facility is located in Dillon Field House, adjacent to the Bright Hockey Center. Renovated Many services are offered through the athletic training room, including in summer 2007, the training room includes over 7,500 square feet of orthopedic clinics four days each week, internal medicine clinics twice treatment, exam and rehabilitation space. The facility also includes four a week and a sports nutritionist every other week. In addition, x-ray is newly installed therapeutic whirlpools (two hot, two cold), a casting room available in the athletic training room for immediate visualization of and orthotics fabrication room as well as a medical records room, doctor’s orthopedic injuries. Student observation in the orthopedic clinic helps and private exam rooms. The training room is equipped with ultrasound, facilitate interaction and confidential case discussion between athletic electrical stimulation, cardiovascular and weight training equipment as well training students, physical therapy students, medical students and sports as specialized rehabilitation equipment. medicine staff.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Coaching Staff Dan Perlmutter Assistant Director of Strength & Conditioning

Dan Perlmutter has served as the Prior to working at Harvard, he served as an assistant strength coach at assistant director of strength and from 2002-04. He also spent the summer of 2004 as conditioning at Harvard since April 2005, an assistant strength coach at Holy Cross and with the American Hockey following a stint as interim director of the League’s Worcester IceCats. strength program from September 2004 Perlmutter has worked as a strength coach for the USTA Competition until March 2005. Training Center in Boston and has done private strength training with Perlmutter is responsible for the several professional and Olympic hockey players, as well as an Olympic development and implementation of hammer thrower. strength and conditioning plans for He earned an M.Ed. in applied exercise science from Springfield in 2004 Harvard’s men’s and women’s hockey, and a B.A. in communication studies from George Washington in 1998. men’s and women’s soccer, women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s fencing, A Cambridge native, Perlmutter resides in Arlington, Mass., with his coed and women’s sailing, men’s and women’s track and field and alpine and wife, Amy, and daughters Mia and Jordan. nordic skiing teams. Strength & Conditioning The Harvard strength and conditioning department is committed to Since its completion in March 2007, Harvard student-athletes have providing the highest level of athletic preparation for all varsity student- enjoyed training on state-of-the-art equipment in the spacious 24,000- athletes. The primary goal is to maximize the potential of each individual square-foot facility. The layout of the building is designed for full-service student-athlete throughout his college career. Every student-athlete matters. training for each athlete and team since every aspect of a complete training Each of Harvard’s 41 varsity teams receives comprehensive support and regiment is housed in the center. effort from the strength and conditioning staff during designated training times. The strength and conditioning staff works closely with each sport’s Training amenities include: head coach to implement the most effective year-round training. • 24 all-rubber Olympic weightlifting platforms by Sorinex. Through the guidance of strength coaches, student-athletes develop skills • 24 full bumper plate sets by Uesaka. such as discipline, perseverance, goal-setting, teamwork, mental toughness • 24 nine-foot Power Racks with three-way chin-up bars by Power Lift. and work ethic. These instill habits that will lead students to better and • 24 Olympic benches adjustable from 0-90 degrees by Sorinex. healthier lives. • 24 full sets of iron plates by York. 32 The cornerstones of Harvard strength and conditioning are intensity • 24 18-inch step-up plyometric boxes. and consistency. Harvard runs a full-service program, focusing on strength, • 24 dip and chin-up belts. power, speed, agility, conditioning, flexibility, recovery, nutrition and injury • Two full sets of dumbbells, ranging from three to 130 pounds. prevention and management. Strength training emphasizes multi-joint, • Three Hammer Strength Jammers. multi-plane movements such as power cleans, squats and upper-body • A 21,000-square-foot all-purpose turf floor. presses. Rotational movements, balance and stability, unilateral exercises • 12 40-yard lanes with cross-lanes every five yards located in the middle and core training are also priorities. All programs are specialized to match of the facility. Athletes engage in footwork, dynamic warmup, team goals at given times of the year. Speed, agility and conditioning are dynamic flex, speed and agility training, interval conditioning and tailored to the needs of each sport. Flexibility, recovery, nutrition and injury dynamic strength training, all in the strength and conditioning center. prevention are incorporated into all team training programs. • 12 pulling sleds by Power Systems. Harvard strength and conditioning is committed to the idea of sound • Speed and agility training equipment storage space. mind, sound body. It honors the values of the university and supports the • Indoor and outdoor medicine ball walls measuring 40 feet wide by eight principles of the Ivy League and the NCAA. feet high. The Palmer Dixon Strength and Conditioning Center is one of the • 50 medicine balls ranging from one to 20 pounds. premier strength and conditioning facilities in the country. Few, if any, • 24 stability balls and stability pads. facilities can match Palmer Dixon’s ability to accommodate large teams in • A 3,000-square-foot loft filled with 30 pieces of indoor conditioning such a variety of strength training and conditioning areas with top-of-the- equipment such as Spinner, Airdyne and stationary bikes as well as line equipment. treadmills, ellipticals and stairsteppers. • Men’s and women’s locker rooms. • Strength and conditioning offices.

Located in the Soldiers Field Athletic Complex, the Palmer Dixon Strength and Conditioning Center sits adjacent to Bright Hockey Center. The facility and the entire strength and conditioning program are managed by a highly trained staff of four full-time coaches. Director of strength and conditioning Craig Fitzgerald oversees the facility along with assistant directors Dan Perlmutter and Tim Mullen and assistant strength and conditioning coach Emily Saul. The Palmer Dixon Center had served as an indoor squash and tennis facility before it was converted to Harvard’s varsity athletics training center in 2007. It is named for William Palmer Dixon ’25, who was a two-time national squash champion, a former president of the Harvard Varsity Club, and a longtime supporter of Harvard’s athletics program.

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Jimmy Fraser 9 Senior • Forward • 5-11, 185 • Shoots: Right Port Huron, Michigan • Ann Arbor Huron High School Captain of Harvard Hockey

Part of the fifth set of co-captains in program history. Junior (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Part of penalty-kill unit that led the league with a .913 success rate (94 for 103) in league play … Also skated with Tyler Magura ’08 on Harvard’s top defensive forward line, helping the Crimson lead the league in scoring defense in ECAC games (1.86 goals allowed per game) … Reached double digits in faceoff wins 13 times … Had a pair of assists in ECAC quarterfinal Game1 win against Quinnipaic (March 14) … Netted the third-period game-winner after having his second-period penalty shot saved in 2-1 win against Brown (Feb. 23) … Scored Harvard’s lone goal in 2-1 loss at Princeton (Jan. 5) … Assisted on Harvard’s first goal in ECAC semifinal win against Cornell (March 21) and lone goal in 1-0 defeat of Dartmouth (Dec. 1) … Was 11-2 on faceoffs in tie at Yale (Nov. 28) and posted season-high 15 faceoff wins in Harvard’s victory against Northeastern to open the Beanpot (Feb. 4). Sophomore (2006-07) Career Highs Played in 29 games, missing four for the World Junior Championship in Sweden … The 19th Harvard player to be named to Points 4 2 goals, 2 assists the U.S. National Junior Team … An alternate captain for the U.S. squad, which won a bronze medal … Earned ECAC Hockey vs Cornell, 3/18/06, League All-Academic honors … Had four multi-point games … Recorded six points in a three-game span in regular-season ECACHL final finale against No. 16 Cornell (Feb. 24) and first-round playoff series against Yale (March 2-3) … Scored a goal and assisted on Goals 2 vs. Cornell, 3/18/06, two, including the game-winner, against the Big Red … Notched two helpers in first game of Yale series and scored the tying ECACHL final goal in Game 2 comeback win … Scored the game-winner and added an assist at Colgate (Nov. 11) … Had two assists against Assists 2 seven times, Union (Feb. 2) … Scored Harvard’s first goal in season opener at Dartmouth (Oct. 27) … Posted 13-3 faceoff record in Beanpot most recently opener against No. 15 Boston College. vs. Quinnpiac, 3/14/08, ECAC quarterfinal Freshman (2005-06) Pt. Streak 3 2/24/07-3/3/07 Made the ECACHL Championship all-tournament team … Led Crimson rookies in scoring … Played in all 35 games, one of just two freshmen to do so … Stepped up with two critical goals and two assists when Jon Pelle ’08 went down with an injury 34 early in the ECACHL final win against Cornell (March 18) … Recorded assists in his first two Scoring Against … and three of his first four games … Netted first GP G A P goal in win at St. Lawrence (Nov. 26) … Had Boston College 5 0 0 0 two assists in Beanpot win against Northeastern Boston U. 4 0 0 0 (Feb. 13) and at Rensselaer (Jan. 7). Brown 6 1 1 2 Before Harvard Clarkson 7 0 0 0 Captained U.S. National Under-18 and U-17 Colgate 6 1 1 2 Teams … U-18 team won the Five Nations, Cornell 8 3 7 10 Four Nations and U-18 World Championships Dartmouth 7 1 2 3 … Played in 58 games with the U-18 squad, Maine 1 0 0 0 notching 33 points (10-23) … Won U-17 New Hampshire 1 0 1 1 Five Nations and Four Nations titles … Skated Northeastern 3 0 3 3 in 65 games, recording 24 points (12-12) … North Dakota 2 0 1 1 Captain and MVP of baseball team at Huron High School while in the U.S. program … Ohio State 1 0 1 1 Won academic and most-improved honors for Princeton 7 1 0 1 baseball and golf teams during two years at Port Quinnipiac 9 1 7 8 Huron Northern High School. Rensselaer 5 0 3 3 Personal St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 9 1 2 3 Co-host, with Alex Biega, of Top Shelf intermission show on WHRB-FM. Union 5 0 2 2 Vermont 2 0 0 0 Concentration Yale 8 2 3 5 Psychology.

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2005-06 35 3 13 16 66 .045 27 54 -3 2 0 0 2006-07 29 6 10 16 71 .085 19 38 0 0 0 1 2007-08 33 2 11 13 67 .030 21 42 -2 0 0 1 Career 97 11 34 45 204 .054 67 134 -5 2 0 2

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Brian McCafferty 2 Senior • Defenseman • 6-0, 205 • Shoots: Left Lexington, Massachusetts • Belmont Hill School Captain of Harvard Hockey

Part of the fifth set of co-captains in program history. Junior (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Helped Harvard lead ECAC Hockey in scoring defense (1.86 goals allowed per game) and penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in league play … Tied for 10th in ECAC defenseman scoring in league play (2-10-12) … Tied for seventh in defenseman scoring in Ivy League games (1-4-5) … Paired with Jack Christian for much of season … Had two assists in regular-season finale at Cornell (March 1) and another in ECAC semi win against Big Red … Recorded two assists in home win against No. 16 Quinnipiac (Feb. 16) … Two-assist game against No. 15 Boston College (Dec. 12), part of streak of five straight games with a point (Dec. 4-Jan. 4) … Scored winning goal to break 1-1 tie in 2-1 home win against Cornell (Nov. 16). Career Highs Sophomore (2006-07) Points 3 three times, most An ECAC Hockey League All-Academic selection … Skated with Dylan Reese ’07 as the Crimson’s top defensive pair … Part recently 3 assists vs. of power-play unit that ranked eighth nationally at .205 (42 for 205) … Ranked third on the team and tied for sixth among Boston College, ECACHL defensemen in assists … Assisted on three of team’s four goals in shutout of No. 3 Boston College (Nov. 7) … Scored 11/7/06 the winning goal at Rensselaer (Jan. 5) … Recorded two assists in home win against Union (Feb. 2) … Assisted on goals in each Goals 1 six times, most recently game of the first-round playoff series win against Yale (March 2-3). at Ohio State, 12/29/07, Ohio Hockey Classic Freshman (2005-06) Assists 3 three times, most Won the Percy Award as Harvard’s top freshman … Notched eight assist in the last three ECACHL playoff games, making him recently vs. Boston the league playoff assist leader and its second-leading playoff scorer … Tied for third in the league in scoring by a freshman College, 11/7/06 defenseman … One of two Harvard rookies to play in all 35 games … Tied for third on the team at +8 … Posted three assists Pt. Streak 5 12/4/07-1/4/08 in each game of the ECACHL championship weekend and was +5 in the 10-1 semifinal win against Dartmouth (March 17) … Scored lone goal in 1-0 win at No. 12 New Hampshire (Dec. 8) and netted first Crimson goal against Colgate (Nov. 12).

Before Harvard Scoring Against … 35 Member of the Belmont Hill hockey team from 2000-05 and captain last two seasons … Played alongside current Harvard GP G A P teammate Matt McCollem … Three-time All-Independent School League selection … Two-time Most Valuable Player … Boston College 5 0 5 5 Four-year member of the lacrosse team, starting Boston U. 4 0 0 0 at midfield … Received the team sportsmanship Brown 4 0 1 1 award in lacrosse as a senior … Lacrosse team Clarkson 8 0 2 2 went 15-0 and won the ISL championship in Colgate 6 1 2 3 2003 … Played football as a sophomore, starting at safety … Elected to the Cum Laude Society Cornell 8 1 6 7 in 2004 … Selected as an AP Scholar in 2005 Dartmouth 6 0 3 3 … Member of the Peer Leadership Program and Maine 1 0 0 0 his last two years at Belmont and served as head Michigan State 1 0 1 1 of the group as a senior. Michigan Tech 1 0 0 0 Personal New Hampshire 1 1 0 1 President of Crimson City Hockey Clinic Northeastern 3 0 2 2 in 2008 … Father, Kevin ’76, was a 10-time North Dakota 2 0 0 0 varsity letterwinner as a member of the Harvard Ohio State 1 1 0 1 football, indoor and outdoor track teams … Princeton 6 0 2 2 Brothers are also former Crimson athletes … Quinnipiac 9 0 3 3 Kevin ’02 played football one year and hockey Rensselaer 5 2 1 3 three years … Brendan ’04 was a four-year St. Cloud State 1 0 1 1 member of the football team. St. Lawrence 9 0 4 4 Concentration Union 6 0 4 4 Economics. Yale 8 0 4 4

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2005-06 35 2 13 15 55 .036 6 12 +8 1 0 1 2006-07 29 1 14 15 47 .021 6 12 -2 1 0 1 2007-08 31 3 14 17 47 .064 9 18 -11 1 0 1 Career 95 6 41 47 149 .040 21 42 -5 3 0 3

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Alex Biega 3 Junior • Defenseman • 5-11, 195 • Shoots: Right Montreal, Quebec • Salisbury School Assistant Captain of Harvard Hockey

Harvard’s first assistant captain since current pros Tom Cavanagh ’05 and Ryan Lannon ’05 in 2004-05 … Selected in the fifth round (147th pick overall) of the 2006 NHL Entry Draft by the . Sophomore (2007-08) Earned ECAC Hockey third-team, all-tournament and preseason all-league (media) honors, as well as All-Ivy League honorable mention … Led Crimson defensemen in scoring, while ranking fourth overall on the team … Ranked third in plus/minus … Helped Harvard lead ECAC Hockey in scoring defense (1.86 goals allowed per game) and penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in league play … Tied for seventh in the Ivy League in defenseman scoring in league play (0-5-5) … Paired with classmate Ian Tallett for much of season … Had three assists with a +4 rating in playoff opener against Quinnipiac (March 14) … Notched assists in ECAC semifinal and final to total six assists in five playoff games … Registered consecutive two-assist games against No. 7 Boston College in the Beanpot final (Feb. 11) and against No. 17 Princeton (Feb. 15) … Was +6 in the Beanpot: +3 in final and +3 in semifinal win against No. 14 Northeastern (Feb. 4) … Assisted on goals by brother, Michael, against No. 15 BC (Dec. 12) and Yale (Nov. 28). Freshman (2006-07) Named to ECACHL All-Rookie team … Shared with Doug Rogers the Percy Award as the Crimson’s top rookies … Led league freshman defensemen with 18 points … Tied for ninth in the ECACHL in overall defenseman scoring … Often skated alongside David MacDonald ’08 … Part of power-play unit that ranked eighth nationally at .205 (42 for 205) … Scored three power-play goals … One of two freshmen Career Highs to play in all 33 games … Recorded the game-winning goal and two assists in win against No. 20 Quinnipiac (Nov. 24) … Points 3 twice, most recently Scored twice in tie at Brown (Feb. 17) … Notched points in four straight games Nov. 17-24 … Had an assist in Harvard debut 3 assists vs. Quinnipiac, at No. 17 Dartmouth (Oct. 27) … Scored first career goal in win against No. 3 BC (Nov. 7). 3/14/08, ECAC quarterfinal Before Harvard Goals 2 at Brown, 2/17/07 Captained the Quebec Under-17 Provincial Team in 2005 … Led Salisbury to to its first New England championship, serving Assists 3 vs. Quinnipiac, 3/14/08 as captain and earning team MVP honors … Put up 27 points (10-17) in 28 games as a defenseman to earn selection as league ECAC quarterfinal MVP by the U.S. Hockey Report … New 36 England Championship first-team all-star … Pt. Streak 4 11/17/06-11/24/06 Two-time All-New England selection (2005 and 2006) … Twice named to the all-tournament team at the Flood-Marr Tournament … Also Scoring Against … a member of varsity rowing and varsity soccer GP G A P teams at Salisbury, where he was named 2006 Boston College 4 1 3 4 Athlete of the Year … Selected in the first round Boston U. 2 1 1 2 of the 2004 Quebec Major Junior Hockey Brown 4 2 1 3 League Draft … In the classroom, earned first Clarkson 6 0 2 2 honors both years at Salisbury. Colgate 4 1 0 1 Personal Cornell 5 0 2 2 Brother, Michael, is a forward for the Crimson Dartmouth 4 0 1 1 … Co-host, with Jimmy Fraser, of Top Shelf Michigan State 1 0 0 0 intermission show on WHRB-FM. Michigan Tech 1 0 1 1 Concentration Northeastern 2 0 0 0 Sociology. Ohio State 1 0 0 0 Princeton 5 0 4 4 Quinnipiac 7 1 6 7 Rensselaer 4 1 3 4 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 4 0 0 0 Union 4 1 2 3 Vermont 2 1 1 2 Yale 6 0 4 4

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2006-07 33 6 12 18 65 .092 18 36 -4 3 0 1 2007-08 34 3 19 22 119 .025 14 28 +10 1 0 1 Career 67 9 31 40 184 .049 32 64 +6 4 0 2

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Michael Biega 27 Sophomore • Forward • 5-11, 195 • Shoots: Left Montreal, Quebec • Salisbury School

Freshman (2007-08) Co-recipient of the Percy Award as Harvard’s top rookie, along with Matt McCollem … Twice named ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Week (Dec. 3 and Dec. 17) … Named Harvard COOP Athlete of the Week (Dec. 17) … Tied for third in the league in goals by a freshman in ECAC Hockey games (six) … Among Ivy League freshmen, tied for third in goals (three) and eighth in points (four) in league play … Ranked sixth on the team in scoring, fourth in goals and third in power-play goals … Only freshman and one of nine Crimson players to skate in every game … Often skated on a line with Jon Pelle ’08 and Paul Dufault ’08, as well as on the power play … Assisted on the third-period game-winner by Dufault in bye-clinching victory at Cornell to close the regular season (March 1) … Registered two assists in 3-3 tie at Colgate for another crucial point in the standings a night earlier … Had an assist in the Beanpot final against No. 7 Boston College (Feb. 11) … Scored twice against No. 15 Boston College (Dec. 12) … Tallied first goal and first hat trick in the same game, a 3-3 tie at Yale (Nov. 28) … Was assisted by brother, Alex, on goals against BC and Yale … Also scored goals against St. Lawrence (Jan. 11), at No. 18 Quinnipiac (Jan. 4), at Ohio State (Dec. 29) and at No. 19 Rensselaer (Dec. 4) to give him nine goals in 10 games … Made Harvard debut in season opener at No. 11 Clarkson (Nov. 2) and registered first point with an assist a night later at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3). Before Harvard Played three years of varsity hockey at Salisbury, two alongside brother, Alex … Also part of the varsity soccer team and crew to follow Alex as the school’s Athlete of the Year and earn the Corkery Medal for playing a varsity sport every season … An All-New England, All-Founders League and Flood-Marr all-tournament selection, as well as hockey team MVP, as a senior … Team won the first New England championship his junior year and captured two Flood-Marr Tournament titles and three Founders League crowns in his three years … Started in soccer as a senior and was stroke for crew … Academic honors include the Harvard Book Prize, Key Society, first and second honors, AP French Course Award and Certificate of Merit for performance in academics, athletics, citizenship and extracurricular activities. Personal Brother, Alex, is a defenseman for the Crimson. Career Highs Points 3 3 goals at Yale, 11/28/07 37 Goals 3 at Yale, 11/28/07 Assists 2 at Colgate, 2/29/08 Pt. Streak 2 twice, most recently 2/29/08-3/1/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston Colllege 2 2 1 3 Boston U. 1 0 0 0 Brown 2 0 0 0 Colgate 2 0 3 3 Cornell 3 0 1 1 Clarkson 2 0 0 0 Dartmouth 2 0 0 0 Northeastern 1 0 0 0 Ohio State 1 1 0 1 Quinnipiac 5 1 0 1 Princeton 3 0 0 0 Rensselaer 2 1 0 1 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 2 1 1 2 Union 2 0 1 1 Vermont 1 0 0 0 Yale 2 3 0 3

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 34 9 7 16 74 .122 5 10 -6 5 0 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Sam Bozoian 18 Sophomore • Forward • 6-0, 185 • Shoots: Right St. Charles, Missouri • Choate Rosemary Hall

Freshman (2006-07) Played in two games as a rookie … Made Harvard debut against Quinnipiac (Nov. 24) and skated against Dartmouth (Dec. 16). Before Harvard A three-year letterwinner at Choate Rosemary Hall … Assistant captain as a senior … 2005 first team All-New England … 2005 first team All-Founders League … 2002 Tim Horton’s Tournament MVP … Helped Choate win the 2004 Lawrenceville Tournament. Personal Interests include golf, fishing and hunting … Participated in Choate’s Special Population Skates community service program, where he skated with community members with disabilities … Brother, Kyle, played hockey at Fredonia State.

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Scoring Against … GP G A P Dartmouth 1 0 0 0 Quinnipiac 1 0 0 0

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2006-07 2 0 0 0 1 .000 1 2 -2 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Ryan Carroll 35 Sophomore • Goaltender • 5-11, 170 • Catches: Left Hackensack, New Jersey • Tabor Academy

Freshman (2007-08) Made collegiate debut against No. 15 Boston College (Dec. 12), stopping four shots and allowing one goal in 17 minutes, five seconds. Before Harvard Played two years for Tabor Academy after two seasons at Bergen Catholic … All-conference selection both years at Tabor, leading the team to the Travis Roy Cup championship in 2006 and the New Year’s Tournament title in 2007 … North Jersey Goalie of the Year and a first-team All-North Jersey selection as a sophomore … Bergen Catholic’s Defensive Player of the Year as a freshman … Posted a .962 save percentage and 1.00 goals-against average for his team at the 2005 USA Select 17 Festival … Selected by the Tri-City Storm in the 2005 United States Hockey League Futures Draft … Also played three years of varsity baseball, playing shortstop and captaining the Tabor team as a senior … Made honors list every year in high school … A National Honor Society member. Personal Interests include golf.

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Career Highs Saves 4 vs. Boston College, 12/12/07

Stats Against … GP Min. Svs GA W-L-T Boston College 1 17:05 4 1 0-0-0

Career Stats Year GP GS Minutes GA GAA Saves SvPct W L T Sho PPG SHG 2007-08 1 0 17:05 1 3.51 4 .800 0 0 0 0 1 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Nick Coskren 16 Senior • Forward • 5-11, 205 • Shoots: Right Walpole, Massachusetts • St. Sebastian’s School

Junior (2007-08) Scored both Crimson goals in 2-2 tie at Vermont (Dec. 8) … Had a pair of assists in 3-3 tie at Yale (Nov. 28) … Recorded an assist in win at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3) … Played in 12 of the first 13 games of the season and the final five contests of the regular season … Had +2 games against Union (Nov. 10) and at Vermont (Dec. 8). Sophomore (2006-07) Played in 15 games … Recorded assists against No. 14 Clarkson (Nov. 3) and in win at Princeton (Feb. 9) … Helper against the Tigers came on the second-period game-winner by Paul Dufault ’08. Freshman (2005-06) Had a productive rookie campaign, reaching double digits in points (4-8-12) … Freshman line of Coskren, Jimmy Fraser and Steve Rolecek accounted for a pair of goals in the Beanpot consolation win against Northeastern (Feb. 13), with Coskren picking up a goal and an assist … Scored in two of first three collegiate games, wins against Dartmouth (Oct. 29) and Princeton (Nov. 5) … Assisted on Harvard’s goal against Maine in the NCAA tournament (March 25). Career Highs Before Harvard Points 2 four times, most Played four years of hockey at St. Sebastian’s … Three-time All-Independent School League selection … Team won consecutive recently 2 goals Independent School League titles (2002, ’03) and the 2003 New England Prep School Athletic Conference championship … at Vermont, 12/8/07 St. Sebastian’s teammate of fellow Crimson forward Doug Rogers … Four-year member of the honor roll. Goals 2 at Vermont, 12/8/07 Personal Assists 2 twice, most recently, Brothers, Tim and Tony, both played four seasons of hockey at Holy Cross … Older brother, Mike ’09, lettered as a goalie with at Yale, 11/28/07 the Crimson in 2005-06. Pt. Streak 3 12/30/05-1/28/06 Concentration 40 Economics. Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 2 0 0 0 Boston U. 4 0 0 0 Brown 3 0 0 0 Clarkson 5 0 1 1 Colgate 4 0 0 0 Cornell 4 0 1 1 Dartmouth 5 1 0 1 Maine 1 0 1 1 Michigan State 1 0 0 0 Michigan Tech 1 0 0 0 Northeastern 2 1 1 2 Ohio State 1 0 0 0 North Dakota 2 1 0 1 Princeton 5 1 1 2 Quinnipiac 5 0 0 0 Rensselaer 3 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 4 0 2 2 Union 4 0 2 2 Vermont 1 2 0 2 Yale 6 0 4 4

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2005-06 28 4 8 12 36 .111 10 20 -2 1 0 0 2006-07 15 0 2 2 13 .000 7 14 -2 0 0 0 2007-08 20 2 3 5 32 .062 4 8 +5 0 0 0 Career 63 6 13 19 81 .074 21 42 +1 1 0 0

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Michael Del Mauro 13 Sophomore • Forward • 6-1, 195 • Shoots: Right Watchung, New Jersey • Deerfield Academy

Freshman (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Recorded first career point with assist at Princeton (Jan. 5) and had another helper on the game-winning goal at home against Brown (Feb. 23) … Both assists were on Jimmy Fraser goals … Made collegiate debut in 6-1 win at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3). Before Harvard Skated for the Indiana Ice of the United States Hockey League in 2006-07, helping the team reach the Clark Cup semifinals … Notched a combined 90 points on 47 goals and 43 assists in 53 games for Deerfield Academy and and the New Jersey Rockets of the Atlantic Junior Hockey League in 2005-06 … Played for Deerfield in 2005-06 after skating for Delbarton School from 2002-05 … Led Delbarton to the non-public division final of the 2005 /New Jersey State High School Championship … Scored his team’s lone goal in the championship game, earning selection to the all-tournament team … Played for the Rockets from youth hockey through 2006, leading the AJHL in scoring in 2004-05. Personal Interests include golf, soccer and reading … Father, Ronald, played baseball for Seton Hall.

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Career Highs Points 1 twice, most recently 1 assist vs. Brown, 2/23/08 Assists 1 twice, most recently vs. Brown, 2/23/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 0 0 Boston U. 1 0 0 0 Brown 1 0 1 1 Clarkson 1 0 0 0 Cornell 2 0 0 0 Dartmouth 1 0 0 0 Princeton 2 0 1 1 Quinnipiac 1 0 0 0 Rensselaer 2 0 0 0 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 2 0 0 0 Union 1 0 0 0 Yale 1 0 0 0

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 17 0 2 2 12 .000 2 4 0 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Chris Huxley 28 Sophomore • Defenseman • 5-11, 202 • Shoots: Left Weymouth, Massachusetts • Noble and Greenough School

Freshman (2007-08) Helped Harvard lead ECAC Hockey in scoring defense (1.86 goals allowed per game) and penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in league play … Scored first collegiate goal in 4-0 win against Union (Nov. 10) … Posted first career assist in second game, at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3) … Also had assists against Princeton (Feb. 15) and at Yale (Nov. 28) … Played in Harvard’s first 20 games as a rookie and suited up in Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship final against Princeton (March 22). Before Harvard Played for the Sioux Falls Stampede of the United States Hockey League in 2006-07 after graduating from Noble and Greenough School and attending Weymouth High School … Scored 17 points on three goals and 14 assists as a defenseman in the regular season with the Stampede, then recorded five assists in eight playoff games to help the team win the league title … Captained teams his senior year at Nobles and sophomore year at Weymouth … An All-Independent School League selection and winner of the John Carlton Memorial Award in 2006 … Won two national titles with midget select team Junior Bruins. Personal Hobbies include tennis and fishing.

Career Highs Points 1 four times, most 42 recently 1 assist vs. Princeton, 2/15/08 Goals 1 vs. Union, 11/10/07 Assists 1 three times, most recently 1 assist vs. Princeton, 2/15/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 0 0 Boston U. 1 0 0 0 Brown 1 0 0 0 Clarkson 2 0 0 0 Colgate 1 0 0 0 Cornell 1 0 0 0 Dartmouth 2 0 0 0 Ohio State 1 0 0 0 Princeton 3 0 1 1 Quinnipiac 1 0 0 0 Rensselaer 2 0 0 0 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 2 0 1 1 Union 1 1 0 1 Vermont 1 0 0 0 Yale 1 0 1 1

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 22 1 3 4 25 .040 8 16 +1 1 0 0

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Bill Keenan 20 Senior • Forward • 6-1, 180 • Shoots: Right New York, New York • Collegiate School

Junior (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Did not play due to injury. Sophomore (2006-07) Played in five games … Scored first career goal against St. Lawrence (Nov. 4) in his second career game. Freshman (2005-06) Made his Harvard debut Nov. 5 at Princeton’s Baker Rink. Before Harvard Played tennis and soccer at Collegiate School … Played for the New York Apple Core in the Eastern Junior Hockey League from 2003-05 … Assistant captain for the Apple Core in 2004-05 … 2004-05 EJHL Hockey Night In Boston All-Scholastic, tournament champion and EJHL All-Star … 2003 Hockey Night In Boston All-Star and top scorer. Personal Son of Howard and Pam Keenan, who both graduated from Harvard in 1973 … Father was a tight end on the Harvard football team … Grandfather, Don Carmichael, graduated from Harvard in 1935. Concentration Government.

43

Career Highs Points 1 1 goal vs. St. Lawrence, 11/4/06 Goals 1 vs. St. Lawrence, 11/4/06

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 0 0 Brown 1 0 0 0 Cornell 1 0 0 0 Colgate 1 0 0 0 Princeton 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 1 1 0 1

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2005-06 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 2006-07 5 1 0 1 4 .250 0 0 0 0 0 0 2007-08 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career 6 1 0 1 4 .250 0 0 0 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Matt McCollem 23 Sophomore • Forward • 6-1, 205 • Shoots: Left Somerville, Massachusetts • Belmont Hill School

Selected in the sixth round (154th pick overall) of the 2006 NHL Entry Draft by the St. Louis Blues. Freshman (2007-08) Co-recipient of the Percy Award as Harvard’s top rookie, along with Michael Biega … Received National Rookie of the Month honorable mention for February … Tied for fourth among Ivy League freshmen for scoring in league play (1-5-6) … Often skated on high-powered scoring line with Mike Taylor ’08 and Doug Rogers … Registered 12 of his 14 points in the final 14 games … Posted a career-high four points (1-3-4) and was +3 in series-opening 11-0 win against Quinnipiac (March 14) in ECAC quarterfinals … Recorded first multi-point game with two assists in win against Yale (Feb. 22) … Scored first career goal in win at Union (Feb. 8) and followed with two more goals in the next three games, finding the net in the Beanpot final against No. 7 Boston College (Feb. 11) and at home against No. 16 Quinnipiac (Feb. 16) … Made Harvard debut in season opener at No. 11 Clarkson (Nov. 2) and registered first point with an assist a night later at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3). Before Harvard A three-year letterwinner at Belmont Hill School where he played with current Harvard teammate Brian McCafferty … Captained team to Independent School League title as a senior … A first-team All-New England and All-Independent School League selection as a junior and as a senior … 2005 Hockey Night In Boston prep/private MVP … Made honors list all four years at Belmont Hill.

Career Highs Points 4 1 goal, 3 assists vs. Quinnipiac, 3/14/08, ECAC quarterfinal 44 Goals 1 five times, most recently vs. quinnipiac, 3/14/08, ECAC Quarterfinal Assists 3 vs. quinnipiac, 3/14/08, ECAC quarterfinal Pt. Streak 7 2/1/08-2/23/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston Colllege 2 1 0 1 Boston U. 1 0 0 0 Brown 2 1 1 2 Colgate 2 0 0 0 Cornell 3 0 1 1 Clarkson 1 0 0 0 Dartmouth 2 0 0 0 Ohio State 1 0 0 0 Quinnipiac 5 2 3 5 Princeton 2 0 1 1 Rensselaer 2 0 0 0 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 2 0 1 1 Union 2 1 0 1 Vermont 1 0 0 0 Yale 2 0 2 2

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 31 5 9 14 53 .094 14 28 +1 1 0 0

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Pier-Olivier Michaud 39 Sophomore • Forward • 5-10, 180 • Shoots: Left Mont-Joli, Quebec • École Polyvalente le Mistral

Freshman (2007-08) Played in all five ECAC Hockey playoff games, scoring four of his seven points in those games … Six of his seven points came against Quinnipiac … Part of penalty-kill unit that led ECAC Hockey with a .913 success rate (94 for 103) in league play … Shared team lead with +6 rating in ECAC Hockey quarterfinal series against Quinnipiac (March 14-16) … Scored in the series-opening win against the Bobcats, added a goal and two assists in Game 2 and went a combined 22-9 on faceoffs in those two games … Scored first two career goals in front of a large group of former teammates and coaches in 4-1 regular-season win against No. 16 Quinnipiac (Feb. 16) … Made Harvard debut in 3-0 win against No. 16 Rensselaer (Nov. 9). Before Harvard Played three seasons for the Portland Junior Pirates of the Atlantic Junior Hockey League … In 2006-07, captained the Junior Pirates, making the all-star team that competed in the Junior Jamboree … Also competed in Hockey Night In Boston and earned junior hockey all-scholastic MVP honors … A Rookie of the Year finalist and second-team all-star his first season in Portland, notching 72 points (40-32) in 42 games … Made all-star team that played U.S. National Under-18 Team … In 2003-04, played for Mont-Joli BSL Midget Espoir … Received Dr. Guy Morissette Award as student-athlete of the year, Gino Oullet Award as personality of the year and Guy Bergeron Award as the best student. Personal Father, Bertrand, captained the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières hockey team, leading the squad to the semifinals of the Canadian championship … Interests include golf, baseball, reading and cinema.

45 Career Highs Points 3 1 goal, 2 assists vs. Quinnipiac, 3/15/08, ECAC quarterfinal Goals 2 vs. Quinnipiac, 2/16/08 Assists 2 vs. Quinnipiac, 3/15/08, ECAC quarterfinal Pt. Streak 2 3/14/08-3/15/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 0 0 Brown 2 0 0 0 Clarkson 1 0 0 0 Colgate 1 0 1 1 Cornell 2 0 0 0 Dartmouth 1 0 0 0 Northeasteron 1 0 0 0 Quinnipiac 4 4 2 6 Princeton 2 0 0 0 Rensselaer 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 1 0 0 0 Union 1 0 0 0 Yale 1 0 0 0

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 19 4 3 7 20 .200 1 2 +5 0 0 1

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Chad Morin 7 Junior • Defenseman • 6-0, 210 • Shoots: Left Auburn, New York • North High School

Sophomore (2007-08) Helped Harvard lead ECAC Hockey in scoring defense (1.86 goals allowed per game) and penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in league play … Tied with defensive partner David MacDonald ’08 for fourth on the team in plus/minus … Was +4 in quarterfinal series win against Quinnipiac (March 14-16) … Recorded an assist in Beanpot final against No. 7 Boston College (Feb. 11) … Scored on the power play to complete a two-goal comeback for a 3-3 tie at No. 18 Quinnipiac (Jan. 4) … Plus or even in his first nine games of the season, including season-high +2 in 6-1 win at No. 16 St. Lawrence (Nov. 3) … Also recorded assists against No. 11 Clarkson (Jan. 12) and at Vermont (Dec. 8). Freshman (2006-07) Played in 29 games on defense, often alongside Jack Christian, becoming an offensive contributor late in the season … Finished with nine points on two goals and seven assists … Skated in the first 19 games of the season, recording two assists in that time … Was out of the lineup for three games and returned to score his first collegiate goal, the game-winning tally against Rensselaer (Feb. 3) … Goal started a stretch of six points in six games, culminating in a goal and an assist against Colgate (Feb. 23) to help Harvard clinch home ice in the playoffs … Skated end to end, slipped between two defenders and roofed a backhand shot for highlight-reel goal against the Raiders. Before Harvard Graduate of North High School … Two-year member of the U.S. National Team Development Program … Helped the U.S. national teams win gold medals at the U-17 Four Nations in 2003 (Magnitigorsk, Russia), the U-18 Five Nations (Pisetany, Career Highs Slovakia) and Four Nations (Ann Arbor, Mich.) and 2005 U-18 Five Nations (Tjorns, Sweden) … Played for the Sioux City Points 2 1 goal, 1 assist vs. Musketeers of the United States Hockey League in 2005-06 … Was a USHL All-Star in 2006 … Selected to 2002 Ontario Colgate, 2/23/07 Provincial Junior A Hockey League Future Stars … Also attended Huron High School in Ann Arbor, Mich. Goals 1 three times, Personal most recently at Quinnipiac, 1/4/08 Interests include lacrosse, golf and guitar … Participated in USA Hockey Outreach Program from 2003 to 2005 … Cousin, J.D. Forrest, was an All-American at Boston Assists 1 11 times, most recently 46 College and plays in the Carolina Hurricanes vs. Yale, 2/22/08 organization. Pt. Streak 3 2/16/07-2/23/07 Concentration Sociology. Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 3 0 1 1 Boston U. 2 0 0 0 Brown 4 0 1 1 Clarkson 5 0 1 1 Colgate 3 1 1 2 Cornell 5 0 1 1 Dartmouth 3 0 1 1 Michigan State 1 0 0 0 Michigan Tech 1 0 0 0 Northeastern 2 0 0 0 Princeton 5 0 1 1 Quinnipiac 6 1 0 1 Rensselaer 4 1 0 1 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 4 0 0 0 Union 3 0 0 0 Vermont 2 0 1 1 Yale 6 0 3 3

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2006-07 29 2 7 9 46 .043 19 49 -4 1 0 1 2007-08 31 1 4 5 36 .028 17 42 +7 1 0 0 Career 60 3 11 14 82 .037 36 91 +3 2 0 1

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey John Riley 1 Junior • Goaltender • 5-11, 190 • Catches: Left Lake Forest, Illinois • Loyola Academy

Sophomore (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Recorded two saves in combined shutout of Quinnipiac in ECAC playoff opener (March 14) … Made official Harvard debut with four minutes of action in win against Yale (Feb. 22), stopping all four shots to come his way. Freshman (2006-07) An ECAC Hockey League All-Academic honoree … Did not see game action. Before Harvard Posted a 30-5-1 record with a 1.59 goals-against average to help Team Illinois to 41 straight wins, a 61-9-2 record and the Midwest Elite Hockey League championship. Personal Interests include golf, fishing and playing the guitar. Concentration History.

47

Career Highs Saves 3 vs. Yale, 2/22/08

Stats Against … GP Min. Svs GA W-L-T Quinnipiac 1 9:21 2 0 0-0-0 Yale 1 4:02 3 0 0-0-0

Career Stats Year GP GS Minutes GA GAA Saves SvPct W L T Sho PPG SHG 2006-07 0 0 0:00 0 0.00 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 2007-08 2 0 13:23 0 0.00 5 1.000 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career 2 0 13:23 0 0.00 5 1.000 0 0 0 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Doug Rogers 15 Junior • Forward • 6-1, 195 • Shoots: Right Watertown, Massachusetts • St. Sebastian’s School

Selected in the fourth round (119th overall) of the 2006 NHL Entry Draft by the . Sophomore (2007-08) ECAC Hockey’s nominee for National Player of the Month for February, earning honorable mention … Named ECAC Player of the Week (Feb. 18) … Skated in every game for the second straight year … Often skated with Mike Taylor ’08 and Matt McCollem … Shared the team lead in plus/minus, game-winning goals and faceoff percentage (.607) … Ranked second on team in goals, points, assists and power-play goals … Had seven points (2-5-7) in five playoff games … Registered seven multi-point games, good for second on the team … Posted a winning faceoff record in 27 of 34 games and had a losing mark in just one of the first 20 contests … Reached double digits in faceoff wins 32 times … Scored in the third period to tie Colgate (Feb. 29) … Posted first career hat trick in 3-2 win against No. 17 Princeton (Feb. 15) and added another goal the following night in 4-1 win against No. 16 Quinnipiac … Had a goal, two assists and a season-high 21 faceoff wins earlier in the week, in Beanpot final against No. 7 Boston College (Feb. 11) … Won faceoff to set up own game-winning goal in overtime at Boston University (Nov. 20) … Recorded assists in three straight games, three times (Jan. 11-26, Dec. 12-30, Nov. 2-9). Freshman (2006-07) Shared with Alex Biega the Percy Award as the Crimson’s top rookies … Named ECAC Hockey League Rookie of the Week (March 5) … Ranked second on the team in scoring and tied for seventh in scoring among ECACHL freshmen … League’s second-leading power-play scorer in ECACHL games (4-10-14) … Ranked 11th in the league, first among freshmen, with 17 overall power-play points (5-12-17) … Led Crimson centers with a .611 winning percentage on faceoffs (272 wins, 173 losses) … One of eight players and two freshmen to play in all 33 games … Centered Career Highs Ryan Maki ’07 and Mike Taylor ’08 for much of the season and helped power-play unit rank eighth nationally at .205 (42 for Points 3 three times, most 205) … Ranked third on the Crimson with five multiple-point games … Won at least half of his faceoffs in 18 straight games recently 1 goal, 2 assists … Notched two goals and an assist in win at Princeton (Feb. 9) … Registered three assists at Brown (Feb. 17) … Posted a goal vs. Quinnipiac, 3/14/08, and an assist in playoff-opening win against Yale (March 2) … Went 24-7 on faceoffs in the Yale series and 42-13 during team’s ECAC quarterfinal late-season, four-game win streak … Scored first collegiate goal against No. 14 Clarkson (Nov. 3), his second career game, and Goals 3 vs. Princeton, 2/15/08 added two assists the following night against St. Lawrence. Assists 3 at Brown, 2/17/07 48 Before Harvard Pt. Streak 6 2/11/08-2/29/08 Four-year hockey letterman at St. Sebastian’s School … Captained team during senior season … Flood Shield Award winner and Scoring Against … All-New England Prep selection as a senior GP G A P … All-Independent School League pick in Boston College 4 1 3 4 sophomore, junior and senior years … Team Boston U. 2 1 0 1 was ISL champion and a New England finalist in Brown 4 0 4 4 2002-2003 … National Honor Society member Colgate 4 1 2 3 in grades 11 and 12. Cornell 5 0 2 2 Personal Clarkson 6 1 3 4 Sister, Mary, is the top scorer in Division II Dartmouth 4 2 1 3 field hockey history and earned All-America Michigan State 1 0 1 1 honors three times in her career at Bentley … Michigan Tech 1 0 1 1 Sisters, Bethany (Northeastern), Jane (Boston Northeastern 2 1 0 1 University) and Catherine (Maryland), played Division I field hockey in college, with Bethany Ohio State 1 0 1 1 and Jane earning All-America honors. Princeton 5 5 2 7 Quinnipiac 7 3 6 9 Concentration Rensselaer 4 0 3 3 Economics. St. Cloud State 1 0 1 1 St. Lawrence 4 1 4 5 Union 4 1 0 1 Vermont 2 0 0 0 Yale 6 3 2 5

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2006-07 33 7 17 24 71 .099 9 18 -1 5 0 1 2007-08 34 13 19 32 88 .148 15 30 +13 6 0 4 Career 67 20 36 56 159 .126 24 48 +12 11 0 5

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Steve Rolecek 19 Senior • Forward • 5-10, 195 • Shoots: Right Bedford, New Hampshire • Phillips Academy Andover

Junior (2007-08) An ECAC Hockey All-Academic selection … Had first two-goal game in win against Quinnipiac (March 14) to open ECAC quarterfinal series, his first game back after missing six games with an injury suffered in the Beanpot final … Recorded assist in Beanpot semifinal win against No. 14 Northeastern (Feb. 4) … Also had a helper against Colgate (Nov. 17). Sophomore (2006-07) Earned a regular spot in the Crimson lineup, skating in 26 games, often forming a line of speedsters with Kevin Du ’07 and Alex Meintel ’08 … Led the Crimson in plus/minus at +8 … Tallied six points on two goals and four assists … Scored the game-winning goal in series-clinching win against Yale (March 3) in first round of the ECAC Hockey League playoffs … Also found the net against Clarkson (Nov. 3) … Recorded a pair of assists in win at Union (Jan. 6) … Notched assists against St. Lawrence (Nov. 4) and in the win against Michigan Tech (Dec. 30). Freshman (2005-06) Produced four points and a +2 rating in his 10 games in the Crimson lineup … Scored his first goal and added an assist for his first multi-point game against Northeastern in the Beanpot consolation game on his birthday (Feb. 13). Career Highs Before Harvard Points 2 three times, most Attended Bishop Guertin High School from 2001-03 and Phillips Academy Andover from 2003-05 … Two-time letterwinner recently 2 goals vs. and starter in hockey and baseball at Andover, where he played hockey with current teammate Joe Smith … Led the team in Quinnipiac, 3/14/08, scoring in 2003-04 … Was named the Hockey Night In Boston Tournament MVP in summer 2004 … Also received the HNIB ECAC quarterfinal Best Pro Prospect Award and was a member of the Northern New England team that won the tournament title … Captained Goals 2 vs. Quinnipiac, 3/14/08, hockey team as a senior and led squad to the playoffs for second straight season … A Central New England Prep School All-Star ECAC quarterfinal … Received the Tippett Award, presented to a baseball or football player who represents courage, dedication and respect to the Assists 2 at Union, 1/6/07 sport … Named Division I first-team all-state team at Bishop Guertin … Team Most Valuable Player … Led the league in goal Pt. Streak 2 11/3/06-11/4/06 and points … Squad was the runner-up at the Division I state championship … Also played 49 for the Boston Bulldogs … Member of ARC, a program that sets up Andover students with Scoring Against … special-needs young adults in the community. GP G A P Boston College 3 0 0 0 Concentration Boston U. 2 0 0 0 Economics. Brown 3 0 0 0 Clarkson 7 1 0 1 Colgate 4 0 1 1 Cornell 4 0 1 1 Dartmouth 2 0 0 0 Michigan State 1 0 0 0 Michigan Tech 1 0 1 1 New Hampshire 1 0 0 0 Northeastern 2 1 2 3 Ohio State 1 0 0 0 Princeton 3 0 0 0 Quinnipiac 4 2 0 2 Rensselaer 4 0 1 1 St. Lawrence 5 0 1 1 Union 3 0 2 2 Vermont 1 0 0 0 Yale 5 1 0 1

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2005-06 10 1 3 4 11 .091 2 4 +2 0 0 0 2006-07 26 2 4 6 22 .091 8 16 +8 0 0 1 2007-08 20 2 2 4 24 .083 2 4 -1 0 0 0 Career 56 5 9 14 57 .088 12 24 +9 0 0 1

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Joe Smith 22 Sophomore • Forward • 6-1, 210 • Shoots: Right Woburn, Massachusetts • Phillips Academy Andover

Freshman (2007-08) Played in 10 games … Skated in both games of the Beanpot, an event he had been attending as a fan since age 4 … Tallied first collegiate goal at Brown (Feb. 1) … Made Harvard debut against Colgate (Nov. 17). Before Harvard Four-year hockey letterwinner at Phillips Andover, where he captained the team as a senior and twice led the team in scoring … Finished career with 61 goals and 61 assists for 122 points … In 2007, received All-New England East All-Star honorable mention and earned Phillips Academy’s Sumner Smith Hockey Award … Made the Flood-Marr all-tournament team in 2006 … Picked to USA Hockey Select Festival 14, 15, 16 and 17 teams … Named Hockey Night in Boston prep/private MVP in 2007 and Sophomore Tournament MVP in 2004 … Twice named HNIB Best Pro Prospect and fastest skater … Attended Woburn High School in 2002-03 and was team’s leading scorer and Rookie of the Year and a league all-star … All-star and two-year starting outfielder for Phillips Andover’s league-champion baseball team … Received George H.W. Bush Endowment Scholarship and participated in ARC community service program … Named to several honor societies and took part in a number of extracurricular activities. Personal Has studied Spanish, Latin and Greek … Uncle, Mark Ferullo, played baseball for Northeastern.

50

Career Highs Points 1 1 goal at Brown, 2/1/08 Goals 1 at Brown, 2/1/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 0 0 Brown 1 1 0 1 Colgate 2 0 0 0 Dartmouth 1 0 0 0 Northeastern 1 0 0 0 Princeton 1 0 0 0 St. Cloud State 1 0 0 0 Union 1 0 0 0 Yale 1 0 0 0

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2007-08 10 1 0 1 7 .143 2 4 -1 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Ian Tallett 8 Junior • Defenseman • 6-2, 207 • Shoots: Left St. Louis, Missouri • Ladue High School

Sophomore (2007-08) Earned the Angier Trophy as the Crimson’s most improved player … Tied for the team lead in plus/minus, along with Doug Rogers … Had a minus rating just once in 22 games played (-1, Feb. 1 at Brown) and was +14 in his final 12 outings … Helped Harvard lead ECAC Hockey in scoring defense (1.86 goals allowed per game) and penalty killing (.913, 94 for 103) in league play … Was +3 in quarterfinal series-opening win against Quinnipiac (March 14) and had an assist in the series clincher … Registered first multi-point game with two assists in 4-1 win against No. 16 Quinnipiac (Feb. 16) … Also picked up an assist in Beanpot championship game against No. 7 Boston College (Feb. 11) … Was +4 in the Beanpot final and +3 in the 3-1 semifinal win against No. 14 Northeastern … Registered first collegiate point, an assist, in tie at Vermont (Dec. 8). Freshman (2006-07) ECAC Hockey League All-Academic selection … Made collegiate debut in win over Rensselaer (Feb. 3) … Played in Beanpot game against Northeastern (Feb. 12). Before Harvard Made the United States Hockey League All-Star/Prospects Game as a member of the Chicago Steel in 2005-06 … Selected in the first round (fifth overall pick) of the USHL Draft … Lettered three years each in hockey and lacrosse at Delbarton High School (freshman), Mary Institute and Saint Louis Country Day School (MICDS, sophomore and junior), Stevenson High School and Ladue High School (senior) … Played for St. Louis Midget AAA while at MICDS … Played on back-to-back state championship lacrosse teams at MICDS and, as a senior, captained Ladue to its first lacrosse playoff berth … Made all-conference and all-state first teams in lacrosse. Personal Received academic honors in high school … Enjoys golf … Family moved to St. Louis from New Jersey after freshman year of high school. Concentration Government.

51 Career Highs Points 2 2 assists vs. Quinnipiac, 2/16/08 Assists 2 vs. Quinnipiac, 2/16/08

Scoring Against … GP G A P Boston College 1 0 1 1 Brown 2 0 0 0 Clarkson 1 0 0 0 Colgate 2 0 0 0 Cornell 2 0 0 0 Dartmouth 1 0 0 0 Northeastern 2 0 0 0 Ohio State 1 0 0 0 Princeton 2 0 0 0 Quinnipiac 5 0 3 3 Rensselaer 1 0 0 0 St. Lawrence 1 0 0 0 Union 1 0 0 0 Vermont 1 0 1 1 Yale 1 0 0 0

Career Stats Year GP G A Pts Shots Shot% Pen Min +/- PPG SHG GWG 2006-07 2 0 0 0 2 .000 1 2 -2 0 0 0 2007-08 22 0 5 5 15 .000 9 18 +13 0 0 0 Career 24 0 5 5 17 .000 10 20 +11 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Rence Coassin 24 Freshman • Forward • 6-1, 200 • Shoots: Right Hamden, Connecticut • Choate Rosemary Hall

Before Harvard Played for Choate Rosemary Hall from 2003 to 2006 before suiting up for the New Hampshire Junior Monarchs of the Eastern Junior Hockey League for two seasons … Captained Choate in 2006 and New Hampshire in 2008 … Helped the Monarchs win two national championships as well as the 2007 EJHL title … An all-state performer as a junior and senior at Choate, where he played with Harvard teammate Sam Bozoian … Also captained Mid-Fairfield to an Under-16 national title … Received the David T. Layman Prize for Earnest and Persistent Effort in the Third Form … Four-time Dean’s List honoree at Choate and member of the assessment team from 2004 to 2006. Personal Enjoys golfing, traveling and spending time with family … A diehard Boston Red Sox fan … Uncle, Joe Castiglione, is a Red Sox radio announcer … Uncles, Frank and Charles Castiglione, played baseball for Yale.

52 Ryan Grimshaw 6 Freshman • Defenseman • 6-0, 195 • Shoots: Right Rochester, New York • Ann Arbor Pioneer High School

Before Harvard Graduated from Pioneer High School while playing two years in the U.S. National Team Development Program … Spent freshman year at Greece Athena High School and sophomore year at Salisbury School … Voted an assistant captain for the U.S. National Under-17 Team, along with Harvard teammate Colin Moore … Won three gold medals, one silver and one bronze with the NTDP … Finished 2008 season with bronze at the U-18 World Championship, leading Team USA and ranking in the tournament’s top three in plus/minus … Helped Salisbury win New England titles in hockey and lacrosse as a sophomore, playing hockey alongside Harvard teammates Alex and Michael Biega … Also played fullback and linebacker on the Salisbury football team … Played on Athena varsity hockey team in seventh, eighth and ninth grades … Started in hockey and lacrosse as a freshman … Graduated in top five percent of class at Pioneer after receiving first honors every trimester at Salisbury. Personal Hobbies include golf, tennis, swimming, water skiing and other outdoor sports … Also enjoys drawing.

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Matt Hoyle 34 Freshman • Goaltender • 6-2, 205 • Catches: Left North York, Ontario • Park Tudor School

Before Harvard Graduated from Park Tudor School while playing one year for the Indiana Ice of the United States Hockey League … Helped the Ice win the USHL East Division title, posting a 12-5-4 record in 25 games … Previously attended St. Michael’s College School and played for the of the Ontario Provincial Junior Hockey League in 2006-07 … Was Rookie of the Year and made all-star team in the OPJHL … Played attack for the Park Tudor lacrosse team as a senior … An honor roll student from 2004 to 2008. Personal Hobbies include boating, lacrosse and working out … Hails from the same hometown as Harvard assistant coach Sean McCann ’94.

53 Alex Killorn 21 Freshman • Forward • 6-1, 195 • Shoots: Right Montreal, Quebec • Deerfield Academy

Selected in the third round (77th pick overall) of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft by the . Before Harvard Played two years of hockey and golf at Deerfield, captaining the hockey team as a senior … As a member of Team Quebec, won the World Under -17 Hockey Challenge in 2006 … Drafted by Shawinigan (42nd overall) in the 2005 Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Draft … Played center with the Lac St. Louis Lions in the Quebec Midget AAA League … Named team MVP and selected a Second Line League All-Star … Played in the Quebec Midget AAA All-Star game … Deerfield’s MVP as a senior, his second straight season as an All-New England and Flood Marr all-tournament pick … Was a candidate both years for US Hockey Report Prep Forward of the Year … Helped Deerfield golf team go undefeated senior year … Also attended Loyola High School … An honor-roll selection every year and earned honors as a senior at Deerfield. Personal Enjoys golfing.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Eric Kroshus 10 Freshman • Forward • 6-1, 197 • Shoots: Right Calgary, Alberta • Edge School

Before Harvard Won a British Columbia Hockey League championship with the Penticton Vees in 2008, a year after helping the Camrose Kodiaks win the Alberta Junior Hockey League and Doyle Cup titles … Posted totals of 13-19-32 in 28 games for Penticton and 25-28-53 in 56 games for Camrose … An Albert AAA Midget Hockey League first-team All-Star in 2006 and MVP of his midget team in 2005 … Earned top-student honors for grades 7, 9, 10 and 11 at Edge School and for his teams at Camrose and Penticton … Won the Singleton Family Award for summer research at the University of Calgary. Personal Hobbies include reading, soccer and basketball … Sister, Emily, was a three-time All-America runner at Princeton, won the Philadelphia Marathon and is pursuing a Ph.D. at the Harvard School of Public Health … Mother, Claire, won the Calgary Marathon and still holds the course record.

54 Colin Moore 12 Freshman • Forward • 5-10, 183 • Shoots: Right Medfield, Mass. • Ann Arbor Pioneer High School

Before Harvard Graduated from Pioneer High School while playing two years in the U.S. National Team Development Program after playing hockey and lacrosse at Belmont Hill School … Voted an assistant captain for the U.S. National Under-17 Team … Won three gold medals, one silver and one bronze with the NTDP … Finished 2008 season with bronze at the U-18 World Championship … Played alongside current Harvard teammates Ryan Grimshaw (with NTDP) and Matt McCollem (with Belmont Hill). Personal Hobbies include lacrosse, tennis, basketball, skiing and writing … Father, Keith, was a track All-American at Michigan State … Mother, Lisa, was also a four-year varsity cross country and track athlete for the Spartans … Grandfather, George, played for the Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League in the 1950s.

GoCrimson.com Meet the Crimson :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Daniel Moriarty 11 Freshman • Freshman • 5-9, 187 • Shoots: Right Estevan, Saskatchewan • Estevan Comprehensive School

Before Harvard Captained the Alberni Valley Bulldogs of the British Columbia Hockey League in 2007-08, leading the team in scoring (29-32-61 in 56 games) … Named the Bulldogs’ MVP and earned team’s Academic Award … Played in the BCHL All-Star Game … Spent the preceding three seasons with the Melville Millionaires of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League … Started in the 2007 SJHL All-Star Game and went on to lead the Millionaires in scoring (28-24-52 in 58 games) … Was team’s assistant captain, top forward and playoff MVP … A four-year honor-roll student at Estevan Comprehensive School … Posted top-10 grade-point averages as a junior and senior and won the Social Science Award as a senior.

55 Peter Starrett 14 Freshman • Defenseman • 6-3, 210 • Shoots: Right Bellingham, Massachusetts • Catholic Memorial School

Before Harvard Played four years of hockey at Catholic Memorial, starting in his sophomore through senior years and captaining the Knights to a conference title as a senior … A Catholic Conference and Massachusetts Academic All-Star … Named to the Boston Globe Dream Team and Boston Herald Super Team … A National Honor Society member.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Meet the Crimson Crimson, White and Blue

The Harvard men’s hockey team has a proud tradition of association with international competition, and current Crimson players are carrying on that trend. Jimmy Fraser (left) represented Harvard and the United States in the 2007 International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championship in Leksand and Mora, Sweden. He served as an alternate captain on Team USA, helping the team capture the bronze medal. Fraser also spent two seasons in the U.S. National Team Development Program, captaining the U.S. Under-17 and U-18 National Teams. Teammates Chad Morin, Ryan Grimshaw and Colin Moore (below, counterclockwise from top left) also played for the U.S. NTDP teams before coming to Harvard. In August 2007 Doug Rogers (top right) competed in the National Junior Evaluation Camp, playing games against teams from Sweden and Finland. Assistant coach Patrick Foley was an NTDP assistant before joining the Harvard staff and served an assistant caoch of the 2008 U.S. National Junior Team, which competed at the 2008 IIHF World Junior Championship in the Czech Republic. Two of Harvard’s Canadian players, Alex Biega and Alex Killorn, have represented their province as members of Quebec Under-17 teams. See page 125 for a full list of Harvard players who have suited up for U.S. and Canadian Olympic and national teams.

56

GoCrimson.com Opponents 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

Alabama-Huntsville Chargers Sunday, December 28 • 5/8 p.m. • Kohl Center (Madison, Wis.) Badger Hockey Showdown • Consolation/Championship

School Information Team Information Location: Huntsville, Ala. Head coach: Danton Cole (Michigan State ’91) Danton Cole Scott Kalinchuk Founded: 1969 Record at school: 6-21-4 (one year) President: Dr. David B. Williams Overall record: 6-21-4 (one year) Athletic director: Jim Harris Assistant coaches: , John McCabe uahchargers.com Enrollment: 7,100 Hockey office phone: (256) 824-2205 Colors: Royal Blue and White Captain: Scott Kalinchuk Series Info Assistant captains: Josh Murray, Tom Train Record: Series tied, 0-0-0 Sports Information Rink: (6,800), 200 x 85 Donato vs. Alabama-Huntsville: 0-0-0 Contact: Jamie Gilliam Last season: Phone: (256) 824-2201 6-21-4 (3-13-4, fifth in ) Fax: (256) 824-6947 Postseason: CHA quarterfinal Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 24/4 Press box phone: (256) 518-6167/6168 Friday, November 28 • 4 p.m. • (Chestnut Hill, Mass.) Monday, February 9 • 5/8 p.m. • TD Banknorth Garden (Boston, Mass.)

School Information Team Information Location: Chestnut Hill, Mass. Head coach: Jerry York (Boston College ’67) Jerry York Brock Bradford Founded: 1863 Record at school: 336-180-50 (14 years) 58 President: Rev. William P. Leahy, S.J. Overall record: 803-515-84 (36 years) Athletic director: Gene DeFilippo Associate head coach: Mike Cavanaugh bceagles.com Enrollment: 14,500 Assistant coaches: Greg Brown, Jim Logue Colors: Maroon and Gold Hockey office phone: (617) 552-3028 Series Info Captain: Brock Bradford Record: Boston College leads, 65-44-5 Sports Information Assistant captains: Benn Ferriero, Tim Filangieri Last Harvard win: Contact: Tim Clark Rink: Conte Forum (7,884), 200 x 85 Nov. 7, 2006 – 4-0, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (617) 552-8841 Last season: Last Boston College win: Fax: (617) 552-4903 25-11-8 (11-9-7 fourth in Hockey East) Feb. 11, 2007 – 6-5 (ot), at TD Banknorth Garden Email: [email protected] Postseason: HE champion, NCAA champion Donato vs. Boston College: 3-4-0 Press box phone: (617) 552-4747 Letterwinners returning/lost: 15/6 Boston University Terriers Monday, February 2 • 5 p.m. • TD Banknorth Garden (Boston, Mass.)

School Information Team Information Location: Boston, Mass. Head coach: Jack Parker (Boston U. ’68) Jack Parker Founded: 1839 Record at school: 781-406-97 (35 years) President: Robert A. Brown Overall record: 781-406-97 (35 years) Athletic director: Michael P. Lynch Associate head coach: goterriers.com Enrollment: 16,572 Assistant coaches: Mike Bavis, Mike Geragosian Colors: Scarlet and White Hockey office phone: (617) 353-4639 Series Info Captains: Matt Gilroy, John McCarthy Record: Boston University leads, 71-62-6 Sports Information Assistant captain: Last Harvard win: Contact: Brian Kelley Rink: (6,300), 200 x 90 Nov. 20, 2007 – 2-1 (ot), at Agganis Arena Phone: (617) 353-2872 Last season: Last Boston University win: Fax: (617) 358-4762 19-17-4 (16-9-3, second in Hockey East) Nov. 21, 2006 – 2-1, at Agganis Arena Email: [email protected] Postseason: Hockey East semifinal Donato vs. Boston University: 2-2-1 Press box phone: (617) 358-7300 Letterwinners returning/lost: 17/10

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Brown Bears College Hockey’s Oldest Active Rivalry Tuesday, November 18 • 7 p.m. • (Providence, R.I.) Friday, January 9 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Providence, R.I. Head coach: Roger Grillo (Maine ’86) Roger Grillo Devin Timberlake Founded: 1764 Record at school: 115-182-47 (11 years) President: Ruth J. Simmons Overall record: 115-182-47 (11 years) Athletic director: Mike Goldberger Assistant coaches: Danny Brooks, brownbears.com Enrollment: 5,754 Mark Workman, Tony Ciresi Colors: Seal Brown, Cardinal Red and White Hockey office phone: (401) 863-1915 Series Info Captain: Devin Timberlake Record: Harvard leads, 102-38-10 Sports Information Rink: Meehan Auditorium (2,495), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Jeanne Carhart Last season: Feb. 23, 2008 – 2-1, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (401) 863-1094 6-21-4 (6-13-3, t-10th in ECAC Hockey) Last Brown win: Fax: (401) 863-1436 Postseason: ECAC Hockey first round Feb. 1, 2008 – 4-2, at Meehan Auditorium Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 20/5 Donato vs. Brown: 4-2-2 Press box phone: (401) 863-3507 / 3518 Friday, November 14 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Saturday, February 21 • 7 p.m. • (Potsdam, N.Y.)

School Information Team Information Location: Potsdam, N.Y. Head coach: (Bowling Green ’86) George Roll Tyrell Mason Founded: 1896 Record at school: 96-80-20 (five years) 59 President: Tony Collins Overall record: 215-154-36 (12 years) Athletic director: Steve Yianoukos Associate coach: Greg Drechsel clarksonathletics.com Enrollment: 3,000 Assistant coach: Jean-Francois Houle Colors: Green and Gold Hockey office phone: (315) 268-3874 Series Info Captains: Tyrell Mason, Phil Paquet Record: Clarkson leads, 48-44-9 Sports Information Rink: Cheel Arena (3,000), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Gary Mikel Last season: Feb. 25, 2006 – 2-1, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (315) 268-6673 22-13-4 (15-4-3 first in ECAC Hockey) Last Clarkson win: Fax: (315) 268-7613 Postseason: ECAC quarterfinal, NCAA regional Jan. 12, 2008 – 4-2, at Bright Hockey Center Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 19/6 Donato vs. Clarkson: 3-7-0 Press box phone: (315) 268-6688 Saturday, November 22 • 7 p.m. • (Hamilton, N.Y.) Friday, February 13 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Hamilton, N.Y. Head coach: (St. Lawrence ’84) Don Vaughan David McIntyre Founded: 1819 Record at school: 257-235-52 (15 years) President: Rebecca S. Chopp Overall record: 257-235-52 (15 years) Athletic director: David Roach Assistant coaches: , Jason Lefevre gocolgateraiders.com Enrollment: 2,800 Hockey office phone: (315) 228-7572 Colors: Maroon, White and Gray Captain: Nick St. Pierre Series Info Assistant captains: Mark Anderson, Tom Riley Record: Harvard leads, 43-18-5 Sports Information Rink: Starr Rink (2,246), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: John Gilger Last season: Feb. 23, 2007 – 4-1, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (315) 228-7860 18-81-6 (8-9-5, eighth in ECAC Hockey) Last Colgate win: Fax: (315) 228-7977 Postseason: ECAC Hockey semifinal Nov. 17, 2007 – 2-1, at Bright Hockey Center Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 16/9 Donato vs. Colgate: 4-4-1 Press box phone: (315) 228-6820

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

Cornell Big Red Friday, November 21 • 7 p.m. • (Ithaca, N.Y.) Saturday, February 14 • 8 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Ithaca, N.Y. Head coach: (Cornell ’86) Mike Schafer Michael Kennedy Founded: 1865 Record at school: 254-139-45 (13 years) President: David J. Skorton Overall record: 254-139-45 (13 years) Athletic director: J. Andrew Noel, Jr. Associate head coach: cornellbigred.com Enrollment: 13,700 Assistant coach: Scott Garrow Colors: Carnelian Red and White Hockey office phone: (607) 255-4171 Series Info Captains: Michael Kennedy, Record: Cornell leads, 64-57-7 Sports Information Assistant captains: Tyler Mugford, Jared Seminoff Last Harvard win: Contact: Kevin Zeise Rink: Lynah Rink (4,267), 200 x 85 March 21, 2008 – 2-1, at Times Union Center Phone: (607) 255-5627 Last season: Last Cornell win: Fax: (607) 255-9791 19-14-3 (12-9-3, t-fourth in ECAC Hockey) Nov. 10, 2006 – 3-2, at Lynah Rink Email: [email protected] Postseason: ECAC Hockey semifinal Donato vs. Cornell: 7-4-0 Press box phone: (607) 255-3533 Letterwinners returning/lost: 17/4 Friday, October 31 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Sunday, January 25 • 4 p.m. • (Hanover, N.H.)

School Information Team Information Location: Hanover, N.H. Head coach: (Dartmouth ’81) Bob Gaudet Rob Pritchard Founded: 1769 Record at school: 163-151-41 (11 years) 60 President: James Wright Overall record: 256-293-72 (20 years) Athletic director: Josie Harper Assistant coaches: Dave Peters, Brendan Whittet dartmouthsports.com Enrollment: 4,200 Hockey office phone: (603) 646-3320 Colors: Dartmouth Green and White Captain: Rob Pritchard Series Info Rink: Thompson Arena (4,500), 200 x 85 Record: Harvard leads, 122-55-8 Sports Information Last season: Last Harvard win: Contact: Heather Croze 12-16-4 (6-13-3, t-10th in ECAC Hockey) Jan. 26, 2008 – 3-1, at Thompson Arena Phone: (603) 646-2468 Postseason: ECAC Hockey first round Last Dartmouth win: Fax: (603) 646-1286 Letterwinners returning/lost: 20/7 Oct. 27, 2006 – 5-2, at Thompson Arena) Email: [email protected] Donato vs. Dartmouth: 6-3-0 Press box phone: (603) 646-1131 Lake Superior State Lakers Saturday, December 27 • 5 p.m. • Kohl Center (Madison, Wis.) Badger Hockey Showdown • Semifinal

School Information Team Information Location: Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. Head coach: Jim Roque (LSSU ’85) Jim Roque Nathan Perkovich Founded: 1946 Record at school: 46-53-17 (three years) President: Rodney L. Lowman, Ph.D. Overall record: 46-53-17 (three years) Athletic director: Kris Dunbar Assistant coaches: Tim Christian, Rich Metro lssulakers.com Enrollment: 3,100 Hockey office phone: (617) 373-2631 Colors: Royal Blue and Gold Captain: TBA Series Info Rink: Abel Arena (4,000), 200 x 85 Record: Harvard leads, 2-1-0 Sports Information Last season: Last Harvard win: Contact: Linda Bouvet 10-20-7 (7-15-6, 10th in CCHA) March 25, 1989 – 5-2, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (906) 635-2601 Postseason: CCHA first round Last Lake Superior State win: Fax: (906) 635-2573 Letterwinners returning/lost: 19/6 March 31, 1994 – 3-2 (ot), at St. Paul Civic Center Email: [email protected] Donato vs. Lake Superior State: 0-0-0 Press box phone: (906) 635-7501

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

North Dakota Fighting Sioux Friday, December 5 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Saturday, December 6 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Grand Forks, N.D. Head coach: Dave Hakstol (North Dakota ’96) Dave Hakstol Ryan Duncan Founded: 1883 Record at school: 106-56-15 (four years) President: Dr. Robert Kelley Overall record: 106-56-15 (four years) Athletic director: Brian Faison Associate head coach: Cary Eades fightingsioux.com Enrollment: 12,559 Assistant coach: Dane Jackson Colors: Kelly Green and White Hockey office phone: (701) 777-2654 Series Info Captain: Ryan Duncan Record: North Dakota leads, 6-2-1 Sports Information Rink: Engelstad Arena (11,406), 200 x 90 Last Harvard win: Contact: Dan Benson Last season: Dec. 29, 2005 – 1-0, at Engelstad Arena Phone: (701) 777-2985 28-11-4 (18-7-3, second in WCHA) Last North Dakota win: Fax: (701) 777-4352 Postseason: WCHA semifinal, NCAA semifinal Dec. 30, 2005 – 3-2, at Engelstad Arena Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 17/7 Donato vs. North Dakota: 1-1-0 Press box phone: (701) 777-3571/3572 Monday, February 9 • 5/8 p.m. • TD Banknorth Garden (Boston, Mass.)

School Information Team Information Location: Boston, Mass. Head coach: (Colby ’86) Greg Cronin Founded: 1898 Record at school: 32-60-15 (three years) 61 President: Dr. Joseph Aoun Overall record: 52-73-17 (four years) Athletic director: Peter Roby Assistant coaches: Gene Reilly, Sean McEachern gonu.com Enrollment: 14,482 Hockey office phone: (617) 373-2631 Colors: Red and Black Captain: Joe Vitale Series Info Rink: (5,900), 200 x 90 Record: Harvard leads, 64-30-0 Sports Information Last season: Last Harvard win: Contact: Jon Litchfield 16-18-3 (12-13-2, sixth in Hockey East) Feb. 5, 2008 – 3-1, at TD Banknorth Garden Phone: (617) 373-3643 Postseason: Hockey East first round Last Northeastern win: Fax: (617) 373-3152 Letterwinners returning/lost: 22/2 Feb. 12, 2007 – 3-1, at TD Banknorth Garden Email: [email protected] Donato vs. Northeastern: 2-2-0 Press box phone: (617) 373-5561 Saturday, January 3 • 7 p.m. • Baker Rink (Princeton, N.J.) Saturday, February 28 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Princeton, N.J. Head coach: (Colorado College ’89) Guy Gadowsky Lee Jubinville Founded: 1746 Record at school: 54-68-9 (four years) President: Shirley Tilghman Overall record: 122-157-34 (nine years) Athletic director: Gary D. Walters Assistant coaches: Keith Fisher, Matt Lindsay, goprincetontigers.com Enrollment: 4,600 Neil Little Colors: Orange and Black Hockey office phone: (609) 258-5058 Series Info Captain: TBA Record: Harvard leads, 143-52-9 Sports Information Rink: Baker Rink (2,092), 200 x 80 Last Harvard win: Contact: Yariv Amir Last season: Feb. 15, 2008 – 3-2, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (609) 258-5701 21-14-0 (14-8-0, second in ECAC Hockey) Last Princeton win: Fax: (609) 258-2399 Postseason: ECAC champion/NCAA first round March 22, 2008 – 4-1, at Times Union Center Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 21/4 Donato vs. Princeton: 6-3-0 Press box phone: (609) 258-1813

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

Quinnipiac Bobcats Friday, January 2 • 7 p.m. • TD Banknorth Sports Center (Hamden, Conn.) Friday, February 27 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Hamden, Conn. Head coach: (Connecticut Col. ’90) Rand Pecknold Dan Henningson Founded: 1929 Record at school: 263-165-42 (14 years) President: John L. Lahey Overall record: 263-165-42 (14 years) Athletic director: Jack McDonald Assistant coaches: Ben Syer, Scott Robson, quinnipiacbobcats.com Enrollment: 7,400 Paul Brown Colors: Blue and Gold Hockey office phone: (203) 582-3435 Series Info Captain: TBA Record: Harvard leads, 5-2-2 Sports Information Rink: TD Banknorth Sports Center (3,300), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Ken Sweeten Last season: March 16, 2008 – 3-1, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (203) 582-8625 20-15-5 (9-9-4, sixth in ECAC Hockey) Last Quinnipiac win: Fax: (203) 582-5385 Postseason: ECAC Hockey quarterfinal Nov. 4, 2005 – 7-4, at Bright Hockey Center Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 20/6 Donato vs. Quinnipiac: 5-2-2 Press box phone: (203) 582-3796 Rensselaer Engineers Tuesday, November 4 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Friday, November 7 • 7 p.m. • Houston Field House (Troy, N.Y.)

School Information Team Information Location: Troy, N.Y. Head coach: (Ferris State ’97) Seth Appert Mathias Lange Founded: 1824 Record at school: 21-41-12 (two years) 62 President: Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson Overall record: 21-41-12 (two years) Acting Athletic director: Kevin Beattie Assistant coaches: Shawn Kurulak, rpiathletics.com Enrollment: 5,000 Jim Montgomery Colors: Cherry and White Hockey office phone: (518) 276-2295 Series Info Captain: TBA Record: Harvard leads, 44-32-2 Sports Information Rink: Houston Field House (5,217), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Kevin Beattie Last season: Nov. 9, 2007 – 3-0, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (518) 276-2187 11-23-4 (6-13-3, 10th in ECAC Hockey) Last Rensselaer win: Fax: (518) 276-2188 Postseason: ECAC Hockey first round Dec. 4, 2007 – 4-2, at Houston Field House Phone: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 17/8 Donato vs. Rensselaer: 6-2-0 Press box phone: (518) 276-2661 St. Lawrence Saints Saturday, November 15 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Friday, February 20 • 7 p.m. • (Canton, N.Y.)

School Information Team Information Location: Canton, N.Y. Head coach: (New Hampshire ’77) Joe Marsh Shawn Fensel Founded: 1856 Record at school: 422-349-55 (23 years) President: Dr. Daniel F. Sullivan Overall record: 422-349-55 (23 years) Athletic director: Margie Strait Associate head coach: Chris Wells stlawu.edu/sports Enrollment: 2,300 Assistant coaches: , Colors: Scarlet and Brown Hockey office phone: (315) 229-5881 Series Info Captains: Shawn Fensel, Jared Ross Record: Harvard leads, 49-36-5 Sports Information Rink: Appleton Arena (3,000), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Wally Johnson Last season: Nov. 3, 2007 – 6-1 at Appleton Arena Phone: (315) 229-5588 13-20-4 (7-13-2, ninth in ECAC Hockey) Last St. Lawrence win: Fax: (315) 229-5589 Postseason: ECAC Hockey first round Jan. 11, 2008 – 3-1 at Bright Hockey Center Phone: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 21/5 Donato vs. St. Lawrence: 8-5-0 Press box phone: (315) 229-7312

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Union Dutchmen Saturday, November 8 • 7:30 p.m. • Messa Rink (Schenectady, N.Y.) Friday, January 30 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center

School Information Team Information Location: Schenectady, N.Y. Head coach: (Cortland State ’97) Nate Leaman Matt Cook Founded: 1795 Record at school: 72-88-22 (five years) President: Stephen C. Ainlay Overall record: 72-88-22 (five years) Athletic director: Jim McLaughlin Associate head coach: unionathletics.com Enrollment: 2,200 Assistant coach: Ben Barr Colors: Garnet and White Hockey office phone: (518) 388-6134 Series Info Captains: Lane Caffaro, Matt Cook Record: Harvard leads, 29-4-3 Sports Information Rink: Messa Rink (2,225), 201 x 86 Last Harvard win: Contact: Kevin Zalaznik Last season: Feb. 8, 2008 – 3-2, at Messa Rink Phone: (518) 388-6377 15-14-6 (10-7-5, t-fourth in ECAC Hockey) Last Union win: Fax: (518) 388-6096 Postseason: ECAC Hockey quarterfinal Feb. 28, 2006 – 2-1, at Bright Hockey Center Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 21/5 Donato vs. Union: 6-1-1 Press box phone: (518) 388-8726 Sunday, December 28 • 5/8 p.m. • Kohl Center (Madison, Wis.) Badger Hockey Showdown • Consolation/Championship

School Information Team Information Location: Madison, Wis. Head coach: Mike Eaves (Wisconsin ’78) Mike Eaves Ben Street Founded: 1848 Record at school: 123-95-30 (six years) 63 President: Biddy Martin Overall record: 123-95-30 (six years) Athletic director: Barry Alvarez Assistant coaches: Mark Osiecki, Kevin Patrick uwbadgers.com Enrollment: 42,041 Hockey office phone: (608) 262-3932 Colors: Cardinal and White Captains: Blake Geoffrion, Ben Street Series Info Rink: Matthews Arena (5,900), 200 x 97 Record: Wisconsin leads, 8-1-0 Sports Information Last season: Last Harvard win: Contact: Paul Capobianco 16-17-7 (11-12-5, sixth in WCHA) Dec. 29, 1976 – 4-3, at Dane County Coliseum Phone: (608) 263-1983 Postseason: WCHA first round, NCAA regional Last Wisconsin win: Fax: (608) 262-8184 Letterwinners returning/lost: 20/6 Dec. 27, 1998 – 6-3, at Email: [email protected] Donato vs. Wisconsin: 0-0-0 Press box phone: (608) 265-4336 Saturday, January 10 • 7 p.m. • Bright Hockey Center Friday, February 6 • 7 p.m. • (New Haven, Conn.)

School Information Team Information Location: New Haven, Conn. Head coach: (Yale ’80) Keith Allain Matt Nelson Founded: 1701 Record at school: 27-31-7 (two years) President: Richard C. Levin Overall record: 27-31-7 (two years) Athletic director: Tom Beckett Associate head coach: C.J. Marottolo yalebulldogs.com Enrollment: 5,000 Assistant coach: Kyle Wallack Colors: Yale Blue and White Hockey office phone: (203) 432-1476 Series Info Captain: Matt Nelson Record: Harvard leads, 136-72-18 Sports Information Rink: Ingalls Rink (3,486), 200 x 85 Last Harvard win: Contact: Steve Conn Last season: Feb. 22, 2008 – 6-1, at Bright Hockey Center Phone: (203) 432-1456 16-14-4 (9-9-4, t-sixth in ECAC Hockey) Last Yale win: Fax: (203) 432-1454 Postseason: ECAC Hockey first round Feb. 16, 2007 – 5-1, at Ingalls Rink Email: [email protected] Letterwinners returning/lost: 18/6 Donato vs. Yale: 6-3-1 Press box phone: (203) 432-0778/0779

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents All-Time Series Results

11/23/1984 A 5-4 W 12/17/1968 H (ot) 5-6 W 12/18/1925 N A 0-3 L 3/14/1970 N EG 2-8 L Home games played at 11/22/1985 H 6-4 W 12/17/1969 A 5-6 L 1/26/1927 N A (ot) 1-0 W 12/9/1970 H (ot) 4-4 T Watson Rink from 1954-55 11/22/1986 A 6-3 W 3/10/1970 A E 10-5 W 12/16/1927 N A 5-3 W 2/22/1971 N BG 1-4 L to 1977-78 and at Bright 2/6/1987 H 7-5 W 12/15/1970 H 4-0 W 12/18/1929 N A 4-0 W 3/12/1971 N EG 4-2 W Hockey Center from 1979- 11/21/1987 H 6-2 W 2/8/1971 N BG 10-4 W 1/15/1930 N G 6-1 W 12/8/1971 A (ot) 4-4 T 80 to present 2/5/1988 A 5-1 W 12/14/1971 A 6-4 W 1/11/1933 N G 5-2 W 2/14/1972 N BG 1-4 L A Boston Arena 11/18/1988 A 6-1 W 12/13/1972 H 6-4 W 1/10/1934 N G 4-3 W 3/10/1972 N E 1-3 L B Beanpot 2/4/1989 H 11-1 W 1/8/1974 A 5-6 L 1/27/1934 N A 3-2 W 12/6/1972 A 6-5 W BG A BG E ECAC/ECACHL 11/17/1989 H 3-4 L 2/4/1974 N 11-6 W 12/18/1934 N 5-1 W 2/5/1973 N 3-8 L 2/3/1990 A 4-1 W 1/7/1975 H 2-1 W 12/17/1935 N A 12-1 W 12/12/1973 H 5-6 L Championship A BG F 11/17/1990 A 5-2 W 1/7/1976 A (ot) 6-6 T 2/17/1937 N 9-3 W 2/11/1974 N 5-4 W FleetCenter/ 2/1/1991 H 12-2 W 1/20/1976 H 7-4 W 12/16/1937 N A (ot) 5-4 W 3/9/1974 N EG 2-4 L TD Banknorth Garden 1 ECAC Christmas Tournament 1/11/1977 A 1-4 L 12/20/1938 N A 3-6 L 3/16/1974 N NG 5-7 L G Boston Garden BG A Bishop’s 2/7/1977 N 4-2 W 12/19/1939 N 8-1 W 12/10/1974 H 7-2 W H Holmes Field 12/12/1977 H 0-7 L 12/17/1940 N A 3-7 L 2/10/1975 N BG 2-7 L Harvard leads, 1-0-0 K EG K 1/10/1978 A 3-11 L 12/17/1941 N 5-1 W 3/8/1975 N 3-7 L Boston Skating Club 1 2/22/1908 N 4-0 W 1/9/1979 A (ot) 5-4 W 2/17/1942 N A 3-2 W 3/15/1975 N N2 5-10 L L Lynn 1 Concord, N.H. 1/9/1980 H 2-6 L 12/15/1942 N A 18-2 W 12/10/1975 A 3-8 L N NCAA Championship Boston College 2/4/1980 N BG 3-4 L 1/7/1943 N K 7-0 W 2/2/1976 N BG 5-6 L O A EG 10-minute overtime Harvard trails, 44-65-5 1/6/1981 A 2-6 L 2/28/1946 N 4-4 T 3/12/1976 N 4-8 L BG A (no dudden death) 1/19/1919 N K 7-2 W 2/9/1981 N 2-0 W 3/7/1946 N 4-5 L 12/8/1976 H (ot) 2-3 L A BG P Cambridge Pavilion 2/3/1922 N A 2-4 L 1/5/1982 H 3-4 L 12/18/1946 N (ot) 5-4 W 2/14/1977 N 4-3 W E A R 12/30/1946 N K 3-6 L 3/9/1982 H 2-0 W 12/10/1947 N 2-8 L 12/7/1977 A 3-4 L Franklin Park A BG3 A 1/4/1983 A 4-10 L 2/11/1948 N 6-10 L 3/1/1978 N 1-7 L S 2/17/1947 N 5-10 L Harvard Stadium BG A W 12/3/1947 N A 4-3 W 2/8/1983 N (ot) 4-5 L 12/1/1948 N 6-8 L 12/3/1978 H 5-8 L T West Newton A BG 2/25/1948 N A 1-6 L 1/3/1984 H 1-3 L 2/9/1949 N 10-8 W 2/5/1979 N 2-4 L W BG A 1978-79 home games 12/15/1948 N A 4-9 L 2/13/1984 N 2-5 L 12/6/1949 N 7-6 W 12/5/1979 A (ot) 4-3 W A BG played at Boston 1/12/1949 N A 5-8 L 12/21/1984 A 6-6 T 2/7/1950 N 4-6 L 2/11/1980 N 7-4 W BG G University’s Walter 12/20/1949 N A 5-8 L 2/11/1985 N 6-5 W 12/15/1950 N 2-6 L 12/2/1980 H 5-2 W A Brown Arena 2/28/1950 N A 9-8 W 11/26/1985 H 4-4 T 2/13/1951 N 1-6 L 12/2/1981 H 2-5 L BG A BG 12/20/1950 N A 5-3 W 2/3/1986 N 2-4 L 12/17/1951 N 5-9 L 2/1/1982 N 1-5 L BG A 2/5/1951 N A 9-10 L 2/9/1987 N (ot) 6-7 L 2/25/1952 N 3-14 L 12/1/1982 H 10-3 W BG A BG Alaska Fairbanks 12/19/1951 N A 0-5 L 2/8/1988 N 2-4 L 12/13/1952 N (ot) 4-4 T 2/14/1983 N 4-5 L BA Harvard leads, 2-0-0 1/9/1952 N A (ot) 5-6 L 11/25/1988 H (ot) 4-3 W 12/27/1952 N 7-4 W 11/30/1983 A 3-1 W 64 BG A BG 12/21/1994 A 5-2 W 12/22/1952 N BA (ot) 3-2 W 2/6/1989 N 5-4 W 1/3/1953 N (ot) 6-5 W 2/4/1985 N 3-5 L G BG 12/22/1994 A 9-2 W 2/11/1953 N A 2-6 L 11/23/1990 A 1-2 L 12/15/1953 N 3-1 W 2/1/1988 N 2-4 L BG BG BG 12/11/1953 N G 3-5 L 2/3/1992 N 6-4 W 1/11/1954 N 3-2 W 2/13/1989 N 9-6 W American International G BG 1/12/1954 N BG 1-4 L 1/3/1993 H 5-2 W 12/14/1954 N 6-2 W 2/12/1990 N 2-8 L Harvard leads, 3-0-0 BG A 2/15/1954 N G 1-4 L 2/14/1994 N (ot) 1-2 L 2/16/1955 A 13-2 W 11/20/1990 H 0-4 L 1/11/1951 A 6-3 W BG A BG 12/10/1954 N G 3-4 L 2/6/1995 N 6-7 L 12/9/1955 N (ot) 3-4 L 2/4/1991 N 2-8 L 1/10/1957 A 4-2 W BG BG 12/29/1954 N A 8-2 W 11/28/1995 H (ot) 1-2 L 2/6/1956 N 6-1 W 2/10/1992 N 2-5 L 2/9/1957 H 11-3 W BF 1A 2/8/1955 N BG (ot) 5-4 W 2/12/1996 N 2-6 L 12/28/1956 N 5-2 W 11/24/1992 A 3-4 L A BG Amherst 12/16/1955 N G 3-5 L 11/18/1997 A (ot) 3-4 L 1/7/1957 A 3-4 L 2/8/1993 N 4-2 W 3 BG BG 2/8/1956 N BG 2-4 L 12/28/1997 N (ot) 6-6 T 2/1/1957 N 3-5 L 2/7/1994 N 4-2 W Harvard leads, 2-0-0 BF A A 2/25/1956 N A 5-3 W 2/2/1998 N (ot) 5-4 W 12/7/1957 A 3-6 L 11/22/1994 H 1-6 L 12/17/1910 H 10-0 W G A 12/29/1956 N 1A 4-2 W 1/13/1999 H 3-1 W 1/14/1958 N (ot) 5-4 W 11/26/1996 A 1-5 L 1/7/1914 H 1-0 W BF A BF 2/13/1957 N A 5-3 W 2/8/1999 N 4-6 L 12/8/1958 A (ot) 5-5 T 2/3/1997 N 1-7 L Army 12/11/1957 N A 6-1 W 12/10/1999 A 0-3 L 3/2/1959 H 2-3 L 11/25/1997 H 3-5 L A BF Harvard leads, 29-5-1 2/10/1958 N BG 7-3 W 11/25/2000 H (ot) 2-3 L 2/10/1960 A 5-2 W 2/9/1998 N (ot) 1-2 L BF BG 1/10/1931 A 10-0 W 2/19/1958 N G 8-1 W 2/5/2001 N 1-4 L 2/15/1960 N 3-2 W 11/24/1998 A 5-3 W 2/26/1941 H G 5-2 W 11/29/1958 A 1-3 L 11/24/2001 A 0-1 L 1/16/1961 H 6-4 W 11/23/1999 H 1-2 L BF BG BF 2/7/1942 A 6-2 W 1/9/1959 A 2-3 L 2/11/2002 N 0-4 L 2/5/1961 N (ot) 3-2 W 2/7/2000 N 0-4 L A 2/23/1942 H K 7-2 W 2/2/1959 N BG 4-6 L 12/11/2002 H (ot) 2-2 T 1/15/1962 A 8-1 W 11/21/2000 A 4-3 W BG 2/13/1943 A 6-1 W 2/18/1959 H 3-5 L 12/10/2003 A 2-3 L 2/12/1962 N 5-0 W 11/20/2001 H 4-8 L BF 2/22/1943 H K 8-4 W 12/5/1959 A 2-4 L 2/2/2004 N 1-4 L 12/8/1962 H 2-1 W 11/26/2002 A 0-3 L 1A BF 2/22/1946 A 3-4 L 1/2/1961 A (ot) 2-1 W 11/16/2004 H 3-1 W 12/27/1962 N 10-3 W 2/3/2003 N 1-2 L BF A N4 2/8/1947 A 8-1 W 1/11/1961 H 4-1 W 2/14/2005 N 1-4 L 1/3/1964 A 4-3 W 3/28/2003 N 4-6 L BG 2/22/1947 H A 9-3 W 2/13/1961 N BG 2-4 L 11/15/2005 A 5-3 W 2/3/1964 N (2ot) 2-3 L 11/25/2003 H 5-2 W 2/7/1948 H A 7-1 W 1/10/1962 A 3-2 W 11/7/2006 H 4-0 W 12/9/1964 H (ot) 0-1 L 11/23/2004 A 2-1 W BF 1A 2/12/1949 A 11-0 W 2/5/1962 N BG 6-1 W 2/5/2007 N 1-3 L 12/29/1964 N 0-8 L 11/22/2005 H (ot) 2-2 T A BF 1/14/1950 A (ot) 6-7 L 2/11/1963 N BG 1-3 L 12/12/2007 H 2-7 L 1/5/1966 A 2-4 L 2/6/2006 N 3-5 L BF BG 2/17/1951 A 10-2 W 2/19/1963 H 3-1 W 2/11/2008 N (ot) 5-6 L 2/14/1966 N 2-9 L 11/21/2006 A 1-2 L 1 1A 2/16/1952 A 9-1 W 3/9/1963 N EA (ot) 4-3 W Christmas Tournament 12/28/1966 N 5-7 L 11/20/2007 A (ot) 2-1 W 2 BG 1 12/27/1956 N 1A 4-3 W 1/8/1964 A 4-2 W St. Paul Classic 2/9/1967 N 3-8 L Christmas Tournament 3 EA 2 12/17/1960 A 3-1 W 1/13/1965 H 2-3 L Badger Hockey Showdown 3/7/1967 A 2-6 L St. Louis, Mo. 3 12/16/1961 H 5-1 W 2/8/1965 N BG (ot) 4-5 L 12/6/1967 H 8-5 W Delayed by blizzard Boston University BG 4 3/6/1962 H E (ot) 2-1 W 1/12/1966 A 7-4 W 2/12/1968 N 1-4 L Worcester, Mass. Harvard trails, 62-71-6 3/5/1968 H E 3-6 L 12/19/1962 A (ot) 2-2 T 1/11/1967 H (ot) 3-4 L A 12/13/1922 N 2-0 W A Bowdoin BG 12/11/1968 A 7-4 W 12/18/1963 A 1-5 L 2/13/1967 N (ot) 5-6 L A 12/18/1923 N 8-1 W 12/28/1968 A A 1-2 L Harvard leads, 8-0-0 12/12/1964 H 2-5 L 12/9/1967 A 3-4 L A 1/30/1924 N 5-0 W BG 12/11/1959 A 4-3 W 1G 2 2/10/1969 N 5-3 W 12/19/1969 N 9-3 W 12/28/1967 N 2-5 L A 12/16/1924 N 6-1 W BG 12/2/1960 H 3-0 W 12/11/1971 A 5-2 W 2/5/1968 N BG 6-4 W 2/2/1970 N 3-5 L

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

12/2/1961 A 6-1 W 1/10/1968 A 8-3 W 11/2/2002 H 0-4 L 2/25/1989 H 7-5 W 12/9/1984 A (ot) 6-5 W 12/11/1963 H 4-1 W 12/14/1968 A (ot) 8-7 W 1/31/2003 H 3-1 W 1/5/1990 H 6-1 W 2/15/1985 H 3-0 W 12/5/1964 A 4-1 W 1/8/1969 H 5-1 W 11/1/2003 H 0-2 L 2/24/1990 A 2-6 L 3/8/1985 H E 4-2 W 12/1/1965 H 9-2 W 12/13/1969 H 3-4 L 1/31/2004 A (ot) 1-2 L 1/5/1991 A 5-7 L 3/9/1985 H E 10-2 W 11/30/1966 A 9-2 W 1/7/1970 A 6-3 W 3/12/2004 A E 4-2 W 2/22/1991 H 5-3 W 12/6/1985 A 7-2 W 12/6/1978 A 6-4 W 12/12/1970 H 5-0 W 3/13/2004 A E (ot) 3-2 W 3/9/1991 N EG 2-3 L 2/15/1986 H 5-1 W E Bowling Green 2/10/1971 A 2-3 L 10/29/2004 A (ot)2-2 T 1/11/1992 H (ot) 4-4 T 3/7/1986 H 2-0 W 3/9/1971 H E 4-3 W 2/22/2005 H 3-0 W 2/28/1992 A 2-4 L 3/8/1986 H E 6-4 W Harvard leads, 3-0-0 1/5/1972 H 3-1 W 11/20/2005 H 2-0 W 1/9/1993 A 4-1 W 12/5/1986 A 5-2 W N 3/20/1987 H 6-2 W 3/1/1972 A 3-2 W 2/3/2006 A (ot) 2-1 W 3/5/1993 H (ot) 4-4 T 2/13/1987 H 8-3 W N 3/21/1987 H 3-0 W 12/16/1972 A 5-1 W 11/17/2006 H 1-2 L 1/8/1994 H 7-5 W 12/6/1987 A 1-4 L 1 12/29/2001 N 5-3 W 2/28/1973 H 6-2 W 2/17/2007 A (ot) 6-6 T 3/4/1994 A (ot) 2-2 T 2/12/1988 H 4-2 W 1 Denver Cup 12/15/1973 A 6-2 W 2/1/2008 A 2-4 L 1/7/1995 A (ot) 4-3 W 12/2/1988 H 8-2 W Brown 2/6/1974 H 6-1 W 2/23/2008 H 2-1 W 3/4/1995 H 4-5 L 2/11/1989 A (ot) 5-6 L 1 Harvard leads, 102-38-10 12/14/1974 A 5-3 W Boston, Mass. (Franklin Park) 12/9/1995 A 2-4 L 12/1/1989 A 4-5 L 2 1/19/1898 N 1 0-6 L 12/20/1974 H 6-3 W New York, N.Y. 2/23/1996 H 1-2 L 2/10/1990 H 1-6 L 3 2/1/1899 A 1-2 L 12/13/1975 H 5-8 L Arena 12/7/1996 H 5-4 W 12/2/1990 H (ot) 9-8 W 4 1/24/1900 A 8-1 W 1/10/1976 A 4-2 W Lake Placid, N.Y. 2/21/1997 A 2-4 L 2/8/1991 A 5-5 T 2/2/1900 H H 7-1 W 12/11/1976 A 3-5 L Clarkson 12/5/1997 A 1-4 L 1/6/1992 A (ot) 5-4 W 1/23/1901 A 1-0 W 1/8/1977 H 4-3 W 2/28/1998 H 1-5 L 2/15/1992 H 2-1 W Harvard trails, 44-48-9 E1 H 12/10/1977 A (ot) 3-2 W 3/20/1998 N 2-6 L 12/4/1992 H 5-4 W 2/2/1901 H 9-2 W 12/28/1935 N 1 1-2 L H 1/7/1978 H 7-4 W 12/4/1998 H 1-2 L 2/20/1993 A 4-3 W 2/8/1902 H 7-1 W 12/30/1935 N 1 5-1 W 2 12/9/1978 A 1-2 L 2/27/1999 A 1-5 L 11/20/1993 A 6-7 L 2/23/1903 N 6-0 W 1 W 12/31/1935 N (ot) 4-4 T H 1/6/1979 H 3-7 L 1/14/2000 A 2-5 L 2/11/1994 H 4-1 W 2/3/1904 H 7-3 W 12/31/1936 N 1 7-5 W S 12/8/1979 A (ot) 4-4 T 2/19/2000 H 4-5 L 11/19/1994 H (ot) 3-3 T 2/8/1905 H 15-1 W 1/1/1937 N 1 6-3 W S 1/5/1980 H 9-5 W 12/2/2000 A 3-1 W 12/10/1994 A 3-2 W 2/7/1906 H 4-0 W 1 11/23/1980 A 5-3 W 1/2/1937 N 3-1 W 2/16/2001 H 4-5 L 11/10/1995 A (ot) 2-2 T 1/18/1927 A 5-1 W 12/28/1955 H A 5-11 L A 12/13/1980 H 2-3 L 12/1/2001 H (ot) 2-2 T 2/17/1996 H 1-2 L 1/18/1928 H 7-0 W 3/16/1957 N N2 (2ot) 1-2 L G 12/11/1981 A 4-5 L 2/15/2002 A 1-4 L 11/8/1996 H 1-2 L 2/17/1932 H 10-0 W A 2/3/1982 H 9-6 W 12/17/1957 H 2-1 W 3/15/2002 N E1 (ot) 3-2 W 2/15/1997 A 5-2 W 1/17/1933 A 15-3 W N3 12/15/1982 H (ot) 2-2 T 3/15/1958 N 1-5 L 11/16/2002 A 2-1 W 11/8/1997 A 6-5 W 2/12/1935 A 7-0 W 12/12/1958 A (ot) 4-4 T 12/20/1935 A 3-0 W 2/25/1983 A 7-0 W 2/28/2003 H (ot) 3-3 T 2/20/1998 H 6-1 W 1/8/1960 H 5-1 W E 1/12/1937 A 7-1 W 12/3/1983 A (ot) 4-4 T 11/29/2003 H 0-3 L 3/13/1998 H 5-4 W 2/28/1984 H 4-1 W 12/9/1960 A 5-6 L 12/28/2003 N 6 (ot) 3-3 T 3/14/1998 H E 4-2 W 1/18/1938 A 10-2 W 12/7/1961 H 3-5 L 12/4/1947 A O (ot) 10-5 W 11/18/1984 H 7-2 W 2/20/2004 A 2-1 W 11/14/1998 H 3-6 L 1/11/1963 A 3-4 L E7 A 2/2/1985 A 2-1 W 3/20/2004 N 4-2 W 2/19/1999 A 2-6 L 1/14/1948 H 17-3 W 3/8/1963 N EA 6-4 W A 11/16/1985 A 6-1 W 11/27/2004 A 3-2 W 11/12/1999 A 4-5 L 12/8/1948 H (ot) 5-6 L 2/18/1964 H (ot) 3-4 L 3 2/1/1986 H 10-2 W 2/18/2005 H 5-0 W 2/5/2000 H (ot) 4-4 T 12/14/1948 A 4-3 W E 65 11/14/1986 H 5-2 W 3/10/1964 A 4-6 L 11/25/2005 A 3-4 L 11/18/2000 A 3-2 W 12/13/1949 A (ot) 6-7 L 1/9/1965 A 1-5 L 1/10/1950 H A 3-8 L 12/10/1986 A 3-2 W 2/25/2006 H 2-1 W 2/2/2001 H 4-1 W E 12/13/1965 H 2-4 L 1/9/1951 A 1-4 L 3/6/1987 H 6-2 W 11/3/2006 H 2-5 L 11/17/2001 H 6-1 W E 12/9/1966 A 7-4 W 2/27/1951 H A 1-5 L 3/7/1987 H 5-2 W 1/27/2007 A 2-4 L 2/2/2002 A 3-5 L 11/13/1987 A 5-0 W 1/13/1968 H 8-3 W 3/9/2007 A E 0-3 L 11/23/2002 A 7-1 W 2/7/1952 A 2-7 L A 12/27/1968 H 7-2 W E 1 2/27/1952 H A 5-2 W 1/15/1988 H 5-2 W 3/10/2007 A 1-2 L 12/30/2002 N 8-1 W 11/12/1988 H 3-2 W 1/1/1969 H 2-4 L 11/2/2007 A 1-2 2/14/2003 H 7-0 W 2/7/1953 A 1-3 L 3/7/1969 N EG 8-6 W L 11/28/1988 A 10-1 W 1/12/2008 H 1-4 L 12/5/2003 A 4-2 W 2/24/1953 H 3-4 L 4G 11/11/1989 A 3-3 T 12/20/1969 N 4-3 W 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 1/10/2004 H 3-1 W 2/10/1954 A 6-3 W 5 12/22/1970 N 2-0 W 2 2/23/1954 H L 4-6 L 1/13/1990 H 14-4 W Colorado Springs, Colo. 11/6/2004 A 1-4 L 11/9/1990 H 11-2 W 1/1/1971 A (ot) 4-5 L 3 Minneapolis, Minn. 1/7/2005 H 1-3 L 1/11/1955 A (ot) 4-4 T EG 3/13/1971 N 7-4 W 4 E2 2/22/1955 H L 5-1 W 1/11/1991 A 3-5 L ECAC Christmas Tournament 3/18/2005 N (ot) 4-3 W 11/26/1991 A 4-2 W 2/9/1972 H 6-2 W 5 New York, N.Y. 11/12/2005 H 6-4 W 1/14/1956 H 4-2 W E 11/30/1991 H 5-6 L 3/7/1972 H (ot) 6-5 W 6 Dunkin’ Donuts Coffee Pot 2/17/2006 A 1-4 L 2/11/1956 A 3-1 W E 3/6/1973 H 4-7 L 7 2/2/1957 A 7-0 W 11/7/1992 A 3-2 W Albany, N.Y. 11/11/2006 A 4-1 W 11/28/1992 H 4-3 W 12/8/1973 A 5-3 W 2/23/2007 H 4-1 W 2/7/1957 H 9-3 W E Colby 3/19/1993 N E4 1-3 L 3/4/1975 H 10-5 W 11/17/2007 H 1-2 L 2/5/1958 A 3-1 W 1/5/1978 H 2-4 L Harvard leads, 5-1-1 2/15/1958 H 4-0 W 11/6/1993 A (ot) 5-4 W 2/29/2008 A (ot) 3-3 T 3/8/1980 A 3-7 L 12/17/1958 H (ot) 3-2 W 1 2/7/1959 H 6-1 W 11/26/1993 H (ot) 3-3 T BankOne Badger Showdown 3/18/1994 N E4 5-1 W 1/31/1981 H 2-3 L 12/12/1959 A 2-4 L 2 Albany, N.Y. 2/14/1959 A 6-4 W EA 11/5/1994 A 3-4 L 1/9/1982 A 1-8 L 3/10/1962 N 2-0 W 1/6/1960 A 2-3 L EG Colorado College 12/3/1994 H 4-1 W 3/12/1982 N 7-1 W 12/5/1962 H 7-1 W 1/16/1960 H 3-1 W 1/30/1983 H (ot) 4-3 W 12/7/1963 A 7-2 W Harvard trails, 4-7-0 2/8/1961 A 8-1 W 11/4/1995 A 7-2 W 12/2/1995 H 6-4 W 1/7/1984 A 1-4 L 2/6/1965 H 5-2 W 12/29/1947 A 6-13 L 2/22/1961 H 4-1 W E 11/2/1996 A 5-3 W 3/2/1984 H 1-3 L 11/27/1965 A (ot) 4-4 T 12/30/1947 A 3-10 L 2/7/1962 H 5-1 W E 11/19/1996 H 2-1 W 3/3/1984 H 2-2 T Colgate 12/26/1953 A 3-5 L 2/21/1962 A 5-2 W 1/11/1985 A 2-1 W 12/28/1953 A 0-9 L 12/15/1962 H (ot) 4-4 T 11/29/1997 A 5-3 W Harvard leads, 43-18-5 12/9/1997 H 5-2 W 3/2/1985 H 6-1 W 1/1/1962 A 6-5 W 2/9/1963 A 3-1 W 3/15/1985 N EG 2-1 W 1/7/1961 A 4-1 W 1/2/1962 A 6-4 W 11/6/1998 H 1-4 L E 12/14/1963 A (ot) 2-3 L 3/5/1963 H 5-3 W 1A 11/28/1998 A (ot) 4-4 T 1/10/1986 H 3-2 W 12/28/1962 N (ot) 3-2 W 2/22/1964 H (ot) 6-5 W 2/15/1974 A 8-6 W 2 10/30/1999 A 1-0 W 3/1/1986 A (ot) 4-5 L 12/28/1977 A 6-4 W 12/16/1964 H 2-9 L EG 1/11/1975 H 14-4 W 11/27/1999 H 2-4 L 3/14/1986 N 2-4 L 12/21/1979 A 4-10 L 2/20/1965 A 1-8 L 1/10/1987 A 4-1 W 2/24/1979 A 10-2 W 12/29/2000 A 3-5 L 12/15/1965 A (ot) 3-4 L 11/3/2000 A 3-0 W 2/24/1980 H 2-3 L 12/7/2000 H 5-3 W 2/27/1987 H 5-0 W 12/30/2000 A 0-3 L 2/23/1966 H 1-4 L 12/6/1980 A 7-6 W 1 11/3/2001 H 2-4 L 1/9/1988 H 5-3 W Christmas Tournament 12/14/1966 H 3-1 W 11/27/1981 H 3-5 L 2 12/8/2001 A 5-2 W 2/26/1988 A 3-2 W Holiday Hockey Tournament 2/11/1967 A 1-9 L EG 12/11/1982 A 7-4 W E 3/11/1988 N 4-6 L 12/16/1967 H 7-3 W 3/8/2002 H 4-1 W 1/29/1984 H 3-5 L 3/9/2002 H E (2ot) 2-1 W 1/13/1989 A 5-2 W

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

Columbia 12/29/1966 N 1A 1-4 L 2/24/1984 H 3-4 L 11/13/1999 A 2-1 W 2/12/1938 A (ot) 2-3 L Harvard leads, 10-0-0 2/22/1967 H 1-4 L 12/8/1984 A 5-5 T 2/4/2000 H 2-6 L 2/23/1938 H G (ot) 6-7 L 1/18/1902 A 4-3 W 12/18/1967 H 0-9 L 2/16/1985 H (ot) 4-5 L 3/10/2000 A E 3-4 L 2/15/1939 H G 1-2 L 1/31/1903 A 5-1 W 2/28/1968 A 2-7 L 12/8/1985 A 11-3 W 3/11/2000 A E 3-4 L 3/1/1939 A 2-4 L 1/30/1904 A 2-0 W 1/11/1969 A 4-8 L 2/14/1986 H (ot) 4-3 W 11/17/2000 A 1-1 T 1/13/1940 H A (ot) 4-5 L 1/14/1905 H S 5-0 W 2/27/1969 H 3-6 L 12/7/1986 A 6-3 W 2/3/2001 H 1-2 L 2/10/1940 A 3-8 L 1/13/1906 A 7-0 W 3/8/1969 N EG 2-4 L 2/14/1987 H 3-0 W 3/16/2001 N E2 2-5 L 2/22/1941 A 4-5 L 1/12/1907 A 7-0 W 1/10/1970 H 1-3 L 12/4/1987 A 3-1 W 11/16/2001 H (ot) 4-3 W 3/5/1941 H G (ot) 3-3 T 1/11/1908 A 14-1 W 2/25/1970 A 3-9 L 2/13/1988 H 3-1 W 2/1/2002 A 3-6 L 12/13/1941 H K 3-4 L 1/9/1909 A 5-1 W 3/13/1970 N EG 5-6 L 12/4/1988 H 9-1 W 3/16/2002 N E2 (2ot) 4-3 W 1/10/1942 A 3-5 L 1/12/1910 H S 6-0 W 1/9/1971 A (ot) 4-5 L 2/10/1989 A 4-2 W 11/22/2002 A 2-5 L 2/21/1942 H K 5-9 L 1/16/1911 H A 5-0 W 3/3/1971 H 1-3 L 3/11/1989 N EG 6-3 W 2/15/2003 H 3-4 L 1/14/1943 H K 8-10 L 1/8/1972 H 6-4 W 12/3/1989 A 5-0 W 3/16/2003 N E3 (ot) 2-3 L 2/6/1943 A 4-7 L Cornell 2/21/1972 A 2-5 L 2/9/1990 H 5-2 W 12/6/2003 A 0-1 L 2/20/1943 H A (ot) 4-4 T Harvard trails, 57-64-7 1/6/1973 H 2-5 L 3/2/1990 A E 2-6 L 1/9/2004 H 3-5 L 2/15/1946 H 5-14 L 1/8/1910 N 1 5-0 W 2/17/1973 A 4-9 L 3/3/1990 A E 2-4 L 11/5/2004 A 0-2 L 2/15/1947 H A 5-7 L 1/28/1911 H A 2-3 L 1/16/1974 H (ot) 4-5 L 11/30/1990 H 8-3 W 1/8/2005 H 1-0 W 2/26/1947 H A 4-15 L 1/27/1912 H A 3-2 W 2/16/1974 A 7-4 W 2/9/1991 A 2-2 T 3/19/2005 N E3 1-3 L 2/18/1948 H A 5-10 L 1/18/1913 H A 8-2 W 1/10/1975 H 4-2 W 12/8/1991 A (ot) 2-2 T 11/11/2005 H 3-4 L 2/28/1948 A 5-8 L 1/9/1915 H A 8-1 W 2/19/1975 A 8-2 W 2/14/1992 H (ot) 2-2 T 2/18/2006 A 4-3 W 1/15/1949 A 8-5 W 1/11/1916 H A 2-0 W 3/7/1975 N EG 6-4 W 12/5/1992 H 6-1 W 3/18/2006 N E3 6-2 W 2/16/1949 H A 3-4 L 2/17/1923 H A 6-0 W 2/11/1976 A 4-8 L 2/19/1993 A 6-3 W 11/10/2006 A 2-3 L 3/14/1949 H A 2-7 L 1/10/1959 H 18-0 W 2/25/1976 H 3-3 T 11/19/1993 A 5-4 W 2/24/2007 H 3-1 W 2/15/1950 H A 5-8 L 2/23/1959 A 13-0 W 3/13/1976 N EG 6-7 L 2/12/1994 H 4-0 W 11/16/2007 H 2-1 W 2/25/1950 A 7-3 W 1/9/1960 H 9-0 W 2/9/1977 H 4-7 L 3/11/1994 H E 5-4 W 3/1/2008 A 3-1 W 2/10/1951 A 1-5 L 2/22/1960 A 12-2 W 2/23/1977 A 2-6 L 3/12/1994 H E 5-3 W 3/21/2008 N E3 3-1 W 2/20/1951 H A 6-1 W 1/6/1961 A 3-1 W 2/21/1978 A 3-6 L 11/18/1994 H 4-2 W 1 New York, N.Y. 12/29/1951 N 2 (ot) 2-1 2/4/1961 H 2-1 W 2/23/1978 H (ot) 3-4 L 2/10/1995 A 2-1 W 2 Lake Placid, N.Y. 2/13/1952 H A 5-1 W 1/6/1962 H 5-1 W 2/7/1979 H W 2-4 L 11/11/1995 A 3-5 L 3 Albany, N.Y. 2/20/1952 A 5-2 W 2/3/1962 A 1-2 L 2/21/1979 A 3-11 L 2/16/1996 H 4-5 L Dalhousie 1/10/1953 A 5-0 W 1/5/1963 H 8-1 W 2/8/1980 H 5-3 W 3/16/1996 N E2 1-2 L 2/18/1953 H A 5-4 W 2/2/1963 A 5-1 W 2/19/1980 A 1-6 L 11/9/1996 H 2-3 L Harvard trails, 0-1-0 1/9/1954 H L 4-0 W 1/11/1964 A 4-3 W 1/9/1981 H 5-8 L 2/14/1997 A 1-2 L 12/31/1955 H 5-6 L 2/6/1954 A 6-4 W 2/5/1964 H 1-2 L 2/28/1981 A 3-7 L 3/7/1997 A E (ot) 2-2 T Dartmouth 1/15/1955 A 8-4 W 1/16/1965 H 2-3 L E G 2/12/1982 A (ot) 5-4 W 3/8/1997 A 1-4 L Harvard leads, 122-55-8 2/12/1955 H 10-0 W 2/17/1965 A 2-9 L 2/27/1982 H 7-0 W 11/7/1997 A 2-5 L 2/7/1907 H S 12-3 W 1/7/1956 A 6-2 W 1/15/1966 A 6-7 L 12/12/1982 A 1-3 L 2/21/1998 H 2-3 L 2/8/1908 H S 10-3 W 2/4/1956 A 10-1 W 2/19/1966 H (ot) 5-4 W 2/12/1983 H (ot) 3-2 W 11/13/1998 H 2-7 L 2/22/1909 N 1 1-0 W 2/16/1957 A 8-3 W 66 12/20/1966 A 3-4 L 12/10/1983 A 5-6 L 2/20/1999 A 5-3 W 2/12/1910 H S 5-0 W 2/27/1957 H 4-0 W 2/4/1911 H A 12-1 W 2/1/1958 A 7-1 W 2/9/1912 H A 7-3 W 2/25/1958 H 4-4 T 2/5/1913 H A 3-1 W 1/31/1959 A 2-4 L 1/17/1914 H A 2-1 W 2/25/1959 H 3-4 L 1/20/1915 H A 2-4 L 2/6/1960 A 3-1 W 2/4/1916 H A 6-0 W 2/13/1960 H 1-5 L 1/13/1917 H A 3-0 W 1/14/1961 H 7-1 W 1/24/1920 H P 4-2 W 2/11/1961 A 9-2 W 1/22/1921 H A 5-0 W 1/13/1962 H 5-0 W 2/15/1922 H A 3-0 W 2/10/1962 A 10-4 W 2/21/1923 H A 0-1 L 1/16/1963 A 6-1 W 2/23/1924 H A 3-4 L 2/6/1963 H 6-1 W 2/21/1925 H A 2-1 W 1/14/1964 H 4-3 W 2/20/1926 H A (ot) 3-2 W 2/8/1964 A 1-7 L 1/12/1927 H A 4-2 W 1/19/1965 A 3-5 L 2/23/1927 H A 2-2 T 2/24/1965 H 3-1 W 2/18/1928 H A 1-4 L 1/18/1966 H 8-3 W 1/12/1929 A 1-2 L 2/12/1966 A 5-3 W 2/16/1929 H G 3-2 W 1/18/1967 A 6-2 W 2/8/1930 A 2-1 W 2/18/1967 H 10-4 W 2/15/1930 H G 4-0 W 1/16/1968 A 7-2 W 2/14/1931 H G 4-2 W 2/21/1968 H 4-2 W 2/21/1931 A 3-2 W 12/7/1968 A 11-2 W 2/13/1932 H G 5-2 W 1/16/1969 H 6-3 W 2/20/1932 A 6-2 W 12/6/1969 H 6-1 W 2/11/1933 A 3-2 W 2/14/1970 A 8-1 W 2/17/1933 H GO (2ot) 5-2 W 12/5/1970 A 9-4 W 2/10/1934 A 1-4 L 2/17/1971 H 5-4 W 2/16/1934 H G 2-3 L 1/11/1972 A 7-3 W 2/9/1935 A 6-2 W 2/16/1972 H 3-4 L 2/22/1935 H A 9-3 W 1/10/1973 A 7-5 W 1/18/1936 H A 3-2 W 2/14/1973 H (ot) 2-2 T 2/8/1936 A 4-6 L 12/5/1973 H 4-5 L 2/11/1936 H A 10-1 W 2/27/1974 A 6-2 W G 1/15/1975 H 4-2 W Lane MacDonald skates against Michigan State in the 1989 NCAA semifinal. Six of the 11 1/9/1937 H 2-0 W 2/6/1937 A 14-4 W 2/26/1975 A 9-3 W meetings between the Crimson and Spartans have come in the NCAA tournament. 2/17/1976 H 4-5 L

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

3/2/1976 A 2-9 L Denver UMass Lowell 12/29/2006 N 1 2-5 L MIT 1/13/1977 A 3-2 W Harvard trails, 1-5-0 Harvard trails, 0-1-0 1 Great Lakes Invitational Harvard leads, 39-0-0 3/1/1977 H 2-3 L 12/29/1953 A 2-16 L 12/28/2001 N 1 0-2 L 2 Providence, R.I. 1/11/1900 H H 10-1 W 11/15/1977 H (ot) 4-5 L 12/30/1953 A 3-10 L 1 Denver Cup 3 St. Paul, Minn. 2/7/1900 H H 8-4 W 2/28/1978 A 4-3 W N1 H 3/13/1969 N 2-9 L McGill Michigan Tech 1/10/1903 H 4-3 W 11/21/1978 A 3-7 L 3/20/1971 N N2 0-1 L 1/11/1905 H S 25-0 W W Harvard leads, 4-2-0 2/28/1979 H 2-3 L 12/30/1977 N 3 (ot) 2-3 L Harvard trails, 10-24-0 1/10/1907 N T 8-0 W S 1/8/1930 H G 11-0 W 12/15/1979 H 2-5 L 3/28/1986 N N4 5-2 W 2/9/1907 H 2-8 L 1/7/1909 N T 1-0 W S 3/15/1969 N N1 (2ot) 6-5 W 2/27/1980 A (ot) 5-6 L 1 Colorado Springs, Colo. 1/25/1908 H 8-2 W 1/5/1910 H S 4-1 W A 12/28/1972 N 2 4-2 W 12/17/1980 H 2-3 L 2 Syracuse, N.Y. 1/7/1911 H 2-5 L 12/14/1910 N A 4-3 W A 3/15/1974 N NG (ot) 5-6 L 3/6/1981 A 2-5 L 3 Holiday Hockey Tournament 2/3/1912 H 3-0 W 12/21/1911 N A 21-4 W A 12/27/1980 N 2 2-9 L 11/24/1981 A 11-1 W 4 Providence, R.I. 1/14/1914 H 1-2 L 12/18/1912 N A 4-0 W A 12/30/2006 N 2 3-2 W 3/6/1982 H 7-4 W 2/5/1915 H 0-1 L 12/17/1913 N A 11-1 W Hamilton A 1 Colorado Springs, Colo. 11/23/1982 H 7-3 W 1/29/1916 H 4-1 W 12/17/1914 N A 6-2 W A 2 Great Lakes Invitational 2/16/1983 A 9-1 W Harvard leads, 3-0-0 2/10/1917 H 4-0 W 1/9/1917 N A 8-0 W A A 11/22/1983 A 5-3 W 2/20/1924 H 5-2 W 12/21/1923 H 0-2 L Middlebury 2/4/1920 N P 8-0 W A 1 2/1/1984 H 4-0 W 2/5/1925 H 6-2 W 1/2/1926 N 4-5 L 2/16/1921 N A 8-2 W A A Harvard leads, 5-0-0 12/14/1984 A 11-1 W 2/3/1926 H 11-1 W 12/29/1926 H (ot) 3-4 L G 1/27/1922 N A 9-2 W 1 1/14/1931 H 6-0 W 1/28/1985 H 7-1 W 1/7/1928 N 1-3 L 1/26/1923 N A 10-0 W Holy Cross G 12/10/1955 H 3-0 W 11/29/1985 A 9-2 W 12/21/1928 H (ot) 3-2 W 1/9/1924 N A 7-0 W Harvard leads, 2-0-1 2 12/15/1956 A 10-0 W 12/14/1985 H 9-2 W 1/1/1931 N 3-2 W A 1/14/1946 H 10-5 W 12/20/1957 H 7-1 W 12/11/1924 N 8-3 W 11/28/1986 A 8-3 W 2/23/1931 A 2-0 W 12/16/1925 N A 2-0 W 2/4/1946 H 7-7 T GO 12/5/1958 A 8-6 W 12/19/1931 H (2ot) 3-5 L A 11/29/1986 H 5-0 W A 12/10/1926 N 5-1 W 2/3/1947 H 10-4 W 3 11/27/1987 A 5-3 W 12/29/1931 N (ot) 6-5 W Minnesota 12/9/1927 N A 9-0 W G 12/12/1987 H 6-1 W Illinois-Chicago 12/17/1932 H 2-4 L Harvard trails, 6-20-0 12/12/1928 N G 9-1 W 11/22/1988 A 4-2 W Harvard trails, 0-1-0 12/23/1932 A 2-5 L 1/14/1932 H G 7-6 W 1/6/1930 N G 8-1 W 12/12/1988 H 10-0 W 12/27/1987 N 1 2-3 L 12/22/1933 A 1-8 L 1/2/1948 A 6-8 L 12/11/1930 N G 7-2 W G 11/27/1989 A 4-2 W 1 Long Island Hockey Classic 1/8/1934 H 2-12 L 1/3/1948 A 2-7 L 12/9/1931 N G 7-1 W 12/16/1989 H 7-2 W 12/21/1934 A 1-6 L 12/29/1950 A (ot) 4-3 W 12/15/1932 N G 9-1 W Kings G 11/27/1990 A 8-1 W 1/9/1935 H 1-4 L 12/30/1950 A (ot) 7-6 W 12/12/1933 N A 4-1 W G 12/15/1990 H 8-2 W Harvard leads, 1-0-0 1/8/1936 H 0-3 L 12/22/1953 A 2-4 L 12/11/1934 N A 10-0 W A 1/4/1992 A 6-3 W 1/6/1921 H 9-1 W 2/22/1936 A 7-4 W 12/23/1953 A 0-9 L 12/10/1935 N A 12-0 W 2/21/1992 H 4-2 W 2/22/1937 A 2-7 L 12/27/1957 A 2-7 L 12/15/1936 N A 8-0 W Lake Superior State G 12/18/1992 H 6-4 W 1/8/1938 H 0-6 L 12/28/1957 A (ot) 2-3 L A Harvard leads, 2-1-0 12/7/1937 N 13-0 W 2/22/1939 A 6-13 L K 2/26/1993 A 3-4 L N 12/29/1961 A 2-7 L 12/9/1942 N 13-4 W 3/24/1989 H 4-2 W A 1/15/1994 H 2-1 W 1/6/1940 H 0-7 L 12/30/1961 A 3-4 L A 3/25/1989 H N 5-2 W 12/4/1948 N 16-8 W 12/19/1947 A 4-9 L G A 2/18/1994 A (ot) 5-4 W N1 12/23/1963 H 5-2 W 2/23/1949 N 13-6 W 3/31/1994 N (ot) 2-3 L A 12/22/1948 H 0-14 L N1 A 1/14/1995 A 5-3 W 1 3/19/1971 N (ot) 5-6 L 12/3/1949 N 10-5 W St. Paul, Minn. A 67 2/17/1995 H 1-2 L 12/28/1954 H 1-2 L 12/27/1973 N 2 3-6 L 12/5/1950 N G 14-2 W G 1/6/1996 H 1-2 L Laval 12/23/1955 H 2-6 L 3/14/1975 N N2 4-6 L 1/14/1952 N A 14-1 W 3/1/1996 A 1-5 L 1/2/1970 A 7-4 W 12/27/1976 A (ot) 3-4 L 1/7/1953 N A 12-1 W Harvard leads, 2-0-0 1 1/4/1997 A (ot) 3-2 W 1/27/1909 H S 3-0 W New York, N.Y. 12/27/1978 A 4-5 L 2 N3 Montreal 2/28/1997 H 6-3 W 2/10/1927 H A 4-1 W Fort Erie, Ont. 3/25/1983 N 5-3 W 1/2/1998 H 4-3 W 3 Syracuse, N.Y. 12/17/1983 A 4-6 L Harvard leads, 3-0-0 Maine 3/7/1998 A 4-1 W Merrimack 12/18/1983 A 4-6 L 2/20/1937 A 3-1 W 1/2/1999 A 4-2 W Harvard trails, 5-6-0 3/28/1987 N N4 3-6 L 1/6/1938 H G 5-1 W Harvard trails, 0-1-0 3/6/1999 H 4-2 W 2/2/1980 A 3-5 L 4/1/1989 N N5 (ot) 4-3 W 2/21/1939 A 7-5 W 12/23/2004 N 1 4-6 L 11/5/1999 H 7-2 W 2/13/1981 H 4-1 W 12/22/1989 A 1-3 L 1 Dodge Holiday Classic Nebraska-Omaha 12/17/1999 A (ot) 1-1 T 12/5/1981 A 7-2 W 12/23/1989 A 3-6 L Harvard leads, 2-0-0 11/11/2000 H 5-2 W 1/13/1983 H 9-2 W Michigan 12/29/1995 A 6 2-5 L 12/18/1998 A 4-1 W 2/9/2001 A 0-7 L 12/14/1983 A 4-5 L Harvard trails, 2-5-1 12/29/1999 A 6 2-5 L E3 12/19/1998 A 4-3 W 3/17/2001 N (ot) 3-2 W 1/3/1994 A 7-6 W 12/30/1930 N 1 7-0 W 1 Syracuse, N.Y. N1 11/4/2001 H 5-2 W 3/23/2002 N (ot) 3-4 L 3/10/1955 N N2 3-7 L 2 St. Louis, Mo. New Brunswick 11/10/2001 A (ot) 3-3 T 12/15/2002 A 2-4 L 3/15/1957 N N2 1-6 L 3 Grand Forks, N.D. Series tied, 0-0-1 N2 11/8/2002 H 5-2 W 3/26/2004 N 4-5 L 12/28/1964 N 1A 2-4 L 4 , Mich. 12/29/1960 N 1 (ot) 4-4 T 2/21/2003 A 4-1 W 12/11/2004 H 4-1 W 12/27/1972 N 3 8-4 W 5 St. Paul, Minn. 1 RPI Christmas Tournament E4 N2 3/21/2003 N 5-3 W 3/25/2006 N 1-6 L 12/27/1974 N 3 2-3 L 6 Mariucci Classic 1 New Hampshire 11/8/2003 A (ot) 2-2 T Worcester, Mass. 12/27/1991 N 3 1-3 L 2 Minnesota Duluth 2/28/2004 H 4-0 W Albany, N.Y. 12/15/2001 A (ot) 3-3 T Harvard leads, 18-11-0 E4 Harvard trails, 4-9-0 K 3/19/2004 N 2-1 W Marquette 1 Fort Erie, Ont. 1/12/1943 H 13-2 W 2/4/2005 H 2-1 W 2 1/3/1958 A 2-5 L 1/8/1966 H 9-5 W Harvard trails, 0-1-0 Colorado Springs, Colo. 2/25/2005 A 1-2 L 3 12/28/1978 A 3-8 L 12/3/1966 A 6-2 W 2/5/1930 H G 3-4 L Great Lakes Invitational 10/29/2005 H 6-2 W 12/30/1980 H 6-4 W 2/15/1969 H 7-1 W 12/16/2005 A 1-5 L Massachusetts Michigan State 12/30/1982 A 2-3 L 3/4/1969 H E (ot) 4-3 W N E4 3/22/1985 A 2-4 L 3/17/2006 N 10-1 W 1/27/1913 H A 9-3 W Harvard trails, 4-7-1 12/9/1969 A 11-3 W 3/23/1985 A N 2-4 L 10/27/2006 A 2-5 L 1/14/1914 H A 4-3 W 1/4/1958 A 2-6 L 1/15/1972 A (ot) 3-4 L 12/12/1986 A 4-1 W EG 12/16/2006 H 3-2 W 2/3/1915 H A 4-0 W 1/2/1976 A 8-6 W 3/11/1972 N 1-4 L 12/13/1986 A 4-2 W 12/1/2007 H 1-0 W 1/19/1921 H A 2-0 W 1/3/1976 A 4-3 W 12/2/1972 H 9-3 W 1 12/28/1987 N 1 3-6 L 1/26/2008 A 3-1 W 11/8/1998 A 3-1 W 12/28/1980 N 4-6 L 11/28/1973 A 2-3 L 1 N 12/17/1993 A 0-3 L E New York, N.Y. 12/30/1999 N 1 2-4 L 3/18/1983 H 6-5 W 3/9/1976 A 4-3 W 2 N 12/18/1993 A 9-4 W RPI Christmas Tournament 12/13/2003 H 5-3 W 3/19/1983 H 3-3 T 12/15/1976 H 6-9 L 3 N2 12/20/1996 A 1-3 L Lake Placid, N.Y. 1 Mariucci Classic 3/29/1986 N 5-6 L 12/14/1977 A 7-6 W 4 Albany, N.Y. 3/18/1988 H N 5-6 L 12/21/1996 A 2-4 L 12/12/1978 H W 8-4 W UMass Devens 3/19/1988 H N 3-5 L 1 Long Island Hockey Classic 12/11/1979 A 4-1 W Harvard leads, 1-0-0 3/30/1989 N N3 6-3 W 12/10/1980 H 4-3 W 2/4/1948 H A 17-2 W 12/28/1991 N 1 1-3 L 12/9/1981 A 3-2 W

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

12/7/1982 H 7-5 W 1/14/1967 H 4-5 L Notre Dame 3/7/1919 N 1 7-2 W 3/4/1959 H 5-1 W 3/11/1983 N EG 6-3 W 12/2/1967 A A 9-1 W Harvard leads, 5-2-0 1/31/1920 H P 6-3 W 2/20/1960 A 3-2 W 2/21/1984 A 2-6 L 12/5/1968 H 8-4 W 1/7/1927 H A 7-0 W 3/6/1920 N 2 10-1 W 3/1/1960 H 4-3 W 12/10/1988 A (ot) 4-3 W 2/3/1969 N BG 8-4 W 12/29/1973 A 2-5 L 1/29/1921 H A 7-0 W 12/30/1960 N 4 6-1 W 3/26/1994 N N1 7-1 W 12/4/1969 A A 6-3 W 12/23/1974 H 8-2 W 1/21/1922 N 2 3-0 W 2/18/1961 A 7-4 W 12/7/1994 H 2-5 L 2/9/1970 N BG (ot) 5-4 W 12/21/1975 A 7-9 L 2/18/1922 H A 9-0 W 2/28/1961 H 9-2 W 11/21/1995 A (ot) 2-3 L 12/1/1970 H 12-0 W 12/20/1976 H 4-3 W 1/13/1923 H A 1-3 L 2/17/1962 A 3-1 W 12/30/1995 N 2 3-8 L 1/17/1972 H 5-2 W 12/22/1977 N 1 4-3 W 2/24/1923 A 2-1 W 2/27/1962 H 10-0 W 1/28/1997 H 5-7 L 2/7/1972 N BG 8-3 W 12/23/1978 H W 9-5 W 2/28/1923 H A 1-0 W 2/16/1963 H 6-1 W 12/14/2000 A 1-4 L 1/15/1973 H 8-1 W 1 Bloomington, Minn. 1/19/1924 A 4-2 W 2/27/1963 A 5-0 W 3/26/2005 N N3 (ot) 2-3 L 2/12/1973 N BG 8-5 W 2/18/1924 H A 2-1 W 2/15/1964 A 6-2 W 12/8/2005 A 1-0 W 2/20/1974 A A (ot) 3-2 W Ohio State 1/24/1925 H A 4-2 W 3/3/1964 H 6-2 W 1 Albany, N.Y. 12/2/1974 A A 5-3 W Harvard trails, 0-1-0 2/28/1925 A 5-4 W 2/13/1965 H 6-2 W 2 Mariucci Classic 2/3/1975 N BG 9-0 W 12/29/2007 A 1 2-4 L 1/9/1926 A 4-3 W 3/2/1965 A (ot) 3-2 W 3 Amherst, Mass. 12/2/1975 H 5-4 W 1 Ohio Hockey Classic 1/30/1926 H A 4-3 W 12/31/1965 N 5 6-3 W BG G North Dakota 2/9/1976 N 4-2 W Ottawa 1/2/1932 H 4-3 W 2/5/1966 A 3-6 L 11/29/1976 A A 4-2 W 1/14/1933 A 2-6 L 3/2/1966 H 4-1 W Harvard trails, 0-3-0 Harvard trails, 2-6-1 1/12/1978 H 5-14 L 1/21/1933 N A 5-4 W 1/7/1967 H 6-2 W 1/6/1913 H A 0-2 L 1/1/1951 A 5-2 W 2/6/1978 N BG (ot) 4-3 W 2/22/1933 A 4-2 W 2/28/1967 A 4-5 L 1/2/1914 N 1 0-2 L 1/2/1951 A 3-5 L 1/4/1979 A A 3-5 L 1/13/1934 A 0-3 L 12/13/1967 H 5-3 W 1/3/1914 N 1 0-3 L 1/1/1958 A 1-5 L 2/12/1979 N BG 4-5 L 1/20/1934 H G 2-5 L 2/10/1968 A 4-3 W N1 1 Syracuse, N.Y. 3/14/1958 N 1-9 L 11/20/1979 H 8-2 W 1/12/1935 H A 7-2 W 2/8/1969 H 5-2 W 2 12/27/1967 N 1-8 L 11/25/1980 H 5-11 L Penn 2/16/1935 A 6-1 W 2/19/1969 A 5-2 W 3 12/28/1973 N (ot) 2-2 T 2/2/1981 N BG 10-2 W 1/11/1936 A 3-4 L 2/7/1970 A 6-3 W N4 Harvard leads, 19-5-0 3/26/1987 N 2-5 L BG A 2/8/1982 N (ot) 5-6 L 2/22/1929 A 9-0 W 2/29/1936 H 8-0 W 3/4/1970 H 7-2 W 12/29/2005 A 1-0 W G 2/23/1982 H 6-3 W 1/6/1968 H 15-1 W 3/4/1936 H 3-2 W 2/6/1971 H 8-0 W 12/30/2005 A 2-3 L 3/13/1982 N EG 2-5 L 1/16/1937 H G 6-2 W 2/24/1971 A 12-4 W 1 2/3/1968 A 12-0 W Minneapolis, Minn. 2/22/1983 A (ot) 4-3 W 2/13/1937 A 8-4 W 12/17/1971 H 7-2 W 2 1/14/1969 H 12-0 W St. Paul Classic 12/6/1983 H 4-2 W 1/15/1938 A 3-2 W 2/23/1972 A 9-0 W 3 2/1/1969 A 6-1 W St. Louis, Mo. 2/6/1984 N BG 3-7 L 2/16/1938 H G (ot) 4-4 T 1/13/1973 H 11-1 W 4 1/31/1970 A (ot) 4-5 L Detroit, Mich. BG 3 2/10/1986 N 7-1 W 2/21/1970 H 8-0 W 12/29/1938 N 2-3 L 2/21/1973 A 13-2 W BG 3 Northeastern 2/2/1987 N (ot) 4-5 L 1/16/1971 A 6-5 W 12/30/1938 N 1-3 L 1/11/1974 H 10-1 W BG 3 Harvard leads, 64-30-0 2/5/1990 N 5-4 W 2/20/1971 H 5-1 W 12/31/1938 N 4-1 W 2/9/1974 A 5-4 W BG A 12/4/1940 N K 4-7 L 2/11/1991 N 0-5 L 12/4/1971 A 11-3 W 1/14/1939 H 5-2 W 12/6/1974 H 4-1 W BG 12/20/1941 N K 5-4 W 2/1/1993 N 7-5 W 12/28/1971 N 1 7-4 W 2/25/1939 A (ot) 4-3 W 2/15/1975 A 10-2 W BG 3 12/12/1942 N K 15-3 W 2/13/1995 N 2-4 L 2/12/1972 H 2-3 L 12/28/1939 N 3-6 L 2/6/1976 A 6-1 W A 3 2/4/1943 N GO (ot) 10-7 W 11/24/1995 A 4-1 W 12/9/1972 H 9-1 W 12/29/1939 N 5-3 W 2/21/1976 H 6-3 W BF 3O 1/7/1948 N A 11-4 W 2/5/1996 N 1-4 L 2/10/1973 A 7-6 W 12/30/1939 N (ot) 6-6 T 2/5/1977 H (ot) 5-4 W 68 A 2/3/1948 N A 7-8 L 12/1/1996 H 4-3 W 12/2/1973 A 7-3 W 2/17/1940 H 4-5 L 2/18/1977 A 5-2 W BF 1/19/1949 N A 9-5 W 2/10/1997 N 0-2 L 1/12/1974 H 4-2 W 2/28/1940 A 1-2 L 2/4/1978 H 2-1 W A 3/1/1949 N A 4-5 L 12/18/1997 A 4-6 L 11/30/1974 H 7-3 W 1/3/1941 A 4-10 L 2/18/1978 A 3-6 L BF 1/16/1950 N A 5-4 W 2/1/1999 N (ot) 3-4 L 2/14/1975 A 5-3 W 1/4/1941 A 2-6 L 2/3/1979 A (ot) 7-7 T A W 2/13/1950 N A 6-3 W 12/19/1999 H (ot) 6-5 W 12/6/1975 A 3-4 L 2/8/1941 H 3-4 L 2/14/1979 H 4-3 W BF 1/16/1951 N A 3-1 W 2/14/2000 N 3-1 W 2/20/1976 H 8-2 W 2/15/1941 A 4-5 L 1/12/1980 A 3-5 L BF 3 2/6/1951 N A 1-5 L 2/12/2001 N 7-8 L 12/4/1976 H 3-4 L 1/1/1942 N 2-6 L 2/13/1980 H 5-1 W BF 3 2/4/1952 N A (ot) 2-3 L 2/4/2002 N 2-5 L 2/19/1977 A 6-2 W 1/2/1942 N 2-1 W 1/10/1981 H 2-3 L BF 3 1/31/1953 N A (ot) 3-4 L 2/10/2003 N 4-1 W 12/3/1977 H 6-3 W 1/3/1942 N 2-3 L 2/27/1981 A 5-3 W BF 2/13/1953 N A 6-2 W 2/9/2004 N 1-3 L 2/17/1978 A 3-4 L 2/14/1942 A 2-4 L 12/19/1981 A 5-5 T BF K 12/18/1953 N A 6-2 W 2/7/2005 N 1-2 L 1 St. Louis, Mo. 3/4/1942 H 5-2 W 2/26/1982 H 10-0 W BF 2/2/1954 N G 7-2 W 2/13/2006 N 5-0 W 1/9/1943 A 5-1 W 12/18/1982 H 9-2 W BF Princeton K 12/7/1954 N G 11-1 W 2/12/2007 N 1-3 L 2/10/1943 H 9-1 W 2/27/1983 A 2-4 L BF Harvard leads, 143-52-9 1/8/1955 H 6-2 W 2/4/2008 N 3-1 W 1/1/1946 H 7-5 W 2/10/1984 A 7-2 W 1 3/1/1902 N 1 6-3 W A 2/7/1955 N BG 12-3 W Christmas Tournament 2/19/1947 H 9-2 W 2/25/1984 H 6-0 W 1/17/1903 N 1 4-1 W 2/14/1948 A 4-8 L 11/24/1984 A 4-3 W 12/6/1955 H 8-3 W Northern Arizona 1 1/21/1905 N 6-5 W 3/10/1948 H A 6-2 W 2/8/1985 H 5-2 W 2/28/1956 H 2-4 L Harvard leads, 1-0-0 1 G 1/20/1906 N 3-2 W 2/19/1949 A 5-3 W 11/23/1985 H 5-4 W 1/14/1957 N 7-0 W 1 12/29/1982 N 12-1 W 1 A BG 1/19/1907 N 3-4 L 3/9/1949 H 8-6 W 2/7/1986 A 4-2 W 2/5/1957 N 5-3 W 1 Jeno Holiday Tournament 1/18/1908 N 1 W 6-2 1/30/1958 N G 11-0 W 2/18/1950 A 7-4 W 11/21/1986 A 6-2 W 1/16/1909 N 1 3-2 W A 2/3/1958 N BG 4-5 L Northern Michigan 3/7/1950 H 4-5 L 2/7/1987 H 3-1 W 1/15/1910 N 1 0-3 L 2/9/1959 N BG 4-0 W Harvard trails, 1-2-1 2/24/1951 A 4-5 L 11/20/1987 H (ot) 4-3 W 1/21/1911 H A 5-1 W A 12/28/1959 N 1A 8-2 W 12/28/1982 N 1 7-0 W 3/6/1951 H 3-8 L 2/6/1988 A 3-2 W 1/10/1912 N 1 3-2 W 2/8/1960 N BG 5-3 W 3/26/1993 N N2 (2ot) 2-3 L 1/12/1952 A 0-2 L 11/19/1988 A 9-5 W 1/20/1912 H A 2-3 L A 12/15/1960 H 5-3 W 12/29/2002 N 3 2-3 L 3/5/1952 H 1-4 L 2/3/1989 H 7-2 W 1/22/1913 H A 5-3 W 1/4/1962 H 6-1 W 12/22/2004 N 4 (ot) 0-0 T 2/21/1953 A 1-3 L 11/18/1989 H 9-6 W 2/8/1913 N 1 1-3 L A 12/12/1962 H 8-1 W 1 Jeno Holiday Tournament 3/4/1953 H 4-2 W 2/2/1990 A (ot) 5-4 W 2/15/1913 H A 3-0 W 12/26/1962 N 1A 11-6 W 2 Worcester, Mass. 2/20/1954 A 6-4 W 11/16/1990 A 3-4 L 1/24/1914 H A 2-1 W G 2/4/1963 N BG (ot) 4-3 W 3 BankOne Badger Showdown 3/3/1954 H 3-1 W 2/2/1991 H 7-0 W 2/14/1914 N 1 2-4 L 12/4/1963 A A 4-2 W 4 Dodge Holiday Classic 2/19/1955 A 6-2 W 11/22/1991 H 8-1 W 2/21/1914 N 1 1-4 L G 2/10/1964 N BG 7-5 W 3/1/1955 H 5-2 W 2/8/1992 A (ot) 4-4 T Norwich 1/16/1915 N 1 4-1 W 12/2/1964 H 2-6 L 2/18/1956 A 5-3 W 11/20/1992 A (ot) 6-5 W 1/23/1915 H A 5-1 W 12/30/1964 N 1A 5-1 W Harvard leads, 3-0-0 3/7/1956 H 2-1 W 2/13/1993 H (ot) 3-3 T 1/15/1916 H A 3-0 W E 2/15/1965 N BG 1-3 L 12/14/1956 A 6-2 W 1/12/1957 A 9-1 W 3/12/1993 H 6-2 W 1/22/1916 N 1 2-0 W E 12/8/1965 A A 3-1 W 1/13/1960 H 10-2 W 2/6/1957 H 5-1 W 3/14/1993 H 8-0 W 1/20/1917 N 1 1-2 L 2/7/1966 N BG 5-1 W 1/4/1964 H 11-2 W 1/11/1958 A 7-2 W 11/13/1993 H 7-1 W 2/2/1917 H A 4-3 W 12/30/1966 N 1A (ot) 5-4 W 3/5/1958 H 5-0 W 2/4/1994 A (ot) 4-3 W 2/24/1917 H A 2-0 W 2/21/1959 A (ot) 5-5 T 11/12/1994 A 6-4 W

GoCrimson.com Opponents :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

2/3/1995 H 3-5 L 1/9/1939 N A 4-2 W 3/12/1999 A E 2-1 W 2/6/1981 H 7-3 W Toronto 11/18/1995 H 4-3 W 2/23/1940 A 2-10 L 3/13/1999 A E 0-4 L 1/8/1982 A 1-3 L Harvard trails, 11-17-2 12/15/1995 A 5-1 W 1 Syracuse, N.Y. 3/14/1999 A E 2-4 L 1/7/1983 H 3-4 L 1/15/1913 H A 2-0 W 11/16/1996 A 2-6 L Quinnipiac 12/3/1999 A 2-3 L 1/6/1984 A (ot) 3-4 L 1/3/1920 H P 2-5 L 11/30/1996 H 1-2 L 3/4/2000 H 0-2 L 1/12/1985 A 4-3 W 1/3/1922 H A 1-6 L (Harvard leads, 5-2-2) 11/14/1997 H (ot) 3-3 T 1/6/2001 H 5-2 W 3/1/1985 H (ot) 3-4 L 1/3/1923 H A 5-7 L 11/4/2005 A 1 2-5 L 2/13/1998 A 3-7 L 2/23/2001 A 1-0 W 1/11/1986 H 7-0 W 1/3/1924 H A 1-2 L 12/6/2005 H 3-2 W 11/20/1998 A 2-3 L 1/5/2002 A 5-2 W 2/28/1986 A 7-3 W 1/5/1924 H A 1-4 L 11/24/2006 H 4-2 W 2/13/1999 H 5-3 W 2/22/2002 H 1-5 L 1/9/1987 A 4-3 W 1/2/1925 H A 2-1 W 1/30/2007 A (ot) 2-2 T 1/8/2000 H 2-4 L 11/30/2002 H 3-1 W 2/28/1987 H (ot) 3-4 L 1/6/1926 H A 0-2 L 1/4/2008 A (ot) 3-3 T EG 2/25/2000 A 4-1 W 2/7/2003 A 6-4 W 3/14/1987 N 6-3 W 12/26/1926 N 1 4-3 W 2/16/2008 H 4-1 W 1/12/2001 A 4-3 W 1/3/2004 A 1-4 L 1/8/1988 H 4-3 W 1/3/1927 H A (ot) 1-1 T 3/14/2008 H E 11-0 W 3/3/2001 H 2-2 T 2/13/2004 H 2-3 L 2/27/1988 A 6-5 W 12/27/1927 H A 4-1 W 3/15/2008 H E 4-7 L 1/11/2002 H 1-2 L 12/4/2004 H 2-1 W 1/14/1989 A 5-1 W 12/28/1928 N 1 (ot) 2-3 L 3/16/2008 H E 3-1 W 3/2/2002 A 0-3 L 2/11/2005 A 3-0 W 2/24/1989 H 4-2 W 1/3/1929 H G (ot) 0-0 T 1 Hartford, Conn. (Civic Center) 12/6/2002 A 6-3 W 1/7/2006 A 2-3 L 1/6/1990 H (ot) 3-2 W 12/28/1929 N 1 2-3 L 1/11/2003 H 1-2 L Rensselaer 1/26/2006 H 3-1 W 2/23/1990 A 3-4 L 1/2/1930 H G 2-6 L 11/14/2003 H 2-4 L Harvard leads, 44-32-2 1/5/2007 A 5-1 W 1/4/1991 A 4-5 L 12/27/1930 N 1 4-1 W 12/16/2003 A 1-2 L 12/27/1951 A 1 2-6 L 2/3/2007 H 3-1 W 2/23/1991 H 4-2 W 1/7/1931 H G 9-0 W 11/13/2004 H 8-6 W 12/28/1960 A 1 3-5 L 11/9/2007 H 3-0 W 1/10/1992 H 3-2 W 1/9/1932 N 1 2-1 W 1/28/2005 A 7-0 W 1/5/1967 H 8-2 W 12/4/2007 A 2-4 L 2/1/1992 A 0-4 L 1/7/1933 N 1 1-8 L 1 11/5/2005 A 2-1 W 1/4/1968 A 2-7 L RPI Christmas Tournament 1/8/1993 A 10-4 W 1/6/1934 N 1 1-4 L 2 2/10/2006 H (ot) 5-4 W 1/4/1969 H 7-3 W Lake Placid, N.Y. 3/6/1993 H 1-3 L 1/4/1936 H G 6-4 W 11/25/2006 H 2-4 L 3/8/1974 N EG 7-2 W Saint Louis 1/7/1994 H 8-1 W 1/7/1937 H A (2ot) 5-4 W 2/9/2007 A 4-2 W 3/5/1994 A (ot) 5-4 W 2/19/1938 A 3-7 L 11/25/1978 A (ot) 5-6 L Series tied, 1-1-0 1/5/2008 A 1-2 L 1/6/1995 A 3-4 L 1/7/1939 H A 1-11 L 11/24/1979 H 2-6 L 1/3/1975 A 13-3 W 2/15/2008 H 3-2 W 12/5/1980 A 1-9 L 3/3/1995 H 8-3 W 2/22/1940 A 1-10 L E6 1/5/1975 A 4-5 L 3/22/2008 N 1-4 L 11/28/1981 H 5-2 W 12/8/1995 A 3-7 L 12/30/1959 N 2A 2-7 L 1 New York, N.Y. 11/27/1982 A 7-4 W Sir George Williams 2/24/1996 H 4-5 L 12/21/1963 H G 4-1 W 2 E Philadelphia, Pa. 3/4/1983 H E 5-1 W Harvard leads, 1-0-0 3/8/1996 A 5-2 W 12/18/1965 H G 5-7 L 3 E Lake Placid, N.Y. 3/5/1983 H E 4-2 W 12/30/1967 A 12-0 W 3/9/1996 A 2-3 L 1/3/1970 N 3 5-7 L 4 E RPI Christmas Tournament 12/4/1983 H 0-6 L 3/10/1996 A 8-4 W 11/30/1984 A 5-4 W 5 Southern California 1 Buffalo, N.Y. 1/4/1985 H 4-5 L 12/6/1996 H (ot) 3-3 T New York, N.Y. 6 Albany, N.Y. 2/23/1985 A 1-4 L Harvard leads, 1-0-0 2/22/1997 A 3-6 L 2 Christmas Tournament A E Providence 3/16/1985 N EG 1-3 L 12/17/1938 H 6-2 W 3/4/1997 H 4-2 W 3 Montreal, Que. 12/6/1997 A 3-1 W Harvard leads, 17-9-1 1/3/1986 A 4-2 W St. Cloud State Tufts 2/22/1986 H 11-0 W 2/27/1998 H (ot) 2-3 L 12/8/1953 A 10-1 W Harvard trailss, 0-2-0 12/5/1998 H 1-5 L Harvard leads, 12-0-0 G 1/4/1987 H 5-2 W 1 P 69 12/17/1954 H 10-3 W 12/272003 N 4-6 L 2/26/1999 A (ot) 4-5 L 1/28/1920 H 8-0 W 12/13/1955 H G (ot) 4-5 L 2/20/1987 A 4-1 W 12/30/2007 N 2 1-4 L K EG 1/15/2000 A 4-6 L 12/5/1942 N 8-0 W 3/13/1987 N 4-1 W 1 1/10/1956 A 5-4 W Dunkin’ Donuts Coffee Pot 2/18/2000 H 2-4 L 12/12/1949 N A 9-2 W 1/3/1988 A 5-4 W 2 12/6/1956 A 3-6 L Ohio Hockey Classic 12/1/2000 A 3-6 L 12/11/1950 N A 5-0 W 12/18/1956 H G 10-2 W 2/20/1988 H 0-4 L A E St. Francis Xavier 2/17/2001 H 4-1 W 1/16/1952 N 8-2 W 2/8/1958 A 9-3 W 3/4/1988 H 5-4 W A E 11/30/2001 H 2-1 W 12/17/1952 N 8-1 W 2/22/1958 H 6-1 W 3/5/1988 H 6-4 W Harvard leads, 4-1-0 A S 2/16/2002 A (ot) 3-3 T 12/17/1955 N 13-3 W 1/13/1959 H 3-6 L 1/6/1989 H 4-1 W 1/25/1909 H 1-0 W S 11/15/2002 A 6-1 W 2/22/1956 H 16-1 W 2/4/1959 A 4-3 W 2/18/1989 A (ot) 4-3 W 2/5/1910 H 1-4 L E A 3/1/2003 H 5-0 W 2/23/1957 H 13-1 W 12/29/1959 N 1A (ot) 5-4 W 3/3/1989 H 7-3 W 1/11/1911 H 8-2 W E A 11/28/2003 H 3-0 W 1/8/1958 H 16-1 W 2/24/1960 A 0-7 L 3/4/1989 H W 5-4 1/31/1912 H 7-2 W A 2/21/2004 A (ot) 3-3 T 1/7/1959 H 6-2 W G 11/25/1989 A 5-7 L 2/9/1928 H 12-1 W 12/18/1964 H 2-1 W 11/26/2004 A 2-4 L 1/20/1960 H 10-2 W 3/4/1974 H E 9-3 W 2/17/1990 H 7-3 W St. Lawrence 12/8/1990 H (ot) 7-8 L 2/19/2005 H 5-2 W Union 1/14/1976 A (ot) 4-4 T E 2/15/1991 A 6-3 W Harvard leads, 49-36-5 3/11/2005 H 2-0 W 1/17/1976 H 6-5 W A E Harvard leads, 29-4-3 3/1/1991 H E 7-3 W 12/27/1954 N (ot) 3-2 W 3/12/2005 H 3-2 W 12/1/1976 H 4-5 L N1 11/15/1991 A 7-5 W 3/2/1991 H E 3-3 T 3/12/1955 N 6-3 W 11/26/2005 A 4-3 W 1/17/1977 A 4-5 L A 2/1/1992 H 7-3 W 11/16/1991 A 6-0 W 12/30/1955 H 1-3 L 2/24/2006 H 3-2 W 12/1/1977 A 6-4 W A E 11/13/1992 H 4-0 W 1/31/1992 H 5-1 W 12/19/1957 H 4-6 L 3/10/2006 H 1-5 L 11/29/1978 A 5-2 W E 1/15/1993 A 3-2 W E 12/13/1958 A 3-4 L 3/11/2006 H 3-2 W 3/7/1992 H (ot) 3-4 L 12/3/1993 A 2-0 W 1/31/1979 A 3-5 L 12/18/1959 H (ot) 5-5 T 3/12/2006 H E 8-4 W 11/14/1992 H 4-3 W 2/26/1994 H (ot) 3-3 T 11/28/1979 A 3-6 L 12/10/1960 A (ot) 1-2 L 11/4/2006 H 4-5 L 1/14/1981 H 1-3 L 2/5/1993 A 3-6 L 11/26/1994 H 5-2 W E2 12/11/1961 H 2-0 W 1/26/2007 A 3-4 L 3/20/1993 N 6-3 W 2/25/1995 A 3-5 L 12/13/1981 A (ot) 6-5 W 3/9/1962 N EA 5-6 L 11/4/2007 A 6-1 W 12/4/1993 A 3-4 L 1/12/1996 A 2-0 W 2/9/1983 H 8-5 W 1/12/1963 A 1-6 L 1/11/2008 H 1-3 L EG 2/25/1994 H 7-5 W 3/12/1983 N 4-1 W 1 2/3/1996 H 6-0 W E2 12/16/1963 H 3-1 W Colorado Springs, Colo. 3/19/1994 N 3-0 W 12/11/1996 A 3-0 W 1/12/1984 A 2-0 W 1/8/1965 A 7-3 W 1 11/27/1994 H 3-4 L St. Mary’s 1/10/1997 H 2-4 L Christmas Tournament 12/11/1965 H 3-5 L 2/24/1995 A 5-3 W Harvard leads, 1-0-0 1/10/1998 A (ot) 3-2 W Queen’s E 12/10/1966 A 2-3 L 3/10/1995 H (ot) 2-2 T 1/6/1932 H G 11-2 W 2/6/1998 H 3-1 W E 2/17/1968 H 4-6 L Harvard leads, 6-4-0 3/11/1995 H 1-3 L 1/9/1999 H 4-3 W A 1/2/1969 H (ot) 4-4 T 1/6/1915 H 1-2 L 1/13/1996 A 6-4 W St. Patrick’s 2/5/1999 A (ot) 1-1 T A 2/18/1970 H 6-2 W 1/8/1916 H 3-4 L 2/2/1996 H 4-3 W Harvard trails, 0-2-0 12/4/1999 A 5-1 W A 1/2/1971 A 2-1 W A 1/27/1917 H 5-1 W 1/11/1997 H 6-1 W 2/10/1921 H 0-1 L \3/3/2000 H 3-2 W A 1/19/1972 H 7-1 W A 2/14/1923 H 2-1 W 1/31/1997 A 2-5 L 2/14/1921 H 1-2 L 1/5/2001 H 5-2 W 1 12/7/1973 A 6-4 W 1/2/1931 N 5-1 W 1/9/1998 A 4-6 L 2/24/2001 A 2-3 L 1 1/5/1977 H 10-0 W Syracuse 12/31/1931 N 3-1 W 2/7/1998 H 1-5 L 1/4/2002 A 3-2 W G 1/3/1978 A 7-4 W Series tied, 1-1-0 2/10/1937 H 5-2 W 12/1/1998 A 4-7 L 2/23/2002 H 4-0 W 1/13/1979 H W 2-3 L 12/27/1913 A 5-2 W 2/18/1938 A 2-6 L 1/8/1999 H 0-1 L 11/29/2002 H 7-4 W 3/7/1980 A 5-3 W 12/30/1913 A 1-2 L

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Opponents

1/4/2003 A 3-1 W 12/7/2004 H 3-1 W 2/24/1912 H A 4-2 W 3/13/1948 H A 1-0 W 2/18/1984 A (ot) 1-1 T 1/2/2004 A 3-2 W 2/26/2005 A (ot) 2-2 T 2/1/1913 H A 4-0 W 3/17/1948 A 3-10 L 11/17/1984 H 3-1 W 2/14/2004 H 3-2 W 11/28/2006 H (ot) 1-2 L 2/19/1913 N 1 3-2 W 3/5/1949 H A 4-1 W 2/1/1985 A 2-6 L 12/3/2004 H 4-1 W 12/8/2007 A (ot) 2-2 T 2/6/1914 H A 4-3 W 3/12/1949 A 8-3 W 11/15/1985 A 5-7 L 2/1/2005 A 8-1 W 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 2/11/1914 A 1-3 L 3/4/1950 A 1-4 L 1/31/1986 H 3-2 W A A EG 1/6/2006 A (ot) 1-1 T Western Michigan 2/28/1914 H 4-1 W 3/11/1950 H 2-1 W 3/15/1986 N 6-3 W 1/27/2006 H 1-2 L 1/30/1915 H A 4-2 W 3/3/1951 H A 4-0 W 11/15/1986 H 4-1 W 1/7/2007 A 3-2 W Series tied, 2-2-0 2/23/1915 A 3-1 W 3/10/1951 A 1-5 L 1/13/1987 A 2-4 L 2/2/2007 H 5-2 W 12/29/1981 A 1-3 L 2/12/1916 H A 2-0 W 3/1/1952 A 3-4 L 11/14/1987 A 7-2 W 11/10/2007 H 4-0 W 12/30/1981 A 2-4 L 2/26/1916 A 4-2 W 3/8/1952 H A 2-5 L 1/17/1988 H 8-1 W N 2/8/2008 A 3-2 W 3/21/1986 H 4-2 W 2/17/1917 A 0-2 L 2/28/1953 H A 5-2 W 11/11/1988 H 6-3 W N 3/22/1986 H 7-2 W A U.S. International 3/3/1917 H 5-0 W 3/7/1953 A 4-2 W 1/31/1989 A 1-3 L Western Ontario 3/10/1917 A 0-2 L 2/27/1954 A (ot) 3-3 T 11/10/1989 A 2-6 L Harvard trails, 0-2-0 1 G Harvard leads, 1-0-0 2/8/1919 N 4-1 W 3/6/1954 H (ot) 5-5 T 1/12/1990 H 11-0 W 12/18/1979 H 2-7 L P A 12/1/1984 A 7-2 W 1/17/1920 H 5-4 W 2/26/1955 H 9-1 W 11/10/1990 H 7-1 W 12/19/1979 H 3-8 L 2/21/1920 N 2 3-0 W 3/5/1955 A 4-1 W 1/12/1991 A 2-5 L Vermont Williams 2/5/1921 N 2 7-0 W 3/3/1956 A 0-1 L 11/23/1991 H (ot) 2-2 T A Harvard leads, 35-23-3 (Harvard leads, 18-0-0) 2/26/1921 H 13-1 W 3/10/1956 H 2-0 W 2/7/1992 A (ot) 5-5 T S A G 1/6/1971 H 2-3 L 1/13/1909 H 10-2 W 2/11/1922 H 6-2 W 3/2/1957 H 4-2 W 11/21/1992 A (ot) 5-5 T A 2/7/1973 A 8-4 W 2/9/1915 H 9-1 W 2/25/1922 A 3-1 W 3/9/1957 A 4-0 W 2/12/1993 H 4-1 W A 2/7/1975 H 10-1 W 1/20/1926 H 4-1 W 1/20/1923 A 3-2 W 3/1/1958 A 6-2 W 11/12/1993 H 4-0 W K A G 11/23/1976 A 5-2 W 2/14/1940 H 4-3 W 3/3/1923 H 0-3 L 3/8/1958 H 6-0 W 12/11/1993 A 12-1 W A 11/22/1977 H 6-3 W 2/5/1941 A 3-2 W 3/7/1923 A 2-1 W 2/28/1959 H 2-1 W 11/11/1994 A 2-3 L K A 12/14/1978 A 4-7 L 1/7/1942 H 7-1 W 2/9/1924 H 0-3 L 3/7/1959 A (ot) 5-5 T 2/4/1995 H 3-2 W K 1/4/1980 H (ot) 3-4 L 1/16/1943 H 11-0 W 3/1/1924 A 1-6 L 2/27/1960 A 5-0 W 11/17/1995 H 5-2 W A A A 3/7/1981 A 4-9 L 3/5/1947 H 16-3 W 1/17/1925 H (ot) 3-2 W 3/5/1960 H 2-3 L 2/9/1996 A 5-6 L A 1/13/1982 H 3-5 L 2/21/1948 A 5-1 W 2/14/1925 H 2-3 L 2/25/1961 H 6-2 W 11/15/1996 A (ot) 2-2 T 1 A 1/11/1983 A 7-2 W 2/26/1949 N 5-3 W 2/25/1925 H (3ot) 0-1 L 3/1/1961 A (ot) 1-1 T 2/7/1997 H 3-2 W A A 11/26/1983 H (ot) 4-3 W 1/17/1950 H 10-0 W 2/13/1926 H 4-0 W 2/24/1962 A 2-1 W 11/15/1997 H 1-3 L 2 1 G 1/5/1985 H 6-1 W 1/13/1951 N 21-4 W 2/27/1926 N 2-0 W 3/3/1962 H 9-3 W 2/14/1998 A 3-5 L 3 A A E5 2/22/1985 A 9-3 W 12/28/1951 N 13-0 W 2/19/1927 H 6-2 W 2/23/1963 H 6-5 W 3/21/1998 N 4-1 W 1/4/1986 A 2-3 L 2/14/1956 H 10-3 W 2/26/1927 A 2-1 W 2/29/1964 A 12-2 W 11/21/1998 A 1-7 L 2/21/1986 H 7-3 W 2/20/1957 A 7-2 W 2/25/1928 A (ot) 2-1 W 3/2/1963 A 6-0 W 2/12/1999 H 3-2 W A G 1/3/1987 H 7-1 W 2/12/1958 H 9-1 W 3/3/1928 H 2-0 W 3/7/1964 H 3-2 W 1/7/2000 H 3-2 W A 2/21/1987 A 3-0 W 12/6/1958 A 9-2 W 3/2/1929 H 2-1 W 2/27/1965 H 3-4 L 2/26/2000 A 5-2 W 1/2/1988 A (ot) 3-4 L 2/13/1963 H 6-3 W 3/9/1929 A 0-1 L 3/6/1965 A 5-4 W 1/13/2001 A 1-3 L 1 3 2/19/1988 H 2-3 L Springfield, Mass. 3/13/1929 A (3ot) 2-3 L 1/1/1966 N 2-3 L 3/2/2001 H 6-4 W 2 E 3/12/1988 N EG 7-1 W Troy, N.Y. 3/1/1930 A (ot) 3-2 W 2/26/1966 A 5-8 L 3/9/2001 H 5-4 W 70 3 G G E 1/7/1989 H 3-2 W RPI Christmas Tournament 3/8/1930 H 1-3 L 3/5/1966 H 5-6 L 3/10/2001 H 7-4 W G A 2/17/1989 A 5-3 W 3/12/1930 H (3ot) 2-2 T 2/25/1967 H 7-3 W 1/12/2002 H 4-3 W Wisconsin G 3/10/1989 N EG (ot) 2-3 L 2/28/1931 H 1-5 L 3/4/1967 A 7-3 W 3/1/2002 A 3-4 L Harvard trails, 1-8-0 3/7/1931 A 1-3 L 2/24/1968 A 7-1 W 12/7/2002 A 6-3 W 12/8/1989 A (ot) 5-6 L 1 12/26/1971 N (ot) 1-2 L G 2/16/1990 H 2-3 L 2/27/1932 A 4-1 W 3/2/1968 H 9-1 W 1/10/2003 H 6-2 W 12/29/1976 A 4-3 W G A 12/7/1990 H 8-2 W 3/5/1932 H (2ot) 1-1 T 2/22/1969 H 7-2 W 11/15/2003 H 4-1 W 12/30/1976 A 5-7 L 3/9/1932 A (2ot) 4-4 T 3/1/1969 A (ot) 2-3 L 2/6/2004 A 7-5 W 2/16/1991 A 1-2 L N 3/20/1982 A 1-6 L 2/25/1933 A 1-4 L 2/28/1970 A 6-2 W 11/12/2004 H 3-1 W 1/3/1992 A 3-1 W N 3/21/1982 A 3-4 L 3/4/1933 H G 4-1 W 3/7/1970 H 9-0 W 1/29/2005 A 5-3 W 2/22/1992 H 4-1 W N2 3/26/1983 N 2-6 L G 1 12/13/1992 H 4-0 W 3/8/1933 H (ot) 4-3 W 12/21/1970 N 6-2 W 11/18/2005 H (ot) 4-3 W 12/21/1985 A 4-5 L A 2/27/1993 A 3-1 W 2/24/1934 A 6-2 W 2/26/1971 H 11-4 W 12/4/2005 A 3-4 L 12/22/1985 A 4-5 L 3/3/1934 H G 1-3 L 3/6/1971 A 11-2 W 11/18/2006 H 2-5 L 1/14/1994 H (ot) 4-4 T 3 12/27/1997 A 3-6 L 3/7/1934 A (2ot) 4-5 L 2/26/1972 A 5-1 W 2/15/2007 A 1-5 L 2/19/1994 A 5-3 W 1 St. Louis, Mo. 3/2/1935 H G (ot) 2-3 L 3/4/1972 H A 8-4 W 3/2/2007 H E 5-2 W 1/13/1995 A 5-2 W 2 Grand Forks, N.D. 3/9/1935 A 4-1 W 2/24/1973 H 9-1 W 3/3/2007 H E 2-1 W 2/18/1995 H 0-5 L 3 Badger Showdown G 1/5/1996 H (ot) 3-4 L 3/13/1935 H 2-3 L 3/3/1973 A 2-1 W 11/28/2007 A (ot) 3-3 T G 3/2/1996 A 1-3 L Yale 2/15/1936 H 5-2 W 2/23/1974 A 1-6 L 2/22/2008 H 6-1 W 1 3/15/1996 N E1 4-3 W 3/7/1936 A 11-0 W 3/2/1974 H 10-3 W New York, N.Y. Harvard leads, 136-72-18 4 2 1/3/1997 A 1-5 L 1 2/27/1937 A 8-5 W 12/28/1974 N 8-3 W Philadelphia, Pa. 2/26/1900 N 4-5 L G 3 3/1/1997 H 4-5 L 1 3/6/1937 H 5-0 W 2/22/1975 H 3-2 W Buffalo, N.Y. 2/17/1901 N 4-0 W 4 1/3/1998 H 3-4 L 1 2/26/1938 A 5-4 W 3/1/1975 A 7-2 W Great Lakes Invitational 2/15/1902 N 3-4 L G 5 3/6/1998 A 7-6 W 3/14/1902 N 1 3-5 L 3/5/1938 H 2-3 L 2/28/1976 A 9-3 W Lake Placid, N.Y. 1/3/1999 A 7-6 W 3/15/1902 N 1 1-4 L 3/10/1938 A 1-2 L 3/6/1976 H 7-2 W 3/5/1999 H 5-3 W 1 2/17/1939 A (ot) 2-2 T 2/26/1977 H 6-2 W 2/21/1903 N 3-0 W G 11/6/1999 H 6-3 W 1 3/4/1939 H 7-3 W 3/5/1977 A 5-3 W 2/27/1903 N 6-2 W G 11/10/2000 H 3-5 L 2/28/1903 N 1 5-1 W 3/2/1940 H 2-4 L 2/25/1978 A 2-3 L 12/9/2000 A 3-5 L 1 3/9/1940 A 1-5 L 3/4/1978 H 3-4 L 2/22/1904 N 5-2 W W 11/9/2001 A 1-5 L 1 3/1/1941 A 2-8 L 2/10/1979 H 1-4 L 2/27/1904 N 4-3 W G 2/8/2002 H 6-0 W 1 3/8/1941 H 2-8 L 3/3/1979 A 5-6 L 2/18/1905 N 7-1 W A 11/9/2002 H 4-2 W 2/17/1906 N 1 4-3 W 2/28/1942 H 2-4 L 2/23/1980 A (ot) 6-6 T 2/22/2003 A 5-2 W 2/16/1907 N 1 3-2 W 3/7/1942 A 3-4 L 3/1/1980 H (ot) 4-4 T 3/14/2003 H E 4-2 W 1 2/27/1943 A 4-1 W 2/14/1981 H 6-2 W 2/15/1908 N 2-3 L G 3/15/2003 H E 5-1 W 1 3/6/1943 H 2-4 L 2/21/1981 A 5-5 T 2/20/1909 N 5-0 W G 11/7/2003 A 6-4 W 2/19/1910 N 1 3-0 W 3/10/1943 H 5-3 W 2/6/1982 H 1-1 T 2/27/2004 H 4-6 L 1 2/9/1946 A 2-9 L 2/20/1982 A 3-5 L 2/18/1911 N 3-2 W A 3/5/2004 H E 3-0 W 2/17/1912 H A 4-0 W 3/1/1947 H 4-6 L 2/5/1983 A 0-5 L 3/6/2004 H E 5-3 W 2/21/1912 A 2-3 L 3/8/1947 A 2-4 L 2/19/1983 H 3-0 W 3/6/1948 A 3-4 L 2/4/1984 H 2-1 W

GoCrimson.com Year in Review 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Year in Review 2007-08 Season Recap

In a year of streaks, the 2007-08 Harvard men’s Harvard lost just once in its next five games, goal and two assists in the final, while Tallett was hockey team had its best run at the end of the as Brian McCafferty scored the game-winner in a +7 in the two Beanpot games. season, narrowly missing the ECAC Hockey title 2-1 home win against rival Cornell, Doug Rogers Undaunted by what could have been a and the NCAA tournament and re-establishing struck in overtime to beat Boston University by heartbreaking loss, the Crimson built momentum itself as one of the nation’s top teams. the same score, Michael Biegea netted the first from its Beanpot comeback, going 5-0-1 to It was one season that felt like three distinct three goals of his career in a 3-3 tie at Yale and close the regular season. The run started with a campaigns. The Crimson got off to a 6-2-1 start, Taylor netted the game’s only goal—a highlight- 3-2 home win against No. 17 Princeton fueled climbing to a No. 12 national ranking. Harvard reel, shorthanded effort in the third period—at by a Rogers hat trick. The Crimson then rolled then struggled through its next nine contests but home against Dartmouth. over 16th-ranked Quinnipiac, 4-1, and posted lost just twice in the final 11regular-season games A 4-2 loss at No. 19 Rensselaer started a a 6-1 drubbing of Ivy nemesis Yale. Against the before putting together one of its trademark midseason skid that saw the Crimson play strong Bulldogs, Richter made 37 saves and became the playoff runs to reach the league championship games at Vermont and No. 18 Quinnipiac, only first Crimson goaltender to score a goal. final for the sixth time in the last seven years. to come away with ties in both contests. Harvard Jimmy Fraser tallied the third-period winner Harvard finished the season ranked 16th in the also made its first trip to the Buckeye State to in a 2-1 victory against Brown on Senior Night at USCHO.com/CSTV Division I Men’s Poll and in compete in the Ohio Hockey Classic, facing the Bright Hockey Center. Following a tie at Colgate, the PairWise rankings that determine the NCAA host Buckeyes and No. 16 St. Cloud State. the Crimson also won on Cornell’s Senior Night. Championship field. The Crimson finished one The Crimson seemed to solve its problems over Seniors Taylor, Paul Dufault and Tyler Magura win shy of ECAC Hockey’s automatic NCAA the January exam break. A two-goal night by Jon scored Harvard’s goals in a 3-1 win at Lynah Rink berth and two spots back of the final at-large Pelle paced Harvard in a 3-1 win at Dartmouth to close the regular season. selection in the PairWise. Jan. 26, the team’s best overall performance of The wins did not end with the regular season. The team was led, appropriately, by its two the season to that point. A 4-2 loss at Brown Led by a Dave Watters hat trick, the Crimson captains. David MacDonald guided the top followed, but the Crimson rebounded with defeated Quinnipiac, 11-0, in the playoff opener, defensive unit in ECAC Hockey. With Dryden three goals in the first seven minutes of a 3-1 the first of a three-game quarterfinal series. Award-winner Kyle Richter in net, the Crimson win against No. 14 Northeastern in the opening Harvard set a program postseason goals record, allowed a league-low 1.86 goals per ECAC round of the 56th Beanpot. The Crimson killed came within one goal of the overall ECAC contest. MacDonald was a second-team All-Ivy all six NU power plays and held its third straight tournament record and matched the largest League pick, while Richter earned first-team opponent to 20 shots or fewer on the way to its margin of victory in tournament history. The selections from the Ivy League and ECAC first Beanpot final appearance in a decade. Crimson outshot the Bobcats, 48-29, and scored Hockey. Alex Biega made the ECAC third team After Matt McCollem’s first career goal and 14 one more goal than it did in all of December. It and garnered All-Ivy honorable mention. third-period saves helped Harvard hold off Union was Harvard’s largest victory margin in 15 years, 72 Mike Taylor, MacDonald’s co-captain, paced for a 3-2 win, the Crimson returned to TD and Watters posted the first five-point game by a the Harvard forwards. Taylor, a second-team Banknorth Garden for a classic championship- Harvard player since 2003. All-Ivy pick, was one of the nation’s top players game matchup with No. 7 Boston College, the The Bobcats posted a 7-4 win in Game 2, but in the final two months of the season. He eventual 2008 NCAA champion. Harvard rallied Taylor once again came through in the deciding notched at least a point in the final 14 games of from two goals down in the final nine minutes game. The senior notched two goals and an assist his career, igniting the Crimson’s late-season run of regulation before scored at 7:07 in his final game at Bright to lead Harvard to and finishing with a team-high 35 points and 23 of overtime to lift the Eagles to a 6-5 win. Taylor a 3-1 victory and a trip back to Albany for the assists. He and MacDonald were also key parts of scored twice, including the game-tying goal with championship weekend. a Harvard penalty kill that allowed a league-low less than five minutes left to complete a comeback Pelle scored twice and Richter made 31 saves to nine goals in 103 ECAC opponents’ power plays. from a 5-3 third-period hole. He added an assist propel the Crimson to a 3-1 semifinal win against Jon Pelle, a semifinalist for the Walter Brown for the Crimson, which fell just short of its 11th Cornell and yet another ECAC final appearance. Award as the top U.S.-born player in New Beanpot title and first in 15 years. Rogers had a Pelle scored again in the title game, but Princeton England, led the team with 14 goals. Doug goalie stopped Harvard’s other 35 Rogers was the second-leading goal- and point- shots in a 4-1 win for the No. 15 Tigers. scorer with totals of 13-19-32, while Biega led Taylor finished as the league’s top playoff scorer Harvard’s defensemen with 22 points (3-19-22). with 11 points on three goals and eight assists. Ian Tallett, Biega’s defensive partner, shared with Pelle, meanwhile, scored five power-play goals in Rogers the team plus/minus lead at +13. five tournament games to earn a all-tournament The Crimson was also successful in the selection alongside Alex Biega. classroom, placing 15 players on the ECAC All- The Crimson put the final touches on the Academic Team. The total was the league’s third- season at the team’s banquet April 19 at the highest and good for second among Ivy schools. Harvard Club of Boston. Fraser and McCafferty Harvard looked like a title contender from were tabbed as 2008-09 captains, and Taylor the season’s first weekend. Following a 2-1 loss was crowned team MVP with the awarding to defending champion Clarkson in the opener, of the Tudor Cup. Tallett received the Angier Harvard pulled away to a 6-1 win against No. Trophy as the team’s most improved player, while 16 St. Lawrence, ECAC Hockey’s reigning Michael Biega and McCollem shared the Percey regular-season champ. Richter made a career- Award as top rookies. MacDonald and Magura high 42 saves in the win. The next weekend, he received the Weiland Award for devotion to backstopped Harvard to a 3-0 win against No. hockey. Along with the rest of the senior class, 16 Rensselaer and a 4-0 blanking of Union, they were recognized for guiding the Crimson to becoming the second Crimson goalie and first in a successful season and paving the way for more Alex Biega, Doug Rogers and Mike Taylor celebrate 25 years to post shutouts on consecutive nights. Rogers’ Beanpot final goal against Boston College. wins in the future.

GoCrimson.com Year in Review :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey 2007-08 Results 17-13-4 overall, 12-7-3 ECAC Hockey League, 7-2-1 Ivy League, 10-5-0 home, 5-5-4 road, 2-3-0 neutral Date Opponent Time/Result Shots PP PK Goal Scorers Goaltender (saves/GA) Att. Sun, Oct. 14 Prince Edward Island ^ W, 6-3 34/34 0/8 4/4 Rogers 2, McCollem, M. Biega, Richter (11/3), Carroll (10/0) 250 Michaud, Watters Fri, Nov. 2 at No. 11/11 Clarkson * L, 1-2 26/22 1/5 5/5 Meintel Richter (20/2) 2,643 Sat, Nov. 3 at 16/- St. Lawrence * W, 6-1 23/43 0/3 6/7 Christian 2, Rogers, Dufault, Richter (42/1) 2,385 Pelle, MacDonald Fri, Nov. 9 No. 16/- Rensselaer * W, 3-0 30/28 1/4 3/3 A. Biega, McCafferty, Christian Richter (28/0) 2,436 Sat, Nov. 10 Union * W, 4-0 21/27 1/4 7/7 Taylor, Huxley, Dufault, Magura Richter (27/0) 2,147 Fri, Nov. 16 Cornell * W, 2-1 35/23 0/3 3/4 Pelle, McCafferty Richter (22/1) 2,915 Sat, Nov. 17 Colgate * L, 1-2 27/34 0/3 2/3 Dufault Richter (32/2) 2,461 Tue, Nov. 20 at Boston University W, 2-1 (ot) 20/40 0/7 3/4 Pelle, Rogers Richter (39/1) 5,325 Wed, Nov. 28 at Yale * T, 3-3 (ot) 26/36 1/2 3/3 M. Biega 3 Richter (33/3) 3,312 Sat, Dec. 1 Dartmouth * W, 1-0 33/27 0/2 3/3 Taylor Richter (27/0) 2,096 Tue, Dec. 4 at No. 19/- Rensselaer * L, 2-4 36/29 1/4 3/3 M. Biega, Watters Richter (25/4) 2,665 Sat, Dec. 8 at Vermont T, 2-2 (ot) 37/22 0/3 2/3 Coskren 2 Richter (20/2) 4,003 Sun, Dec. 9 U.S. Nat’l Under-18 Team ^ L, 3-4 32/20 0/2 1/1 Watters, Pelle, McCabe Carroll (19/3), Riley (7/1) 1,112 Wed, Dec. 12 No. 15/15 Boston College L, 2-7 36/27 2/8 6/10 M. Biega 2 Richter (16/6), Carroll (4/1) 2,469 Sat, Dec. 29 at Ohio State 1 L, 2-4 37/31 0/4 3/4 M. Biega, McCafferty Richter (27/4) 4.398 Sun, Dec. 30 No. 16/- St. Cloud State 1 L, 1-4 29/33 1/5 4/6 Pelle Richter (29/3) 4,087 Fri, Jan. 4 at No. 18/- Quinnipiac * T, 3-3 (ot) 24/20 1/3 5/5 M. Biega, Taylor, Morin Richter (17/3) 3,392 Sat, Jan. 5 at Princeton * L, 1-2 32/36 0/2 4/4 Fraser Richter (34/2) 2,043 Fri, Jan. 11 St. Lawrence * L, 1-3 40/24 1/3 6/7 M. Biega Richter (21/3) 3,011 Sat, Jan. 12 No. 11/11 Clarkson * L, 2-4 33/28 0/3 3/3 Meintel, Taylor Richter (24/3) 2,673 Sat, Jan. 26 at Dartmouth * W, 3-1 30/19 1/4 4/4 Pelle 2, Rogers Richter (18/1) 4,426 Fri, Feb. 1 at Brown * L, 2-4 34/20 1/9 3/4 Meintel, Smith Richter (16/4) 1,713 73 Mon, Feb. 4 vs. No. 14/14 Northeastern 2 W, 3-1 33/19 0/4 6/6 Pelle, Taylor, Rogers Richter (18/1) 17,565 Fri, Feb. 8 at Union * W, 3-2 22/25 1/3 4/4 A. Biega, McCollem, Dufault Richter (24/2) 1,990 Mon, Feb. 11 vs. No. 7/7 Boston College 2 L, 5-6 (ot) 26/33 1/3 1/1 Taylor 2, McCollem, Rogers, Pelle Richter (27/6) 17,565 Fri, Feb. 15 No. 17/- Princeton * W, 3-2 21/35 2/7 7/8 Rogers 3 Richter (33/2) 2,667 Sat, Feb. 16 No. 16/- Quinnipiac * W, 4-1 33/38 1/6 3/4 Michaud 2, McCollem, Rogers Richter (37/1) 2,882 Fri, Feb. 22 Yale * W, 6-1 30/41 3/8 8/9 Pelle 2, Watters, Taylor, Richter (37/1), Riley (3/0) 2,552 Richter, Rogers Sat, Feb. 23 Brown * W, 2-1 36/17 0/4 2/3 McCollem, Fraser Richter (16/1) 2,590 Fri, Feb. 29 at Colgate * T, 3-3 (ot) 29/28 1/3 4/4 Dufault, A. Biega, Rogers Richter (25/3) 1,482 Sat, March 1 at Cornell * W, 3-1 22/23 0/3 4/4 Taylor, Dufault, Magura Richter (22/1) 4,267 Fri, March 14 Quinnipiac 3 W, 11-0 48/29 3/8 4/4 Watters 3, Rolecek 2, Taylor, Richter (27/0), Riley (2/0) 1,731 McCollem, Rogers, Michaud, Pelle, MacDonald Sat, March 15 Quinnipiac 3 L, 4-7 45/27 1/7 2/6 Meintel 2, Pelle, Michaud Richter (20/6) 1,321 Sun, March 16 Quinnipiac 3 W, 3-1 29/27 1/3 4/4 Taylor 2, Rogers Richter (26/1) 1,822 Fri, March 21 No. 20/- Cornell 4 W, 3-1 33/32 3/6 3/4 Pelle 2, Watters Richter (31/1) 5,074 Sat, March 22 No. 15/15 Princeton 4 L, 1-4 36/28 1/3 3/4 Pelle Richter (24/4) 4,851

Game-winning goal scorers, winning goalies in bold ^ Exhibition * ECAC Hockey game 1 Ohio Hockey Classic, Columbus, Ohio (Value City Arena) 2 56th Annual Beanpot, Boston, Mass. (TD Banknorth Garden) 3 Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship Quarterfinal Series, Cambridge, Mass. (Bright Hockey Center) 4 Bank of America ECAC Hockey Championship Weekend, Albany, N.Y. (Times Union Center)

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Year in Review 2007-08 Statistics Player Statistics Overall ECAC Hockey Career No. Name GP G A P Sh +/- P-M PP SH GW GP G A P Sh +/- P-M PP SH GW GP G A P 10 Mike Taylor 34 12 23 35 90 +8 4-8 0 3 4 22 6 13 19 63 +7 4-8 0 2 2 125 29 41 70 15 Doug Rogers 34 13 19 32 88 +13 15-30 6 0 4 22 8 9 17 56 +6 9-18 4 0 2 67 20 36 56 11 Jon Pelle 34 14 12 26 121 -4 15-30 8 0 3 22 6 10 16 79 +1 13-26 2 0 2 135 39 58 97 3 Alex Biega 34 3 19 22 119 +10 14-28 1 0 1 22 3 8 11 70 +1 8-16 1 0 1 67 9 31 40 2 Brian McCafferty 31 3 14 17 47 -11 9-18 1 0 1 20 2 10 12 26 -1 6-12 1 0 1 95 6 41 47 27 Michael Biega 34 9 7 16 74 -6 5-10 5 0 0 22 6 6 12 48 -3 5-10 3 0 0 34 9 7 16 12 Paul Dufault 34 7 7 14 48 0 7-14 1 0 2 22 6 6 12 34 +4 3-6 1 0 2 98 17 31 48 23 Matt McCollem 31 5 9 14 53 +1 14-28 1 0 0 20 3 6 9 29 0 12-24 1 0 0 88 25 16 41 21 Alex Meintel 27 5 9 14 49 +6 6-12 2 0 0 16 3 5 8 27 +1 1-2 2 0 0 31 5 9 14 22 Dave Watters 27 6 7 13 46 0 8-16 4 0 0 16 2 2 4 21 0 2-4 1 0 0 107 21 24 45 9 Jimmy Fraser 33 2 11 13 67 -2 21-42 0 0 1 21 2 6 8 38 -1 12-24 0 0 1 97 11 34 45 39 Pier-Olivier Michaud 19 4 3 7 20 +5 1-2 0 0 1 12 2 1 3 11 +1 1-2 0 0 1 19 4 3 7 14 David MacDonald 34 2 5 7 29 +7 13-26 0 0 0 22 1 3 4 20 +7 6-12 0 0 0 115 2 12 14 5 Jack Christian 27 3 2 5 15 +1 12-24 0 1 0 16 3 1 4 9 +6 8-16 0 1 0 91 3 9 12 16 Nick Coskren 20 2 3 5 32 +5 4-8 0 0 0 16 0 3 3 20 +3 0-0 0 0 0 63 6 13 19 17 Tyler Magura 34 2 3 5 33 +2 7-14 0 1 0 22 2 1 3 15 +1 6-12 0 1 0 134 7 15 22 7 Chad Morin 31 1 4 5 36 +7 17-42 1 0 0 20 1 2 3 21 +6 10-20 1 0 0 60 3 11 14 8 Ian Tallett 22 0 5 5 15 +13 9-18 0 0 0 14 0 2 2 10 +2 6-12 0 0 0 24 0 5 5 19 Steve Rolecek 20 2 2 4 24 -1 2-4 0 0 0 10 0 1 1 10 -4 1-2 0 0 0 56 5 9 14 28 Chris Huxley 22 1 3 4 25 +1 8-16 1 0 0 16 1 3 4 20 0 6-12 1 0 0 22 1 3 4 25 Michael Del Mauro 17 0 2 2 12 0 2-4 0 0 0 14 0 2 2 9 0 0-0 0 0 0 17 0 2 2 33 Kyle Richter 34 1 0 1 1 0 1-2 0 0 0 22 1 0 1 1 0 1-2 0 0 0 52 1 0 1 29 Joe Smith 10 1 0 1 7 -1 2-4 0 0 0 7 1 0 1 5 +1 1-2 0 0 0 10 1 0 1 24 J.D. McCabe 3 0 0 0 1 0 0-0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 +1 0-0 0 0 0 36 1 1 2 Bench 6-12 5-10 Harvard 34 98 169 267 1052 +54 202-412 31 5 17 22 59 100 159 643 +39 126-252 18 4 12 Opponents 34 79 135 214 972 -68 194-426 24 3 13 22 41 69 110 624 -49 115-260 9 2 7 74 Goaltender Statistics Overall ECAC Hockey No. Name GP/GS Min. GA Svs. Sv% GAA Record SO GP/GS Min. GA Svs. Sv% GAA Record SO 33 Kyle Richter 34/34 2023:15 74 884 .923 2.19 17-13-4 3 22/22 1321:44 40 580 .935 1.82 12-7-3 3 1 John Riley 2/0 13:23 0 5 1.000 0.00 0-0-0 0 1/0 4:02 0 3 1.000 0.00 0-0-0 0 35 Ryan Carroll 1/0 17:05 1 4 .800 3.51 0-0-0 0 0/0 – – – – – – – Empty Net 19 17:16 4 11 9:14 1 Harvard 34 2070:59 79 893 .919 2.29 17-13-4 4 22 1335:00 41 583 .934 1.84 12-7-3 3 Opponents 34 2070:59 98 954 .907 2.84 13-17-4 0 22 1335:00 59 584 .908 2.65 7-12-3 0 Returning players in bold

Power Play Situational Records Overall Harvard...... 31/151 (.205) At Home...... 10-5-0 Having 10-19 Shots...... 0-0-0 Opponents...... 24/159 (.151) On the Road...... 5-5-4 Having 20-29 Shots...... 7-4-3 At a Neutral Site...... 2-3-0 Having 30-39 Shots...... 9-7-1 ECAC Hockey In One-Goal Games...... 6-4-0 Having 40 or More Shots...... 1-2-0 Harvard...... 18/90 (.200) In Two-Goal Games...... 5-5-0 Allowing 10-19 Shots...... 3-0-0 Opponents...... 9/103 (.087) In Three-Goal or More Games...... 6-4-0 Allowing 20-29 Shots...... 8-8-3 In Overtime Games...... 1-1-4 Allowing 30-39 Shots...... 3-5-1 Scoring by Period Scoring 4 or More Goals...... 5-2-0 Allowing 40 or More Shots...... 3-0-0 Scoring 3 Goals...... 8-0-3 Outshooting Opponents...... 9-9-3 Overall 1 2 3 ot T Scoring 2 or Fewer Goals...... 4-11-1 Outshot by an Opponent...... 8-4-1 Harvard 31 28 38 1 98 Allowing 4 or More Goals...... 0-9-0 Shots Are Even...... 0-0-0 Opponents 21 26 31 1 79 Allowing 3 Goals...... 0-1-3 First of Back-to-Back Games...... 6-4-2 Allowing 2 or Fewer Goals...... 17-3-1 Second of Back-to-Back Games...... 6-6-0 ECAC Hockey 1 2 3 ot T Scoring First...... 16-4-1 Following a Win...... 9-6-2 Harvard 18 16 25 0 59 Opponent Scores First...... 1-9-3 Following a Loss...... 6-4-2 Opponents 12 10 19 0 41 Leading After One Period...... 10-3-0 Following a Tie...... 2-2-0 Trailing After One Period...... 1-8-2 vs. Hockey East Teams...... 2-2-1 Tied After One Period...... 6-2-2 vs. CCHA Teams...... 0-1-0 Leading After Two Periods...... 11-2-1 vs. WCHA Teams...... 0-1-0 Trailing After Two Periods...... 0-10-0 vs. Ranked Teams...... 6-7-1 Tied After Two Periods...... 6-1-3 in Postseason...... 3-2-0

GoCrimson.com Year in Review :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey ECAC Hockey

2007-08 Standings ECAC Hockey Awards Conference Only Overall Pts GP Record Pct. GF-GA GP Record Pct. GF-GA Player of the Year 1. Clarkson 33 22 15-4-3 .750 72-47 39 22-13-4 .615 108-93 Lee Jubinville, Princeton 2. Princeton 28 22 14-8-0 .636 75-57 35 21-14-0 .600 112-95 Ken Dryden Award (Top Goalie) 3. Harvard 27 22 12-7-3 .614 59-41 34 17-13-4 .559 98-79 Kyle Richter, Harvard 4. Union 25 22 10-7-5 .568 50-57 35 15-14-6 .514 79-91 Rookie of the Year Cornell 25 22 12-9-1 .568 60-43 36 19-14-3 .569 102-78 , Cornell 6. Quinnipiac 22 22 9-9-4 .500 62-67 39 20-15-4 .564 120-118 Yale 22 22 9-9-4 .500 58-61 34 16-14-4 .529 93-94 Best Defensive Forward 8. Colgate 21 22 8-9-5 .477 58-55 42 18-18-6 .500 113-104 , Clarkson 9. St. Lawrence 16 22 7-13-2 .364 58-68 37 13-20-4 .405 103-109 Best Defensive Defenseman 10. Rensselaer 15 22 6-13-3 .341 45-69 38 11-23-4 .342 79-113 Mike Moore, Princeton Brown 15 22 6-13-3 .341 50-68 31 6-21-4 .258 67-108 Dartmouth 15 22 6-13-3 .341 64-78 32 12-16-4 .438 98-107 Coach of the Year Guy Gadowsky, Princeton Bank of America Regular-Season Stat Leaders Turfer Athletic Award Princeton ECAC Hockey (ECAC Hockey Games Only) Championship Results Points All-ECAC Hockey Teams 1. 31 Lee Jubinville, Princeton (10g, 21a) First Team First Round t-14. 19 Mike Taylor, Harvard (6g, 13a) Kyle Richter, G, Harvard No. 5 Cornell def. No. 12 Dartmouth Goals Grant Clitsome, D, Clarkson 3-2, 3-5, 6-0 1. 16 Steve Zalewski, Clarkson Mike Moore, D, Princeton No. 6 Quinnipiac def. No. 11 Brown t-9. 8 Doug Rogers, Harvard Nick Johnson, F, Dartmouth 7-6 (ot), 7-1 Lee Jubinville, F, Princeton No. 7 Yale def. No. 10 Rensselaer Assists Steve Zalewski, F, Clarkson 75 3-2 (3ot), 3-2 (ot) 1. 21 Lee Jubinville, Princeton t-9. 13 Mike Taylor, Harvard Second Team No. 8 Colgate def. No. 9 St. Lawrence , G, Clarkson 2-5, 3-2, 3-1 Power-Play Points Lane Caffaro, D, Union 1. 12 Riley Nash, Cornell (5g, 7a) Sean Hurley, D, Brown Quarterfinals t-5. 9 Doug Rogers, Harvard (4g, 5a) Tyler Burton, F, Colgate No. 8 Colgate def. No. 1 Clarkson Power-Play Goals Colin Greening, F, Cornell 0-1, 4-3, 3-2 (2ot) Brett Wilson, F, Princeton No. 2 Princeton def. No. 7 Yale 1. 6 Nick Johnson, Dartmouth 3-0, 3-4, 4-0 t-5. 4 Doug Rogers, Harvard Third Team Shorthanded Goals , G, Colgate No. 3 Harvard def. No. 6 Quinnipiac Alex Biega, D, Harvard 11-0, 4-7, 3-1 1. 3 Matt Beca, Clarkson Zach Miskovic, D, St. Lawrence t-2. 2 Mike Taylor, Harvard No. 5 Cornell def. No. 4 Union Evan Stephens, D, Dartmouth 3-2, 3-2 Game-Winning Goals , F, Yale Matt Beca, F, Clarkson Semifinals t-1. 4 Colin Greening, Cornell Brett Wilson, Princeton Jesse Winchester, F, Colgate No. 2 Princeton def. No. 8 Colgate t-7. 2 Paul Dufault, Harvard 3-0 All-Rookie Team Jon Pelle, Harvard Corey Milan, G, Union No. 3 Harvard def. No. 5 Cornell Doug Rogers, Harvard Mike Devin, D, Cornell 3-1 Mike Taylor, Harvard Evan Stephens, D, Dartmouth Consolation Defenseman Points Riley Nash, F, Cornell No. 5 Cornell def. No. 8 Colgate 1. 18 Evan Stephens, Dartmouth (4g, 14a) , F, Rensselaer 4-2 t-10 12 Brian McCafferty, Harvard (2g, 10a) Adam Presizniuk, F, Union All-Tournament Team Championship Freshman Points 1. 20 Riley Nash, Cornell (8g, 12a) Zane Kalemba, G, Princeton (MOP) No. 2 Princeton def. No. 3 Harvard Alex Biega, D, Harvard 4-1 Goals-Against Average Mike Moore, D, Princeton 1. 1.82 Kyle Richter, Harvard Jon Pelle, F, Harvard Save Percentage Kevin Lohry, F, Princeton Michael Kennedy, F, Cornell 1. .935 Kyle Richter, Harvard

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Year in Review Ivy League

2007-08 Standings Ivy League Awards Conference Only Overall Pts GP Record Pct. GF-GA GP Record Pct. GF-GA Player of the Year 1. Princeton 18 10 9-1-0 .900 36-20 35 21-14-0 .600 112-95 Lee Jubinville, Princeton 2. Harvard 15 10 7-2-1 .750 26-16 34 17-13-4 .559 98-79 Rookie of the Year 3. Cornell 11 10 5-4-1 .550 27-16 36 19-14-3 .569 102-78 Riley Nash, Cornell 4. Yale 8 10 3-5-2 .400 25-34 34 16-14-4 .529 93-94 5. Brown 6 10 3-7-0 .300 23-33 31 6-21-4 .258 67-108 All-Ivy League Teams 6. Dartmouth 2 10 1-9-0 .100 23-41 32 12-16-4 .438 98-107 First Team Kyle Richter, G, Harvard Mike Moore, D, Princeton Sean Hurley, D, Brown Regular-Season Stat Leaders (Ivy League Games Only) Lee Jubinville, F, Princeton Nick Johnson, F, Dartmouth Points Goals-Against Average Sean Backman, F, Yale 1. 17 Lee Jubinville, Princeton (4g, 13a) 1. 1.33 , Cornell 8. 10 Mike Taylor, Harvard (3g, 7a) 2. 1.61 Kyle Richter, Harvard Second Team 9. 9 Jon Pelle, Harvard (5g, 4a) Zane Kalemba, G, Princeton Save Percentage 10t. 8 Doug Rogers, Harvard (5g, 3a) Evan Stephens, D, Dartmouth 1. .951 Ben Scrivens, Cornell David MacDonald, D, Harvard Goals 2. .942 Kyle Richter, Harvard Colin Greening, F, Cornell 1. 9 Colin Greening, Cornell Winning Percentage Brett Wilson, F, Princeton 4t. 5 Jon Pelle, Harvard Riley Nash, F, Cornell Doug Rogers, Harvard 1. .900 Zane Kalemba, Princeton (9-1-0) Mike Taylor, F, Harvard 2. .750 Kyle Richter, Harvard (7-2-1) Assists Honorable Mention 1. 13 Lee Jubinville, Princeton Ben Scrivens, G, Cornell 4t. 7 Mike Taylor, Harvard Tom Dignard, D, Yale Alex Biega, D, Harvard 76 Power-Play Points Topher Scott, F, Cornell 1. 6 Jon Grecu, Dartmouth (2g, 4a) Ryan Garbutt, F, Brown Riley Nash, Cornell (2g, 4a) Nick Johnson, Dartmouth (2g, 4a) 4t. 5 Jon Pelle, Harvard (2g, 3a) 9t. 4 Doug Rogers, Harvard (3g, 1a) Alex Biega, Harvard (0g, 4a) Power-Play Goals 1t. 4 Sean Backman, Yale 2t. 3 Doug Rogers, Harvard 4t. 2 Jon Pelle, Harvard Shorthanded Goals 1. 2 Mike Taylor, Harvard Game-Winning Goals 1. 3 Colin Greening, Cornell Brett Wilson, Princeton 3t. 2 Jon Pelle, Harvard Defenseman Points 1t. 8 Evan Stephens, Dartmouth (2g, 6a) Sean Hurley, Brown (1g, 7a) Jody Peterson, Princeotn (1g, 7a) 7t. 5 Brian McCafferty, Harvard (1g, 4a) Alex Biega, Harvard (0g, 5a) Freshman Points 1. 12 Riley Nash, Cornell (3g, 9a) 4t. 6 Matt McCollem, Harvard (1g, 5a) 8t. 4 Michael Biega, Harvard (3g, 1a)

Mike Taylor’s teammates and the Bright Hockey Center crowd celebrate his goal Dec. 1 against Dartmouth.

GoCrimson.com Record Book 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book Individual Records

Points, Period Points by Defenseman, Season 5...... Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Northeastern 46...... Mark Fusco ’83 (33 GP / 1982-83); 13g, 33a (2/7/55, Beanpot semifinal); 4g, 1a Points by Defenseman, Career Also a Beanpot record 135...... Mark Fusco ’83 (112 GP / 1979-83); 44g, 91a Points, Game Longest Point Streak 10...... Bob Cleary ’58 vs. Tufts (1/8/58); 4g, 6a 29 games...... Scott Fusco ’85-6; in 1984-85 season 9...... David Key ’49 vs. Williams (3/5/47); 3g, 6a 24 games...... Bob Cleary ’58; in 1957-58 season Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Boston University (2/16/55); 1g, 8a 8...... Sid Greeley ’47 vs. Williams (3/5/47); 2g, 6a Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Providence (12/17/54); 6g, 2a Scott Fusco ’85-6 George McManama ’70 vs. Penn (1/6/68); 2g, 6a Points, Season 89...... Bill Cleary ’56 (21 GP / 1954-55); 42g, 47a 81...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (32 GP / 1984-85); 34g, 47a 76...... Bob Cleary ’58 (30 GP / 1957-58); 33g, 43a 73...... Bob Cleary ’58 (26 GP / 1956-57); 36g, 37a 72...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (27 GP / 1970-71); 22g, 50a 68...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (31 GP / 1985-86); 24g, 44a 67...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (34 GP / 1986-87); 37g, 30a 63...... ’91 (34 GP / 1988-89); 15g, 48a Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (28 GP / 1990-91); 24g, 39a Ted Drury ’93-4 (31 GP / 1992-93); 22g, 41a 62...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (28 GP / 1968-69); 24g, 38a Bob Cleary ’58 60...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (32 GP / 1988-89); 31g, 29a Bill Cleary ’56 78 ’95 (32 GP / 1993-94); 25g, 35a Points, Career 240...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (123 GP / 1981-86); 107g, 133a 225...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (128 GP / 1984-89); 111g, 114a 201...... Bob Cleary ’58 (81 GP / 1955-58); 92g, 107a 194...... Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (120 GP / 1987-91); 66g, 128a 187...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (79 GP / 1968-71); 60g, 127a 162...... C.J. Young ’90 (124 GP / 1986-90); 84g, 78a 161...... George Hughes ’79 (98 GP / 1975-79); 66g, 95a 155...... Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 (92 GP / 1985-89); 58g, 96a 151...... Bob McManama ’73 (75 GP / 1970-73); 64g, 87a 148...... Mike Vukonich ’91 (114 GP / 1987-91); 74g, 74a 147...... ’03 (128 GP / 1999-2003); 64g, 83a 144...... Ted Donato ’91 (106 GP / 1987-91); 50g, 94a 142...... Randy Roth ’75 (80 GP / 1972-75); 54g, 88a 140...... Dave Hynes ’73 (74 GP / 1970-73); 64g, 76a 139...... Steve Martins ’95 (98 GP / 1991-95); 59g, 80a 138...... Tim Pettit ’04 (135 GP / 2000-04); 57g, 81a 136...... Steve Owen ’71 (80 GP / 1968-71); 48g, 88a 135...... Mark Fusco ’83 (112 GP / 1979-83); 44g, 91a 134...... Tim Barakett ’87 (127 GP / 1983-87); 55g, 79a 123...... Dan DeMichele ’71 (75 GP / 1968-71); 77g, 46a ’01 (122 GP / 1997-2001); 45g, 88a

(From left) Class of ’71 linemates Steve Owen, Joe Cavanagh and Dan DeMichele still reside among Harvard’s top 20 all-time point scorers.

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Goals, Period Power-Play Goals, Season 4...... Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Northeastern (2/7/55, Beanpot) 20...... Brian Farrell ’94 (F); 1993-94 Also a Beanpot record 19...... Tim Smith ’86 (F); 1984-85 Chris Bala ’01 at Vermont (3/6/98) Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 (F); 1986-87 Goals, Game C.J. Young ’90 (F); 1988-89 17...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1986-87 6...... Ian Baldwin ’33 vs. Brown (1/17/33) Sean McCann ’94 (D); 1993-94 Amory Hubbard ’53 vs. Williams (1/13/51) Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Providence (12/17/54) Power-Play Goals, Career Goals, Season 52...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1984-89 42...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (F); 1981-86 42...... Bill Cleary ’56 (21 GP / 1954-55) Brian Farrell ’94 38...... C.J. Young ’90 (F); 1986-90 37...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (34 GP / 1986-87) 31...... Tim Smith ’86 (F); 1982-86 36...... Bob Cleary ’58 (26 GP / 1956-57) Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 (F); 1985-89 34...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (32 GP / 1984-85) 33...... Dan DeMichele ’71 (27 GP / 1970-71) Shorthanded Goals, Season Scott Fusco ’85-6 (32 GP / 1982-83) 6...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1986-87 C.J. Young ’90 (34 GP / 1988-89) 4...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (F); 1982-83 32...... Bob Cleary ’58 (30 GP / 1957-58) Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (F); 1988-89 Mike Vukonich ‘91 (28 GP / 1990-91) Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1988-89 31...... Tim Smith ’86 (32 GP / 1984-85) Shorthanded Goals , Career Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (32 GP / 1988-89) 12...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1984-89 Goals, Career 7...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (F); 1981-86 Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 111...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (128 GP / 1984-89) Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (D); 1987-91 107...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (123 GP / 1981-86) Longest Goal-Scoring Streak 92...... Bob Cleary ’58 (81 GP / 1955-58) 15 games...... Bill Cleary ’56; 1954-55 84...... C.J. Young ’90 (124 GP / 1986-90) 77...... Dan DeMichele ’71 (75 GP / 1968-71) Fastest Three Goals 74...... Mike Vukonich ’91 (112 GP / 1987-91) 0:49...... C.J. Young ’90 vs. Dartmouth; 12/12/88 66...... George Hughes ’79 (98 GP / 1975-79) (over two periods; all shorthanded) 79 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (120 GP / 1987-91) 2:08...... Sid Greeley ’47 vs. Princeton; 2/19/47 64...... Bob McManama ’73 (75 GP / 1970-73) (without leaving the ice) Dave Hynes ’73 (74 GP / 1970-73) Fastest Goal to Start a Game Tim Smith ’86 (122 GP / 1982-86) 8 seconds...... George Harding, Jr. ’43 Dominic Moore ’03 Dominic Moore ’03 (128 GP / 1999-2003) vs. Williams; 1/16/43 61...... Gene Kinasewich ’64 (75 GP / 1961-64) 60...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (79 GP / 1968-71) Goals by Defenseman, Season 22...... Sean McCann ’94 (33 GP / 1993-94) Goals by Defenseman, Career 44...... Mark Fusco ’83 (112 GP / 1979-83) Game-Winning Goals, Season 10...... Tim Barakett ’87 (F); 1986-87 9...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (F); 1984-85 Tim Barakett ’87 7...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1986-87 Brian Farrell ’94 (F); 1993-94 Game-Winning Goals, Career 17...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (F); 1981-86 16...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1984-89 13...... Tim Barakett ’87 (F); 1983-87 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (F); 1987-91 Dominic Moore ’03 (F); 1999-2003

C.J. Young ’90 Mark Fusco ’83

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book

Assists, Period 4...... George McManama ’70 vs. Boston College (third period, 3/10/70, ECAC quarterfinal) Also an ECAC tournament record Assists, Game 8...... Bill Cleary ’56 vs. Boston University (2/16/55) 7...... George McManama ’70 vs. Boston College (3/10/70, ECAC quarterfinal) Also an ECAC tournament record 6...... Sid Greeley ’47 vs. Williams (3/5/47) David Key ’49 vs. Williams (3/5/47) Bob Cleary ’58 vs. Tufts (1/8/58) George McManama ’70 vs. Penn (1/6/68) 5...... Albert Everts ’44 vs. Boston University (12/15/42) Lane MacDonald ’88-9 at Vermont (2/22/85) Scott Fusco ’85-6 vs. Rensselaer (2/22/86) Tim Smith ’86 vs. Brown (2/1/86) Tim Pettit ’04 vs. Princeton (12/6/03) Assists, Season 50...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (27 GP / 1970-71) Peter Ciavaglia ’91 Lane MacDonald ’88-9 48...... Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (34 GP / 1988-89) 47...... Bill Cleary ’56 (21 GP / 1954-55) Scott Fusco ’85-6 (32 GP / 1984-85) 44...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (31 GP / 1985-86) 43...... Bob Cleary ’58 (30 GP / 1957-58) Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 (33 GP / 1988-89) 41...... Ted Drury ’93-4 (31 GP / 1992-93) 80 39...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (24 GP / 1969-70) Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (28 GP / 1990-91) Assists, Career

133...... Scott Fusco ’85-6 (123 GP / 1981-86) George McManama ’70 Randy Roth ’75 Chris Bala ’01 128...... Peter Ciavaglia ’91 (120 GP / 1987-91) 127...... Joe Cavanagh ’71 (79 GP / 1968-71) 114...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (128 GP / 1984-89) 108...... Bob Cleary ’58 (81 GP / 1955-58) 102...... Mark Benning ’86-7 (95 GP / 1984-87) 96...... Allen Bourbeau ’88-9 (92 GP / 1985-89) 95...... George Hughes ’79 (98 GP / 1975-79) 94...... Ted Donato ’91 (106 GP / 1987-91) 91...... Mark Fusco ’83 (112 GP / 1979-83) 88...... Steve Owen ’71 (80 GP / 1968-71) Randy Roth ’75 (80 GP / 1972-75) Randy Taylor ’87 (120 GP / 1983-87) Steve Moore ’02 (122 GP/1997-2001) Dominic Moore ’03 (128 GP/1999-2003) 81...... Tim Pettit ’04 (135 GP/2000-04) 80...... Steve Martins ’95 (98 GP / 1991-95) Assists by Defenseman, Season 38...... Ed Rossi ’75 (28 GP / 1974-75) Assists by Defenseman, Career 102...... Mark Benning ’86-7 (95 GP / 1984-87) 91...... Mark Fusco ’83 (112 GP / 1979-83)

George Hughes ’79

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Penalties, Season Penalties, Career 52...... Kevan Melrose ’90 (D); 1988-89 131...... Noah Welch ’05 (D); 2001-05 44...... Sean McCann ’94 (D); 1990-91 124...... Sean McCann ’94 (D); 1990-94 43...... Noah Welch ’05 (D); 2004-05 113...... Kevan Melrose ’90 (D); 1987-90 41...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1993-94 109...... Dave McCulloch ’04 (D); 2000-04 40...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1994-95 106...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1991-95 37...... Sean McCann ’94 (D); 1993-94 Mark Moore ’00 (D); 1996-2000 Mark Moore ’00 (D); 1997-98 Penalty Minutes, Season Mark Moore ’00 (D); 1998-99 126...... Kevan Melrose ’90 (D); 1988-89 124...... Kevan Melrose ’90 (D); 1989-90 Kevan Melrose ’90 102...... Dave McCulloch ’04 (D); 2000-01 93...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1993-94 91...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1994-95 Penalty Minutes, Career 300...... Kevan Melrose ’90 (D); 1987-90 270...... Noah Welch ’05 (D); 2001-05 259...... Sean McCann ’94 (D); 1990-94 250...... Steve Martins ’95 (F); 1991-95 248...... Dave McCulloch ’04 (D); 2000-04 236...... Mark Moore ’00 (D); 1996-2000 182...... Steve Flomenhoft ’93 (F); 1989-93 Games Played, Season 36...... Brendan Bernakevitch ’05 (F), 2003-04 Tom Cavanagh ’05 (F), 2003-04 Kevin Du ’07 (F), 2003-04 Tyler Kolarik ’04 (F), 2003-04 Dennis Packard ’04 (F), 2003-04 Tim Pettit ’04 (F), 2003-04 81 Games Played, Career Sean McCann ’94 Noah Welch ’05 138...... Tom Cavanagh ’05 (F); 2001-05 136...... Ryan Lannon ’05 (F); 2001-05 135...... Tim Pettit ’04 (F); 2000-04 Kevin Du ’07 (F); 2003-07 Jon Pelle ’08 (F); 2004-08 134...... Steve Mandes ’07 (F); 2003-07 Tyler Magura ’08 (F); 2004-08 131...... Steve Armstrong ’88 (F); 1984-88 Dennis Packard ’04 (F); 2000-04 Ryan Maki ’07 (F); 2003-07 130...... Tyler Kolarik ’04 (F); 2000-04 129...... Rob Fried ’04 (F); 2000-04 Ryan Lannon ’05 Noah Welch ’05 (D); 2001-05 Peter Hafner ’06 (D); 2002-06 128...... Lane MacDonald ’88-9 (F); 1984-89 Dominic Moore ’03 (F); 2003-04 127...... Tim Barakett ’87 (F); 1983-87 Tod Hartje ’90 (F); 1986-90 John Murphy ’90 (F); 1986-90 Harry Schwefel ’01 (F); 1997-2001

Tom Cavanagh ’05 Tim Pettit ’04

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book Goaltending Records

Games Played, Season Saves, Game 34...... Kyle Richter ’10; 2007-08 60...... Grant Blair ’86 vs. Boston College (12/21/84); 6-6 tie (OT) 33...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2003-04 48...... Bill Fitzsimmons ’67 vs. Boston College 32...... Oliver Jonas ’01; 2000-01 (2/8/65, Beanpot semi); 5-4 loss (OT) 31...... Grant Blair ’86; 1984-85 Grant Blair ’86 vs. Rensselaer (12/4/83); 6-0 loss Grant Blair ’86; 1985-86 Saves by Opposing Goalie, Game J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-97 66...... , Brown (3/9/02); 2-1 Harvard win (2OT) Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2004-05 John Daigneau ’06; 2005-06 Saves, Season 1,021...... Oliver Jonas ’01; 2000-01 Games Played, Career 923...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2004-05 J.R. Prestifilippo ’00 114...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2001-05 884...... Kyle Richter ’10; 2007-08 111...... Grant Blair ’86; 1982-86 847...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2002-03 103...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-2000 844...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-97 91...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 1992-96 814...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2003-04 79...... Wade Lau ’82; 1978-82 789...... Grant Blair ’86; 1985-86 Games Started, Season 787...... Grant Blair ’86; 1984-85 34...... Kyle Richter ’10; 2007-08 784...... John Daigneau ’06; 2005-06 32...... Oliver Jonas ’01; 2000-01 Saves, Career Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2003-04 3,081...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2001-05 Games Started, Career 2,976...... Grant Blair ’86; 1982-86 112...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2001-05 2,661...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-2000 111...... Grant Blair ’86; 1982-86 2,160...... Wade Lau ’82; 1978-82 101...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-2000 2,121...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 1992-96 Allain Roy ’92 89...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 1992-96 1,921...... Bruce Durno ’71; 1968-71 82 79...... Wade Lau ’82; 1978-82 Minutes Played, Game 96:11...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 vs. Cornell (3/16/02, ECAC final) 4-3 win (2OT) 96:01..Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 vs. Colgate (3/18/05, ECACHL semi) 3-2 win (2OT) 94:41..... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 vs. Brown (3/9/02, ECAC quarters) 2-1 win (2OT) Minutes Played, Season 2,023...... Kyle Richter ’10; 2007-08 1,933...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2003-04 1,911...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2004-05 1,904...... Oliver Jonas ’01; 2000-01 1,866...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-97 1,812...... Grant Blair ’86; 1985-86 1,790...... John Daigneau ’06; 2005-06 1,785...... Grant Blair ’86; 1984-85 1,745...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 1995-96 1,741...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2002-03 1,694...... Wade Lau ’82; 1981-82 Minutes Played, Career 6,811...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2001-05 6,563...... Grant Blair ’86; 1982-86 6,044...... J.R. Prestifilippo ’00; 1996-2000 5,338...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 1992-96 4,742...... Wade Lau ’82; 1978-82 4,468...... Bruce Durno ’71; 1968-71 Dov Grumet-Morris ’05

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Goals-Against Average, Season (min. 15 GP) Consecutive Wins, Season 1.63...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 31 GP in 2004-05 12...... James Bailey ’57; from 2/2/57 to 3/9/57 1.75...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 17 GP in 1961-62 10...... Harwood Ellis ’31; from 12/11/30 to 2/23/31 2.06...... Bob Bland ’62; 16 GP in 1961-62 Chuck Flynn ’56; from 1/15/55 to 3/5/55 2.19...... Kyle Richter ’10; 34 GP in 2007-08 Shutouts, Season 2.21...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 24 GP in 1962-63 6...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05, 2004-05 2.22...... Dickie McEvoy ’87; 24 GP in 1986-87 5...... James Bailey ’57; 1956-57 2.26...... Justin Tobe ’07; 18 GP in 2006-07 Bruce Durno ’71; 1970-71 2.27...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 17 GP in 1992-93 4...... Robert Waldinger ’36; 1935-36 Goals-Against Average, Career (min. 40 GP) Dickie McEvoy ’87; 1986-87 Dickie McEvoy ’87 1.93...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 50 GP from 1960-63 3...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2003-04 2.25...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 114 GP from 2001-05 John Daigneau ’06; 2005-06 2.40...... John Daigneau ’06; 43 GP from 2002-06 Kyle Richter ’10; 2007-08 2.54...... Bob Bland ’62; 51 GP from 1959-62 Shutouts, Career 2.82...... Dickie McEvoy ’87; 40 GP from 1982-87 2.84...... Grant Blair ’86; 111 GP from 1982-86 11...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 2001-05 2.90...... John Devin ’88; 43 GP from 1984-88 9...... Grant Blair ’86; 1982-86 6...... Bruce Durno ’71; 1968-71 Save Percentage, Season (min. 15 GP) .947...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 31 GP, 2004-05 .926...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 18 GP, 1961-62 .925...... Dov Grumet Morris ’05; 29 GP, 2002-03 .923...... Kyle Richter ’10; 34 GP in 2007-08 Oliver Jonas ’01 .915...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 33 GP, 2003-04 Tripp Tracy ’96; 17 GP, 1992-93 Dickie McEvoy ’87; 24 GP, 1986-87 Oliver Jonas ’01; 32 GP, 2000-01 .914...... John Daigneau ’06; 31 GP, 2005-06 .912...... Allain Roy ’92; 16 GP, 1988-89 .911...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 24 GP, 1962-63 83 Save Percentage, Career (min. 40 GP) .924...... Dov Grumet Morris ’05; 114 GP, 2001-05 .918...... Godfrey Wood ’63; 45 GP, 1960-63 .914...... John Daigneau ’06; 43 GP, 2002-06 .905...... Grant Blair ’86; 111 GP, 1982-86 Brian Petrovek ’77 Bruce Durno ’71 .901...... Oliver Jonas ’01; 60 GP, 1997-2001 .899...... Allain Roy ’92; 60 GP, 1988-92 Wins, Season 24...... Grant Blair ’86; 24-6-1 record, 1985-86 21...... James Bailey ’57; 21-5-0 record, 1956-57 19...... Brian Petrovek ’77; 19-4-0 record, 1974-75 Grant Blair ’86; 19-7-0 record, 1982-83 Grant Blair ’86; 19-9-2 record, 1984-85 Dickie McEvoy ’87; 19-5-0 record, 1986-87 Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 19-9-0 record, 2004-05 John Daigneau ’06; 19-10-2 record, 2005-06 Wins, Career 72...... Grant Blair ’86; 72-33-5 record, 1982-86 65...... Dov Grumet-Morris ’05; 65-40-6 record, 2001-05 49...... Bruce Durno ’71; 49-24-2 record, 1968-71 48...... Tripp Tracy ’96; 48-35-7 record, 1992-96 45...... Brian Petrovek ’77; 45-24-3 record, 1974-77 42...... Chuck Flynn ’56; 42-23-3 record, 1953-56

Grant Blair ’86

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book Team Records

Most Goals, Period 11...... Third period vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win Miscellaneous Most Goals, Game Most Penalties, Season vs. Division I opponents: 18...... vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win 291...... 1993-94 vs. Boston University (12/15/42); 18-2 win Most Penalty Minutes, Season vs. All opponents: 21...... vs. Williams (1/31/51); 21-4 win 666...... 1989-90 Most Goals Against, Game Most Games Played, Season 16...... vs. Denver (12/29/53); 16-2 loss 36...... 2003-04 Most Goals, Season 35...... 1982-83, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1988-89, 191...... 1988-89 1995-96, 2001-02, 2002-03, 2005-06 Most Goals Against, Season 140...... 1947-48 Most Power-Play Goals, Game Team Goaltending 6...... vs. Army (2/6/87) in 10 chances; 7-5 win Most Saves, Season Most Power-Play Goals, Season 1,056...... 1988-89 66...... 1986-87 (in 184 chances) Best Goals-Against Average, Season Best Power-Play Percentage, Season 1.80...... 2004-05 35.9 percent...... 1986-87 (66-for-184) Best Save Percentage, Season Most Shorthanded Goals, Game .940...... 2004-05 3...... vs. Dartmouth (12/12/88); 10-0 win (all by C.J. Young ’90) Most Shutouts, Season 7...... 2004-05 Most Shorthanded Goals, Season 84 14...... 1988-89 Best Penalty-Kill Percentage, Season 88.7 percent...... 1983-84 (94-for-106) Best Season Starts Consecutive Games with a Goal Record Season 15-0-0...... 1986-87 162 games...... 12/4/72 to 12/10/77 (ended with 7-0 home loss to Boston College, 12/12/77) Ended with 4-2 loss at Yale; 1/13/87 Most Assists, Period 15-0-0...... 1988-89 Ended with 3-1 loss at Yale; 1/31/89 11...... Third period vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win 13-0-0...... 1936-37 Most Assists, Game Ended with 7-2 loss at McGill; 2/22/37 vs. Division I opponents: 20...... vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win vs. All opponents: 22...... vs. Tufts (1/8/58); 16-1 win 11-0-0...... 1930-31 Ended with 5-1 home loss to Yale; 2/28/31 Most Assists, Season 8-0-2...... 1984-85 334...... 1988-89 Ended with 5-4 home loss to RPI; 1/4/85 Most Points, Period 7-0-2...... 1962-63 22...... 11g, 11a vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win Ended with 4-3 loss at Clarkson; 1/11/63 Most Points, Game 7-0-0...... 1942-43 vs. Division I opponents: 38...... 18g, 20a vs. Cornell (1/10/59); 18-0 win Ended with 10-8 home loss to Dartmouth; 1/14/43 vs. All opponents: 38...... 16g, 22a vs. Tufts (1/8/58); 16-1 win 7-0-0...... 1972-73 Most Points, Season Ended with 5-2 home loss to Cornell; 1/6/73 525...... 1988-89 7-0-0...... 1974-75 Ended with 3-2 loss to Michigan in Detroit; 12/27/74 6-0-1...... 1970-71 Ended with 5-4 OT loss at Clarkson; 1/1/71 6-0-1...... 1952-53 Ended with 4-3 OT home loss to Northeastern; 1/31/53

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Year-by-Year Leaders (since 1954-55)

Season Goals Leader Goals Assists Leader Assists Points Leader Points 1954-55 Bill Cleary (Jr., F)...... 42 Bill Cleary (Jr., F)...... 47 Bill Cleary (Jr., F)...... 89 (42g, 47a) 1955-56 Bob Cleary (So., F)...... 24 Bob Cleary (So., F)...... 28 Bob Cleary (So., F)...... 52 (24g, 28a) 1956-57 Bob Cleary (Jr., F)...... 36 Bob Cleary (Jr., F)...... 37 Bob Cleary (Jr., F)...... 73 (36g, 37a) 1957-58 Bob Cleary (Sr., F)...... 32 Bob Cleary (Sr., F)...... 42 Bob Cleary (Sr., F)...... 76 (33g, 43a) 1958-59 Richard Fisher (Sr., C)...... 30 George Higginbottom (Sr., F)...... 25 George Higginbottom (Sr., F)...... 49 (24g, 25a) 1959-60 Dave Morse (So., F)...... 12 James Dwinnell (So., F)...... 15 Dave Morse (So., F)...... 25 (12g, 13a) James Dwinell (So., F)...... 25 (10g, 15a) 1960-61 James Dwinell (Jr., F)...... 16 Tom Heintzman (Jr., F)...... 15 James Dwinell (Jr., F)...... 28 (16g, 12a) 1961-62 Tim Taylor (Jr., F)...... 23 Gene Kinasewich (So., F)...... 20 Gene Kinasewich (So., F)...... 40 (20g, 20a) 1962-63 Tim Taylor (Sr., F)...... 22 Dave Johnston (Sr., D)...... 25 Tim Taylor (Sr., F)...... 39 (22g, 17a) 1963-64 Gene Kinasewich (Sr., F)...... 23 Bill Fryer (Sr., F)...... 17 Gene Kinasewich (Sr., F)...... 39 (23g, 16a) Bill Lamarche (Sr., F)...... 17 1964-65 Dennis McCullough (So., F)...... 9 Baldy Smith (Sr., F)...... 13 Pete Waldinger (So., F)...... 21 (9g, 12a) Pete Waldinger (So., F)...... 9 1965-66 Kent Parrot (So., F)...... 18 Kent Parrot (So., F)...... 25 Kent Parrot (So., F)...... 43 (18g, 25a) 1966-67 Kent Parrot (Jr., F)...... 14 Ben Smith (Jr., F)...... 18 Kent Parrot (Jr., F)...... 29 (14g, 15a) 1967-68 Jack Turco (So., F)...... 17 Kent Parrot (Sr., F)...... 20 Jack Turco (So., F)...... 36 (17g, 19a) Bob Carr (Sr., D)...... 20 1968-69 Joe Cavanagh (So., F)...... 24 Joe Cavanagh (So., F)...... 38 Joe Cavanagh (So., F)...... 62 (24g, 38a) 1969-70 Dan DeMichele (Jr., F)...... 23 Joe Cavanagh (Jr., F)...... 39 George McManama (Sr., F)...... 53 (17g, 36a) Joe Cavanagh (Jr., F)...... 53 (14g, 39a) 1970-71 Dan DeMichele (Sr., F)...... 33 Joe Cavanagh (Sr., F)...... 50 Joe Cavanagh (Sr., F)...... 72 (22g, 50a) 1971-72 Bob McManama (Jr., F)...... 24 Dave Hynes (Jr., F)...... 31 Bob McManama (Jr., F)...... 54 (24g, 30a) Dave Hynes (Jr., F)...... 54 (23g, 31a) 1972-73 Bob McManama (Sr., F)...... 27 Bill Corkery (Sr., F)...... 27 Bob McManama (Sr., F)...... 52 (27g, 25a) Randy Roth (So., F)...... 27 1973-74 Jim McMahon (Jr., F)...... 26 Randy Roth (Jr., F)...... 32 Randy Roth (Jr., F)...... 53 (21g, 32a) 1974-75 Jim McMahon (Sr., F)...... 24 Ed Rossi (Sr., D)...... 38 Randy Roth (Sr., F)...... 50 (21g, 29a) 1975-76 Dave Bell (Jr., F)...... 22 George Hughes (Fr., F)...... 32 George Hughes (Fr., F)...... 47 (15g, 32a) 1976-77 George Hughes (So., F)...... 20 Bill Hozack (Sr., F)...... 28 George Hughes (So., F)...... 42 (20g, 22a) 1977-78 George Hughes (Jr., F)...... 17 Jack Hughes (So., F)...... 19 George Hughes (Jr., F)...... 32 (17g, 15a) 85 1978-79 David Burke (Fr., F)...... 16 Jack Hughes (Jr., F)...... 29 George Hughes (Sr., F)...... 40 (14g, 26a) Mike Watson (Fr., F)...... 16 1979-80 Greg Olson (Fr., D)...... 16 Dave Burke (So., F)...... 17 Mark Fusco (Fr., D)...... 29 (13g, 16a) 1980-81 Greg Olson (So., F)...... 18 Tom Murray (Sr., F)...... 23 Greg Olson (So., F)...... 34 (18g, 16a) Tom Murray (Sr., F)...... 34 (11g, 23a) 1981-82 Scott Fusco (Fr., F)...... 16 Mark Fusco (Jr., D)...... 29 Mark Fusco (Jr., D)...... 40 (11g, 29a) 1982-83 Scott Fusco (So., F)...... 33 Mark Fusco (Sr., D)...... 33 Scott Fusco (So., F)...... 55 (33g, 22a) 1983-84 Brian Busconi (Jr., F)...... 12 David Connors (Sr., F)...... 11 Brian Busconi (Jr., F)...... 18 (12g, 6a) 1984-85 Scott Fusco (Jr., F)...... 34 Scott Fusco (Jr., F)...... 47 Scott Fusco (Jr., F)...... 81 (34g, 47a) 1985-86 Tim Smith (Sr., F)...... 28 Scott Fusco (Sr., F)...... 44 Scott Fusco (Sr., F)...... 68 (24g, 44a) 1986-87 Lane MacDonald (Jr., F)...... 37 Allen Bourbeau (So., F)...... 34 Lane MacDonald (Jr., F)...... 67 (37g, 30a) 1987-88 Andy Janfaza (Sr., F)...... 17 Peter Ciavaglia (Fr., F)...... 23 Peter Ciavaglia (Fr., F)...... 33 (10g, 23a) Don Sweeney (Sr., D)...... 23 1988-89 C.J. Young (Jr., F)...... 33 Peter Ciavaglia (So., F)...... 48 Peter Ciavaglia (So., F)...... 63 (15g, 48a) 1989-90 Mike Vukonich (Jr., F)...... 22 Mike Vukonich (Jr., F)...... 29 Mike Vukonich (Jr., F)...... 51 (22g, 29a) 1990-91 Mike Vukonich (Sr., F)...... 32 Peter Ciavaglia (Sr., F)...... 39 Peter Ciavaglia (Sr., F)...... 63 (24g, 39a) 1991-92 Steve Flomenhoft (Jr., F)...... 14 Tim Burke (Sr., F)...... 24 Tim Burke (Sr., F)...... 32 (8g, 24a) 1992-93 Matt Mallgrave (Sr., F)...... 27 Ted Drury (Sr., F)...... 41 Ted Drury (Sr., F)...... 63 (22g, 41a) 1993-94 Brian Farrell (Sr., F)...... 29 Chris Baird (Sr., F)...... 38 Steve Martins (Jr., F)...... 60 (25g, 35a) 1994-95 Steve Martins (Sr., F)...... 15 Steve Martins (Sr., F)...... 23 Steve Martins (Sr., F)...... 38 (15g, 23a) 1995-96 Henry Higdon (So., F)...... 17 Brad Konik (Sr., F)...... 26 Brad Konik (Sr., F)...... 37 (11g, 26a) 1996-97 Rob Millar (So., F)...... 13 Joe Craigen (Sr., F)...... 14 Rob Millar (So., F)...... 25 (13g, 12a) 1997-98 Chris Bala (Fr., F)...... 16 Steve Moore (Fr., F)...... 23 Steve Moore (Fr., F)...... 33 (10g, 23a) 1998-99 Steve Moore (So., F)...... 18 Rob Millar (Sr., F)...... 17 Steve Moore (So., F)...... 31 (18g, 13a) 1999-2000 Dominic Moore (Fr., F)...... 12 Steve Moore (Jr., F)...... 16 Steve Moore (Jr., F)...... 26 (10g, 16a) 2000-01 Dominic Moore (So., F)...... 15 Dominic Moore (So., F)...... 28 Dominic Moore (So., F)...... 43 (15g, 28a) 2001-02 Tim Pettit (So., F)...... 16 Tyler Kolarik (So., F)...... 21 Brett Nowak (Jr., F)...... 31 (14g, 17a) 2002-03 Dominic Moore (Sr., F)...... 24 Tim Pettit (Jr., F)...... 30 Dominic Moore (Sr., F)...... 51 (24g, 27a) 2003-04 Tom Cavanagh (Jr., F)...... 16 Tim Pettit (Sr., F)...... 24 Tom Cavanagh (Jr., F)...... 36 (16g, 20a) 2004-05 Tom Cavanagh (Sr., F)...... 10 Tom Cavanagh (Sr., F)...... 19 Tom Cavanagh (Sr., F)...... 29 (10g, 19a) Ryan Maki (So., F)...... 10 2005-06 Dan Murphy (Sr., F)...... 18 Kevin Du (Jr., F)...... 23 Kevin Du (Jr., F)...... 33 (10g, 23a) 2006-07 Alex Meintel (Jr., F)...... 14 Kevin Du (Sr., F)...... 20 Kevin Du (Sr., F)...... 25 (5g, 20a) 2007-08 Jon Pelle (Sr., F)...... 14 Mike Taylor (Sr., F)...... 23 Mike Taylor (Sr., F)...... 35 (12g, 23a)

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book Year-by-Year Records

Season W L T Pct. Captain Season W L T Pct. Captain 1895-96 No College Opponents 1952-53 11 5 1 .676 Walter F. Greeley 1896-97 No College Opponents 1953-54 10 10 2 .500 R. Norman Wood 1897-98 0 1 0 .000 Fredrick J. Goodridge 1954-55 17 3 1 .833 W. Scott Cooledge 1898-99 0 1 0 .000 William S. Beardsell 1955-56 15 10 0 .600 Charles B. Flynn 1899-1900 4 1 0 .800 William S. Beardsell 1956-57 21 5 0 .808 James A. Bailey 1900-01 3 0 0 1.000 William H. Laverack 1957-58 18 10 1 .643 Robert B. Cleary 1901-02 3 3 0 .500 Alfred Winsor 1958-59 12 9 4 .560 Richard M. McLaughlin 1902-03 7 0 0 1.000 Joseph S. Levering 1959-60 16 7 1 .688 Michael Graney 1903-04 4 0 0 1.000 Tristam B. Souther 1960-61 18 4 2 .792 C. Stewart Forbes 1904-05 5 0 0 1.000 Trowbridge Callaway 1961-62 21 5 0 .808 David L. Grannis 1905-06 4 0 0 1.000 Daniel A. Newhall 1962-63 21 3 2 .846 Timothy B. Taylor 1906-07 4 2 0 .667 Richard S. Townsend 1963-64 17 7 0 .708 Eugene Kinasewich 1907-08 5 1 0 .833 Clarence C. Pell 1964-65 9 15 0 .375 John S. Daly 1908-09 8 0 0 1.000 James P. Willetts 1965-66 10 12 1 .457 Robert L. Clark 1909-10 5 2 0 .714 Samuel T. Hicks 1966-67 11 12 0 .478 Dennis M. McCullough 1910-11 7 2 0 .778 Ralph Hornblower II 1967-68 15 9 0 .625 John P. Garrity, Jr. 1911-12 8 2 0 .800 Frederick D. Huntington 1968-69 19 8 1 .696 Robert T. Bauer 1912-13 9 2 0 .818 Harry B. Gardner 1969-70 16 9 0 .640 Christopher J. Gurry 1913-14 8 7 0 .533 William A. Willetts 1970-71 18 8 1 .685 Joseph V. Cavanagh, Jr. 1914-15 8 3 0 .727 William H. Claflin 1971-72 17 8 1 .673 J. Thomas Paul 1915-16 7 1 0 .875 John E.P. Morgan 1972-73 17 4 1 .795 Kevin Hampe 1916-17 7 3 0 .700 John E.P. Morgan 1973-74 17 11 1 .603 Robert W. Goodenow/ 1917-18 No Formal Program E. Mark Noonan 1918-19 3 0 0 1.000 Robert E. Grass 1974-75 23 6 0 .793 Randy L. Roth 1919-20 7 1 0 .875 Norman S. Walker 1975-76 13 10 3 .558 Kevin Carr 1920-21 7 2 0 .778 Edward L. Bigelow 1976-77 14 12 0 .538 William R. Horton, Jr. 1921-22 6 2 0 .750 George Owen, Jr. 1977-78 12 14 0 .462 Bryan Cook 86 1922-23 8 4 0 .667 George Owen, Jr. 1978-79 7 18 1 .288 John Cochrane 1923-24 6 6 0 .500 William E. Crosby, Jr. 1979-80 8 15 3 .365 John Hynes/Graham Carter 1924-25 8 2 0 .800 Edward M. Beals, Jr. 1980-81 11 14 1 .442 Thomas Murray 1925-26 8 3 0 .727 Thayer Cummings 1981-82 13 15 2 .467 Michael Watson 1926-27 9 1 2 .833 William P. Ellison 1982-83 23 9 2 .706 Gregory A. Olson 1927-28 7 2 0 .778 John P. Chase 1983-84 10 14 3 .426 Kenneth S. Code 1928-29 5 4 1 .550 John Tudor 1984-85 21 9 2 .688 Brad C. Kwong 1929-30 7 4 1 .625 Eliot R. Putnam 1985-86 25 8 1 .750 Scott M. Fusco 1930-31 11 2 0 .846 Harwood Ellis 1986-87 28 6 0 .824 Peter E. Chiarelli 1931-32 11 1 2 .857 Charles C. Cunningham 1987-88 21 11 0 .656 Steven J. Armstrong 1932-33 9 5 0 .643 Robert Saltonstall, Jr. 1988-89 31 3 0 .912 B. Lane MacDonald 1933-34 4 9 0 .308 Paul deB. deGive 1989-90 13 14 1 .482 Carl J. Young 1934-35 8 4 0 .667 William P. Watts 1990-91 14 12 3 .534 Edward P. Donato 1935-36 12 4 1 .735 Frederick R. Moseley, Jr. 1991-92 14 7 6 .630 Kevin A. Sneddon 1936-37 15 1 0 .938 George S. Ford 1992-93 22 6 3 .758 Theodore E. Drury 1937-38 6 7 1 .464 Samuel T. Hicks, Jr. 1993-94 24 5 4 .788 Sean P. McCann 1938-39 7 7 1 .500 Francis A. Harding, Jr. 1994-95 14 14 2 .500 Benjamin M. Coughlin 1939-40 3 10 1 .250 William C. Coleman, Jr. 1995-96 13 20 1 .397 Bradley G. Konik 1940-41 2 9 1 .208 Joseph P. Willetts 1996-97 11 18 3 .391 J. Ashlin Halfnight 1941-42 8 8 0 .500 M. Greely Summers, Jr. 1997-98 14 17 2 .455 Jeremiah S. McCarthy 1942-43 14 3 1 .806 John A. Paine, Jr./ 1998-99 14 16 2 .469 Craig D. Adams Earle D. Acker 1999-2000 11 17 2 .400 Trevor G. Allman 1943-44 No Formal Program 2000-01 16 15 2 .515 Steven F. Moore 1944-45 No Formal Program 2001-02 15 15 4 .500 Peter M. Capouch 1945-46 2 4 2 .375 William M. Ayers 2002-03 22 10 2 .676 Dominic M. Moore 1946-47 6 6 0 .500 John R. Crocker 2003-04 18 15 3 .542 Kenneth J. Smith 1947-48 9 14 0 .391 John E. Lavalle 2004-05 21 10 3 .662 Noah P. Welch 1948-49 12 8 0 .600 David M. Key, Jr. 2005-06 21 12 2 .629 Peter R. Hafner 1949-50 10 8 0 .556 Myles D. Huntington 2006-07 14 17 2 .455 Dylan P. Reese 1950-51 12 11 0 .522 Lewis T. Preston 2007-08 17 13 4 .559 David M. MacDonald/ 1951-52 8 11 0 .421 Dustin M. Burke Michael J. Taylor, Jr. Totals 1,271 785 103 .613

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Year-by-Year Results

1903-04 (4-0) 1/11 St. Francis Xavier A 8-2 W 1915-16 (7-1) 1922-23 (8-4) A Home games played at Captain: Tristam B. Souther ’04 1/16 Columbia 5-0 W Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 Coach: William H. Claflin, Jr. ’15 Watson Rink from 1954‑55 1/21 Princeton A 5-1 W 1/30 at Columbia 2-0 W A Captain: John E.P. Morgan ’17 Captain: George Owen, Jr. ’23 to 1977-78 and at Bright H 1/28 Cornell 2-3 L A A 2/3 Brown 7-3 W A 1/8 Queen’s 3-4 L 12/13 Boston University 2-0 W Hockey Center from 1 2/4 Dartmouth 12-1 W A A 2/22 Yale 5-2 W 1 1/11 Cornell 2-0 W 1/3 Toronto 5-7 L 1 2/18 Yale 3-2 W A A 1979‑80 to present. 2/27 Yale 4-3 W 1 1/15 Princeton 3-0 W 1/13 Princeton 1-3 L 1 New York, N.Y. 1 A Boston Arena New York, N.Y. 1/22 Princeton 2-0 W 1/20 at Yale 3-2 W 1/29 McGill A 4-1 W 1/26 MIT A 10-0 W B 1911-12 (8-2) Beanpot 1904-05 (5-0) 2/4 Dartmouth A 6-0 W 2/14 Queen’s A 2-1 W Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 C Brae Burn Country Club Captain: Trowbridge Callaway ’05 2/12 Yale A 2-0 W 2/17 Cornell A 6-0 W S Captain: Frederick D. Huntington ’12 A E 1/11 MIT 25-0 W 2/26 at Yale 4-2 W 2/21 Dartmouth 0-1 L ECAC/ECACHL A 1/14 Columbia S 5-0 W 12/21 MIT 21-4 W 2/24 at Princeton 2-1 W 1 Championship 1/21 Princeton 1 6-5 W 1/10 Princeton 3-2 W 1916-17 (7-3) 2/28 Princeton A 1-0 W A F FleetCenter/ 2/8 Brown S 15-1 W 1/20 Princeton 2-3 L Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 3/3 Yale A 0-3 L A 2/18 Yale 1 7-1 W 1/27 Cornell 3-2 W 3/7 at Yale 2-1 W TD Banknorth Garden A Captain: John E.P. Morgan ’17 1 1/31 St. Francis Xavier 7-2 W G New York, N.Y. 1/9 MIT A 8-0 W Boston Garden 2/3 McGill A 3-0 W 1/13 Dartmouth A 3-0 W 1923-24 (6-6) H 2/9 Dartmouth A 7-3 W Holmes Field 1905-06 (4-0) 1/20 Princeton 1 1-2 L Coach: William H. Claflin, Jr. ’15 2/17 Yale A 4-0 W K Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1/27 Queen’s A 5-1 W Captain: William E. Crosby, Jr. ’24 Boston Skating Club 2/21 at Yale 2-3 L Captain: Daniel A. Newhall ’06 2/2 Princeton A 4-3 W 12/18 Boston University A 8-1 W L Lynn, Mass. 2/24 Yale A 4-2 W 1/13 at Columbia 7-0 W 2/10 McGill A 4-0 W 12/21 McGill A 0-2 L N 1 New York, N.Y. NCAA Championship 1/20 Princeton 1 3-2 W 2/17 at Yale 0-2 L 1/3 Toronto A 1-2 L O 10-minute overtime 2/7 Brown S 4-0 W 1912-13 (9-2) 2/24 Princeton A 2-0 W 1/5 Toronto A 1-4 L 2/17 Yale 1 4-3 W 3/3 Yale A 5-0 W 1/9 MIT A 7-0 W (no sudden death) Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1 3/10 at Yale 0-2 L 1/19 at Princeton 4-2 W P New York, N.Y. Cambridge Pavilion Captain: Harry B. Gardner ’13 1 New York, N.Y. 1/30 Boston University A 5-0 W A R 1906-07 (4-2) 12/18 MIT 4-0 W 2/9 Yale A 0-3 L Franklin Park A 1/6 Ottawa 0-2 L A S Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1917-18 2/18 Princeton 2-1 W Harvard Stadium A 1/15 Toronto 2-0 W No Program 2/20 Hamilton A 5-2 W Captain: Richard S. Townsend ’07 A A C 1/18 Cornell 8-2 W 2/23 Dartmouth 3-4 L 1/10 MIT 8-0 W A 1/22 Princeton 5-3 W 1918-19 (3-0) 3/1 at Yale 1-6 L 1/12 at Columbia 7-0 W A 1897-98 (0-1) 1 1/27 Massachusetts 9-3 W 1/19 Princeton 3-4 L A Captain: Robert E. Gross ’19 Captain: Frederick J. Goodridge ’98 S 2/1 Yale 4-0 W 1 1924-25 (8-2) 2/7 Dartmouth 12-3 W A 1/19 Boston College 7-2 W R S 2/5 Dartmouth 3-1 W 2 Coach: Edward L. Bigelow ’21 1/19 Brown 0-6 L 2/9 McGill 2-8 L 1 2/8 Yale 4-1 W 1 2/8 Princeton 1-3 L 2 2/16 Yale 3-2 W A 3/7 Princeton 7-2 W Captain: E.M. Beals ’25 1898-99 (0-1) 1 2/15 Princeton 3-0 W 1 A New York, N.Y. 1 Brighton, Mass. (Charlesbank Rink) 12/11 MIT 8-3 W 2/19 Yale 3-2 W 2 A Captain: William S. Beardsell ’00 1 New York, N.Y. 12/16 Boston University 6-1 W New York, N.Y. A 2/1 at Brown 1-2 L 1907-08 (5-1) 1/2 Toronto 2-1 W 87 Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1913-14 (8-7) 1919-20 (7-1) 1/17 Yale A (ot) 3-2 W 1899-1900 (4-1) Captain: Clarence C. Pell ’08 Captain: Norman S. Walker ’21 1/24 Princeton A 4-2 W Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 A Captain: William S. Beardsell ’00 1/11 at Columbia 14-1 W 1/3 Toronto P 2-5 L 2/5 Hamilton 6-2 W Captain: William A. Willetts A H 1 P 2/14 Yale 2-3 L 1/11 MIT 10-1 W 1/18 Princeton 6-2 W A 1/17 Yale 5-4 W 12/17 MIT 11-1 W A 1/24 at Brown 8-1 W 1/25 McGill S 8-2 W 1/24 Dartmouth P 4-2 W 2/21 Dartmouth 2-1 W 12/27 at Syracuse 5-2 W A 2/2 Brown H 7-1 W 2/8 Dartmouth S 10-3 W 1/28 Tufts P 8-0 W 2/25 Yale (3ot) 0-1 L H 1 12/30 at Syracuse 1-2 L P 2/28 at Princeton 5-4 W 2/7 MIT 8-4 W 2/15 Yale 2-3 L 1 1/31 Princeton 6-3 W 1 2 1/2 Ottawa 0-2 L P 2/26 Yale 4-5 L 2/22 Bishop’s 4-0 W 1 2/4 MIT 8-0 W 1 1/3 Ottawa 0-3 L 1 1925-26 (8-3) New York, N.Y. 1 New York, N.Y. 2/21 Yale 3-0 W 2 1/7 Amherst 1-0 W 1 Coach: Edward L. Bigelow ’21 Concord, N.H. A 3/6 Princeton 10-1 W 1900-01 (3-0) 1/14 Massachusetts 4-3 W 1 A Philadelphia, Pa. Captain: Thayer Cumings ’26 1/17 Dartmouth 2-1 W A Captain: William H. Laverack 1908-09 (8-0) A 12/16 MIT 2-0 W 1/24 Princeton 2-1 W 1920-21 (7-2) A 1/23 at Brown 1-0 W Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 A 12/18 Boston University 0-3 L H 1/31 McGill 1-2 L 1 2/2 Brown 9-2 W Captain: James P. Willetts ’09 A Captain: Edward L. Bigelow ’21 1/2 McGill 4-5 L 2/6 Yale 4-3 W A 2/17 Yale 1 4-0 W 1/7 MIT C 1-0 W 1/8 Kings A 9-1 W 1/6 Toronto 0-2 L 1 2/11 at Yale 1-3 L A A New York, N.Y. 1/9 at Columbia 5-1 W 2 1/19 Massachusetts 2-0 W 1/9 at Princeton 4-3 W 2/14 Princeton 2-4 L A S A 1/13 Williams 10-2 W 2 1/22 Dartmouth 5-0 W 1/20 Williams 4-1 W 2/21 Princeton 1-4 L A 1901-02 (3-3) 1 A 1/16 Princeton 3-2 W A 1/29 Princeton 7-0 W 1/30 Princeton 4-3 W 2/28 Yale 4-1 W A S 1 Captain: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1/25 St. Francis Xavier 1-0 W 1 2/5 Yale 7-0 W 2/3 Hamilton 11-1 W Syracuse, N.Y. A S A 1/18 at Columbia 4-3 W 1/27 Laval 3-0 W 2 2/10 St. Patrick’s 0-1 L 2/13 Yale 4-0 W New York, N.Y. A 2/8 Brown H 7-1 W 2/20 Yale 1 5-0 W 2/14 St. Patrick’s A 1-2 L 2/20 Dartmouth (ot) 3-2 W 1 2/15 Yale 1 3-4 L 2/22 Dartmouth 1 1-0 W 1914-15 (8-3) 2/16 MIT A 8-2 W 2/27 Yale 2-0 W 1 1 1 A New York, N.Y. 3/1 Princeton 6-3 W New York, N.Y. Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 2/26 Yale 13-1 W 3/14 Yale 1 3-5 L 1 Philadelphia, Pa. 1 Captain: William H. Claflin, Jr. ’15 1926-27 (9-1-2) 3/15 Yale 1-4 L 1909-10 (5-2) A 1 12/17 MIT 6-2 W 1921-22 (7-2) Coach: Edward L. Bigelow ’21 New York, N.Y. Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 A 1/6 Queen’s 1-2 L Captain: Captain: Samuel T. Hicks ’10 A Coaches: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02, William P. Ellison ’27 1/9 Cornell 8-1 W A 1902-03 (7-0) S 1/5 MIT 4-1 W 1 William H. Claflin, Jr. ’15 12/10 MIT 5-1 W 1/16 Princeton 4-1 W A 1 Captain: Joseph S. Levering ’03 1/8 Cornell 5-0 W A Captain: George Owen, Jr. ’23 12/29 McGill (ot) 3-4 L 1/20 Dartmouth 2-4 L 1 H S A 1/10 MIT 4-3 W 1/12 Columbia 6-0 W A 1/3 Toronto 1-6 L 12/26 Toronto 4-3 W 1/23 Princeton 5-1 W A 1 1 A 1/17 Princeton 4-1 W 1/15 Princeton 0-3 L A 1/14 Dalhousie 4-1 W 1/3 Toronto (ot) 1-1 T 1/30 Yale 4-2 W A S 1 1/31 at Columbia 5-1 W 2/5 St. Francis Xavier 1-4 L A 1/21 Princeton 3-0 W 1/7 Notre Dame 7-0 W 2/3 Massachusetts 4-0 W A 1 S A 1/12 Dartmouth 4-2 W 2/21 Yale 3-0 W 2/12 Dartmouth 5-0 W 2/5 McGill A 0-1 L 1/27 MIT 9-2 W 1 1 A 2/23 Brown 6-0 W 2/19 Yale 3-0 W A 2/3 Boston College 2-4 L 1/18 at Brown 5-1 W 2/9 Williams 9-1 W A 1 1 A 1/26 Boston University (ot) 1-0 W 2/27 Yale 6-2 W New York, N.Y. 2/23 at Yale 3-1 W 2/11 Yale 6-2 W 1 A A 2/28 Yale 5-1 W 1 2/15 Dartmouth 3-0 W 2/10 Laval 4-1 W New York, N.Y. A 1 New York, N.Y. 1910-11 (7-2) 2/18 Princeton A 9-0 W 2/19 Yale 6-2 W A Coach: Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 2/25 at Yale 3-1 W 2/23 Dartmouth 2-2 T Captain: Ralph Hornblower II ’11 1 Philadelphia, Pa. 2/26 at Yale 2-1 W 1 New York, N.Y. 12/14 MIT A 4-3 W 12/17 Amherst A 10-0 W 1/7 McGill A 2-5 L

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book

1927-28 (7-2) 1932-33 (9-5) 1/12 at Brown 7-1 W 1941-42 (8-8) 12/19 at McGill 4-9 L G Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 1/16 Princeton 6-2 W Coach: Clark Hodder ’25 12/29 at Colorado College 6-13 L Captain: J. P. Chase ’28 Captain: Robert Saltonstall, Jr. ’33 2/6 at Dartmouth 14-4 W Captain: M. Greely Summers, Jr. ’42 12/30 at Colorado College 3-10 L 2/10 Queen’s G 5-2 W 1/2 at Minnesota 6-8 L 12/9 MIT A 9-0 W 12/15 MIT G 9-1 W 12/13 Dartmouth K 3-4 L 2/13 at Princeton 8-4 W 1/3 at Minnesota 2-7 L 12/16 Boston University A 5-3 W 12/17 McGill G 2-4 L 12/17 Boston University K 5-1 W 2/17 Boston University A 9-3 W 1/7 Northeastern A 11-4 W 12/31 Toronto A 4-1 W 12/23 at McGill 2-5 L 12/20 Northeastern K 5-4 W 2/20 at Montreal 3-1 W 1/14 Brown A 17-3 W 1/7 McGill 1 1-3 L 1/7 Toronto 1 1-8 L 1/1 Princeton 1 2-6 L 2/22 at McGill 2-7 L 2/3 Northeastern A 7-8 L 1/18 Brown A 7-0 W 1/11 Boston University G 5-2 W 1/2 Princeton 1 2-1 W 2/27 at Yale 8-5 W 2/4 UMass Devens A 17-2 W 2/9 St. Francis Xavier A 12-1 W 1/14 at Princeton 2-6 L 1/3 Princeton 1 2-3 L 3/6 Yale G 5-0 W 2/7 Army A 7-1 W 2/18 Dartmouth A 1-4 L 1/17 at Brown 15-3 W 1/7 Williams K 7-1 W 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 2/11 Boston University A 6-10 L 2/25 at Yale (ot) 2-1 W 1/21 Princeton G 5-4 W 1/10 at Dartmouth 3-5 L 2/14 at Princeton 4-8 L 3/3 Yale A 2-0 W 2/11 at Dartmouth 3-2 W 2/7 at Army 6-2 W 1937-38 (6-7-1) 2/18 Dartmouth A 5-10 L 1 New York, N.Y. 2/17 Dartmouth GO (2ot) 5-2 W 2/14 at Princeton 2-4 L Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/21 at Williams 5-1 W 2/22 at Princeton 4-2 W 2/17 Boston University A 3-2 W 2/25 Boston College A 1-6 L 1928-29 (5-4-1) 2/25 at Yale 1-4 L Captain: Trafford S. Hicks, Jr. ’38 2/21 Dartmout K 5-9 L A 2/28 at Dartmouth 5-8 L Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 3/4 Yale G 4-1 W 12/7 MIT 13-0 W 2/23 Army K 7-2 W A 3/6 at Yale 3-4 L Captain: John Tudor ’29 3/8 Yale G (ot) 4-3 W 12/16 Boston University (ot) 5-4 W 2/28 Yale A 2-4 L G 3/10 Princeton A 6-2 W G 1 1/6 Montreal 5-1 W K 12/12 MIT 9-1 W New York, N.Y. 3/4 Princeton 5-2 W A 1/8 McGill G 0-6 L 3/13 Yale 1-0 W 12/21 McGill G (ot) 3-2 W 3/7 at Yale 3-4 L 1/15 at Princeton 3-2 W 1 3/17 at Yale 3-10 L 12/28 Toronto 1 (ot) 2-3 L 1933-34 (4-9) Lake Placid, N.Y. 1/18 at Brown 10-2 W 1/3 Toronto G (ot) 0-0 T Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/12 at Dartmouth (ot) 2-3 L 1948-49 (12-8) 1/12 at Dartmouth 1-2 L Captain: Paul deB. deGive ’34 1942-43 (14-3-1) 2/16 Princeton G (ot) 4-4 T Coach: John P. Chase ’28 2/16 Dartmouth G 3-2 W 12/12 MIT A 4-1 W Coach: John P. Chase ’28 2/18 at Queen’s 2-6 L Captain: David M. Key, Jr. ’49 2/22 at Penn 9-0 W 12/22 at McGill 1-8 L Captains: John A. Paine, Jr. ’43, 2/19 at Toronto 3-7 L 12/1 Boston University A 6-8 L 3/2 Yale G 2-1 W 1/6 Toronto 1 1-4 L Earle D. Acker ’44 2/23 Dartmouth G (ot) 6-7 L 12/4 MIT A 16-8 W 3/9 at Yale 0-1 L 1/8 McGill G 2-12 L 12/5 Tufts K 8-0 W 2/26 at Yale 5-4 W 12/8 Brown A (ot) 5-6 L 3/13 at Yale (3ot) 2-3 L 1/10 Boston University G 4-3 W 12/9 MIT K 13-4 W 3/5 Yale G 2-3 L 12/14 at Brown1 4-3 W 1 New York, N.Y. 1/13 at Princeton 0-3 L 12/12 Northeastern K 15-3 W 3/10 at Yale 1-2 L 12/15 Boston College A 4-9 L 1/20 Princeton G 2-5 L 12/15 Boston University A 18-2 W 12/22 McGill A 0-14 L 1929-30 (7-4-1) 1/27 Boston University A 3-2 W 1/7 Boston University K 7-0 W 1938-39 (7-7-1) 1/12 Boston College A 5-8 L Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/10 at Dartmouth 1-4 L 1/9 at Princeton 5-1 W G Coach: Clark Hodder ’25 K 1/15 at Dartmouth 8-5 W Captain: Eliot T. Putnam ’29 2/16 Dartmouth 2-3 L 1/12 New Hampshire 13-2 W A Captain: Francis A. Harding, Jr. ’39 K 1/19 Northeastern 9-5 W A 2/24 at Yale 6-2 W 1/14 Dartmouth 8-10 L 12/18 Boston University 4-0 W A A G 12/17 Southern California 6-2 W K 2/9 Boston University 10-8 W 12/28 Toronto 1 2-3 L 3/3 Yale 1-3 L 1/16 Williams 11-0 W A GO 2/12 at Army 11-0 W G 3/7 at Yale (2ot) 4-5 L 12/20 Boston University 3-6 L 2/4 Northeastern (ot) 10-7 W 1/2 Toronto 2-6 L 1 A 1 12/29 Princeton 2-3 L 2/16 Dartmouth 3-4 L 1/6 MIT G 8-1 W New York, N.Y. 2/6 at Dartmouth 4-7 L 1 K 2/19 at Princeton 5-3 W G 12/30 Princeton 1-3 L 2/10 Princeton 9-1 W 1/8 Michigan Tech 11-0 W 1 2/23 MIT A 13-6 W G 1934-35 (8-4) 12/31 Princeton 4-1 W 1/15 Boston University 6-1 W 2/13 at Army 6-1 W 2 A A 2/26 Williams 5-3 W G Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 1/7 Toronto 1-11 L 2/20 Dartmouth (ot) 4-4 T 2/5 Marquette 3-4 L G 3/1 Northeastern A 4-5 L Captain: William P. Watts ’35 1/9 Queen’s 4-2 W 2/22 Army K 8-4 W 2/8 at Dartmouth 2-1 W A 3/5 Yale A 4-1 W G A 1/14 Princeton 5-2 W 2/15 Dartmouth 4-0 W 12/11 MIT 10-0 W 2/27 at Yale 4-1 W A 2/15 Dartmouth G 1-2 L G 3/9 Princeton 8-6 W 3/1 at Yale (ot) 3-2 W 12/18 Boston University A 5-1 W 3/6 Yale 2-4 L G 3/12 at Yale 8-3 W 88 G 2/17 at Yale (ot) 2-2 T 3/10 Yale 5-3 W 3/8 Yale 1-3 L 12/21 at McGill 1-6 L 3/14 Dartmouth A 2-7 L G G 2/21 at Montreal 7-5 W 3/12 Yale (3ot) 2-2 T 1/9 McGill 1-4 L 1 Rhode Island Arena 1 A 2/22 at McGill 6-13 L 1943-44 New York, N.Y. 1/12 Princeton 7-2 W 2 2/25 at Princeton (ot) 4-3 W Springfield, Mass. 2/9 at Dartmouth 6-2 W No Formal Program 3/1 at Dartmouth 2-4 L 1930-31 (11-2) 2/12 at Brown 7-0 W 3/4 Yale G 7-3 W 1949-50 (10-8) Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/16 at Princeton 6-1 W 1944-45 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. Coach: John P. Chase ’28 Captain: A No Formal Program Harwood Ellis ’31 2/22 Dartmouth 9-3 W Captain: Myles D. Huntington ’50 12/11 MIT G 7-2 W 3/2 Yale G (ot) 2-3 L 1939-40 (3-10-1) 12/3 MIT A 10-5 W 12/27 Toronto 1 4-1 W 3/9 at Yale 4-1 W 1945-46 (2-4-2) Coach: Clark Hodder ’25 12/6 Boston University A 7-6 W 12/30 Michigan 2 7-0 W 3/13 Yale G 2-3 L Coach: John P. Chase ’28 Captain: William C. Coleman ’40 12/12 Tufts A 9-2 W 1/1 McGill 2 3-2 W Captain: William M. Ayers ’47 A 12/13 at Brown (ot) 6-7 L 1/2 Queen’s 3 5-1 W 1935-36 (12-4-1) 12/19 Boston University 8-1 W 1 1/1 Princeton 7-5 W 12/20 Boston College A 5-8 L 1/7 Toronto G 9-0 W Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 12/28 Princeton 3-6 L 1 1/14 Holy Cross 10-5 W 1/10 Brown A 3-8 L 1/10 at Army 10-0 W Captain: 12/29 Princeton 5-3 W Frederick R. Moseley ’36 1O 2/4 Holy Cross 7-7 T G Princeton 1/14 at Army (ot) 6-7 L 1/14 Middlebury 6-0 W A 12/30 (ot) 6-6 T 12/10 MIT 12-0 W A 2/9 at Yale 2-9 L 1/16 Northeastern A 5-4 W 2/14 Dartmouth G 4-2 W A 1/6 McGill 0-7 L 12/17 Boston University 12-1 W A 2/15 Dartmouth 5-14 L 1/17 Williams A 10-0 W 2/21 at Dartmouth 3-2 W 1/13 Dartmouth (ot) 4-5 L 12/20 at Brown 3-0 W 2/22 at Army 3-4 L 2/7 Boston University A 4-6 L 2/23 at McGill 2-0 W 1 2/10 at Dartmouth 3-8 L A 12/28 Clarkson 1-2 L K 2/28 Boston University 4-4 T 2/13 Northeastern A 6-3 W 2/28 Yale G 1-5 L 1 2/14 Williams 4-3 W A 12/30 Clarkson 5-1 W A 3/7 Boston University 4-5 L 2/15 Dartmouth 5-8 L 3/7 at Yale 1-3 L 1 2/17 Princeton 4-5 L 12/31 Clarkson (ot) 4-4 T 2/18 at Princeton 7-4 W 1 New York, N.Y. G 2/22 at Toronto 1-10 L 1946-47 (6-6) 1/4 Toronto 6-4 W 2/25 at Dartmouth A 7-3 W 2 Fort Erie, Ont. G 2/23 at Queen’s 2-10 L 1/8 McGill 0-3 L Coach: John P. Chase ’28 2/28 Boston College A 9-8 W 3 Syracuse, N.Y. 2/28 at Princeton 1-2 L 1/11 at Princeton 3-4 L G Captain: John R. Crocker, Jr. ’47 3/4 at Yale 1-4 L A 3/2 Yale 2-4 L 1/18 Dartmouth 3-2 W A A 3/9 at Yale 1-5 L 12/18 Boston University (ot) 5-4 W 3/7 Princeton 4-5 L 1931-32 (11-1-2) K 2/8 at Dartmouth 4-6 L 1 12/30 Boston College 3-6 L 3/11 Yale A 2-1 W A Lake Placid, N.Y. Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/11 Dartmouth 10-1 W 2/3 Holy Cross A 10-4 W G Captain: C.C. Cunningham ’32 2/15 Yale 5-2 W 2/8 at Army 8-1 W 1950-51 (12-11) G 1940-41 (2-9-1) 12/9 MIT 7-1 W 2/22 at McGill 7-4 W 2/15 at Dartmouth 5-7 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland GO A Coach: Clark Hodder ’25 12/19 McGill (2ot) 3-5 L 2/29 Princeton 8-0 W 2/17 Boston College A 5-10 L 1 G Captain: Joseph P. Willetts ’41 Captain: Lewis T. Preston ’50 12/29 McGill (ot) 6-5 W 3/4 Princeton 3-2 W A K 2/19 Princeton 9-2 W 12/5 MIT G 14-2 W 12/31 Queen’s 1 3-1 W 3/7 at Yale 11-0 W 12/4 Northeastern 4-7 L A A 2/22 Army 9-3 W 12/11 Tufts G 5-0 W 1/2 Princeton G 4-3 W 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 12/17 Boston University 3-7 L A 2/26 Dartmouth 4-15 L 12/15 Boston University G 2-6 L 1/6 St. Mary’s G 11-2 W 1/3 at Princeton 4-10 L A 3/1 Yale 4-6 L 12/20 Boston College A 5-3 W 1/9 Toronto 2 2-1 W 1936-37 (15-1) 1/4 at Princeton 2-6 L A 3/5 Williams 16-3 W 12/29 at Minnesota (ot) 4-3 W 1/14 Minnesota G 7-6 W Coach: Joseph Stubbs ’20 2/5 at Williams 3-2 W A 3/8 at Yale 2-4 L 12/30 at Minnesota (ot) 7-6 W 2/13 Dartmouth G 5-2 W Captain: 2/8 Princeton 3-4 L George S. Ford ’37 1/1 at North Dakota 5-2 W 2/17 Brown G 10-0 W A 2/15 at Princeton 4-5 L 1947-48 (9-14) 12/15 MIT 8-0 W 1/2 at North Dakota 3-5 L 2/20 at Dartmouth 6-2 W 1 2/22 at Dartmouth 4-5 L 12/31 Clarkson 7-5 W G Coach: John P. Chase ’28 1/9 at Brown 1-4 L 2/27 at Yale 4-1 W 1 2/26 Army 5-2 W 1/1 Clarkson 6-3 W Captain: John E. Lavalle ’46 1/11 at American International 6-3 W G 1 3/1 at Yale 2-8 L 3/5 Yale (2ot) 1-1 T 1/2 Clarkson 3-1 W A 1 3/5 Dartmouth G (ot) 3-3 T 12/3 Boston College 4-3 W 1/13 Williams 21-4 W 3/9 at Yale (2ot) 4-4 T A O 1/7 Toronto (2ot) 5-4 W G 12/4 at Brown (ot) 10-5 W 1/16 Northeastern A 3-1 W 1 Syracuse, N.Y. G 3/8 Yale 2-8 L 1/9 Dartmouth 2-0 W 12/10 Boston University A 2-8 L 2/5 Boston College A 9-10 L 2 New York, N.Y. ()

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

2/6 Northeastern A 1-5 L 2/28 Yale A 5-2 W 3/10 Michigan N1 3-7 L 2/16 at Dartmouth 8-3 W 12/12 at Clarkson (ot) 4-4 T 2/10 at Dartmouth 1-5 L 3/4 Princeton A 4-2 W 3/12 St. Lawrence N1 6-3 W 2/20 at Williams 7-2 W 12/13 at St. Lawrence 3-4 L 2/13 Boston University A 1-6 L 3/7 at Yale 4-2 W 1 Colorado Springs, Colo. 2/23 Tufts 13-1 W 12/17 Colby (ot) 3-2 W 2/17 at Army 10-2 W 2/27 Dartmouth 4-0 W 1/7 Tufts 6-2 W 2/20 Dartmouth A 6-1 W 1953-54 (10-10-2) 1955-56 (15-10) 3/2 Yale G 4-2 W 1/9 at Boston College 2-3 L 2/24 at Princeton 4-5 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/6 Princeton 5-1 W 1/10 Cornell 18-0 W 2/27 Brown A 1-5 L Captain: R. Norman Wood ’54 Captain: Charles B. Flynn ’56 3/9 at Yale 4-0 W 1/13 Providence 3-6 L A N2 3/3 Yale 4-0 W 12/8 at Providence 10-1 W 12/6 Northeastern 8-3 W 3/15 Michigan 1-6 L 1/31 at Dartmouth 2-4 L A N2 BG 3/6 Princeton 3-8 L 12/11 Boston College G 3-5 L 12/9 Boston University G (ot) 3-4 L 3/16 Clarkson (2ot) 1-2 L 2/2 Boston College 4-6 L 1 3/10 at Yale 1-5 L 12/15 Boston University G 3-1 W 12/10 Middlebury 3-0 W Christmas Tournament 2/4 at Providence 4-3 W 1 2 Troy, N.Y. 12/18 Northeastern G 6-2 W 12/13 Providence G (ot) 4-5 L Colorado Springs, Colo. 2/7 Brown 6-1 W BG 12/22 at Minnesota 2-4 L 12/16 Boston College G 3-5 L 2/9 Northeastern 4-0 W 1951-52 (8-11) 12/23 at Minnesota 1 0-9 L 12/17 Tufts G 13-3 W 1957-58 (18-10-1) 2/14 at Brown 6-4 W Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 12/26 at Colorado College 3-5 L 12/23 McGill G 2-6 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/18 Boston College 3-5 L Captain: Dustin M. Burke ’52 12/28 at Colorado College 0-9 L 12/28 Clarkson A 5-11 L Captain: Robert Barry Cleary ’58 2/21 at Princeton (ot) 5-5 T 12/17 Boston University A 5-9 L 12/29 at Denver 2-16 L 12/30 St. Lawrence A 1-3 L 12/7 at Boston University A 3-6 L 2/23 at Cornell 13-0 W 12/19 Boston College A 0-5 L 12/30 at Denver 3-10 L 12/31 Dalhousie A 5-6 L 12/11 Boston College A 6-1 W 2/25 Dartmouth 3-4 L A 12/27 at Rensselaer 1 2-6 L 1/9 Dartmouth L 4-0 W 1/7 at Dartmouth 6-2 W 12/17 Clarkson A 2-1 W 2/28 Yale 2-1 W 12/28 Williams 1 13-0 W 1/11 Boston University BG 3-2 W 1/10 at Providence 5-4 W 12/19 St. Lawrence A 4-6 L 3/2 Boston University 2-3 L 12/29 Dartmouth 1 (ot) 2-1 W 1/12 Boston College BG 1-4 L 1/14 Brown 4-2 W 12/20 Middlebury 7-1 W 3/4 Princeton 5-1 W 1/9 Boston College A (ot) 5-6 L 2/2 Northeastern G 7-2 W 2/4 at Dartmouth 10-1 W 12/27 at Minnesota 2-7 L 3/7 at Yale (ot) 5-5 T 1/12 at Princeton 0-2 L 2/6 at Dartmouth 6-4 W 2/6 Boston University BG 6-1 W 12/28 at Minnesota (ot) 2-3 L 1/14 MIT A 14-1 W 2/10 at Brown 6-3 W 2/8 Boston College BG 2-4 L 1/1 at North Dakota 1-5 L 1959-60 (16-7-1) 1/16 Tufts A 8-2 W 2/15 Boston College G 1-4 L 2/11 at Brown 3-1 W 1/3 at Minnesota Duluth 2-5 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/4 Northeastern A (ot) 2-3 L 2/20 at Princeton 6-4 W 2/14 Williams 10-3 W 1/4 at Michigan State 2-6 L Captain: Michael Graney ’60 2/7 at Brown 2-7 L 2/23 Brown L 4-6 L 2/18 at Princeton 5-3 W 1/8 Tufts 16-1 W 12/5 at Boston College 2-4 L 2/13 Dartmouth A 5-1 W 2/27 at Yale (ot) 3-3 T 2/22 Tufts 16-1 W 1/11 at Princeton 7-2 W 12/11 at Bowdoin 4-3 W 2/16 at Army 9-1 W 3/3 Princeton G 3-1 W 2/25 Boston College A 5-3 W 1/14 Boston University G (ot) 5-4 W 12/12 at Colby 2-4 L 2/20 at Dartmouth 5-2 W 3/6 Yale G (ot) 5-5 T 2/28 Northeastern 2-4 L 1/30 Northeastern G 11-0 W 12/18 St. Lawrence (ot) 5-5 T 2/25 Boston University A 3-14 L 1 Hibbing, Minn. 3/3 at Yale 0-1 L 2/1 at Dartmouth 7-1 W 12/28 Northeastern 1A 8-2 W 2/27 Brown A 5-2 W 3/7 Princeton 2-1 W 2/3 Northeastern BG 4-5 L 12/29 Providence 1A (ot) 5-4 W 3/1 at Yale 3-4 L 1954-55 (17-3-1) 3/10 Yale 2-0 W 2/5 at Brown 3-1 W 12/30 Toronto 1A 2-7 L 3/5 Princeton A 1-4 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/8 at Providence 9-3 W 1/6 at Brown 2-3 L 3/8 Yale A 2-5 L Captain: W. Scott Cooledge ’55 1956-57 (21-5) 2/10 Boston College BG 7-3 W 1/8 Clarkson 5-1 W 1 RPI Christmas Tournament 12/7 Northeastern G 11-1 W Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/12 Williams 9-1 W 1/9 Cornell 9-0 W 12/10 Boston College G 3-4 L Captain: James A. Bailey II ’57 2/15 Brown 4-0 W 1/13 Norwich 10-2 W G 1952-53 (11-5-1) 12/14 Boston University G 6-2 W 12/6 at Providence 3-6 L 2/19 Boston College 8-1 W 1/16 Brown 3-1 W Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 12/17 Providence G 10-3 W 12/14 at Norwich 6-2 W 2/22 Providence 6-1 W 1/20 Tufts 10-2 W Captain: Walter F. Greeley ’53 12/27 St. Lawrence A (ot) 3-2 W 12/15 at Middlebury 10-0 W 2/25 Dartmouth 4-4 T 2/6 at Dartmouth 3-1 W BG 12/13 Boston University A (ot) 4-4 T 12/28 McGill A 1-2 L 12/18 Providence G 10-2 W 3/1 at Yale 6-2 W 2/8 Northeastern 5-3 W A 12/17 Tufts A 8-1 W 12/29 Boston College A 8-2 W 12/27 Army 1A 4-3 W 3/5 Princeton 5-0 W 2/10 at Boston University 5-2 W G 12/22 Boston College BA (ot) 3-2 W 1/8 Northeastern 6-2 W 12/28 Boston University 1A 5-2 W 3/8 Yale 6-0 W 2/13 Dartmouth 1-5 L N1 BG 12/27 Boston University BA 7-4 W 1/11 at Brown (ot) 4-4 T 12/29 Boston College 1A 4-2 W 3/14 North Dakota 1-9 L 2/15 Boston University 3-2 W 89 N1 1/3 Boston University A (ot) 6-5 W 1/15 at Dartmouth 8-4 W 1/7 at Boston University A 3-4 L 3/15 Clarkson 1-5 L 2/20 at Princeton 3-2 W 1 1/7 MIT A 12-1 W 2/7 Northeastern BG 12-3 W 1/10 at American International 4-2 W Minneapolis, Minn. 2/22 at Cornell 12-2 W 1/10 at Dartmouth 5-0 W 2/8 Boston College BG (ot) 5-4 W 1/12 at Princeton 9-1 W 2/24 at Providence 0-7 L 1/31 Northeastern A (ot) 3-4 L 2/12 Dartmouth G 10-0 W 1/14 Northeastern G 7-0 W 1958-59 (12-9-4) 2/27 at Yale 5-0 W 2/7 at Brown 1-3 L 2/16 at Boston University A 13-2 W 2/1 Boston University BG 3-5 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/1 Princeton 4-3 W A 2/11 Boston College A 2-6 L 2/19 at Princeton 6-2 W 2/2 at Brown 7-0 W Captain: Richard Martin McLaughlin ’59 3/5 Yale 2-3 L 1 2/13 Northeastern A 6-2 W 2/22 Brown L 5-1 W 2/5 Northeastern BG 5-3 W 11/29 at Boston College 1-3 L Christmas Tournament 2/18 Dartmouth A 5-4 W 2/26 Yale A 9-1 W 2/7 Brown 9-3 W 12/5 at Middlebury 8-6 W 2/21 at Princeton 1-3 L 3/1 Princeton G 5-2 W 2/9 American International 11-3 W 12/6 at Williams 9-2 W 1960-61 (18-4-2) 2/24 Brown L 3-4 L 3/5 at Yale 4-1 W 2/13 Boston College A 5-3 W 12/8 at Boston University A (ot) 5-5 T Coach: Ralph C. Weiland Captain: Charles Stewart Forbes ’61 12/2 Bowdoin 3-0 W 12/9 at Clarkson 5-6 L 12/10 at St. Lawrence (ot) 1-2 L 12/15 Northeastern 5-3 W 12/17 at Army 3-1 W 12/28 at Rensselaer 1 3-5 L 12/29 New Brunswick 1 (ot) 4-4 T 12/30 Princeton 1 6-1 W 1/2 at Boston College (ot) 2-1 W 1/6 at Cornell 3-1 W 1/7 at Colgate 4-1 W 1/11 Boston College 4-1 W 1/14 Dartmouth 7-1 W 1/16 Boston University 6-4 W 2/4 Cornell 2-1 W 2/5 Boston University BG (ot) 3-2 W 2/8 at Brown 8-1 W 2/11 at Dartmouth 9-2 W 2/13 Boston College BG 2-4 L 2/18 at Princeton 7-4 W 2/22 Brown 4-1 W 2/25 Yale 6-2 W 2/28 Princeton 9-2 W 3/1 at Yale (ot) 1-1 T 1 RPI Christmas Tournament

Gene Kinasewich ’64 scores the overtime game-winner against Boston College to clinch the 1963 ECAC title March 9, 1963.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book

1961-62 (21-5) 2/27 at Princeton 5-0 W 2/15 Northeastern BG 1-3 L 2/11 at Brown 1-9 L 1/16 Dartmouth 6-3 W BG Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/2 at Yale 6-0 W 2/17 at Cornell 2-9 L 2/13 Boston College (ot) 5-6 L 2/1 at Penn 6-1 W E BA Captain: David Long Grannis ’62 3/5 Colgate 5-3 W 2/20 at Brown 1-8 L 2/18 Dartmouth 10-4 W 2/3 Northeastern 8-4 W 3/8 Clarkson E 6-4 W 2/24 Dartmouth 3-1 W 2/22 Cornell 1-4 L 2/8 Princeton 5-2 W 12/2 at Bowdoin 6-1 W 3/9 Boston College EA (ot) 4-3 W 2/27 Yale A 3-4 L 2/25 Yale A 7-3 W 2/10 Boston University BG 5-3 W 12/7 Clarkson 3-5 L 1 Christmas Tournament 3/2 at Princeton (ot) 3-2 W 2/28 at Princeton 4-5 L 2/15 New Hampshire 7-1 W 12/11 St. Lawrence 2-0 W 3/6 at Yale 5-4 W 3/4 at Yale 7-3 W 2/19 at Princeton 5-2 W 12/16 Army 5-1 W 1963-64 (17-7) 1 Christmas Tournament 3/7 at Boston University EA 2-6 L 2/22 Yale A 7-2 W 12/29 at Minnesota 2-7 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 1 Christmas Tournament 2/27 Cornell 3-6 L 12/30 at Minnesota 3-4 L 1965-66 (10-12-1) 3/1 at Yale (ot) 2-3 L 1/1 at Colorado College 6-5 W Captain: Eugene Kinasewich ’64 A Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 1967-68 (15-9) 3/4 New Hampshire E (ot) 4-3 W 1/2 at Colorado College 6-4 W 12/4 at Northeastern 4-2 W Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/7 Clarkson EG 8-6 W 1/4 Northeastern 6-1 W 12/7 at Colby 7-2 W Captain: Robert L. Clark ’66 3/8 Cornell EG 2-4 L 1/6 Cornell 5-1 W 12/11 Bowdoin 4-1 W 11/27 at Colby (ot) 4-4 T Captain: John Paul Garrity ’68 A 3/13 Denver N1 2-9 L 1/10 at Boston College 3-2 W 12/14 at Brown (ot) 2-3 L 12/1 Bowdoin 9-2 W 12/2 at Northeastern 9-1 W A 3/15 Michigan Tech N1 (2ot) 6-5 W 1/13 Dartmouth 5-0 W 12/16 St. Lawrence 3-1 W 12/8 at Northeastern 3-1 W 12/6 Boston University 8-5 W 1 Colorado Springs, Colo. 1/15 at Boston University A 8-1 W 12/18 at Army 1-5 L 12/11 St. Lawrence 3-5 L 12/9 at Boston College 3-4 L G 2/3 at Cornell 1-2 L 12/21 Toronto 4-1 W 12/13 Clarkson 2-4 L 12/13 Princeton 5-3 W G 1969-70 (16-9) 2/5 Boston College BG 6-1 W 12/23 Minnesota 5-2 W 12/15 at Brown (ot) 3-4 L 12/16 Brown 7-3 W A G Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/7 Brown 5-1 W 1/3 at Boston University 4-3 W 12/18 Toronto 5-7 L 12/18 Cornell 0-9 L 1 1 2/10 at Dartmouth 10-4 W 1/4 Norwich 11-2 W 12/31 Princeton 6-3 W 12/27 North Dakota 1-8 L Captain: Christopher J. Gurry ’70 1 1 A 2/12 Boston University BG 5-0 W 1/8 at Boston College 4-2 W 1/1 Yale 2-3 L 12/28 Boston College 2-5 L 12/4 at Northeastern 6-3 W A 2/17 at Princeton 3-1 W 1/11 at Cornell 4-3 W 1/5 at Boston University 2-4 L 12/30 at Sir George Williams 12-0 W 12/6 Dartmouth 6-1 W 2/21 at Brown 5-2 W 1/14 Dartmouth 4-3 W 1/8 New Hampshire 9-5 W 1/4 at Rensselaer 2-7 L 12/9 at New Hampshire 11-3 W BG 2/24 at Yale 2-1 W 2/3 Boston University (2ot) 2-3 L 1/12 at Boston College 7-4 W 1/6 Penn 15-1 W 12/13 Brown 3-4 L 2/27 Princeton 10-0 W 2/5 Cornell 1-2 L 1/15 at Cornell 6-7 L 1/10 at Brown 8-3 W 12/17 at Boston College 5-6 L 1G 3/3 Yale G 9-3 W 2/8 at Dartmouth 1-7 L 1/18 Dartmouth 8-3 W 1/13 Clarkson 8-3 W 12/19 Army 9-3 W BG 1G 3/6 Army E (ot) 2-1 W 2/10 Northeastern 7-5 W 2/5 at Princeton 3-6 L 1/16 at Dartmouth 7-2 W 12/20 Clarkson 4-3 W BG 3/9 St. Lawrence EA 5-6 L 2/15 at Princeton 6-2 W 2/7 Northeastern 5-1 W 2/3 at Penn 12-0 W 1/2 at McGill 7-4 W BG 2 3/10 Colby EA 2-0 W 2/18 Clarkson (ot) 3-4 L 2/12 at Dartmouth 5-3 W 2/5 Boston College 6-4 W 1/3 Toronto 5-7 L 2/22 Brown (ot) 6-5 W 2/14 Boston University BG 2-9 L 2/10 at Princeton 4-3 W 1/7 at Brown 6-3 W 1962-63 (21-3-2) 2/29 at Yale 12-2 W 2/19 Cornell (ot) 5-4 W 2/12 Boston University BG 1-4 L 1/10 Cornell 1-3 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/3 Princeton 6-2 W 2/23 Brown 1-4 L 2/17 St. Lawrence 4-6 L 1/31 at Penn (ot) 4-5 L G BG Captain: Timothy Taylor ’63 3/7 Yale 3-2 W 2/26 at Yale 5-8 L 2/21 Dartmouth 4-2 W 2/2 Boston University 3-5 L 3/10 at Clarkson E 4-6 L 3/2 Princeton 4-1 W 2/24 at Yale 7-1 W 2/7 at Princeton 6-3 W 12/5 Colby 7-1 W 3/5 Yale G 5-6 L 2/28 at Cornell 2-7 L 2/9 Northeastern BG (ot) 5-4 W 12/8 Boston University 2-1 W 1964-65 (9-15) 1 Buffalo, N.Y. 3/2 Yale G 9-1 W 2/14 at Dartmouth 8-1 W 12/12 Northeastern 8-1 W Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/5 Boston University E 3-6 L 2/18 St. Lawrence 6-2 W 12/15 Brown (ot) 4-4 T 1966-67 (11-12) 1 St. Paul Classic 2/21 Penn 8-0 W 12/19 at Army (ot) 2-2 T Captain: John S.F. Daly ’65 Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/25 at Cornell 3-9 L 12/26 Northeastern 1A 11-6 W 12/2 Northeastern 2-6 L 1968-69 (19-8-1) 2/28 at Yale 6-2 W 12/27 Boston University 1A 10-3 W 12/5 at Bowdoin 4-1 W Captain: Dennis M. McCullough ’67 Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 3/4 Princeton 7-2 W 12/28 Colorado College 1A (ot) 3-2 W 12/9 Boston University (ot) 0-1 L 11/30 at Bowdoin 9-2 W 3/7 Yale 9-0 W 1/5 Cornell 8-1 W 12/12 Army 2-5 L 12/3 at New Hampshire 6-2 W Captain: Robert Theodore Bauer ’69 3/10 at Boston College E 10-5 W 90 1/11 at Clarkson 3-4 L 12/16 Brown 2-9 L 12/9 at Clarkson 7-4 W 12/5 Northeastern 8-4 W G 3/13 Cornell EG 5-6 L 1/12 at St. Lawrence 1-6 L 12/18 Providence 2-1 W 12/10 at St. Lawrence 2-3 L 12/7 at Dartmouth 11-2 W 1A A 3/14 Boston University EG 2-8 L 1/16 at Dartmouth 6-1 W 12/28 Michigan 2-4 L 12/14 Brown 3-1 W 12/11 at Boston University 7-4 W 1A 1 ECAC Christmas Tournament 2/2 at Cornell 5-1 W 12/29 Boston University 0-8 L 12/20 at Cornell 3-4 L 12/14 at Brown (ot) 8-7 W 1A 1A 2 Montreal, Que. 2/4 Northeastern BG (ot) 4-3 W 12/30 Northeastern 5-1 W 12/28 Boston University 5-7 L 12/17 Boston College (ot) 5-6 L 1A A 2/6 Dartmouth 6-1 W 1/8 at St. Lawrence 7-3 W 12/29 Cornell 1-4 L 12/27 Clarkson 7-2 W 1A A 1970-71 (18-8-1) 2/9 at Brown 3-1 W 1/9 at Clarkson 1-5 L 12/30 Northeastern (ot) 5-4 W 12/28 Boston University 1-2 L Coach: Ralph C. Weiland 2/11 Boston College BG 1-3 L 1/13 Boston College 2-3 L 1/5 Rensselaer 8-2 W 1/1 Clarkson 2-4 L 2/13 Williams 6-3 W 1/16 Cornell 2-3 L 1/7 Princeton 6-2 W 1/2 St. Lawrence (ot) 4-4 T Captain: Joseph Vincent Cavanagh, Jr. ’71 2/16 Princeton 6-1 W 1/19 at Dartmouth 3-5 L 1/11 Boston College (ot) 3-4 L 1/4 Rensselaer 7-3 W 12/1 Northeastern 12-0 W 2/19 Boston College 3-1 W 2/6 Colby 5-2 W 1/14 Northeastern 4-5 L 1/8 Brown 5-1 W 12/5 at Dartmouth 9-4 W BG 2/23 Yale A 6-5 W 2/8 Boston College (ot) 4-5 L 1/18 at Dartmouth 6-2 W 1/11 at Cornell 4-8 L 12/9 Boston University (ot) 4-4 T 2/13 Princeton 6-2 W 2/9 Boston University BG 3-8 L 1/14 Penn 12-0 W 12/12 Brown 5-0 W 12/15 Boston College 4-0 W 12/21 Yale *1 6-2 W 12/22 Clarkson *1 2-0 W 1/1 at Clarkson (ot) 4-5 L 1/2 at St. Lawrence 2-1 W 1/6 Vermont 2-3 L 1/9 at Cornell (ot) 4-5 L 1/16 at Penn 6-5 W 2/6 Princeton 8-0 W 2/8 Boston College BG 10-4 W 2/10 at Brown 2-3 L 2/17 Dartmouth 5-4 W 2/20 Penn 5-1 W 2/22 Boston University BG 1-4 L 2/24 at Princeton 12-4 W 2/26 Yale A 11-4 W 3/3 Cornell 1-3 L 3/6 at Yale 11-2 W 3/9 Brown E 4-3 W 3/12 Boston University EG 4-2 W 3/13 Clarkson EG 7-4 W 3/19 Minnesota N2 (ot) 5-6 L 3/20 Denver N2 0-1 L 1 New York, N.Y. (Madison Square Garden) 2 Syracuse, N.Y.

Harvard defeated Michigan Tech, 4-2, to win the 1972 Great Lakes Invitational in Detroit, Mich.

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

1971-72 (17-8-1) Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 Captain: John Thomas Paul ’72 12/4 at Penn 11-3 W 12/8 at Boston University (ot) 4-4 T 12/11 at Army 5-2 W 12/14 at Boston College 6-4 W 12/17 Princeton 7-2 W 12/26 Wisconsin 1 (ot) 1-2 L 12/28 Penn 1 7-4 W 1/5 Brown 3-1 W 1/8 Cornell 6-4 W 1/11 at Dartmouth 7-3 W 1/15 at New Hampshire (ot) 3-4 L 1/17 Northeastern 5-2 W 1/19 St. Lawrence 7-1 W 2/7 Northeastern BG 8-3 W 2/9 Clarkson 6-2 W 2/12 Penn 2-3 L 2/14 Boston University BG 1-4 L 2/16 Dartmouth 3-4 L 2/21 at Cornell 2-5 L 2/23 at Princeton 9-0 W 2/26 at Yale 5-1 W 3/1 at Brown 3-2 W 3/4 Yale A 8-4 W 3/7 Clarkson E (ot) 6-5 W 3/10 Boston University EG 1-3 L 3/11 New Hampshire EG 1-4 L 1 St. Louis, Mo. 1972-73 (17-4-1) Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 The Bright Hockey Center was dedicated on Nov. 19, 1979 when the Crimson hosted the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. More than 3,000 Captain: Kevin Francis Hampe ’73 spectators turned out for the game. 12/2 New Hampshire 9-3 W 12/6 at Boston University 6-5 W 3/2 Yale 10-3 W 12/13 Brown 5-8 L 2/23 at Cornell 2-6 L 12/14 at Vermont 4-7 L 12/9 Penn 9-1 W 3/4 Providence E 9-3 W 12/21 at Notre Dame 7-9 L 2/26 Yale 6-2 W 12/23 Notre Dame 9-5 W 12/13 Boston College 6-4 W 3/8 Rensselaer EG 7-2 W 1/2 at Michigan State 8-6 W 3/1 Dartmouth 2-3 L 12/27 at Minnesota 4-5 L 12/16 at Brown 5-1 W 3/9 Boston University EG 2-4 L 1/3 at Michigan State 4-3 W 3/5 at Yale 5-3 W 12/28 at Minnesota Duluth 3-8 L 1 12/27 Michigan 8-4 W 3/15 Michigan Tech NG (ot) 5-6 L 1/7 at Boston College (ot) 6-6 T 1/4 at Northeastern 3-5 L 1 12/28 Michigan Tech 4-2 W 3/16 Boston University NG 5-7 L 1/10 at Brown 4-2 W 1977-78 (12-14) 1/6 Brown 3-7 L 1/6 Cornell 2-5 L 1 Fireman’s Hoilday Hockey Tournament 1/14 at Providence (ot) 4-4 T Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 1/9 at Boston College (ot) 5-4 W 91 1/10 at Dartmouth 7-5 W 1/17 Providence 6-5 W Captain: Brian W. Cook ’78 1/13 St. Lawrence 2-3 L 1/13 Princeton 11-1 W 1974-75 (23-6) 1/20 Boston College 7-4 W 11/15 Dartmouth (ot) 4-5 L 1/31 at Providence 3-5 L 1/15 Northeastern 8-1 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/2 Boston University BG 5-6 L 2/3 at Princeton (ot) 7-7 T BG 11/22 Vermont 6-3 W 2/5 Boston University 3-8 L BG Captain: Randy Lee Roth ’75 2/6 at Princeton 6-1 W 12/1 at Providence 6-4 W 2/5 Boston University 2-4 L 2/7 at Vermont 8-4 W BG 11/30 Penn 7-3 W 2/9 Northeastern 4-2 W 12/3 Penn 6-3 W 2/7 Cornell 2-4 L 2/10 at Penn 7-6 W A 2/11 at Cornell 4-8 L 2/10 Yale 1-4 L BG 12/2 at Northeastern 5-3 W 12/7 at Boston University 3-4 L 2/12 Northeastern 8-5 W BG 12/6 Princeton 4-1 W 2/17 Dartmouth 4-5 L 12/10 at Brown (ot) 3-2 W 2/12 Northeastern 4-5 L 2/14 Dartmouth (ot) 2-2 T 12/10 Boston University 7-2 W 2/20 Penn 8-2 W 12/12 Boston College 0-7 L 2/14 Princeton 4-3 W 2/17 at Cornell 4-9 L 12/14 at Brown 5-3 W 2/21 Princeton 6-3 W 12/14 at New Hampshire 7-6 W 2/21 at Cornell 3-11 L 2/21 at Princeton 13-2 W 12/20 Brown 6-3 W 2/25 Cornell 3-3 T 12/22 Notre Dame 1 4-3 W 2/24 at Colgate 10-2 W 2/24 Yale 9-1 W 12/23 Notre Dame 8-2 W 2/28 at Yale 9-3 W 12/28 at Colorado College2 6-4 W 2/28 Dartmouth 2-3 L 2/28 Brown 6-2 W 12/27 Michigan 1 2-3 L 3/2 at Dartmouth 2-9 L 12/30 Denver 2 (ot) 2-3 L 3/3 at Yale 5-6 L 3/3 at Yale 2-1 W 1 3/6 Yale 7-2 W E 12/28 Yale 8-3 W 1/3 at St. Lawrence 7-4 W 3/6 Clarkson 4-7 L 3/9 at New Hampshire E 4-3 W 1979-80 (8-15-3) 1 1/3 at Saint Louis 13-3 W 1/5 Clarkson 2-4 L Great Lakes Invitational EG 1/5 at Saint Louis 4-5 L 3/12 Boston University 4-8 L 1/7 Brown 7-4 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 EG 1973-74 (17-11-1) 1/7 Boston College 2-1 W 3/13 Cornell 6-7 L 1/10 at Boston College 3-11 L Captains: John Hynes ’80, 1/10 Cornell 4-2 W 1/12 Northeastern 5-14 L Graham Carter ’80 Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 1/11 Colgate 14-4 W 1976-77 (14-12) 2/4 Princeton 2-1 W 11/20 Northeastern 8-2 W Captains: Robert William Goodenow ’74, 1/15 Dartmouth 4-2 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/6 Northeastern BG (ot) 4-3 W 11/24 Rensselaer 2-6 L Everett Mark Noonan ’74 2/3 Northeastern BG 9-0 W Captain: William R. Horton, Jr. ’77 2/17 at Penn 3-4 L 11/28 at Providence 3-6 L 11/28 at New Hampshire 2-3 L 2/7 Vermont 10-1 W 11/23 at Vermont 5-2 W 2/18 at Princeton 3-6 L 12/5 at Boston University (ot) 4-3 W 12/2 at Penn 7-3 W 2/10 Boston University BG 2-7 L 11/29 at Northeastern A 4-2 W 2/21 at Cornell 3-6 L 12/8 at Brown (ot) 4-4 T 12/5 Dartmouth 4-5 L 2/14 at Penn 5-3 W 12/1 Providence 4-5 L 2/23 Cornell (ot) 3-4 L 12/11 at New Hampshire 4-1 W 12/7 at St. Lawrence 6-4 W 2/15 at Princeton 10-2 W 12/4 Penn 3-4 L 2/25 at Yale 2-3 L 12/15 Dartmouth 2-5 L 12/8 at Clarkson 5-3 W 2/19 at Cornell 8-2 W 12/8 Boston University (ot) 2-3 L 2/28 at Dartmouth 4-3 W 12/18 U.S. International 2-7 L 12/12 Boston University 5-6 L 2/22 Yale 3-2 W 12/11 at Brown 3-5 L 3/1 Boston University BG3 1-7 L 12/19 U.S. International 3-8 L 12/15 at Brown 6-2 W 2/26 at Dartmouth 9-3 W 12/15 New Hampshire 6-9 L 3/4 Yale 3-4 L 12/21 at Colorado College 4-10 L 1 12/27 Minnesota 3-6 L 3/1 at Yale 7-2 W 12/20 Notre Dame 4-3 W 1 Bloomington, Minn. () 1/4 Vermont (ot) 3-4 L 1 12/28 North Dakota (ot) 2-2 T 3/4 Clarkson E 10-5 W 12/27 at Minnesota (ot) 3-4 L 2 Holiday Hockey Tournament 1/5 Brown 9-5 W 12/29 at Notre Dame 2-5 L 3/7 Cornell EG 6-4 W 12/29 at Wisconsin 4-3 W 3 delayed by blizzard 1/9 Boston College 2-6 L 1/8 at Boston College 5-6 L 3/8 Boston University EG 3-7 L 12/30 at Wisconsin 5-7 L 1/12 at Princeton 3-5 L 1/11 Princeton 10-1 W 3/14 Minnesota N2 4-6 L 1/5 St. Lawrence 10-0 W 1978-79 (7-18-1) 2/2 at Maine 3-5 L 1/12 Penn 4-2 W 3/15 Boston University N2 5-10 L 1/8 Brown 4-3 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/4 Boston College BG 3-4 L 1/16 Cornell (ot) 4-5 L 1 Great Lakes Invitational 1/11 at Boston College 1-4 L 2/8 Cornell 5-3 W BG Captain: John Cochrane ’79 2/4 Boston College 11-6 W 2 BG St. Louis, Mo. 1/13 at Dartmouth 3-2 W Home Games Played at Boston University 2/11 Boston University 7-4 W 2/6 Brown 6-1 W 1/17 at Providence 4-5 L 11/21 at Dartmouth 3-7 L 2/13 Princeton 5-1 W 2/9 at Princeton 5-4 W 1975-76 (13-10-3) 2/5 Princeton (ot) 5-4 W 2/19 at Cornell 1-6 L BG 11/25 at Rensselaer (ot) 5-6 L 2/11 Boston University 5-4 W BG Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/7 Boston College 4-2 W 11/29 at Providence 5-2 W 2/23 at Yale (ot) 6-6 T 2/15 at Colgate 8-6 W Captain: Kevin Carr ’76 2/9 Cornell 4-7 L 12/3 Boston University 5-8 L 2/24 Colgate 2-3 L 2/16 at Cornell 7-4 W BG 12/2 Northeastern 5-4 W 2/14 Boston University 4-3 W 12/6 at Bowdoin 6-4 W 2/27 at Dartmouth (ot) 5-6 L 2/20 at Northeastern A (ot) 3-2 W 12/6 at Penn 3-4 L 2/18 at Princeton 5-2 W 12/9 at Brown 1-2 L 3/1 Yale (ot) 4-4 T 2/23 at Yale 1-6 L 12/10 at Boston University 3-8 L 2/19 at Penn 6-2 W 12/12 New Hampshire 8-4 W 3/7 at St. Lawrence 5-3 W 2/27 at Dartmouth 6-2 W 3/8 at Clarkson 3-7 L

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book

1980-81 (11-14-1) 2/8 Boston College BG (ot) 4-5 L 1985-86 (25-8-1) 11/27 at Dartmouth 5-3 W 1/6 St. Lawrence (ot) 3-2 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/9 Providence 8-5 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 12/4 at Cornell 3-1 W 1/12 Yale 11-0 W Captain: Tom Murray ’81 2/12 Cornell (ot) 3-2 W Captain: Scott M. Fusco ’85-’86 12/6 at Colgate 1-4 L 1/13 Brown 14-4 W 2/14 Boston University BG 4-5 L 12/12 Dartmouth 6-1 W 2/2 at Princeton (ot) 5-4 W 11/23 at Brown 5-3 W 11/15 at Yale 5-7 L 2/16 at Dartmouth 9-1 W 12/27 Illinois-Chicago 1 2-3 L 2/3 at Army 4-1 W 11/25 Northeastern 5-11 L 11/16 at Brown 6-1 W 2/19 Yale 3-0 W 12/28 Minnesota Duluth 1 3-6 L 2/5 Northeastern BG 5-4 W 12/2 Boston University 5-2 W 11/22 Army 6-4 W 2/22 at Northeastern (ot) 4-3 W 1/2 at Vermont (ot) 3-4 L 2/9 Cornell 5-2 W 12/5 at Rensselaer 1-9 L 11/23 Princeton 5-4 W 2/25 at Brown 7-0 W 1/3 at Rensselaer 5-4 W 2/10 Colgate 1-6 L 12/6 at Colgate 7-6 W 11/26 Boston College 4-4 T 2/27 at Princeton 2-4 L 1/8 St. Lawrence 4-3 W 2/12 Boston University BG 2-8 L 12/10 New Hampshire 4-3 W 11/29 at Dartmouth 9-2 W 3/4 Rensselaer E 5-1 W 1/9 Clarkson 5-3 W 2/16 Vermont 2-3 L 12/13 Brown 2-3 L 12/6 at Colgate 7-2 W 3/5 Rensselaer E 4-2 W 1/15 Brown 5-2 W 2/17 Rensselaer 7-3 W 12/17 Dartmouth 2-3 L 12/8 at Cornell 11-3 W 3/11 New Hampshire EG 6-3 W 1/17 Yale 8-1 W 2/23 at St. Lawrence 3-4 L 12/27 Michigan Tech1 2-9 L 12/14 Dartmouth 9-2 W 3/12 Providence EG 4-1 W 2/1 Boston University BG 2-4 L 2/24 at Clarkson 2-6 L 12/28 Michigan State1 4-6 L 12/21 at Wisconsin 4-5 L 3/18 Michigan State N 6-5 W 2/5 at Army 5-1 W 3/2 at Cornell E 2-6 L 12/30 Minnesota Duluth 6-4 W 12/22 at Wisconsin 4-5 L 3/19 Michigan State N 3-3 T 2/6 at Princeton 3-2 W 3/3 at Cornell E 2-4 L 1/6 at Boston College 2-6 L 1/3 at Rensselaer 4-2 W 3/25 Minnesota N2 5-3 W 2/8 Boston College BG 2-4 L 1/9 Cornell 5-8 L 1/4 at Vermont 2-3 L 3/26 Wisconsin N2 2-6 L 2/12 Colgate 4-2 W 1990-91 (14-12-3) 1/10 Princeton 2-3 L 1/10 Clarkson 3-2 W 1 Jeno Holiday Tournament (Duluth, Minn.) 2/13 Cornell 3-1 W Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 1/14 Providence 1-3 L 1/11 St. Lawrence 7-0 W 2 Grand Forks, N.D. 2/19 Vermont 2-3 L 1/31 Clarkson 2-3 L 1/31 Yale 3-2 W Captain: Edward P. Donato ’91 2/20 Rensselaer 0-4 L 2/2 Northeastern BG 10-2 W 2/1 Brown 10-2 W 11/9 Brown 11-2 W 1983-84 (10-14-3) 2/26 at Clarkson 3-2 W 2/6 St. Lawrence 7-3 W 2/3 Boston College BG 2-4 L 11/10 Yale 7-1 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/27 at St. Lawrence 6-5 W 2/9 Boston College BG 2-0 W 2/7 at Princeton 4-2 W 11/16 at Princeton 3-4 L Captain: Kenneth S. Code ’84 3/4 Rensselaer E 5-4 W 2/13 Maine 4-1 W 2/10 Northeastern BG 7-1 W 11/17 at Army 5-2 W 11/22 at Dartmouth 5-3 W 3/5 Rensselaer E 6-4 W 2/14 Yale 6-2 W 2/14 Cornell (ot) 4-3 W 11/20 Boston University 0-4 L 11/26 Vermont (ot) 4-3 W 3/11 Clarkson EG 4-6 L 2/21 at Yale 5-5 T 2/15 Colgate 5-1 W 11/23 at Boston College 1-2 L 11/30 at Boston University 3-1 W 3/12 Vermont EG 7-1 W 2/27 at Princeton 5-3 W 2/21 Vermont 7-3 W 11/27 at Dartmouth 8-1 W 12/3 at Brown (ot) 4-4 T 3/18 Michigan State N 5-6 L 2/28 at Cornell 3-7 L 2/22 Rensselaer 11-0 W 11/30 Cornell 8-3 W 12/4 Rensselaer 0-6 L 3/19 Michigan State N 3-5 L 3/6 at Dartmouth 2-5 L 2/28 at St. Lawrence 7-3 W 12/2 Colgate (ot) 9-8 W 12/6 Northeastern 4-2 W 1 Long Island Hockey Classic 3/7 at Vermont 4-9 L 3/1 at Clarkson (ot) 4-5 L 12/7 Vermont 8-2 W 12/10 at Cornell 5-6 L 1 Great Lakes Invitational 3/7 Colgate E 2-0 W 12/8 Rensselaer (ot) 7-8 L 12/14 at Maine 4-5 L 1988-89 (31-3) 3/8 Colgate E 6-4 W 12/15 Dartmouth 8-2 W 12/17 at Minnesota 4-6 L Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 1981-82 (13-15-2) 3/14 Clarkson EG 2-4 L 1/4 at St. Lawrence 4-5 L 12/18 at Minnesota 4-6 L Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 3/15 Yale EG 6-3 W Captain: B. Lane MacDonald ’88-’89 1/5 at Clarkson 5-7 L 1/3 Boston College 1-3 L Captain: Michael Watson ’82 3/21 Western Michigan E 4-2 W 11/11 Yale 6-3 W 1/11 at Brown 3-5 L 1/6 at St. Lawrence (ot) 3-4 L 3/22 Western Michigan E 7-2 W 11/12 Brown 3-2 W 1/12 at Yale 2-5 L 11/24 at Dartmouth 11-1 W 1/7 at Clarkson 1-4 L 3/28 Denver N1 5-2 W 11/18 at Army 6-1 W 2/1 Army 12-2 W 11/27 Colgate 3-5 L 1/12 at Providence 2-0 W 3/29 Michigan State N1 5-6 L 11/19 at Princeton 9-5 W 2/2 Princeton 7-0 W 11/28 Rensselaer 5-2 W BG 1/29 Colgate 3-5 L 1 11/22 at Dartmouth 4-2 W 2/4 Boston University 2-8 L 12/2 Boston University 2-5 L Providence, R.I. 2/1 Dartmouth 4-0 W 11/25 Boston College (ot) 4-3 W 2/8 at Colgate 5-5 T 12/5 at Maine 7-2 W 2/4 Yale 2-1 W 1986-87 (28-6) 11/28 at Brown 10-1 W 2/9 at Cornell 2-2 T 12/9 at New Hampshire 3-2 W BG 2/6 Northeastern 3-7 L 12/2 Colgate 8-2 W 2/11 Northeastern BG 0-5 L 12/11 at Brown 4-5 L Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/10 at Princeton 7-2 W 12/4 Cornell 9-1 W 2/15 at Rensselaer 6-3 W 12/13 at Providence (ot) 6-5 W BG Captain: Peter E. Chiarelli ’87 2/13 Boston College 2-5 L 12/10 at New Hampshire (ot) 4-3 W 2/16 at Vermont 1-2 L 92 12/19 at Princeton 5-5 T 11/14 Brown 5-2 W 2/18 at Yale (ot) 1-1 T 12/12 Dartmouth 10-0 W 2/22 Clarkson 5-3 W 12/29 at Western Michigan 1-3 L 11/15 Yale 4-1 W 2/21 at New Hampshire 2-6 L 1/6 Rensselaer 4-1 W 2/23 St. Lawrence 4-2 W 12/30 at Western Michigan 2-4 L 11/21 at Princeton 6-2 W 2/24 Cornell 3-4 L 1/7 Vermont 3-2 W 3/1 Rensselaer E 7-3 W 1/5 Boston College 3-4 L 11/22 at Army 6-3 W 2/25 Princeton 6-0 W 1/13 at Clarkson 5-2 W 3/2 Rensselaer E 3-3 T 1/8 at St. Lawrence 1-3 L 11/28 at Dartmouth 8-3 W 2/28 Brown 4-1 W 1/14 at St. Lawrence 5-1 W 3/9 Clarkson EG 2-3 L 1/9 at Clarkson 1-8 L E 11/29 Dartmouth 5-0 W 3/2 Clarkson 1-3 L 1/31 at Yale 1-3 L 1/13 Vermont 3-5 L E 12/5 at Colgate 5-2 W 3/3 Clarkson 2-2 T 2/3 Princeton 7-2 W 1991-92 (14-7-6) 2/1 Boston University BG 1-5 L 12/7 at Cornell 6-3 W 2/4 Army 11-1 W Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 2/3 Brown 9-6 W 1984-85 (21-9-2) 12/10 at Brown 3-2 W 2/6 Boston College BG 5-4 W 2/6 Yale 1-1 T 12/12 at Minnesota Duluth 4-1 W Captain: Kevin A. Sneddon ’92 Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/10 at Cornell 4-2 W 2/8 Northeastern BG (ot) 5-6 L 12/13 at Minnesota Duluth 4-2 W 11/15 at Union 7-5 W Captain: Brad C. Kwong ’85 2/11 at Colgate (ot) 5-6 L 2/12 at Cornell (ot) 5-4 W 1/3 Vermont 7-1 W 11/16 at Rensselaer 6-0 W 11/17 Yale 3-1 W 2/13 Boston University BG 9-6 W 2/20 at Yale 3-5 L 1/4 Rensselaer 5-2 W 11/22 Princeton 8-1 W 11/18 Brown 7-2 W 2/17 at Vermont 5-3 W 2/23 Northeastern 6-3 W 1/9 at St. Lawrence 4-3 W 11/23 Yale (ot) 2-2 T 11/23 at Army 5-4 W 2/18 at Rensselaer (ot) 4-3 W 2/26 Princeton 10-0 W 1/10 at Clarkson 4-1 W 11/26 at Brown 4-2 W 11/24 at Princeton 4-3 W 2/24 St. Lawrence 4-2 W 2/27 Cornell 7-0 W 1/13 at Yale 2-4 L 11/30 Brown 5-6 L 11/30 at Toronto 5-4 W 2/25 Clarkson 7-5 W 3/6 Dartmouth 7-4 W 2/2 Northeastern BG (ot) 4-5 L 12/8 at Cornell (ot) 2-2 T 12/1 at Western Ontario 7-2 W 3/3 Rensselaer E 7-3 W 3/9 Boston College E 2-0 W 2/6 Army 7-5 W 12/27 Michigan 1 1-3 L 12/8 at Cornell 5-5 T 3/4 Rensselaer E 5-4 W 3/12 Clarkson EG 7-1 W 2/7 Princeton 3-1 W 12/28 Michigan State 1 1-3 L 12/9 at Colgate (ot) 6-5 W 3/10 Vermont EG (ot) 2-3 L 3/13 Northeastern EG 2-5 L 2/9 Boston College BG (ot) 6-7 L 1/3 at Vermont 3-1 W 12/14 at Dartmouth 11-1 W 3/11 Cornell EG 6-3 W 3/20 at Wisconsin N 1-6 L 2/13 Colgate 8-3 W 1/4 at Dartmouth 6-3 W 12/21 at Boston College 6-6 T 3/24 Lake Superior State N 4-2 W 3/21 at Wisconsin N 3-4 L 2/14 Cornell 3-0 W 1/6 at Colgate (ot) 5-4 W 1/4 Rensselaer 4-5 L 3/25 Lake Superior State N 5-2 W 2/20 at Rensselaer 4-1 W 1/10 St. Lawrence 3-2 W 1/5 Vermont 6-1 W 3/30 Michigan State N1 6-3 W 1982-83 (23-9-2) 2/21 at Vermont 3-0 W 1/11 Clarkson (ot) 4-4 T 1/11 at Clarkson 2-1 W 4/1 Minnesota N1 (ot) 4-3 W Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/27 Clarkson 5-0 W 1/31 Rensselaer 5-1 W 1/12 at St. Lawrence 4-3 W 1 St. Paul, Minn. 2/28 St. Lawrence (ot) 3-4 L 2/1 Union 7-3 W Captain: Gregory A. Olson ’83 BG 1/28 Dartmouth 7-1 W E 2/3 Boston College 6-4 W 11/23 Dartmouth 7-3 W 3/6 Brown 6-2 W 1989-90 (13-14-1) 2/1 at Yale 2-6 L E 2/7 at Yale (ot) 5-5 T 11/27 at Rensselaer 7-4 W 3/7 Brown 5-2 W 2/2 at Brown 2-1 W EG Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 2/8 at Princeton (ot) 4-4 T BG 3/13 Rensselaer 4-1 W 12/1 Boston University 10-3 W BG 2/4 Boston University 3-5 L EG Captain: Carl J. Young ’90 2/10 Boston University 2-5 L 12/7 New Hampshire 7-5 W 3/14 St. Lawrence 6-3 W 2/8 Princeton 5-2 W N 11/10 at Yale 2-6 L 2/14 Cornell (ot) 2-2 T 12/11 at Colgate 7-4 W BG 3/20 Bowling Green 6-2 W 2/11 Boston College 6-5 W N 11/11 at Brown 3-3 T 2/15 Colgate 2-1 W 12/12 at Cornell 1-3 L 3/21 Bowling Green 3-0 W 2/15 Colgate 3-0 W N1 11/17 Army 3-4 L 2/21 Dartmouth 4-2 W 12/15 Brown (ot) 2-2 T 3/26 North Dakota 2-5 L 2/16 Cornell (ot) 4-5 L N1 11/18 Princeton 9-6 W 2/22 Vermont 4-1 W 12/18 Princeton 9-2 W 3/28 Minnesota 3-6 L 2/22 at Vermont 9-3 W 1 11/25 at Rensselaer 5-7 L 2/28 at Clarkson 2-4 L 12/28 Northern Michigan 1 7-0 W Detroit, Mich. 2/23 at Rensselaer 1-4 L 11/27 at Dartmouth 4-2 W 2/29 at St. Lawrence 0-4 L 12/29 Northern Arizona 1 12-1 W 3/1 St. Lawrence (ot) 3-4 L 12/1 at Colgate 4-5 L 3/7 Rensselaer E (ot) 3-4 L 12/30 at Minnesota Duluth 2-3 L 1987-88 (21-11) 3/2 Clarkson 6-1 W 12/3 at Cornell 5-0 W 1 Great Lakes Invitational 1/4 at Boston College 4-10 L E Coach: William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 3/8 Colgate 4-2 W 12/8 at Vermont (ot) 5-6 L 1/7 St. Lawrence 3-4 L E Captain: Steven J. Armstrong ’88 3/9 Colgate 10-2 W 12/16 Dartmouth 7-2 W 1/11 at Vermont 7-2 W EG 11/13 at Brown 5-0 W 3/15 Clarkson 2-1 W 12/22 at Minnesota 1-3 L 1/13 Maine 9-2 W EG 11/14 at Yale 7-2 W 3/16 Rensselaer 1-3 L 12/23 at Minnesota 3-6 L 1/30 Clarkson (ot) 4-3 W N 11/20 Princeton (ot) 4-3 W 3/22 at Minnesota Duluth 2-4 L 1/5 Clarkson 6-1 W 2/5 at Yale 0-5 L 3/23 at Minnesota Duluth N 2-4 L 11/21 Army 6-2 W

GoCrimson.com Record Book :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

1992-93 (22-6-3) 11/22 Boston University 1-6 L 1/10 Union 2-4 L 1/3 Vermont 3-4 L 12/4 Clarkson 1-2 L Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 11/26 Union 5-2 W 1/11 Rensselaer 6-1 W 1/9 at Rensselaer 4-6 L 12/5 St. Lawrence 1-5 L Captain: Theodore E. Drury ’93 11/27 Rensselaer 3-4 L 1/28 New Hampshire 5-7 L 1/10 at Union (ot) 3-2 W 12/18 at Nebraska-Omaha 4-1 W 12/3 Brown 4-1 W 1/31 at Rensselaer 2-5 L 2/2 Boston College BF (ot) 5-4 W 12/19 at Nebraska-Omaha 4-3 W 11/7 at Brown 3-2 W 12/7 New Hampshire 2-5 L 2/3 Boston University BF 1-7 L 2/6 Union 3-1 W 1/2 at Dartmouth 4-2 W 11/13 Union 4-0 W 12/10 at Colgate 3-2 W 2/7 Yale 3-2 W 2/7 Rensselaer 1-5 L 1/3 at Vermont 7-6 W 11/14 Rensselaer 4-3 W 12/21 at Alaska-Fairbanks 5-2 W 2/10 Northeastern BF 0-2 L 2/9 Boston University BF (ot) 1-2 L 1/8 Rensselaer 0-1 L 11/20 at Princeton (ot) 6-5 W 12/22 at Alaska-Fairbanks 9-2 W 2/14 at Cornell 1-2 L 2/13 at Princeton 3-7 L 1/9 Union 4-3 W 11/21 at Yale (ot) 5-5 T 1/6 at St. Lawrence 3-4 L 2/15 at Colgate 5-2 W 2/14 at Yale 3-5 L 1/13 Boston College 3-1 W 11/24 at Boston University 3-4 L 1/7 at Clarkson (ot) 4-3 W 2/21 at Clarkson 2-4 L 2/20 Colgate 6-1 W 2/1 Northeastern BF (ot) 3-4 L 11/28 Brown 4-3 W 1/13 at Vermont 5-2 W 2/22 at St. Lawrence 3-6 L 2/21 Cornell 2-3 L 2/5 at Union (ot) 1-1 T 12/4 Colgate 5-4 W 1/14 at Dartmouth 5-3 W 2/28 Dartmouth 6-3 W 2/27 St. Lawrence (ot) 2-3 L 2/8 Boston College BF 4-6 L 12/5 Cornell 6-1 W 2/3 Princeton 3-5 L 3/1 Vermont 4-5 L 2/28 Clarkson 1-5 L 2/12 Yale 3-2 W 12/13 Vermont 4-0 W 2/4 Yale 3-2 W 3/4 St. Lawrence E 4-2 W 3/6 at Vermont 7-6 W 2/13 Princeton 5-3 W 12/18 Dartmouth 6-4 W 2/6 Boston College BG 6-7 L 3/7 at Cornell E (ot) 2-2 T 3/7 at Dartmouth 4-1 W 2/19 at Colgate 2-6 L 1/3 Boston College 5-2 W 2/10 at Cornell 2-1 W 3/8 at Cornell E 1-4 L 3/13 Colgate E 5-4 W 2/20 at Cornell 5-3 W 1/8 at St. Lawrence 10-4 W 2/13 Northeastern BG 2-4 L 3/14 Colgate E 4-2 W 2/26 at St. Lawrence (ot) 4-5 L 1/9 at Clarkson 4-1 W 2/17 Dartmouth 1-2 L 1997-98 (14-17-2) 3/20 Clarkson E2 2-6 L 2/27 at Clarkson 1-5 L 1/15 at Union 3-2 W 2/18 Vermont 0-5 L Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 3/21 Yale E2 4-1 W 3/5 Vermont 5-3 W 2/1 Northeastern BG 7-5 W 2/24 at Rensselaer 5-3 W 1 Badger Showdown 3/6 Dartmouth 4-2 W 2/5 at Rensselaer 3-6 L Captain: Jeremiah S. McCarthy ’98 2/25 at Union 3-5 L 2 Lake Placid, N.Y. 3/12 at Rensselaer E 2-1 W 2/8 Boston University BG 4-2 W 11/7 at Cornell 2-5 L 3/3 St. Lawrence 8-3 W 3/13 at Rensselaer E 0-4 L 2/12 Yale 4-1 W 11/8 at Colgate 6-5 W 3/4 Clarkson 4-5 L 1998-99 (14-16-2) 3/14 at Rensselaer E 2-4 L 2/13 Princeton (ot) 3-3 T 11/14 Princeton (ot) 3-3 T 3/10 Rensselaer E (ot) 2-2 T Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 2/19 at Cornell 6-3 W 11/15 Yale 1-3 L 3/11 Rensselaer E 1-3 L 1999-2000 (11-17-2) 2/20 at Colgate 4-3 W 11/18 at Boston College (ot) 3-4 L Captain: Craig D. Adams ’99 Coach: Mark Mazzoleni 2/26 at Dartmouth 3-4 L 1995-96 (13-20-1) 11/25 Boston University 3-5 L 11/6 Brown 1-4 L 2/27 at Vermont 3-1 W 11/29 at Brown 5-3 W 11/8 at Massachusetts 3-1 W Captain: Trevor Allman ’00 Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 3/5 Clarkson (ot) 4-4 T 12/5 at Clarkson 1-4 L 11/13 Cornell 2-7 L 10/30 at Brown 1-0 W 3/6 St. Lawrence 1-3 L Captain: Bradley G. Konik ’95-’96 12/6 at St. Lawrence 3-1 W 11/14 Colgate 3-6 L 11/5 Dartmouth 7-2 W 3/12 Princeton E 6-2 W 11/4 at Brown 7-2 W 12/9 Brown 5-2 W 11/20 at Princeton 2-3 L 11/6 Vermont 6-3 W A 3/14 Princeton E 8-0 W 11/10 at Colgate (ot) 2-2 T 12/18 at Northeastern 4-6 L 11/21 at Yale 1-7 L 11/12 at Colgate 4-5 L 3/19 Brown E1 1-3 L 11/11 at Cornell 3-5 L 12/27 at Wisconsin1 3-6 L 11/24 at Boston University 5-3 W 11/13 at Cornell 2-1 W 3/20 Rensselaer E1 6-3 W 11/17 Yale 5-2 W 12/28 Boston College 1 (ot) 6-6 T 11/28 at Brown (ot) 4-4 T 11/23 Boston University 1-2 L 3/26 Northern Michigan N2 (2ot) 2-3 L 11/18 Princeton 4-3 W 1/2 Dartmouth 4-3 W 12/1 at Rensselaer 4-7 L 11/27 Brown 2-4 L 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 11/21 at New Hampshire (ot) 2-3 L A 2 Worcester, Mass. 11/24 at Northeastern 4-1 W 11/28 Boston College (ot) 1-2 L 1993-94 (24-5-4) 12/2 Brown 6-4 W Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 12/8 at St. Lawrence 3-7 L Captain: Sean P. McCann ’94 12/9 at Clarkson 2-4 L 12/15 at Princeton 5-1 W 11/6 at Brown (ot) 5-4 W 12/29 at Minnesota1 2-5 L 11/12 Yale 4-0 W 12/30 New Hampshire 1 3-8 L 11/13 Princeton 7-1 W 93 1/5 Vermont (ot) 3-4 L 11/19 at Cornell 5-4 W 1/6 Dartmouth 1-2 L 11/20 at Colgate 6-7 L 1/12 at Union 2-0 W 11/26 Brown (ot) 3-3 T 1/13 at Rensselaer 6-4 W 12/3 at Union 2-0 W 2/2 Rensselaer 4-3 W 12/4 at Rensselaer 3-4 L 2/3 Union 6-0 W 12/11 at Yale 12-1 W 2/5 Northeastern BF 1-4 L 12/17 at Minnesota Duluth 0-3 L 2/9 at Yale 5-6 L 12/18 at Minnesota Duluth 9-4 W 2/12 Boston College BF 2-6 L 1/3 at Maine 7-6 W 2/16 Cornell 4-5 L 1/7 St. Lawrence 8-1 W 2/17 Colgate 1-2 L 1/8 Clarkson 7-5 W 2/23 Clarkson 1-2 L 1/14 Vermont (ot) 4-4 T 2/24 St. Lawrence 4-5 L 1/15 Dartmouth 2-1 W 3/1 at Dartmouth 1-5 L 2/4 at Princeton (ot) 4-3 W 3/2 at Vermont 1-3 L 2/7 Boston University BG 4-2 W 3/8 at St. Lawrence E 5-2 W 2/11 Colgate 4-1 W 3/9 at St. Lawrence E 2-3 L 2/12 Cornell 4-0 W 3/10 at St. Lawrence E 8-4 W 2/14 Boston College BG (ot) 1-2 L 3/15 Vermont E2 4-3 W 2/18 at Dartmouth (ot) 5-4 W 3/16 Cornell E2 1-2 L 2/19 at Vermont 5-3 W 1 Mariucci Classic 2/25 Rensselaer 7-5 W 2 Lake Placid, N.Y. 2/26 Union (ot) 3-3 T 3/4 at Clarkson (ot) 2-2 T 1996-97 (11-18-3) 3/5 at St. Lawrence (ot) 5-4 W Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 3/11 Cornell E 5-4 W 3/12 Cornell E 5-3 W Captain: J. Ashlin Halfnight ’96-97 3/18 Brown E1 5-1 W 11/2 at Brown 5-3 W 3/19 Rensselaer E1 3-0 W 11/8 Colgate 1-2 L 3/26 New Hampshire N2 7-1 W 11/9 Cornell 2-3 L 3/31 Lake Superior State N3 (ot) 2-3 L 11/15 at Yale (ot) 2-2 T 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 11/16 at Princeton 2-6 L 2 Albany, N.Y. 11/19 Brown 2-1 W 3 St. Paul, Minn. 11/26 at Boston University 1-5 L 11/30 Princeton 1-2 L 1994-95 (14-14-2) 12/1 Northeastern 4-3 W Coach: Ronn Tomassoni 12/6 St. Lawrence (ot) 3-3 T Captain: Benjamin M. Coughlin ’95 12/7 Clarkson 5-4 W 12/11 at Union 3-0 W 11/5 at Brown 3-4 L 12/20 at Minnesota Duluth 1-3 L 11/11 at Yale 2-3 L 12/21 at Minnesota Duluth 2-4 L 11/12 at Princeton 6-4 W 1/3 at Vermont 1-5 L Tripp Tracy ’95 is mobbed by teammates after a 4-2 win over Boston University in the Beanpot 11/18 Cornell 4-2 W 1/4 at Dartmouth (ot) 3-2 W championship game Feb. 8, 1993. 11/19 Colgate (ot) 3-3 T

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: Record Book

12/3 at Rensselaer 2-3 L 2/17 St. Lawrence 4-1 W 2002-03 (22-10-2) 2004-05 (21-10-3) 2006-07 (14-17-2) 12/4 at Union 5-1 W 2/23 at Rensselaer 1-0 W Coach: Mark Mazzoleni Coach: Ted Donato ’91 Coach: Ted Donato ’91 12/10 at Boston College 0-3 L 2/24 at Union 2-3 L Captain: Dominic M. Moore ’03 Captain: Noah P. Welch ’05 Captain: Dylan P. Reese ’07 12/17 at Dartmouth (ot) 1-1 T 3/2 Yale 6-4 W 11/2 Brown 0-4 L 10/29 at Brown (ot) 2-2 T 10/27 at Dartmouth 2-5 L 12/19 Northeastern (ot) 6-5 W 3/3 Princeton 2-2 T 11/8 Dartmouth 5-2 W 11/5 at Cornell 0-2 L 11/3 Clarkson 2-5 L 12/29 at Minnesota1 2-5 L 3/9 Yale E 5-4 W 11/9 Vermont 4-2 W 11/6 at Colgate 1-4 L 11/4 St. Lawrence 4-5 L 12/30 Massachusetts 1 2-4 L 3/10 Yale E 7-4 W 11/15 at St. Lawrence 6-1 W 11/12 Yale 3-1 W 11/7 Boston College 4-0 W 1/7 Yale 3-2 W 3/16 Cornell E1 2-5 L 11/16 at Clarkson 2-1 W 11/13 Princeton 8-6 W 11/10 at Cornell 2-3 L 1/8 Princeton 2-4 L 3/17 Dartmouth E1 (ot) 3-2 W 11/22 at Cornell 2-5 L 11/16 Boston College 3-1 W 11/11 at Colgate 4-1 W 1/14 at Clarkson 2-5 L 1 Lake Placid, N.Y. 11/23 at Colgate 7-1 W 11/23 at Boston University 2-1 W 11/17 Brown 1-2 L 1/15 at St. Lawrence 4-6 L 11/26 at Boston University 0-3 L 11/26 at St. Lawrence 2-4 L 11/18 Yale 2-5 L 2/4 Cornell 2-6 L 2001-02 (15-15-4) 11/29 Union 7-4 W 11/27 at Clarkson 3-2 W 11/21 at Boston University 1-2 L 2/5 Colgate (ot) 4-4 T Coach: Mark Mazzoleni 11/30 Rensselaer 3-1 W 12/3 Union 4-1 W 11/24 Quinnipiac 4-2 W 2/7 Boston University BF 0-4 L Captain: Peter M. Capouch ’02 12/6 at Princeton 6-3 W 12/4 Rensselaer 2-1 W 11/25 Princeton 2-4 L 2/14 Northeastern BF 3-1 W 11/3 Brown 2-4 L 12/7 at Yale 6-3 W 12/7 Vermont 3-1 W 11/28 Vermont (ot) 1-2 L 2/18 St. Lawrence 2-4 L 11/4 Dartmouth 5-2 W 12/11 Boston College (ot) 2-2 T 12/11 Maine 4-1 W 12/16 Dartmouth 3-2 W 2/19 Clarkson 4-5 L 11/9 at Vermont 1-5 L 12/15 at Maine 2-4 L 12/22 Northern Michigan 1 (ot) 0-0 T 12/29 Michigan State 1 2-5 L 2/25 at Princeton 4-1 W 11/10 at Dartmouth (ot) 3-3 T 12/29 Northern Michigan 1 2-3 L 12/23 Merrimack 1 4-6 L 12/30 Michigan Tech 1 3-2 W 2/26 at Yale 5-2 W 11/16 Cornell (ot) 4-3 W 12/30 Colgate 1 8-1 W 1/7 Colgate 1-3 L 1/5 at Rensselaer 5-1 W 3/3 Union 3-2 W 11/17 Colgate 6-1 W 1/4 at Union 3-1 W 1/8 Cornell 1-0 W 1/7 at Union 3-2 W 3/4 Rensselaer 0-2 L 11/20 Boston University 4-8 L 1/10 Yale 6-2 W 1/28 at Princeton 7-0 W 1/26 at St. Lawrence 3-4 L 3/10 at Cornell E 3-4 L 11/24 at Boston College 0-1 L 1/11 Princeton 1-2 L 1/29 at Yale 5-3 W 1/27 at Clarkson 2-4 L 3/11 at Cornel E 3-4 L 11/30 St. Lawrence 2-1 W 1/31 Brown 3-1 W 2/1 at Union 8-1 W 1/30 at Quinnipiac (ot) 2-2 T 1 Mariucci Classic 12/1 Clarkson (ot) 2-2 T 2/3 Boston University BF 1-2 L 2/4 Dartmouth 2-1 W 2/2 Union 5-2 W 2000-01 (16-15-2) 12/8 at Brown 5-2 W 2/7 at Rensselaer 6-4 W 2/7 Northeastern BF 1-2 L 2/3 Rensselaer 3-1 W 12/15 at Michigan (ot) 3-3 T 2/10 Northeastern BF 4-1 W 2/11 at Rensselaer 3-0 W 2/5 Boston College BF 1-3 L Coach: Mark Mazzoleni 12/28 UMass Lowell 1 0-2 L 2/14 Colgate 7-0 W 2/14 Boston College BF 1-4 L 2/9 at Princeton 4-2 W Captain: Steven F. Moore ’01 12/29 Bowling Green 1 5-3 W 2/15 Cornell 3-4 L 2/18 Clarkson 5-0 W 2/12 Northeastern BF 1-3 L 11/3 at Brown 3-0 W 1/4 at Union 3-2 W 2/21 at Dartmouth 4-1 W 2/19 St. Lawrence 5-2 W 2/15 at Yale 1-5 L 11/10 Vermont 3-5 L 1/5 at Rensselaer 5-2 W 2/22 at Vermont 5-2 W 2/22 Brown 3-0 W 2/16 at Brown (ot) 6-6 T 11/11 Dartmouth 5-2 W 1/11 Princeton 1-2 L 2/28 Clarkson (ot) 3-3 T 2/25 at Dartmouth 1-2 L 2/23 Colgate 4-1 W 11/17 at Cornell 1-1 T 1/12 Yale 4-3 W 3/1 St. Lawrence 5-0 W 2/26 at Vermont (ot) 2-2 T 2/24 Cornell 3-1 W 11/18 at Colgate 3-2 W 2/1 at Cornell 3-6 L 3/14 Vermont E 4-2 W 3/11 St. Lawrence E 2-0 W 3/2 Yale E 5-2 W 11/21 at Boston University 4-3 W 2/2 at Colgate 3-5 L 3/15 Vermont E 5-1 W 3/12 St. Lawrence E 3-2 W 3/3 Yale E 2-1 W 11/25 Boston College (ot) 2-3 L 2/4 Northeastern @ 2-5 L 3/21 Dartmouth E2 5-3 W 3/18 Colgate E2 (ot) 4-3 W 3/9 at Clarkson E 0-2 L 12/1 at St. Lawrence 3-6 L 2/8 Vermont 6-0 W 3/22 Cornell E2 (ot) 2-3 L 3/19 Cornell E2 1-3 L 3/10 at Clarkson E 1-2 L 12/2 at Clarkson 3-1 W 2/11 Boston College @ 0-4 L 3/28 Boston University E3 4-6 L 3/26 New Hampshire N3 (ot) 2-3 L 1 Great Lakes Invitational 12/7 Brown 5-3 W 2/15 at Clarkson 1-4 L 1 BankOne Badger Showdown 1 Dodge Holiday Classic 12/9 at Vermont 3-5 L 2/16 at St. Lawrence (ot) 3-3 T 2 Albany, N.Y. 2 Albany, N.Y. 2007-08 (17-13-4) 12/14 at New Hampshire 1-4 L 2/22 Rensslaeer 1-5 L 3 Worcester, Mass. 3 Amherst, Mass. Coach: Ted Donato ’91 12/29 at Colorado College 3-5 L 2/23 Union 4-0 W Captains: David MacDonald ’08 12/30 at Colorado College 0-3 L 3/1 at Yale 3-4 L 2003-04 (18-15-3) 2005-06 (21-12-2) Michael J. Taylor, Jr. ’08 1/5 Union 5-2 W 3/2 at Princeton 0-3 L 94 Coach: Mark Mazzoleni Coach: Ted Donato ’91 11/2 at Clarkson 1-2 L 1/6 Rensselaer 5-2 W 3/8 Brown E 4-1 W Captain: Kenneth J. Smith ’04 Captain: Peter R. Hafner ’06 11/3 at St. Lawrence 6-1 W 1/12 at Princeton 4-3 W 3/9 Brown E (2ot) 2-1 W 11/1 Brown 0-2 L 10/29 Dartmouth 6-2 W 11/9 Renssealer 3-0 W 1/13 at Yale 1-3 L 3/15 Clarkson E2 (ot) 3-2 W 11/7 at Vermont 6-4 W 11/4 at Quinnipiac 1 2-5 L 11/10 Union 4-0 W 2/2 Colgate 4-1 W 3/16 Cornell E2 (2ot) 4-3 W 11/8 at Dartmouth (ot) 2-2 T 11/5 at Princeton 2-1 W 11/16 Cornell 2-1 W 2/3 Cornell 1-2 L 3/23 Maine N3 (ot) 3-4 L 11/14 Princeton 2-4 L 11/11 Cornell 3-4 L 11/17 Colgate 1-2 L 2/5 Boston College BF 1-4 L 1 Denver Cup 11/15 Yale 4-1 W 11/12 Colgate 6-4 W 11/20 at Boston University (ot) 2-1 W 2/9 at Dartmouth 0-7 L 2 Lake Placid, N.Y. 11/25 Boston University 5-2 W 11/15 at Boston College 5-3 W 11/28 at Yale (ot) 3-3 T 2/12 Northeastern BF 7-8 L 3 Worcester, Mass. 11/28 St. Lawrence 3-0 W 11/18 Yale (ot) 4-3 W 12/1 Dartmouth 1-0 W 2/16 Clarkson 4-5 L 11/29 Clarkson 0-3 L 11/20 Brown 2-0 W 12/4 at Rensselaer 2-4 L 12/5 at Colgate 4-2 W 11/22 Boston University (ot) 2-2 T 12/8 at Vermont (ot) 2-2 T 12/6 at Cornell 0-1 L 11/25 at Clarkson 3-4 L 12/12 Boston College 2-7 L 12/10 at Boston College 2-3 L 11/26 at St. Lawrence 4-3 W 12/29 at Ohio State 1 2-4 L 12/13 Massachusetts 5-3 W 12/4 at Yale 3-4 L 12/30 St. Cloud State 1 1-4 L 12/16 at Princeton 1-2 L 12/6 Quinnipiac 3-2 W 1/4 at Quinnipiac (ot) 3-3 T 12/27 St. Cloud State 1 4-6 L 12/8 at New Hampshire 1-0 W 1/5 at Princeton 1-2 L 12/28 Clarkson 1 (ot) 3-3 T 12/16 at Dartmouth 1-5 L 1/11 St. Lawrence 1-3 L 1/2 at Union 3-2 W 12/29 at North Dakota 1-0 W 1/12 Clarkson 2-4 L 1/3 at Rensselaer 1-4 L 12/30 at North Dakota 2-3 L 1/26 at Dartmouth 3-1 W 1/9 Cornell 3-5 L 1/6 at Union (ot) 1-1 T 2/1 at Brown 2-4 L 1/10 Colgate 3-1 W 1/7 at Rensselaer 2-3 L 2/4 Northeastern BF 3-1 W 1/31 at Brown (ot) 1-2 L 1/26 Rensselaer 3-1 W 2/8 at Union 3-2 W 2/2 Boston College BF 1-4 L 1/27 Union 1-2 L 2/11 Boston College BF (ot) 5-6 L 2/6 at Yale 7-5 W 2/3 at Brown (ot) 2-1 W 2/15 Princeton 3-2 W 2/9 Northeastern BF 1-3 L 2/6 Boston University BF 3-5 L 2/16 Quinnipiac 4-1 W 2/13 Rensselaer 2-3 L 2/10 Princeton (ot) 5-4 W 2/22 Yale 6-1 W 2/14 Union 3-2 W 2/13 Northeastern BF 5-0 W 2/23 Brown 2-1 W 2/20 at Clarkson 2-1 W 2/17 at Colgate 1-4 L 2/29 at Colgate (ot) 3-3 T 2/21 at St. Lawrence (ot) 3-3 T 2/18 at Cornell 4-3 W 3/1 Cornell 3-1 W 2/27 Vermont 4-6 L 2/24 St. Lawrence 3-2 W 3/14 Quinnipiac E 11-0 W 2/28 Dartmouth 4-0 W 2/25 Clarkson 2-1 W 3/15 Quinnipiac E 4-7 L 3/5 Vermont E 3-0 W 3/10 St. Lawrence E 1-5 L 3/16 Quinnipiac E 3-1 W 3/6 Vermont E 5-3 W 3/11 St. Lawrence E 3-2 W 3/21 Cornell E2 3-1 W 3/12 at Brown E 4-2 W 3/12 St. Lawrence E 8-4 W 3/22 Princeton E2 1-4 L 3/13 at Brown E (ot) 3-2 W 3/17 Dartmouth E2 10-1 W 1 Ohio Hockey Classic 3/19 Dartmouth E2 2-1 W 3/18 Cornell E2 6-2 W 2 Albany, N.Y. 3/20 Clarkson E2 4-2 W 3/25 Maine N2 1-6 L 3/26 Maine N2 4-5 L 1 Hartford, Conn. (Civic Center) 1 Dunkin’ Donuts Coffee Pot 2 Albany, N.Y. 2 Albany, N.Y.

The Crimson celebrates its double-overtime win against Cornell to claim the 2002 Whitelaw Cup.

GoCrimson.com History 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Captains

1897-98 (0-1)...... Frederick J. Goodridge ’98 1937-38 (6-7-1)...... Trafford S. Hicks, Jr. ’38 1975-76 (13-10-3)...... Kevin Carr ’76 1898-99 (0-1)...... William S. Beardsell ’00 1938-39 (7-7-1)...... Francis A. Harding, Jr. ’39 1976-77 (15-11)...... William R. Horton, Jr. ’77 1899-00 (4-1)...... William S. Beardsell ’00 1939-40 (3-10-1)...... William C. Coleman ’40 1977-78 (12-14)...... Brian W. Cook ’78 96 1900-01 (3-0)...... William H. Laverack ’01 1940-41 (2-9-1)...... Joseph P. Willetts ’41 1978-79 (7-18-1)...... John Cochrane ’79 1901-02 (3-3)...... Alfred Winsor, Jr. ’02 1941-42 (8-8)...... M. Greely Summers, Jr. ’42 1979-80 (8-15-3)...... John Hynes ’80 1902-03 (7-0)...... Joseph S. Lovering ’03 1942-43 (14-3-1)...... John A. Paine, Jr. ’43 Graham Carter ’80 1903-04 (4-0)...... Tristam B. Souther ’04 Earle D. Acker ’44 1980-81 (11-14-1)...... Tom Murray ’81 1904-05 (5-0)...... Trowbridge Callaway ’05 1943-44...... No Formal Program 1981-82 (13-15-2)...... Michael Watson ’82 1905-06 (4-0)...... Daniel A. Newhall ’06 1944-45...... No Formal Program 1982-83 (23-9-2)...... Gregory A. Olson ’83 1906-07 (4-2)...... Richard S. Townsend ’07 1945-46 (2-4-2)...... William M. Ayers ’47 1983-84 (10-14-3)...... Kenneth S. Code ’84 1907-08 (5-1)...... Clarence C. Pell ’08 1946-47 (6-6)...... John R. Crocker, Jr. ’47 1984-85 (21-9-2)...... Brad C. Kwong ’85 1908-09 (8-0)...... Joseph P. Willetts ’09 1947-48 (9-14)...... John E. Lavalle ’46 1985-86 (25-8-1)...... Scott M. Fusco ’85-’86 1909-10 (5-2)...... Samuel T. Hicks ’10 1948-49 (12-8)...... David M. Key, Jr. ’49 1986-87 (28-6)...... Peter E. Chiarelli ’87 1910-11 (7-2)...... Ralph Hornblower II ’11 1949-50 (10-8)...... Myles D. Huntington ’50 1987-88 (21-11)...... Steven J. Armstrong ’88 1911-12 (8-2)...... Frederic D. Huntington ’12 1950-51 (12-11)...... Lewis T. Preston ’50 1988-89 (31-3)...... B. Lane MacDonald ’88-’89 1912-13 (9-2)...... Henry B. Gardner ’13 1951-52 (8-11)...... Dustin M. Burke ’52 1989-90 (13-14-1)...... Carl J. Young ’90 1913-14 (8-7)...... William P. Willetts ’14 1952-53 (11-5-1)...... Walter F. Greeley ’53 1990-91 (14-12-3)...... Edward P. Donato ’91 1914-15 (8-3)...... William H. Claflin ’15 1953-54 (10-10-2)...... R. Norman Wood ’54 1991-92 (14-7-6)...... Kevin A. Sneddon ’92 1915-16 (7-1)...... John E.P. Morgan ’17 1954-55 (17-3-1)...... W. Scott Cooledge ’55 1992-93 (22-6-3)...... Theodore E. Drury ’93 1916-17 (7-3)...... John E.P. Morgan ’17 1955-56 (15-10)...... Charles B. Flynn ’56 1993-94 (24-5-4)...... Sean P. McCann ’94 1917-18...... No Formal Program 1956-57 (21-5)...... James A. Bailey II ’57 1994-95 (14-14-2)...... Benjamin M. Coughlin ’95 1918-19 (3-0)...... Robert E. Gross ’19 1957-58 (18-10-1)...... Robert Barry Cleary ’58 1995-96 (13-20-1)...... Bradley G. Konik ’95-’96 1919-20 (7-1)...... Norman S. Walker ’21 1958-59 (12-9-4)...... Richard M. McLaughlin ’59 1996-97 (11-18-3)...... J. Ashlin Halfnight ’96-’97 1920-21 (7-2)...... Edward L. Bigelow ’21 1959-60 (16-7-1)...... Michael Graney ’60 1997-98 (14-17-2)...... Jeremiah S. McCarthy ’98 1921-22 (7-1)...... George Owen, Jr. ’23 1960-61 (18-4-2)...... Charles S. Forbes ’61 1998-99 (14-16-2)...... Craig D. Adams ’99 1922-23 (8-4)...... George Owen, Jr. ’23 1961-62 (21-5)...... David L. Grannis ’62 1999-2000 (11-17-2)...... Trevor Allman ’00 1923-24 (6-6)...... William E. Crosby, Jr. ’24 1962-63 (21-3-2)...... Timothy Taylor ’63 2000-01 (16-15-2)...... Steven F. Moore ’01 1924-25 (8-2)...... E.M. Beals ’25 1963-64 (17-7)...... Eugene Kinasewich ’64 2001-02 (15-15-4)...... Peter M. Capouch ’02 1925-26 (8-3)...... Thayer Cumings ’26 1964-65 (9-15)...... John S.F. Daly ’65 2002-03 (22-10-2)...... Dominic M. Moore ’03 1926-27 (9-1-2)...... William P. Ellison ’27 1965-66 (10-12-1)...... Robert L. Clark ’66 2003-04 (18-15-3)...... Kenneth J. Smith ’04 1927-28 (7-2)...... J.P. Chase ’28 1966-67 (11-12)...... Dennis M. McCullough ’67 2004-05 (21-10-3)...... Noah P. Welch ’05 1928-29 (5-4-1)...... John Tudor ’29 1967-68 (15-9)...... John P. Garrity, Jr. ’68 2005-06 (21-12-2)...... Peter R. Hafner ’06 1929-30 (7-4-1)...... Eliot T. Putnam ’29 1968-69 (20-7-1)...... Robert T. Bauer ’69 2006-07 (14-17-2)...... Dylan P. Reese ’07 1930-31 (11-2)...... Harwood Ellis ’31 1969-70 (16-9)...... Christopher J. Gurry ’70 2007-08 (17-13-4)...... David M. MacDonald ’08 1931-32 (11-1-2)...... C.C. Cunningham ’32 1970-71 (18-8-1)...... Joseph V. Cavanagh, Jr. ’71 Michael J. Taylor, Jr. ’08 1932-33 (9-5)...... Robert Saltonstall, Jr. ’33 1971-72 (17-8-1)...... John T. Paul ’72 2008-09...... Brian A. McCafferty ’09 1933-34 (4-9)...... Paul deB. deGive ’34 1972-73 (17-4-1)...... Kevin F. Hampe ’73 James M. Fraser ’09 1934-35 (8-4)...... William P. Watts ’35 1973-74 (17-11-1)...... Robert W. Goodenow ’74 1935-36 (12-4-1)...... Frederick R. Moseley ’36 Everett M. Noonan ’74 1936-37 (15-1)...... George S. Ford ’37 1974-75 (23-6)...... Randy L. Roth ’75

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Team Awards John Tudor Memorial Cup Michael J. Taylor, Jr. ’08 Trophy awarded annually to the most valuable member of the Harvard hockey team, determined not by ability alone, but by the qualities of sportsmanship, leadership and team cooperation. Finally, and most importantly, the recipient must have the vague quality which John Tudor called “the old come through in the pinch.” This trophy was presented by the members of the who were classmates of John Tudor ’29, captain of the 1928-29 hockey team.

Tudor Cup Winners 1929-30 Howard Ellis ’31 1978-79 George S. Hughes ’79 1993-94 Sean P. McCann ’94 1930-31 Samuel L. Batchelder ’31 1979-80 Mark E. Fusco ’83 Steve Martins ’95 1931-32 Ian Baldwin ’33 Gregory A. Olson ’83 1994-95 Steve Martins ’95 1932-33 Paul deB. deGive ’34 1980-81 Thomas M. Murray ’81 1995-96 Bradley G. Konik ’95-’96 1933-34 Paul deB. deGive ’34 1981-82 Mark E. Fusco ’83 Emmet E. Tracy ’96 1934-35 Fredrick R. Moseley, Jr. ’36 1982-83 Mark E. Fusco ’83 1996-97 Joseph R. Prestifilippo ’00 1935-36 George S. Ford ’37 1983-84 Grant A. Blair ’86 1997-98 Jeremiah S. McCarthy ’98 1936-37 George S. Ford ’37 1984-85 Scott M. Fusco ’85-86 1998-99 Steven F. Moore ’01 1937-38 Eugene Emerson ’38 1985-86 Scott M. Fusco ’85-86 1999-00 Joseph R. Prestifilippo ’00 1938-39 Francis A. Harding, Jr. ’39 1986-87 Mark K. Benning ’86-87 2000-01 Oliver H. Jonas ’01 Joseph A. Patrick ’39 B. Lane MacDonald ’88-89 2001-02 Peter M. Capouch ’02 1939-40 Warren Winslow ’40 1987-88 Jerald J. Pawloski ’88 2002-03 Dominic M. Moore ’03 1940-41 George E. Duane ’41 Donald C. Sweeney ’88 2003-04 Tyler S. Kolarik ’04 1941-42 Abbott T. Fenn ’42 1988-89 B. Lane MacDonald ’88-89 2004-05 Dov P. Grumet-Morris ’05 1942-43 John C. Burton ’44 1989-90 C. J. Young ’90 2005-06 John E. Daigneau ’06 1943-46 Not Awarded 1990-91 Peter A. Ciavaglia ’91 2006-07 Dylan P. Reese ’07 1946-47 John Crocker, Jr ’46 ocC 1991-92 Allain R. Roy ’92 2007-08 Michael J. Taylor, Jr. ’08 97 1947-48 Richard S. Greeley ’49 1992-93 Theodore E. Drury ’94 1948-49 David McK. Key, Jr. ’49 1949-50 George R. Minot, II ’49 ocC 1950-51 John N. White ’51 1951-52 Dustin M. Burke ’52 1952-53 Walter F. Greeley ’53 E. Amory Hubbard ’53 1953-54 R. Norman Wood ’54 1954-55 William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 1955-56 Charles B. Flynn ’56 1956-57 Robert P. McVey ’58 1957-58 Robert B. Cleary ’58 1958-59 Richard S. Fischer ’59 1959-60 Michael Graney ’60 1960-61 Robert P. Bland ’62 1961-62 David L. Grannis ’62 1962-63 David L. Johnston ’63 1963-64 Romuald Ikauniks ’64 Eugene Kinasewich ’64 1964-65 John S. Daly ’65 1965-66 Robert L. Clark ’66 1966-67 Dennis M. McCullough ’67 1967-68 Robert H. Carr ’68 1968-69 Robert T. Bauer ’69 1969-70 Joseph V. Cavanagh ’71 1970-71 Joseph V. Cavanagh ’71 1971-72 J. Thomas Paul ’72 1972-73 Robert S. McManama ’73 1973-74 Randy Roth ’75 1974-75 James Thomas ’75 1975-76 Kevin Carr ’76 1976-77 Brian S. Petrovek ’77 1977-78 John F. Hughes ’80

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History

Donald Angier Hockey Trophy Ian M. Tallett ’10 Awarded annually to the player showing the greatest general improvement during the year. Mr. Angier was a member of the Harvard hockey team in 1920, 1921 and 1922 and kept a keen and continued interest in the sport. Mr. Angier, until his death Sept. 4, 1949, presented to the winner a silver cigarette case upon the cover of which was etched a replica of the hockey player that appeared on the trophy with the following inscription: “The Angier Trophy, Awarded Annually to the Player Showing the Greatest General Improvement During the Year.”

Angier Trophy Winners 1931-32 Caswell E. MacGregor, Jr. ’31 1983-84 Brian D. Busconi ’85 1995-96 Henry G. Higdon ’98 1932-33 John W. Putnam ’33 William J. Cleary Ill ’85 Jason R. Karmanos ’96 1933-34 John Ware, Jr. ’34 1984-85 Tim S. Smith ’86 1996-97 Douglas M. Sproule ’98 1934-35 Benjamin H. Hallowell ’36 1985-86 Timothy R. Barakett ’87 1997-98 Matthew B. Scorsune ’99 1935-36 Richard M. Claflin ’36 1986-87 Richard M. McEvoy ’86-87 1998-99 Harry D. Schwefel ’01 1936-37 Ralph L. Pope, Jr. ’38 Donald C. Sweeney ’88 1999-00 Scott V. Turco ’00 1937-38 Frederic F. deRham, Jr. ’39 1987-88 Andrew E. Janfaza ’88 2000-01 Oliver H. Jonas ’01 1938-39 Winthrop S. Jameson, Jr. ’39 1988-89 Edward P. Donato ’91 2001-02 Robert J. Fried ’04 1939-40 Robert. H. Cox II, ’41 John C. Weisbrod ’91 2002-03 Kenneth J. Turano ’04 1940-41 Gordon R. McGrath ’42 1989-90 Michael W. Vukonich ’91 2003-04 Ryan J. Maki ’07 1941-42 Charles A. Griffith, Jr. ’42 1990-91 Richard J. DeFreitas, Jr. ’92 2004-05 Andrew M. Lederman ’05 1942-43 Fenton Taylor, Jr. ’44 1991-92 Steven T. Flomenhoft ’93 2005-06 Paul F. Dufault ’08 1943-46 Not Awarded 1992-93 Christopher M. Baird ’94 Joseph D. McCabe ’08 1946-47 Charles A. Griffith, Jr. ’42 1993-94 Bryan S. Lonsinger ’95 2006-07 Alex C. Meintel ’08 1947-48 Stephen L. Washburn ’49 1994-95 Kirk G. Nielsen ’96 2007-08 Ian M. Tallett ’10 1948-49 Thomas C. Moseley ’46 ocC 1949-50 John R. Chase ’50 98 1950-51 Walter F. Greeley ’53 1951-52 Carl W. Timpson, Jr. ’52 1952-53 E. Bradley Richardson ’53 1953-54 W. Scoff College Ill ’55 1954-55 Edward P. Almy ’55 1955-56 Mario J. Celi ’56 1956-57 Edwyn R. Owen ’58 1957-58 Harold I. Pratt, Jr. ’59 1958-59 Michael Graney ’60 1959-60 Theodore S. Ingalls ’61 1960-61 C. Stewart Forbes ’61 1961-62 Timothy B. Taylor ’63 1962-63 Gerald W. Jorgenson ’63 1963-64 William J. Fryer ’64 1964-65 Kenneth Burnes ’65 1965-66 Peter K. Miller ’66 1966-67 Robert H. Carr ’68 1967-68 Ronald E. Mark ’70 1968-69 George B. McManama ’70 1969-70 Gordon L. Freeman ’70 1970-71 David R. Jones ’71 1971-72 Lawrence L. Desmond ’73 1972-73 Robert Goodenow ’74 1973-74 Ed Rossi ’75 1974-75 Steve Janicek ’75 1975-76 Phelps H. Swift ’76 1976-77 James M. Trainor ’79 1977-78 John B. Hynes Ill ’80 1978-79 John J. Dunderdale ’79 1979-80 Greg J. Britz ’83 1980-81 Wade Lau ’82 1981-82 James B. Turner ’83 1982-83 Shayne R. Kukulowicz ’84

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

George Percy Award Michael D. Biega ’11, Matthew R. McCollem ’11 To a member of the freshman class for enthusiasm, sportsmanship, team spirit and loyalty most characteristic of George Percy, first marshal of the class of 1918, captain of the freshman hockey team in 1915, member of the 1916 and 1917 varsity hockey teams and player on the 1916 varsity baseball team, which holds the all-time record for victories. He was in the United States Marine Corps in both world wars and awarded the Navy Cross for heroism on Iwo Jima (February-March 1945).

Percy Award Winners 1971-72 James H. Thomas ’75 1986-87 Carl J. Young ’90 1999-00 Dominic M. Moore ’03 1972-73 Wiz Wyatt ’76 1987-88 Peter A. Ciavaglia ’91 2000-01 Timothy D. Pettit ’04 1973-74 Michael J. Leckie ’77 1988-89 Charles W. Hughes ’92 2001-02 Noah P. Welch ’05 1974-75 Michael A. MacDonald ’78 Allain R. Roy ’92 Thomas G. Cavanagh ’05 1975-76 Michael W. Stewart ’79 1989-90 Theodore E. Drury ’93 2002-03 Peter R. Hafner ’06 1976-77 James R. Dales ’80 1990-91 Sean P. McCann ’94 Charles E. Johnson ’06 1977-78 Thomas G. Carr ’81 1991-92 Steve Martins ’95 2003-04 Kevin R. Du ’07 1978-79 Bradley C. Karp ’83 1992-93 Emmet E. Tracy, Ill ’96 2004-05 Tyler M. Magura ’08 1979-80 Daniel J. Janis ’84 1993-94 J. Ashlin Halfnight ’97 Jonathan Pelle ’08 1980-81 Philip A. Falcone ’84 1994-95 Jeremiah S. P. McCarthy ’98 2005-06 Brian A. McCafferty ’09 1981-82 Scott M. Fusco ’85-’86 1995-96 Craig D. Adams ’99 2006-07 Alexander P. Biega ’10 1982-83 Grant A. Blair ’86 1996-97 J.R. Prestifilippo ’00 Douglas A. Rogers ’10 1983-84 Mario V. Cutone ’87 1997-98 Christopher B. Bala ’01 2007-08 Michael D. Biega ’11 1984-85 B. Lane MacDonald ’88 Steven F. Moore ’01 Matthew R. McCollem ’11 Jerald J. Pawloski ’88 1998-99 Peter Capouch ’02 1985-86 Joshua C. Caplan ’89 Jeff J. Stonehouse ’02 P. Edward Krayer ’89

99 Ralph “Cooney” Weiland Award David M. MacDonald ’08, Tyler M. Magura ’08 Consistent with coach Cooney Weiland’s high standards and love for college hockey, this award is presented to the member or members of the Harvard varsity hockey team whose devotion to the game has repeatedly been evidenced by aggressive and spirited play and by selfless contribution to the total team effort representative of “Cooney’s type of hockey player.”

Weiland Award Winners 1968-69 James B. Otness ’69 1982-83 Neil K. Sheehy ’83 1995-96 Peter S. McLaughlin ’96 Dwight A. Ware ’69 James B. Turner ’83 1996-97 Joseph C. Craigen ’97 1969-70 George B. McManama ’70 1983-84 David M. Connors ’83-84 Marco J. Ferrari ’97 1970-71 S. Bruce Durno ’71 1984-85 Mark K. Benning ’86-87 1997-98 Jeremiah S. McCarthy ’98 1971-72 Robert S. McManama ’73 Bradley C. Kwong ’85 1998-99 Craig D. Adams ’99 1972-73 William J. Corkery, Jr. ’73 1985-86 Robert K. Ohno ’86 1999-00 Trevor G. Allman ’00 1973-74 Leverett S. Byrd ’74 1986-87 Steven J. Armstrong ’88 2000-01 Peter M. Capouch ’02 David Hands ’74 Allen H. Bourbeau ’87-88 2001-02 Peter M. Capouch ’02 1974-75 Leigh P. Hogan ’75 1987-88 Steven J. Armstrong ’88 2002-03 Aaron Y. Kim ’03 1975-76 Brian S. Petrovek ’77 1988-89 Kevan G. Melrose ’90 2003-04 Tyler S. Kolarik ’04 1976-77 William J. Hozach ’77 Edmond J. Presz ’89 James A. Cleary ’06 1977-78 John J. Cochrane ’79 1989-90 Tod D. Hartje ’90 2004-05 Ryan P. Lannon ’05 1978-79 Stephen W. Andrew ’79 John A. Murphy ’90 2005-06 Peter R. Hafner ’06 Murray P. Dea ’79 1990-91 Edward P. Donato ’91 Steven V. Mandes ’07 1979-80 John B. Hynes III ’80 1991-92 Kevin A. Sneddon ’92 2006-07 Steven V. Mandes ’07 Graham H. Carter ’81 1992-93 Matthew F. Mallgrave ’93 2007-08 David M. MacDonald ’08 1980-81 Gregory A. Olson ’83 1993-94 Louis F. Body V ’94 Tyler M. Magura ’08 1981-82 Alan W. Litchfield ’82 Brian P. Farrell ’94 Scott F. Powers ’83 1994-95 Bryan S. Lonsinger ’95

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Major Harvard Awards The William J. Bingham Award The Carroll F. Getchell Manager of the Year First awarded in 1954, the Bingham Award is given annually to the male In 1981, the Committee on Athletics decided to name the Manager of the member of the graduating class of Harvard College who–through integrity, Year Award, established in 1972, for the late Carroll F. Getchell, a long-time courage, leadership and ability on the athletic fields–has best served the high business manager in the Department of Athletics. Each year the department purpose of Harvard as exemplified by the late William J. Bingham ’16, former recognizes that manager in the senior class “who has best displayed integrity, director of athletics. courage, leadership and ability” during his/her years of participation.

1954 T. Jefferson Coolidge 1986 Scott M. Fusco 1979 Yuki A. Moore 2000 Yvonne Kao 1964 Eugene Kinasewich 1987 Mark Benning 1989 Jason S. Wenglin 2002 Masa Hoshino 1971 Joseph V. Cavanagh 1989 B. Lane MacDonald 1991 Julie J. Rim 2005 Brendan Connell 1973 Kevin F. Hampe 1990 Carl J. Young 1997 Andrew Gunderson 1983 Mark E. Fusco 1991 Peter Ciavaglia

The Francis H. Burr ’09 Scholarship The Francis J. Toland Service Award A scholarship fund established in memory of Francis H. Burr by his friends to The Francis J. Toland Service Award is awarded annually in recognition of be awarded to a senior who combines as nearly as possible Burr’s remarkable outstanding contribution to Harvard and its neighboring communities. The qualities of character, leadership, scholarship and athletic ability. award honors Fran Toland, who served as the athletics business manager for more than 40 years prior to his retirement in 2000. The addition of this award 1928 John P. Chase 1967 Dennis McCullough was announced at a celebration of his career of service to the University and the 1932 W. Barry Wood 1969 Robert T. Bauer Department of Athletics in June of that year. 1952 Dustin M. Burke 1984 Kenneth J. Code 1963 David L. G. Johnston 2004 Robert J. Fried

The John P. Fadden Award 100 This award was established in 1966 in honor of the late John P. Fadden’s service as a trainer and friend to Harvard athletes for many years. The award is given annually to a senior student (varsity, JV or intramural) who has overcome physical adversity to make a contribution to his/her team.

1971 Joseph V. Cavanagh 1975 Leigh Hogan 1988 Jerald J. Pawloski 1990 Scott McCormack

The John P. Reardon Men’s Award This award, established in 1987, is named in honor of John P. Reardon ’60, director of athletics from 1977 to 1990. The prize is presented annually to the senior male varsity athlete who exemplifies the qualities of excellent scholarship, character, leadership and athletic ability.

1996 Kirk G. Nielsen 2004 Robert J. Fried

Rob Fried ’04 accepted both the Reardon and Toland Awards at the 2004 Senior Letterwinners Dinner

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Crimson Bloodlines

Blood runs Crimson at Harvard, and anyone who plays hockey here is part of a big family. Historically some have taken that a step further, as at least 41 sets of brothers have worn the crimson, black and white uniform and earned varsity letters for their efforts. Harvard has also had numerous father-son combinations, and we now see the branches of the family tree growing over into the women’s game, with some father-daughter letterwinner combinations as well. Below is a sampling of families who boast multiple Major H winners. Brothers Multigenerational Bloodlines Aiken...... Jim ’76 and John ’76 Bullard...... Lyman ’44 and son Lyman ’77 Ayers...... Charles ’42, Thomas ’45 and William ’47 Calloway...... Trowbridge 1905 and sons Sam ’36 and John ’37 Biega...... Alex ’10 and Michael ’11 Cavanagh...... Joe ’71 and son Tom ’05 Bigelow...... Hugh ’29 and Albert ’29 Chase...... John ’28 and George ’53 Burke...... Kevin ’76, Chip ’77 and Tim ’92 Claflin...... William ’15 and William Jr. ’41 Burnes...... Kennett ’64 and Andrew ’72 Clark...... Forrister ’29, sons Forrister (Tim) ’58 and Bobby ’65; Carr...... Bob ’68 and Kevin ’76 granddaughter Diana ’95 *** Cavanagh...... Joe ’71 and Dave ’72 Clasby...... Dick ’54 and son Michael ’79 Calloway...... Sam ’36 and John ’37 Cleary...... Bill Jr. ’56 and son Bill III ’85 Chase...... Philip ’25 and John ’28 Hicks...... S. Trafford 1910 and son Samuel “Traff” ’38 Clark...... Forrister (Tim) ’58 and Bobby ’65 Hornblower...... Ralph 1911 and great-granddaughter Tracy Catlin ’03 Cleary...... Bill ’56 and Bob ’58 McManama...... Bob ’73 and daughter Kimberly ’00 Coskren...... Mike ’09 and Nick ’09* Newell...... John (“Jack”) ’26 and granddaughter Susan ’84 Downes...... Greg ’61 and Jim ’63 Paine...... John 1909 and son John Jr. ’43 Emerson...... Ashton ’36 and Eugene ’38 Pell...... Clarence ’08 and son Clarry ’33; Evans...... Phil ’81 and Peter ’83 great-granddaughter Mina ’04 * Fusco...... Mark ’83 and Scott ’86 Pratt...... L.O. ’26 and son L.O. Jr. ’59 Garrity...... Jack ’68 and Jon ’80 Putnam...... Eliot ’29 and son Eliot Jr. ’61 Greeley...... Sid ’47, Dick ’49, and Walt ’53 Pruyn...... Robert 1902 and son Lee ’35 Harding...... F. Austin ’39, Goodwin ’43 and William ’46 Saltonstall...... Leverett ’14 and grandson Leverett Byrd ’74 Hughes...... George ’79 and Jack ’80 Turco...... Jack ’70 and son Scott ’00 Key...... Dave ’49 and Al ’50 Waldinger...... Robert ’36 and C. Peter ’67; Cory ’01** Leckie...... Mike ’77 and Bob ’78 Willetts...... Joseph 1909 and son Joseph Jr. ’41 Loring...... Caleb ’43 and George ’50 Wylde...... Cecil ’27 and son John ’58 McCafferty...... Kevin ’02 and Brian ’09 101 McCarthy...... Jeremiah ’98 and Liam ’02 * Mina Pell is a great-granddaughter of Clarence and a granddaughter of Clarry; her father, Haven ’68, was a soccer letterman who also played junior varsity hockey McCormack...... Scott ’90 and Brian ’92 ** Cory is a granddaughter of Robert and a niece of Peter McManama...... George ’70 and Bob ’73 *** Diana is the daughter of Bobby and niece of Tim Mechem...... John ’38 and Richard ’45 Mittell...... Keneth ’34 and Dave ’39 Moore...... Mark ’00, Steve ’01 and Dominic ’03 Moseley...... Fred ’36 and Tom ’46 Newell...... John (“Jack”) ’26 and Henry ’29 Nowak...... Derek ’02 and Brett ’03 Olson...... Mitch ’82 and Greg ’83 Owen...... Steve ’71 and Peter ’76 Roberts...... Jim ’36 and George ’38 Rosenberger...... Eric ’67 and Leif ’72 Saltonstall...... Bill ’28 and Bob ’33 Stubbs...... John ’21 and Frank ’72 Summers...... M. Greeley ’42 and James ’55 Woodworth...... Kennard ’26 and Al ’29

* Sister Leanna Coskren ’11 plays for the Harvard women’s hockey team.

The Moore Brothers played together in the 1999-2000 season. The Cavanagh brothers, Joe ’71 (left) and Dave ’72. (from left): Dominic ’03, Mark ’00 and Steve ’01. Joe’s son, Tom, graduated in 2005 and wore his father’s No. 9.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History All-Time Letterwinners

— A — Barlow, Blair A. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Bright, Alexander H. ’19...... ’19 Clark, Philip M., Jr. ’51...... ’49 Abbot, David M. ’50...... ’48, ’49, ’50 Barringer, Scott B. ’91...... ’88, ’90, ’91 Brignall, James T. ’63...... ’63 Clark, Robert L ’66...... ’64, ’65, ’66 Acker, Earle D. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Barrows, Albert A. (M.S.)...... 1900 Britz, Gregory J. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82, ’83 Clark, Sydney P. ’14...... ’14 Adams, Craig D. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98, ’99 Bartlett, Joseph W. II ’55...... ’55 Brooks, John W. ’39...... ’39 Clasby, Richard J. ’54...... ’52, ’53, ’54 Adams, Francis W. W. ’28...... ’27 Bauer, Robert T., Jr. ’69...... ’67, ’68, ’69 Brown, Thornton ’36...... ’35, ’36 Clasby, Michael ’79...... ’79 Adams, Schuyler ’14...... ’14 Beadie, David M. ’58...... ’58 Bullard, Lyman G. ’44...... ’43 Cleary, Richard S. ’59...... ’59 Aiken, John J. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Beale, Benjamin ’34...... ’32, ’33, ’34 Bullard, Lyman G., Jr. ’77...... ’77 Cleary, Robert B. ’58...... ’56, ’57, ’58 Aldrich, George D. ’39...... ’39 Beals, Edward M., Jr. ’25...... ’23, ’25 Buntin, Roger W. ’21...... ’19, ’21 Cleary, James A. ’06...... ’04 Allen, C. Russel ’38...... ’36, ’37 Beardsell, William L. 1900...... 1900 Burgess, George W. ’25...... ’24, ’25 Cleary, William J., Jr. ’56...... ’54, ’55 Allen, J. Aaron ’91...... ’90 Beckett, William H. M. ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Burke, Charles J. ’77...... ’77 Cleary, William John III ’85...... ’84, ’85 Allen, Richard A. ’56...... ’56 Beebe, Marcus, Jr. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Burke, David M., Jr. ’82/’83...... ’79, ’80, ’81, ’83 Clothier, William J. 1904...... 1903, 1904 Allen, William A. II ’50...... ’48, ’49, ’50 Bell, David S. ’77...... ’75, ’76, ’77 Burke, Dustin M. ’52...... ’50, ’51, ’52 Coady, Clement D. ’27...... ’26, ’27 Allman, Trevor G. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Bellows, Charles S. ’37...... ’37 Burke, Kevin F. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Coady, James D. ’92...... ’92 Almy, Edward P. ’55...... ’53, ’54, ’55 Benning, Mark K. ’86...... ’85, ’86 Burke, Kevin M. ’66...... ’65, ’66 Coan, John T., Jr. ’50...... ’46 Alpine, A. Dean ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Benson, Richard D. ’81...... ’78, ’79, ’80, ’81 Burke, Timothy P. ’92...... ’90, ’91, ’92 Cochrane, John G. ’79...... ’77, ’78, ’79 Anderson, Douglas S. H. ’51...... ’49, ’50 Bent, Michael E. ’99...... ’96 Burnes, Andrew P. ’72...... ’71, ’72 Code, Kenneth S. ’84...... ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84 Anderson, Robert G. ’62...... ’59, ’60, ’61 Bernakevitch, Brendan M.L. ’05... Burnes, Kennett F. ’65...... ’64, ’65 Cohagan, Perry A. ’95...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’95 Andrews, Jerone E., Jr. ’47...... ’46 ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Burns, Robert A. ’83...... ’80, ’81 Coleman, Robert M. ’66...... ’65 Andrews, Stephen W. ’79...... ’78, ’79 Bertagna, Joseph D. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Burton, John C. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Coleman, William C., Jr. ’40...... ’39, ’40 Angier, Donald ’22...... ’20, ’21, ’22 Better, Steven J. ’82...... ’82 Busconi, Brian D. ’85...... ’82, ’83, ’84, ’85 Collins, William E. III ’59...... ’59 Appleton, William C. ’17...... ’17 Biega, Alexander P. ’10...... ’07, ’08 Butterworth, George W. III ’60...... ’59, ’60 Condon, Edward B. ’18...... ’17 Apthorp, William O. ’43...... ’43 Biega, Michael D. ’11...... ’08 Byrd, Leverett S. ’74...... ’72, ’73, ’74 Conklin, Brice H. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99 Armstrong, Steven J. ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88 Bigelow, Albert S. ’29...... ’28, ’29 Byrne, Brendan M. ’07...... ’06, ’07 Conners, David M. ’83/’84...... ’80, ’81, ’83, ’84 Arnold, Bramwell B. ’48...... ’48 Bigelow, Chandler ’24...... ’23 Connolly, Brian D. ’92...... ’91, ’92 Austin, William M. ’25...... ’24, ’25 Bigelow, Edward L. ’21...... ’19, ’20, ’21 — C — Connor, David G. ’62...... ’62 Avery, Thomas M. ’21...... ’19, ’20 Bigelow, Hugh W. ’29...... ’28, ’29 Cabot, Edward ’20...... ’19 Connors, David M. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’83 Ayres, Charles B. ’42...... ’41 Biotti, Christopher J. ’89...... ’86, ’87 Callanan, William S. ’62...... ’61 Cook, Bryan W. ’78...... ’76, ’77, ’78 Ayres, Thomas R. ’45...... ’43 Blackall, Robert M. ’12...... ’10, ’11, ’12 Callaway, John MacI. ’37...... ’35, ’36, ’37 Cooledge, W. Scott III ’55...... ’53, ’54, ’55 Ayres, William M. ’47...... ’46, ’47 Blair, Grant A. ’86...... ’83, ’84, ’85, ’86 Callaway, Samuel R. ’36...... ’34, ’35, ’36 Coolidge, Thomas J., Jr. ’54...... ’52, ’53, ’54 Blakey, Richard B. ’63...... ’63 Callaway, Trowbridge 1905...... 1904, 1905 Copeland, John T. ’58...... ’56, ’57 — B — Bland, Robert P. ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Cantanucci, Jared ’02...... ’99, ’00, ’01 Corkery, William J. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Bacon, Francis M. ’21...... ’19, ’20, ’21 Bliss, Edward P. ’55...... ’53, ’54, ’55 Caplan, Joshua C. ’89...... ’86, ’87, ’88, ’89 Corning, Nathan E. ’53...... ’51, ’52 Bailey, James A. II ’57...... ’55, ’57 Bliss, William L. ’52...... ’50, ’51, ’52 Capouch, Peter ’02...... ’99, ’00, ’01, ’02 Coskren, Michael C. ’09...... ’06 Carman, John J. ’51...... ’49, ’50 102 Baird, Christopher M. ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93, ’94 Blodget, Alden S., Jr. ’38...... ’38 Coskren, Nicholas P. ’09...... ’06, ’07, ’08 Baker, Benjamin B. ’61 ocC...... ’61, ’62 Body, Louis Frederick V. ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93, ’94 Carney, Mark J. ’87...... ’86 Coughlin, Benjamin M. ’95...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’95 Baker, Charles W. ’22...... ’20, ’21, ’22 Bolduc, Daniel G. ’76...... ’75 Carnochan, Gouverneur M. ’14...... ’14 Coulter, Charles J., Jr. ’49...... ’47, ’48, ’49 Baker, Edwin O. ’17...... ’15, ’16, ’17 Bourbeau, Allen H. ’88-89...... ’86, ’87, ’89 Carone, Nicholas E. ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’87 Cowen, Charles T. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Bala, Christopher B. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01 Bourneuf, Henri J. ’33...... ’33 Carr, Kevin M. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Cowen, Robert II ’47...... ’46 Balboni, Maurice ’59...... ’57, ’58, ’59 Boyd, Robert S.B. ’14...... ’14 Carr, Louis B. ’37...... ’35, ’36, ’37 Cox, Robert H. II ’41...... ’40, ’41 Baldwin, George S. ’21...... ’21 Braggiotti, Rama A. B. ’33...... ’33 Carr, Proctor 1904...... 1902, 1903, 1904 Craigen, Joseph C. ’97...... ’94, ’95, ’96, ’97 Baldwin, Ian ’33...... ’31, ’32, ’33 Bray, John R. ’54...... ’52, ’53, ’54 Carr, Robert H., Jr. ’68...... ’66, ’67, ’68 Crehore, Joseph F. ’56...... ’54, ’55, ’56 Baldwin, Robert ’17...... ’15, ’16, ’17 Breistroff, C. Michael ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93 Carroll, Ryan M. ’11...... ’08 Crocker, John Jr., ’46ocC...... ’46, ’47 Barakett, Timothy R. ’87...... ’84, ’85, ’86, ’87 Briggs, Templeton ’09...... ’07, ’09 Carson, Barry A. ’49...... ’46 Crocker, Julian ’44...... ’43 Carstein, Lawrence W. ’39...... ’39 Crocker, Prescott B. ’64...... ’63 Carter, Graham M. ’81...... ’79, ’80 Crosby, David B. ’61...... ’59, ’60, ’61 Cate, Karl S. ’09...... ’09 Crosby, William E. ’24...... ’22 Cavanagh, David J. ’72...... ’70, 71, ’72 Crosby, Wilson H. ’32...... ’30, ’31, ’32 Cavanagh, Joseph V. ’71...... ’69, ’70, ’71 Cross, John ’30...... ’29, ’30 Cavanagh, Thomas G. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Crothers, William R. ’04...... ’02, ’04 Celi, Mario J. ’56...... ’55, ’56 Cummings, Thayer ’26...... ’24, ’25, ’26 Chadwick, Oliver M. ’11...... ’10, ’11 Cunningham, Alan ’16...... ’15 Chalmers, Gregory R. ’85...... ’82, ’83, ’85 Cunningham, Charles C. ’32...... ’30, ’31, ’32 Chase, George W. ’53...... ’53 Cunningham, John H., Jr. ’39...... ’39 Chase, John P. ’28...... ’26, ’27, ’28 Curtis, Laurence ’16...... ’14, ’15 Chase, John R. ’50...... ’48, ’49, ’50 Cushman, John G. ’25...... ’25 Chase, Philip W. ’25...... ’24, ’25 Cushman, Paul ’13...... ’13 Chiarelli, Peter E. ’87...... ’84, ’85, ’86, ’87 Cutler, Philip ’41...... ’39 Choate, Arthur O., Jr. ’34...... ’34 Cutone, Mario V. ’87...... ’84, ’86, ’87 Chodorow, Brett H. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Cutter, Edward L., Jr. ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Christian, John D. ’09...... ’06, ’07, ’08 Church, Fredrick C. ’21...... ’19 — D — Ciavaglia, Peter A. ’91...... ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91 Dagdigian, Steven T. ’75...... ’75 Claflin, Richard M. ’36...... ’35, ’36 Daigneau, John E. ’06...... ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06 Claflin, William H. ’15...... ’13, ’14, ’15 Daly, John S. F. ’65...... ’63 Claflin, William H. III ’41...... ’39, ’40, ’41 de Rham, Frederic F., Jr. ’39...... ’38, ’39 Clark, Charles A. ’20...... ’19 Dea, Murray P. ’79...... ’77, ’78, ’79 Clark, Clarence S. ’16...... ’16 Dearborn, Eustis ’32...... ’32 Clark, Dennis P. ’68...... ’66 Dearborn, Langdon ’28...... ’28 Clark, Eben C. ’26...... ’26, ’27 DeFord, William, Jr. ’59...... ’59 Clark, Forrester A., Jr. ’58...... ’58 DeFreitas, Richard J., Jr. ’92...... ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92 The 1900-01 Harvard Crimson Clark, Kyle ’02...... ’99, ’00 deGive, Paul deB. ’34...... ’33, ’34

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Gorham, Robert S. ’40...... ’40 Graney, Michael ’60...... ’58, ’59, ’60 Grannis, Davis L. III ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Gratwick, Mitchell ’22...... ’22 Graves, Sydney C. ’24...... ’24 Gray, Sherman ’41...... ’39, ’40, ’41 Greeley, Richard S. ’49...... ’46, ’47, ’48, ’49 Greeley, Sidney F., Jr. ’47...... ’47 Greeley, Walter F. ’53...... ’51, ’52, ’53 Green, Gerald W. ’88...... ’86 Griffin, Corey A. ’84...... ’82, ’83, ’84 Griffith, Charles A., Jr. ’42...... ’42 Grimble, Donald L. ’68...... ’67, ’68 Gross, Courtlandt S. ’27...... ’25, ’26, ’27 Gross, Robert E. ’19...... ’19 Grumet-Morris, Dov P. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Guild, George C. ’23...... ’23 Gund, Gordon ’61...... ’61 Gurry, Christopher J. ’70...... ’68, ’69, ’70 Gustafson, Cory G. ’95...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’95 Guttu, Lyle R. ’58...... ’56, ’57, ’58 — H — Hackett, George H. ’43...... ’42 Hafner, Peter R. ’06...... ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06 Hale, Matthew ’32...... ’32 Haley, Paul R. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Halfnight, James A. ’97...... ’96, ’97, ’98, ’99 Hallowell, Benjamin H. ’36...... ’34, ’35, ’36 Bob Havern ’72 in the 1970 ECAC semifinal against Cornell Hamlen, Nathaniel ’27...... ’25, ’26, ’27 Hamlen, William T. ’45 ocC...... ’47 Hammond, John W. ’25...... ’23, ’24, ’25 Del Mauro, Michael J. ’11...... ’08 Elkins, William L. ’29...... ’28 Ford, Shirley S. ’09...... ’08, ’09 Hampe, Kevin F. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 DeMichele, Daniel F. ’71...... ’69, ’70, ’71 Elliott, John ’12...... ’12 Forte, John H. ’46 ocC...... ’46 Hands, David ’74...... ’72, ’73, ’74 Demment, Montague W. ’68...... ’66 Elliott, John, Jr. ’42...... ’42 Fosdick, Paulding 1904...... 1902 Haneman, William F. ’42...... ’42 Dempsey, Sean M. ’02...... ’02 Elliott, John D. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Foster, Hathery ’07...... ’07 Haney, Richard W. ’87...... ’85, ’86, ’87 Desmond, Lawrence L. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Elliott, Osborn ’46...... ’43 Foster, John W. 1903...... 1902, 1903 Hanson, Donald R. ’14 (Scientific School)...... ’13 Devereaux, John C. ’14...... ’14 Ellis, Harwood ’31...... ’30, ’31 Foster, Newton H. ’11...... ’10, ’11 Harding George R., Jr. ’43...... ’42, ’43 Devin, John P. ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88 Ellison, William P. ’27...... ’25, ’26, ’27 Fowkes, Robert J. ’80...... ’77 103 Harding, Charles L., Jr. ’26...... ’26 DeVoe, Michael W. ’87...... ’86, ’87 Emerson, Ashton ’36...... ’35, ’36 Francis, Michael B. ’91...... ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91 Harding, F. Austin, Jr. ’39...... ’37, ’38, ’39 Dewey, Alfred S. ’36...... ’34, ’35, ’36 Emerson, Eugene ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Fraser, James M. ’09...... ’06, ’07, ’08 Harding, Francis A. ’30...... ’30 DiBlasio, Robert V. ’51...... ’49, ’50, ’51 Emery, Frederick I. 1902...... 1902 Fredo, Robert F., Jr. ’68...... ’66, ’67, ’68 Harding, Goodwin W. ’43...... ’43 Diercks, William E. ’69...... ’67, ’68, ’69 Emmons, Robert W. ’21...... ’20, ’21 Freedley, Vinton, Jr. ’40...... ’38, ’39, ’40 Harding, William G. ’46...... ’43 Dole, Richard E. ’10...... ’09 Enright, William F. ’16...... ’16 Freeman, Gordon L., Jr. ’71...... ’69, ’70 Hardy, Roger S. 1901...... 1900, 1901 Donato, Edward P. ’91...... ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91 Ericson, Leif M. ’02...... ’99, ’00, ’01 Fried, Robert J. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Harris, Nathaniel L., Jr. ’52...... ’51, ’52 Donelan, John J., Jr. ’52...... ’50 Ervin, Henry N. ’40...... ’38, ’39, ’40 Frothingham, Channing, Jr. ’31...... ’31 Hart, Timothy J. ’86...... ’84 Dorman, Bradley P. ’84...... ’84 Evans, Peter J. ’83...... ’80, ’81 Frothingham, Thomas E. ’47...... ’46 Hartje, Tod D. ’90...... ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90 Doty, Augustus F. ’16...... ’15, ’16 Evans, Philip R. ’81...... ’78 Fryer, William J. ’64...... ’63, ’64 Hartmann, Ralph P. ’86...... ’84 Dow, Richard A. ’35...... ’33, ’34, ’35 Everett, Walter C. ’33...... ’32 Fusco, Mark E. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82, ’83 Hasler, Wyndham ’34...... ’32, ’33, ’34 Downes, Gregory ’61...... ’59, ’50 Everts, Albert P., Jr. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Fusco, Scott M. ’85-86...... ’82, ’83, ’85 Hatch, Morgan P. ’52...... ’51, ’52 Downes, James E. II ’63...... ’63 Havern, Robert A. ’72...... ’70, ’71, ’72 Downes, Philip G. ’40...... ’40 — F — — G — Haydock, Robert ’10...... ’10 Draper, Charles D. ’32...... ’30 Falcone, Philip A. ’84...... ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84 Gardner, Augustus P. ’94...... ’91, ’92 Heintzman, Thomas G. ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Dreher, George R. ’42...... ’40, ’41, ’42 Famigletti, Brian T. ’98...... ’95, ’96, ’97, ’98 Gardner, George P. ’10...... ’08 Henderson, John W. ’61...... ’60 Driscoll, Terrence T. ’71...... ’69, ’70 Fanning, Charles F., Jr. ’64...... ’63 Gardner, Harrison ’24...... ’24 Hermsdorf, Stephen G. ’95...... ’94, ’95 Drury, Theodore E. ’93...... ’90, ’91, ’93 Farden, R. Scott ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’88 Gardner, Henry B. ’13...... ’12, ’13 Hess, Gregory M. ’92...... ’91, ’92 Du, Kevin R. ’07...... ’04, ’05, ’06, ’07 Farrell, Brian P. ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93, ’94 Garfield, Michael R. ’63...... ’63 Hicks, Samuel T. ’10...... ’08, ’09, ’10 Duane, George E. ’40 ocC...... ’40, ’41 Farrell, David J. ’45 ocC...... ’43, ’47 Garrison, John B. ’31...... ’29, ’30, ’31 Hicks, Samuel T., Jr. ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Dufault, Paul F. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Farrish, Kenneth R. ’78...... ’78 Garrity, John P., Jr. ’68...... ’66, ’67, ’68 Higdon, Henry G. III ’98...... ’95, ’96, ’97, ’98 Duffey, Arthur F., Jr. ’36...... ’34, ’35, ’36 Feloney, Robert J. ’46...... ’46, ’47 Garrity, Jonathan P. ’80...... ’77, ’78, ’79, ’80 Higginbottom, George H. ’59...... ’57, ’58, ’59 Duffy, Gifford R. ’82...... ’79, ’80 Fenn, Abbott T. ’42...... ’40, ’41, ’42 Garrity, William L., Jr. ’50...... ’49, ’50 Higgins, Richard R. ’22...... ’22 Dunbar, Robert P. ’58...... ’58 Ferrari, Marco J. ’97...... ’94, ’95, ’96, ’97 Gaston, John ’22...... ’20 Hill, Francis S. ’24...... ’22, ’23, ’24 Duncan, Leslie R. ’59...... ’58, ’59 Filoon, John W., Jr. ’59...... ’59 Gauthier, David R. ’75...... ’75 Hodder, Clark ’25...... ’24, ’25 Duncan, Robert F. ’12...... ’10, ’11, ’12 Fischer, Richard S. ’59...... ’57, ’58, ’59 Gebelein, George C., Jr. ’43 ocC...... ’41, ’42, ’47 Hodder, Melville T. ’60...... ’60 Dunderdale, John J. ’79...... ’78, ’79 Fisher, Thomas K. ’17...... ’15, ’16, ’17 Giddens, Rene F. G. ’30...... ’28, ’29, ’30 Hofer, Philip ’21...... ’21 Durant, John B. ’27...... ’27 Fitzsimmons, William R. ’67...... ’65, ’66 Gillette, Howard F., Jr. ’35...... ’35 Hogan, Leigh P. ’75...... ’73, ’74, ’75 Durno, Stanley B. ’71...... ’69, ’70, ’71 Flaman, Terrance E. ’70...... ’68, ’69, ’70 Gillie, Bruce L. ’60...... ’58 Holbrook, Guy C., Jr. ’30...... ’28, ’29, ’30 Dwinell, James F. III ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Fleek, John S. ’15...... ’15 Ginal, Michael E. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99 Fletcher, George C. ’89/’90...... ’89 Glaser, Howard H. ’57...... ’57 Holmes, David U. ’57...... ’57 — E — Flint, John G. ’23...... ’23 Gleason, Francis H. ’34...... ’33, ’34 Holmes, Dunbar ’35...... ’34, ’35 Early, Brian F. ’96...... ’96 Flomenhoft, Steven T. ’93...... ’90, ’91, ’92, ’93 Glidden, William T. III ’45 ocC...... ’46 Holmes, Jabish ’21...... ’19, ’20, ’21 Eaton, David C. ’40...... ’39, ’40 Flynn, Charles B. ’56...... ’54, ’55, ’56 Gonzalez, Jorge R. ’66...... ’64, ’65, ’66 Holmes, Thomas B. ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Eaton, Donald K., Jr. ’51...... ’51 Flynn, Robert J. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Goodale, Alfred M. ’13...... ’13 Hopkins, Stephen T. ’14...... ’13, ’14 Eaton, Peter K. ’45 ocC...... ’46 Follows, Peter C. ’86...... ’84, ’85, ’86 Goodenow, Robert W. ’74...... ’72, ’73, ’74 Hornblower, Ralph ’11...... ’09, ’10, ’11 Ecker, Leo A. ’37...... ’35, ’36, ’37 Forbes, C. Stewart ’61...... ’59, ’60, ’61 Goodridge, Frederick J. 1898 and (M.S.)... Hornig, James A. ’70...... ’69 Eckfeldt, Thomas H. ’17...... ’16, ’17 Ford, George S. ’37...... ’35, ’36, ’37 1900, 1901 Horton, Douglas L. ’81...... ’80

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History

Johnson, Barry F. ’69...... ’67 MacLeod, Eldon 1906...... 1903, 1904, 1906 Morin, Chad D. ’10...... ’07, ’08 Johnson, Charles E. ’06...... ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06 Macmilliam, Alexander S., Jr. ’44...... ’43 Morrell, Graham K. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’01 Johnson, Howard A., Jr. ’39...... ’38, ’39 MacNider, Hanford ’11...... ’11 Morrill, Joseph, Jr. ’28...... ’27, ’28 Johnston, David L. ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 Maguire, Derek J. ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93, ’94 Morse, David G. ’62...... ’60, ’61, ’62 Jonas, Oliver H. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01 Magura, Tyler M. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Morse, Eugene D. ’19...... ’19 Jones, David R. ’71...... ’69, ’70, ’71 Mahoney, Francis X. ’55...... ’53, ’54, ’55 Moseley, Thomas C. ’46 ocC...... ’47, ’49 Jones, Vincent W., Jr. ’45 ocC...... ’47, ’48 Mahoney, George F. ’37...... ’35 Movius, Hallam L. 1902...... 1901 Jorgenson, Gerald W. ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 Maki, Ryan J. ’07...... ’04, ’05, ’06, ’07 Moynihan, James E., Jr. ’55...... ’53, ’54 Mallgrave, Matthew Francis X. ’93... Mrkonich, Edward J. ’55...... ’53, ’54 — K — ’90, ’91, ’92, ’93 Mueller, Peter ’69...... ’67, ’68, ’69 Karmanos, Jason R. ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Malmquist, Derek P. ’83...... ’80 Murphy, Brian J. ’80...... ’78, ’79, ’80 Kayser, Robert B., Jr. ’41...... ’41 Manchester, Douglas C. ’55...... ’53, ’54, ’55 Murphy, Daniel P. ’06...... ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06 Keenan, William H. ’09...... ’06, ’07, ’08 Mandes, Steven V. ’07...... ’04, ’05, ’06, ’07 Murphy, George E., Jr. ’69/’70...... ’69, ’70 Kelley, Christopher T. ’08...... ’05 Mangano, Paul S. ’80...... ’80 Murphy, John A. ’90...... ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90 Kelley, Paul M. ’59...... ’57, ’59 Manning, John B. 1903 (Scientific School) Murray, James V. ’76...... ’74 Kelley, Robert C. ’80...... ’78, ’79 and M.S...... 1901, 1902, 1903, 1905 Murray, Thomas ’81...... ’78, ’79, ’80, ’81 Kellogg, Howard ’37...... ’37 Marett, Geb E. ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Muse, Robert F. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Kennedy, Joseph J. ’22...... ’22 Mark, Ronald E. ’70...... ’69, ’70 Kennel, Charles F. ’59...... ’59 Marshall, Harold T., Jr. ’51...... ’50, ’51 — N — Kennish, Ian T. ’94...... ’93, ’94 Martin, Alan R. ’18...... ’17 Nash, Bradley DeL. ’23...... ’23 Kerner, Jamin F. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’00 Martin, Francis A. ’32...... ’30, ’31 Nash, Nicholas D. ’61...... ’61 Key, Albert L. II ’50...... ’48, ’49 Martin, Gary B. ’84...... ’82, ’83, ’84 Nelson, Theodore C. ’52...... ’52 Key, David McK., Jr. ’49...... 47, ’48, ’49 Martin, John M. ’22...... ’21, ’22 Newell, Henry H. ’29...... ’29 Kidder, J. Norton ’37...... ’37 Martin, Roger H. ’34...... ’32, ’33 Newell, John L. ’26...... ’24 Kilpatrick, David J. ’94...... ’91, ’92 Martins, Steve P. ’95...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’95 Newhall, Daniel A. 1906... Kim, Aaron Y. ’03...... ’00, ’01, ’02, ’03 Mason, Benjamin L. ’63...... ’62, ’63 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906 Amory Hubbard ’53 Kinasewich, Eugene ’64...... ’62, ’63, ’64 McAlpine, Howard H. ’72...... ’70 Newhall, Morton L. 1908...... 1906, 1907, 1908 Kinkopf, Abraham R. ’04...... ’01 McCabe, Joseph D. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Nicholas, Frederick S., Jr. ’57...... ’55 Horton, Wiliam R., Jr. ’77...... ’76, ’77 Kirkland, Charles McM. ’34...... ’34 McCafferty, Brian A...... ’06, ’07, ’08 Nichols, Harold W. 1907...... 1907 Hoshino, Masafumi ’02...... ’02 Kissel, Rudolph H. ’17...... ’17 McCafferty, Kevin P. ’02...... ’02 Nieland, Todd A. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Houghton, Charles G., Jr. ’39...... ’38, ’39 Kittredge, Joseph B. ’51...... ’49, ’50, ’51 McCann, Sean P. ’94...... ’91, ’92, ’93, ’94 Nielsen, Kirk G. ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Houston, Philip K. ’12...... ’12 Knowles, John H. ’47...... ’46 McCarthy, Jeremiah S.P. ’98...... ’95, ’96, ’97, ’98 Nolen, William D. ’78...... ’77, ’78 Hovenanian, Michael S. ’36...... ’34, ’35, ’36 Kolarik, Tyler S. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 McCarthy, Liam S.E. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’02 Noonan, E. Mark ’74...... ’72, ’73, ’74 Howard, Godfrey G. ’50...... ’50 Konik, Bradley G. ’95/’96...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’96 McCollem, Matthew R. ’11...... ’08 Noone, Richard S. ’41...... ’41 Howard, Williard ’27 ocC...... ’25, ’27, ’28 Krayer, P. Edward ’89...... ’86, ’87, ’89 McCormack, Brian P., Jr. ’92...... ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92 Norris, Christopher C. ’62...... ’61, ’62 Howe, Nathaniel S. ’26...... ’24, ’25, ’26 Kukulowicz, R. Shayne ’84...... ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84 McCormack, M. Scott ’90...... ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90 North, Jay R. ’84...... ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84 Howe, Reginald H. II ’62...... ’62 Kwong, Bradley C. ’85...... ’82, ’83, ’84, ’85 McCoy, Robert W., Jr. ’62...... ’60, ’61 Nowak, Derek ’02...... ’99, ’00 McCulloch, David G. ’04...... ’01 ’02, ’03, ’04 Nowak, James B. ’03...... ’00, ’01, ’02, ’03 104 Howe, Stephen W. ’50...... ’49 — L — Howell, A. Howard, Jr. ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 McCullough, Dennis M. ’67...... ’65 Noyes, Arthur F. ’56...... ’55, ’56 Lakin, Charles B. ’30...... ’28, ’29, ’30 Howes, Kenneth, Jr. ’46...... ’46 McDonald, Robert C. ’81...... ’79, ’80 Lamarche, F. William ’64...... ’63, ’64 — O — Howley, Paul T. ’89...... ’87, ’88, ’89 McEvoy, Richard M. ’86...... ’83, ’84, ’86 Lanman, Ludlow T. ’21...... ’20 Oberman, Ethan R. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98 Hoyt, Barrett ’30...... ’30 McGrath, Gordon R. ’42...... ’41, ’42 Lannon, Ryan P. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 O’Brien, James B. ’53...... ’51, ’53 Hozach, William J. ’77...... ’75, ’76, ’77 McKean, Quincy A. S., Jr. ’50...... ’47, ’48 Laroque, Joseph, Jr. ’23...... ’22, ’23 O’Donoghue, Kevin J. ’78...... ’76, ’77, ’78 Hubbard, E. Amory ’53...... ’51, ’52, ’53 McKenna, Timothy M. ’76...... ’76 Larson, William R. ’83...... ’81, ’82, ’83 Ohno, Robert K. ’86...... ’84, ’85, ’86 Hughes, Charles W. II ’92...... ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92 McLaughlin, Peter S. ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Lau, Wade C. ’82...... ’79, ’80, ’81, ’82 Olson, Gregory A. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82, ’83 Hughes, George S. ’79...... ’77, ’78, ’79 McLaughlin, Richard M. ’59...... ’57, ’58, ’59 Lavalle, John E. ’46 ocC...... ’47, ’48 Olson, Mitchell S. ’82/’83...... ’79, ’80, ’82, ’83 Hughes, John F. ’80...... ’77, ’78 McMahon, James J. ’75...... ’73, ’74, ’75 Laverack, William H. 1901...... 1900, 1901 O’Malley, Terrence J. ’57...... ’55, ’56, ’58 Hulse, Stacy B., Jr. ’41...... ’30, ’40, ’41 McMahon, Timothy M. ’86...... ’84 Leckie, Robert S. ’78...... ’76, ’77 O’Neill, Grover, Jr. ’44...... ’42, ’43 Humphrey, Richard S. ’21...... ’21 McManama, George B., Jr. ’70...... ’68, ’69, ’70 Lederman, Andrew M. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Otness, James B. ’69...... ’67, ’68, ’69 Hunington, Frederic D. ’12...... ’10 McManama, Robert ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Leonard, Charles R. ’08...... ’07 Owen, E. Robert ’58...... ’56, ’57, ’58 Hunington, Myles D. ’50...... ’48, ’49, ’50 McPherson, Stephen M. ’59...... ’59 Lewis, H. Finlay ’60...... ’60 Owen, George, Jr. ’23...... ’21, ’22, ’23 Hunneman, Roger D. ’17...... ’17 McVey, Robert P. ’58...... ’56, ’57, ’58 Lincoln, William A. ’35...... ’33, ’35 Owen, Peter M. ’76...... ’76 Hunnewell, Walter, Jr. ’39...... ’39 Meahl, Robert K. ’61...... ’60 Liston, James E. ’78...... ’76, ’77, ’78 Owen, Stephen ’71...... ’69, ’70, ’71 Hunter, Andrew A. ’51...... ’50 Mechem, John S. ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Litchfield, Alan W. ’82...... ’79, ’81, ’82 Hutchinson, John W., Jr. ’63...... ’63 Mechem, Richard W. ’45...... ’43 Litchfield, Bayard S. 1903 (Scientific School)... — P — Hutchinson, Constantine 1905...... 1905 Meintel, Alex C. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 1903 Packard, Dennis M. C. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Huxley, Christopher M. ’11...... ’08 Melrose, Kevan G. ’90...... ’88, ’89, ’90 Little, Dennis G. ’56...... ’55, ’56 Page, John E. II ’60...... ’60 Hyland, Robert G. ’98...... ’95, ’96, ’97, ’98 Menkiti, Obiora I. ’99...... ’97, ’99 Lloyd, Demarest ’42...... ’41, ’42 Paine, John A. 1909...... 1907, 1908, 1909 Hynes, David E. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Mercer, Charles B. ’63...... ’63 Lombard, James M. ’61...... ’60, ’61 Paine, John A., Jr. ’43...... ’41, ’42, ’43 Hynes, John B. ’80...... ’78, ’79, ’80 Michaud, Pier-Olivier ’11...... ’08 Lonsinger, Bryan S. ’95...... ’92, ’93, ’94, ’95 Millar, Robert A. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98, ’99 Palmer, Franklin H. ’13...... ’12, ’13 — I — Loring, Caleb, Jr. ’43...... ’41, ’42, ’43 Millen, Randy R. ’79...... ’77, ’78, ’79 Palmer, Potter III ’32...... ’31 Parrot, Kent ’68...... ’66, ’67, ’68 Ikauniks, Romuald ’64...... ’62, ’63, ’64 Loring, George G. ’50...... ’48, ’49 Miller, Peter K. ’66...... ’65, ’66 Patrick, Joseph A. ’39...... ’37, ’38, ’39 Ingalls, Theodore S. ’61...... ’60, ’61 Lovering, Joseph S. 1903...... 1902, 1903 Minot, George R. II ’49 ocC...... ’46, ’48, ’49, ’50 Patterson, Michael E. ’64...... ’62, ’63, ’64 Ingram, John D. ’50...... ’49 Lowery, Jenner 1904...... 1904 Minturn, Robert B., Jr. ’61...... ’60, ’61 Patton, Anthony S. ’54...... ’52, ’53, ’54 Israel, Aaron M. ’96...... ’93, ’94 Luxemburg, Marc J. ’60...... ’59 Miskovich, Craig T. ’92...... ’90, ’91 Paul, John T. ’72...... ’70, ’71, ’72 Ivy, Malcom H. 1904 and L.S...... 1904, 1906 — M — Mittell, David A. ’39...... ’38, ’39 Mittell, Kenneth C. ’34...... ’34 Pavenstedt, Edmund W. ’20...... ’19 — J — MacDonald, B. Lane ’88-89...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’89 Moore, Dominic M. ’03...... ’00, ’01, ’02, ’03 Pawloski, Jerald J. ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88 Jackson, Orton P. ’29...... ’29 MacDonald, David M. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Moore, Marcus J. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Pell, Clarence C. 1908... Jahncke, Redington T. ’72...... ’70 MacDonald, James C. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98 Moore, Steven F. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908 Jameson, Winthrop S., Jr. ’39...... ’37, ’38, ’39 MacDougall, Albert E. ’18...... ’18 Morgan, Henry C. ’14...... ’13, ’14 Pell, Clarence C., Jr. ’33...... ’31, ’32, ’33 Janfaza, Andrew E. ’88...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88 MacGregor, Caswell E., Jr. ’31...... ’31, ’32 Morgan, John E. P. ’17...... ’15, ’16, ’17 Pelle, Jonathan D. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Janicek, Steven A. ’75...... ’74,’75 MacLean, Neal F. ’93...... ’91 Morgan, William F. ’10...... ’09, ’10 Penhallow, Dunlap P. 1903 Jenney, Robert M. ’41...... ’41 MacLeod, A. Matthew ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Morgan, William O. ’18...... ’16, ’17 (Scientific School)...... 1901, 1902

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Percy, George A. ’18...... ’16, ’17 Sard, Russell W. 1905...... 1905 Townsend, Richard S. 1907... Weiss, Benjamin J. ’03...... ’00, ’01, ’02, ’03 Perkins, Robert F., Jr. ’40...... ’39, ’40 Scaife, Roger M. ’39...... ’39 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907 Weiss, Robert H. ’54...... ’54 Perry, Arthur, Jr. ’36...... ’36 Scalamandre, Franco G. ’79...... ’78, ’79 Tracy, Emmet E. III ’96...... ’93, ’94, ’95, ’96 Welch, James O., Jr. ’52...... ’52 Petersen, R. Charles ’78...... ’76, ’77 Scammon, Charles F. ’67...... ’65, ’66 Trainor, James M. ’79...... ’76, ’77, ’78, ’79 Welch, Noah P. ’05...... ’02, ’03, ’04, ’05 Petrovek, Brian S. ’77...... ’75, ’76, ’77 Schuster, Jonathan H. ’77...... ’75, ’76, ’77 Treadwell, Barry L. ’64...... ’63, ’64 Wells, Albert B. II ’56...... ’55, ’56 Pettit, Timothy D. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Schwefel, Harry D. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01 Tudor, John ’29...... ’27, ’28, ’29 Wendell, Edward E. ’32...... ’31 Phillips, Morgan B. ’15...... ’13, ’14, ’15 Scorsune, Matthew B. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Turano, Kenneth J. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Wenham, Sean P. ’94...... ’92 Philpott, Ethan M. ’97...... ’94, ’96, ’97 Scott, Richard S. ’27...... ’25, ’26, ’27 Turco, John H. ’70...... ’68, ’69, ’70 Wheeler, Robert J., Jr. ’84...... ’83, ’84 Piatelli, Lawrence T. ’75...... ’75 Seamans, William S. ’11...... ’11 Turco, Scott V. ’00...... ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Whiston, Mark B. ’84...... ’81 Pierce, Daniel ’56...... ’56 Sears, Walter E. ’46 ocC...... ’47, ’48 Turner, James B. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82, ’83 White, Henry K. ’20...... ’19 Pierce, Edward P. ’12...... ’12 Sedgwick, Henry D. II ’51...... ’50, ’51 Tyler, Michael E. ’63...... ’63 White, John N. ’51...... ’51 Pope, Frederick, Jr. ’42...... ’42 Sheehy, Neil K. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82 Whitlock, Emmet ’41...... ’40 Pope, Ralph L., Jr. ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Short, Charles W. 1908...... 1908 — U — Wider, Enos 1906...... 1904, 1905 Popiel, Brian R. ’90...... ’88, ’89, ’90 Slade, Howard II ’27...... ’27 Ullyot, Daniel J. ’58...... ’56, ’57, ’58 Wigglesworth, Richard B. ’12...... ’10 Popper, Nathaniel ’02...... ’02 Smart, Paul H. ’14...... ’13, ’14 Willetts, Joseph P. 1909...... 1906, 1908, 1909 Porter, Cedric W., Jr. ’60...... ’60 Smith, Baldwin, Jr. ’65...... ’63, ’64, ’65 — V — Willetts, Joseph P. ’41...... ’39, ’40, ’41 Potter, Brokks ’24...... ’24 Smith, Benjamin A. III ’68...... ’66, ’67, ’68 Vanderpool, Wynant D. (L.S.)...... 1900 Willetts, William P. ’14...... ’12, ’13, ’14 Powers, Scott F. ’82...... ’79, ’80, ’81, ’82 Smith, Joseph R. ’11...... ’08 Vietze, David B. ’59...... ’57, ’58, ’59 Winslow, Warren ’40...... ’38, ’39, ’40 Powning, Maynard W. ’53...... ’53 Smith, Kenneth J. ’04...... ’01, ’02, ’03, ’04 Visone, Anthony ’84...... ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84 Winsor, Alfred 1902...... 1901, 1902 Pratt, Herold I., Jr. ’59...... ’58, ’59 Smith, Stephen B. ’12...... ’12 Vukonich, Michael W. ’91...... ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91 Winthrop, Adam ’61...... ’61 Pratt, Laurence O. ’26...... ’25, ’26 Smith, Timothy S. ’86...... ’83, ’84, ’85, ’86 — W — Wolcott, Samuel H., Jr. ’33...... ’33 Pratt, Laurence O., Jr. ’59...... ’59 Sneddon, Kevin A. ’92...... ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92 Wood, Harcourt ’49...... ’48 Prestifilippo, Joseph R., Jr. ’00... Snelling, Henry B. W. ’21...... ’19, ’20, ’21 Wadsworth, Charles Y. ’32...... ’32 Wood, R. Norman ’54...... ’52, ’53, ’54 ’97, ’98, ’99, ’00 Snow, Crocker, Jr. ’61...... ’59, ’60, ’61 Wadsworth, Lewis L., Jr. ’30...... ’30 Wood, W. Barry, Jr. ’32...... ’30, ’31, ’32 Preston, Lewis T. ’50 ocC...... ’47, ’49, ’50, ’51 Sortwell, Alvin F. ’14...... ’12, ’13 Waldinger, Carl P. ’67...... ’65, ’66 Wood, W. Godfrey ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 Presz, Edmond J. ’89...... ’88, ’89 Souther, Tristam B. 1904...... 1903, 1904 Waldinger, Robert H. ’36...... ’35, ’36 Woodworth, Alfred S. ’29...... ’29 Price, Gordon E. ’66...... ’64, ’65, ’66 Sproule, Douglas M. ’98...... ’95, ’96, ’97, ’98 Walker, George G. ’24...... ’22, ’23, ’24 Woodworth, Kennard ’26...... ’26 Pruyn, Milton L. ’35...... ’33 Stanley, Malcolm N. ’29...... ’27, ’29 Walker, Norman S. ’21...... ’19, ’20 Worthen, Thomas B. ’57...... ’55 Pruyn, Robert D. 1902...... 1901, 1902 Starbuck, Robert B. ’84...... ’82, ’83 Wallingford, Buchner A. II ’64...... ’63 Wyatt, Oswald S. ’76...... ’74, ’75, ’76 Purdy, M. Eugene Jr. ’79...... ’78, ’79 Stay, Timothy B. ’01...... ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01 Walsh, Thomas M.’06...... ’03, ’04, ’05, ’06 Wykoff, James H. ’52...... ’51 Putnam, Eliot T. ’29...... ’29, ’30 Stedman, William E. ’41...... ’41 Wanamaker, Elmer M. ’16...... ’14, ’15 Wylde, Cecil I. ’27...... ’27 Putnam, Eliot T., Jr. ’61...... ’61 Steedman, Christopher L. ’63...... ’63 Ward, Lawrence W. ’50...... ’48, ’49 Wylde, John ’58...... ’58 Putnam, John W. ’33...... ’31, ’32, ’33 Stevens. John E. ’66...... ’64 Ware, Dwight A. ’69...... ’69 Wylde, John I. ’17...... ’15, ’16, ’17 Stillman, Carl S. ’22...... ’21 Ware, John, Jr. ’34...... ’34 — Q — Stillman, Elijah H. ’22...... ’21 Washburn, Frank A. B. 1909...... 1907, 1908, 1909 — Y — Quinby, William C., Jr. ’36...... ’35, ’36 Stillman, John S. ’40...... ’40 Washburn, Stephen L. ’49...... ’48 Yetman, William E. ’49...... ’47, ’48, ’49 Stohn, Alexander C., Jr. ’41...... ’41 Watson, Michael D. ’82...... ’79, ’80, ’81, ’82 Young, Carl J. III ’90...... ’87, ’88, ’89, ’90 Watson, Peter T. ’72...... ’70 — R — Stone, Galen L. ’43 ocC...... ’42, ’46 105 Read, Harold W. 1903...... 1903 Stone, Peter L. ’39...... ’37, ’38 Watters, David M. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 — Z — Reece, Franklin A., Jr. ’35...... ’35 Stonehouse, Jeff J. ’02...... ’99, ’00, ’01, ’02 Watts, William P. ’35...... ’33, ’34, ’35 Zakowich, Peter J., Jr. ’99...... ’96 Reese, Dylan P. ’07...... ’04, ’05, ’06, ’07 Storey, Benjamin H. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98, ’99 Weed, Roger H. ’34...... ’34 Zarakov, Isadore ’27...... ’25, ’26, ’27 Reilly, Richard M. ’59...... ’57, ’59 Straus, Edward K. ’31...... ’31 Weisbrod, John C. ’91...... ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91 Zellner, Edward A. ’67...... ’65, ’66 Reynolds, Harrison G. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Stubbs, Frank R., Jr. ’32...... ’30 Rice, Theodore H ’17...... ’16, ’17 Stubbs, John O. ’21...... ’20 Richardson, Arthur W. ’28...... ’28 Summers, James G. ’45...... ’43 Richardson, E. Bradley ’53...... ’51, ’52, ’53 Summers, M. Freely, Jr. ’42...... ’40, ’41, ’42 Richter, Kyle L. ’10...... ’07, ’08 Summers, Peter ’56...... ’55, ’56 Rient, Peter F. ’60...... ’60 Sutherland, Gilbert Jason D. ’97...... ’97 Riley, John C. ’73...... ’71, ’72, ’73 Swan, William D., Jr. ’45 ocC...... ’47 Riley, John S. ’10...... ’08 Sweeney, Donald C. ’ 88...... ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88 Robbins, Henry B. ’36...... ’36 Sweitzer, Brandon W. ’64...... ’64 Roberts, George F. ’38...... ’36, ’37, ’38 Swenson, Stuart N. ’97...... ’94, ’95, ’96 Roberts, James A. ’36...... ’35, ’36 Swift, Phelps H., Jr. ’76...... ’75, ’76 Rodgers, Clayton A. ’99...... ’96, ’97, ’98, ’99 Sztorc, William A. ’84...... ’84 Rogers, Douglas A. ’10...... ’07, ’08 Rolecek, Steven C. ’09...... ’06, ’07, ’08 — T — Rosenberger, Erich ’67...... ’65 Tallett, Ian M. ’10...... ’08 Rosenberger, Leif R. ’72...... ’70, ’71, ’72 Taucher, Craig P. ’89...... ’87, ’88, ’89 Rossi, Edward A. ’75...... ’74, ’75 Taylor, Fenton, Jr. ’44...... ’43 Roth, Randy L. ’75...... ’73, ’74, ’75 Taylor, Michael J. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07, ’08 Roy, Allain R. ’92...... ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92 Taylor, Mosely ’18...... ’16 Roy, Rene M. ’02...... ’02 Taylor, Randall L. ’87...... ’84, ’85, ’86, ’87 Rumsey, Charles C. 1902...... 1900, 1901, 1902 Taylor, Timothy B. ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 Rumsey, Laurence 1908...... 1907, 1908 Thacher, Thomas C. ’18...... ’16, ’17 Russell, Fred A. 1899...... 1900 Thayer, Edward C. II ’51...... ’51 Ryland, G. Neal ’63...... ’61, ’62, ’63 Thomas, Bruce R. ’64...... ’60, ’63 Thomas, James H. ’75...... ’73, ’74, ’75 — S — Thomson, Ronald P. ’63...... ’62, ’63 Sahlin, Peter B. ’65...... ’64, ’65 Thorndike, Theodore B. ’75...... ’73, ’74, ’75 Saltonstall, Leverett ’14...... ’14 Tilghman, George H., Jr. ’’48...... ’46, ’47 Saltonstall, Robert, Jr. ’33...... ’31, ’32, ’33 Tilney, Nicolas L. 1906...... 1906 Saltonstall, William G. ’28...... ’28 Timpson, Carl W., Jr. ’52...... ’50, ’51, ’52 Sampson, Thompson S. 1909... Tobe, Justin E. ’08...... ’05, ’06, ’07 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909 Townsend, Greenough ’17...... ’15, ’17 Sangster, Scott W. ’83...... ’80, ’81, ’82 Mike Vukonich ’91

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Ivy League Hockey History

League competition between Ivy teams began in 1934 and, except for the war years of 1944-46, has operated without interruption. Originally the league was composed of Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton and Yale, and was known as the Quadrangular League. Army joined the group in 1941-42, making it the Pentagonal League. Army dropped out in 1946-47 and was replaced by Brown in 1948-49. The teams became formally known as the Ivy Group in 1955-56. Cornell became a member in 1958-59, and Pennsylvania joined in 1967-68. Penn withdrew its team after the 1977- 78 season, when the school dropped hockey as a varsity sport. The eighth league member, Columbia, has never fielded a varsity hockey team as a member of the Ivy Group.

Ivy League Championships (since 1955-56) The 1963 team poses with the Hobey Baker Trophy, given annually to the Ivy School Titles Most Recent champion. Holding the trophy is team captain Tim Taylor ’63, who went on to a Harvard...... 21...... 2005-06 long coaching career with Yale and the U.S. National Team. Cornell...... 18...... 2004-05 Yale...... 7...... 2006-07 Brown...... 5...... 2003-04 Dartmouth...... 6...... 2006-07 Princeton...... 2...... 2007-08

Ivy League Champions and Harvard Finishes Year Champion Record Harvard Record Year Champion Record Harvard Record 1933-34 Dartmouth 5-1-0 4th 1-5-0 1973-74 Harvard 9-3-0 1st 9-3-0 1934-35 Yale 7-1-0 2nd 5-2-0 1974-75 Harvard 12-0-0 1st 12-0-0 1935-36 Harvard 5-1-0 1st 5-1-0 1975-76 Brown 11-1-0 4th 6-5-1 1936-37 Harvard 6-0-0 1st 6-0-0 1976-77 Cornell 9-2-1 4th 7-5-0 106 1937-38 Dartmouth 6-0-0 3rd 2-3-1 1977-78 Cornell 9-3-0 4th 5-7-0 1938-39 Dartmouth 6-0-0 2nd 3-2-1 1978-79 Dartmouth 8-2-0 5th 1-8-1 1939-40 Yale 5-0-1 4th 0-6-0 1979-80 Dartmouth 7-2-1 4th 3-4-3 1940-41 Princeton 5-1-0 4th 0-5-1 1980-81 Yale 7-2-1 5th 3-6-1 1941-42 Dartmouth 8-0-0 4th 3-5-0 1981-82 Harvard 6-2-2 1st 6-2-2 1942-43 Dartmouth 7-0-1 2nd 5-2-1 1982-83 Harvard 6-3-1 t-1st 6-3-1 1946-47 Dartmouth 5-1-0 3rd 3-4-0 1983-84 Harvard 6-2-2 t-1st 6-2-2 1947-48 Dartmouth 6-0-0 t-2nd 2-4-0 Cornell 7-3-0 1948-49 Dartmouth* 7-2-0 2nd 6-3-0 1984-85 Harvard/Cornell/Yale 7-2-1 t-1st 7-2-1 1949-50 Brown 6-2-0 4th 3-5-0 1985-86 Harvard 9-1-0 1st 9-1-0 1950-51 Brown 6-2-0 5th 2-6-0 1986-87 Harvard 9-1-0 1st 9-1-0 1951-52 Yale 7-1-0 4th 3-5-0 1987-88 Harvard 10-0-0 1st 10-0-0 1952-53 Princeton 6-2-0 t-2nd 5-3-0 1988-89 Harvard 9-1-0 1st 9-1-0 1953-54 Harvard 5-1-2 1st 5-1-2 1989-90 Harvard 8-1-1 1st 8-1-1 1954-55 Harvard 7-0-1 1st 7-0-1 1990-91 Brown 6-2-2 2nd 6-3-1 1955-56 Harvard 7-1-0 1st 7-1-0 1991-92 Yale 5-1-4 2nd 4-1-5 1956-57 Harvard 8-0-0 1st 8-0-0 1992-93 Harvard 7-1-2 1st 7-1-2 1957-58 Harvard 7-0-1 1st 7-0-1 1993-94 Harvard 9-0-1 1st 9-0-1 1958-59 Dartmouth 10-0-0 2nd 6-2-2 1994-95 Brown 7-2-1 2nd 6-4-0 1959-60 Dartmouth 9-1-0 2nd 7-3-0 1995-96 Cornell 9-0-1 3rd 5-5-0 1960-61 Harvard 9-0-1 1st 9-0-1 1996-97 Cornell 9-1-0 3rd 5-4-1 1961-62 Harvard 9-1-0 1st 9-1-0 1997-98 Yale 7-2-1 t-4th 4-5-1 1962-63 Harvard 9-0-1 1st 9-0-1 1998-99 Princeton/Yale 6-3-1 3rd 5-4-1 1963-64 Dartmouth 8-2-0 3rd 7-3-0 1999-2000 Harvard 6-3-1 1st 6-3-1 1964-65 Brown 8-2-0 t-4th 4-6-0 2000-01 Yale 6-3-1 t-2nd 5-3-2 1965-66 Cornell 9-1-0 t-4th 4-6-0 2001-02 Cornell 6-3-1 t-4th 4-5-1 1966-67 Cornell 9-1-0 t-2nd 6-4-0 2002-03 Cornell 8-1-1 t-3rd 6-4-0 1967-68 Cornell 11-1-0 2nd 10-2-0 2003-04 Brown/Cornell 7-2-1 t-4th 3-6-1 1968-69 Cornell 12-0-0 2nd 9-3-0 2004-05 Cornell 8-2-0 2nd 7-2-1 1969-70 Cornell 12-0-0 3rd 8-4-0 2005-06 Harvard 7-3-0 1st 7-3-0 1970-71 Cornell 11-1-1 t-2nd 9-3-0 2006-07 Dartmouth/Yale 6-3-1 6th 3-6-1 1971-72 Cornell 10-2-0 2nd 9-3-0 2007-08 Princeton 9-1-0 2nd 7-2-1 1972-73 Cornell 10-1-1 2nd 9-2-1

* Won playoff

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Harvard’s First Team All-Ivy League Honorees 1955-56 1983-84 1993-94 Mario Celi, D Grant Blair, G Brian Farrell, F Bob Cleary, F Ken Code, D Aaron Israel, G 1956-57 1984-85 Steve Martins, F James Bailey, G Scott Fusco, F Sean McCann, D Bob Cleary, F Randy Taylor, D 1994-95 John Copeland, D 1985-86 Steve Martins, F Lyle Guttu, F Mark Benning, D 1995-96 Paul Kelley, F Grant Blair, G Brad Konik, F Bob Owen, D Scott Fusco, F Peter McLaughlin, D 1957-58 1986-87 1998-99 Bob Cleary, F Mark Benning, D Steve Moore, F Lyle Guttu, F Lane MacDonald , F 1999-2000 Bob Owen, D Randy Taylor, D Steve Moore, F 1958-59 1987-88 J.R. Prestifilippo, G George Higginbottom, F Steve Armstrong, F Matt Scorsune, D 1960-61 Don Sweeney, D 2000-01 Bob Anderson, D C. J. Young, F Dominic Moore, F Bob Bland, G 1988-89 2001-02 Harry Howell, D Lane MacDonald, F Brett Nowak, F 1961-62 Peter Ciavaglia, F 2002-03 Dave Johnston, D C.J. Young, F Gene Kinasewich, F Dominic Moore, F 1989-90 Tim Pettit, F 1962-63 Mike Vukonich, F Noah Welch, D Harry Howell, D C. J. Young, F 2004-05 Dave Johnston, D 1990-91 Tim Taylor, F Tom Cavanagh, F J.R. Prestfilippo ’00 was the Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 1997 and Peter Ciavaglia, F Noah Welch, D Godfrey Wood, G Ted Donato, F the Player of the Year in 2000. 2005-06 1963-64 Mike Vukonich, F Gene Kinasewich, F Kevin Du, F 1991-92 Dylan Reese, D 1964-65 Matt Mallgrave, F 2006-07 John Daly, D 1992-93 Dylan Reese, D 107 1968-69 Ted Drury, F 2007-08 Joe Cavanagh, F Kyle Richter, G Ivy League Players and Rookies of the Year 1969-70 Joe Cavanagh, F Year Player of the Year Rookie of the Year 1979-80 Ross Brownridge, F, Dartmouth Mark Fusco, D, Harvard 1970-71 1980-81 Brock Tredway, F, Cornell none Joe Cavanagh, F 1981-82 Dan Poliziani, F, Yale Scott Fusco, F, Harvard 1971-72 1982-83 Mark Fusco, D, Harvard Grant Blair, G, Harvard Dave Hynes, F 1983-84 Grant Blair, Harvard Dan Allen, F, Brown Bob McManama, F Duanne Moeser, F, Cornell Butch Cutone, D, Harvard 1972-73 Scott Fusco, F, Harvard 1984-85 , F, Cornell Bill Corkery, F Scott Fusco, F, Harvard 1985-86 John Messuri, F, Princeton Bob McManama, F 1986-87 Joe Nieuwendyk, F, Cornell Greg Polaski, F, Princeton 1987-88 John Messuri, Princeton Peter Ciavaglia, F, Harvard 1973-74 Corrie D’Alessio, G, Cornell Randy Roth, F 1988-89 Mike O’Neill, G, Yale , F, Princeton Levy Bird, D 1989-90 C.J. Young, F, Harvard Michael Ross, F, Brown 1974-75 Ted Drury, F, Harvard Randy Roth, F 1990-91 Peter Ciavaglia, F, Harvard Geoff Finch, Brown Jim Thomas, F 1991-92 Mike Brewer, D, Brown Steve Martins, F, Harvard Ed Rossi, D 1992-93 Ted Drury, F, Harvard Ryan Mullhern, F, Brown Brian Petrovek, G 1993-94 Steve Martins, F, Harvard Vinnie Auger, F, Cornell 1976-77 1994-95 Ryan Mulhern, F, Brown Jimmy Andersson, D, Brown Jack Hughes, D 1995-96 Brad Chartrand, F, Cornell Kyle Knopp, F, Cornell Brian Petrovek, G 1996-97 Kyle Knopp, F, Cornell J.R. Prestifilippo, G, Harvard 1979-80 1997-98 Ray Giroux, F, Yale Steve Moore, F, Harvard 1998-99 Jeff Hamilton, F, Yale Denis Ladouceur, F, Cornell Mark Fusco, D 1999-2000 J.R. Prestifilippo, G, Harvard Dominic Moore, F, Harvard 1980-81 2000-01 Jeff Hamilton, F, Yale Tim Pettit, F, Harvard Mark Fusco, D Jeff Dwyer, D, Yale 1981-82 2001-02 Doug Murray, D, Cornell Chris Higgins, F, Yale Mark Fusco, D 2002-03 David LeNeveu, G, Cornell Hugh Jessiman, F, Dartmouth Scott Fusco, F 2003-04 Yann Danis, G, Brown Brian Ihnacak, F, Brown 1982-83 2004-05 David McKee, G, Cornell Nick Johnson, F, Dartmouth Mark Fusco, D 2005-06 Mike Ouellette, F, Dartmouth Mike Karwoski, F, Yale Scott Fusco, F 2006-07 , F, Dartmouth Sean Backman, F, Yale Gene Kinasewich ’64 2007-08 Lee Jubinville, F, Princeton Riley Nash, F, Cornell

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History ECAC Hockey Regular-Season History

In terms of tradition, no conference can lay claim to a richer history than ECAC Hockey. Home to 12 prestigious ice hockey programs, it is a conferece filled with traditon, legendary players, coaches Regular-Season Titles and administrators and an exciting future. The league is the birthplace of collegiate ice hockey, School Titles Most Recent and member institutions have been sponsoring the sport for more than a century. In fact, Harvard Harvard...... 13...... 1993-94 took part in the first intercollegiate hockey game (against Brown) among schools still sponsoring Clarkson...... 10...... 2007-08 the sport Jan. 19, 1898, making the Crimson-Bears series college hockey’s oldest active rivalry. Two Cornell...... 9...... 2004-05 years prior, Yale faced Johns Hopkins in the first recorded intercollegiate hockey game. Boston University...... 6...... 1978-79 The conference’s official formation was for the 1961-62 season, but that was hardly the beginning Boston College...... 3...... 1983-84 of organized Eastern hockey. The teams in the east competed against one another regularly, and Colgate...... 3...... 2005-06 two of the top teams from each of the Eastern and Western regions were selected for the NCAA St. Lawrence...... 3...... 2006-07 tournament. Teams were listed by winning percentage, but no official standings were kept. Dartmouth...... 2...... 2005-06 ECAC Hockey as we now know it is comprised of the hockey teams from Brown, Clarkson, Providence...... 2...... 1982-83 Colgate, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Quinnipiac, Rensselaer, St. Lawrence, Union Rensselaer...... 2...... 1984-85 and Yale. The ECAC schedule features a double round-robin format, which then determines seeding Vermont...... 2...... 1995-96 for the postseason tournament by virtue of standing at the end of the season. Colby...... 1...... 1961-62 New Hampshire...... 1...... 1973-74 Northeastern...... 1...... 1981-82 Yale...... 1...... 1997-98

Regular-Season Champions and Harvard Finishes Year Champion Record Harvard Overall Year Champion Record Harvard Overall 1947-48 9-9-0 t-11th of 28 1980-81 Cornell (Ivy Region) 12-9-1 8-12-1 14th of 17 1948-49 11-7-0 t-7th of 28 Boston College (East) 13-6-3 1949-50 9-8-0 9th of 26 Clarkson (West) 17-2-1 1950-51 9-10-0 17th of 31 1981-82 Harvard (Ivy Region) 11-8-2 11-8-2 8th of 17 1951-52 8-11-0 17th of 27 Northeastern (East) 14-6-1 1952-53 11-5-1 6th of 26 Clarkson (West) 15-4-1 108 1953-54 10-4-2 5th of 28 1982-83 Harvard (Ivy Region) 15-5-1 15-5-1 2nd of 17 1954-55 16-1-1 2nd of 27 Providence (East) 16-5-0 1955-56 15-8-0 5th of 25 St. Lawrence (West) 14-6-0 1956-57 21-3-0 1st of 26 1983-84 Harvard (Ivy Region) 10-9-2 10-9-2 8th of 17 1957-58 18-3-1 2nd of 30 Boston College (East) 15-6-0 1958-59 12-9-4 12th of 30 Rensselaer (West) 17-3-0 1959-60 16-7-1 t-8th of 30 1984-85 Rensselaer 20-1-0 15-5-1 2nd of 12 1960-61 18-4-1 3rd of 29 1985-86 Harvard 18-3-0 18-3-0 1st of 12 1961-62 Colby 17-1-1 18-2-0 2nd of 28 1986-87 Harvard 20-2-0 20-2-0 1st of 12 1962-63 Harvard 17-3-2 17-3-2 1st of 28 1987-88 Harvard/St. Lawrence 18-4-0 18-4-0 t-1st of 12 1963-64 Providence 16-3-0 15-6-0 t-3rd of 29 1988-89 Harvard 20-2-0 20-2-0 1st of 12 1964-65 Boston University 15-3-0 7-13-0 11th of 15 1989-90 Colgate 18-3-1 12-9-1 6th of 12 1965-66 Clarkson 11-1-0 8-11-0 9th of 15 1990-91 Clarkson 15-5-2 13-7-2 4th of 12 1966-67 Boston University 19-0-1 10-11-0 9th of 16 1991-92 Harvard 13-3-6 13-3-6 1st of 12 1967-68 Cornell 19-1-0 14-7-0 t-4th of 17 1992-93 Harvard 16-3-3 16-3-3 1st of 12 1968-69 Cornell 19-1-0 16-6-1 3rd of 17 1993-94 Harvard 16-2-4 16-2-4 1st of 12 1969-70 Cornell 21-0-0 14-6-0 4th of 17 1994-95 Clarkson 14-5-3 12-9-1 3rd of 12 1970-71 Boston University 18-1-1 15-5-1 4th of 17 1995-96 Vermont 17-2-3 9-12-1 6th of 12 1971-72 Cornell 17-3-0 16-4-1 2nd of 17 1996-97 Clarkson 17-5-0 9-11-2 8th of 12 1972-73 Harvard/Cornell 14-3-1 14-3-1 t-1st of 17 1997-98 Yale 17-4-1 10-11-1 5th of 12 1973-74 New Hampshire 15-5-0 13-6-0 2nd of 16 1998-99 Clarkson 18-4-0 8-12-2 8th of 12 1974-75 Harvard 19-1-0 19-1-0 1st of 17 1999-00 St. Lawrence 16-3-1 9-10-2 t-6th of 12 1975-76 Boston University 21-2-0 10-7-3 7th of 17 2000-01 Clarkson 15-5-2 12-8-2 3rd of 12 1976-77 Clarkson 19-4-0 12-10-0 9th of 17 2001-02 Cornell 17-3-2 10-9-3 3rd of 12 1977-78 Boston University 21-1-0 10-13-0 10th of 17 2002-03 Cornell 19-2-1 17-4-1 2nd of 12 1978-79 Boston University 17-4-2 5-18-1 14th of 16 2003-04 Colgate 14-6-2 10-10-2 6th of 12 1979-80 Dartmouth (Ivy Region) 15-6-1 7-11-3 12th of 17 2004-05 Cornell 18-2-2 15-5-2 2nd of 12 Boston College (East) 18-3-1 2005-06 Colgate/Dartmouth 14-6-2 13-8-1 4th of 12 Vermont (West) 16-7-0 2006-07 St. Lawrence 16-5-1 10-10-2 t-6th of 12 2007-08 Clarkson 15-4-3 12-7-3 3rd of 12

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Conference Honors Player of the Year Rookie of the Year Goaltender of the Year 1973-74...... Randy Roth 1965-66...... Kent Parrot 2000-01...... Oliver Jonas 1984-85...... Scott Fusco 1968-69...... Joe Cavanagh 2007-08...... Kyle Richter 1985-86...... Scott Fusco 1976-77...... Jack Hughes Coach of the Year 1988-89...... Lane MacDonald 1979-80...... Mark Fusco 1990-91...... Peter Ciavaglia 1996-97...... J.R. Prestifilippo 1987-88...... Bill Cleary 1992-93...... Ted Drury 1993-94...... Steve Martins

All-Conference Selections Year Team Name Year Team Name 1961-62 First Dave Johnston 1985-86 First Scott Fusco First Gene Kinasewich Second Randy Taylor First Dave Grannis Second Mark Benning First Tim Taylor Second Tim Smith Second Harry Howell 1986-87 First Randy Taylor 1962-63 First Dave Johnston First Mark Benning First Gene Kinasewich First Lane MacDonald First Tim Taylor Second Tim Barakett Second Ike Ikauniks 1987-88 First Don Sweeney Second Bill Lamarche 1988-89 First Lane MacDonald Second Godfrey Wood Second C.J. Young 1963-64 First Gene Kinasewich Second Allen Bourbeau First Ike Ikauniks Second Peter Ciavaglia 1967-68 Second Bob Carr 1989-90 First C.J. Young 1968-69 First Joe Cavanagh First Mike Vukonich Second Chris Gurry 1990-91 First Peter Ciavaglia 1969-70 Second Joe Cavanagh First Ted Donato 1970-71 First Joe Cavanagh Second Mike Vukonich 1971-72 Second Dave Hynes 1992-93 First Ted Drury 109 Second Bob McManama 1993-94 First Sean McCann C.J. Young ’91 1972-73 First Bob McManama First Brian Farrell Second Bill Corkery First Steve Martins 1973-74 First Randy Roth Second Derek Maguire Second Levy Byrd 2000-01 First Oliver Jonas Second Bob Goodenow Second Dominic Moore 1974-75 First Brian Petrovek 2001-02 Second Brett Nowak Second Jim Thomas 2002-03 First Dominic Moore Second Randy Roth First Tim Pettit 1976-77 First Jack Hughes Second Noah Welch 1977-78 Second Jack Hughes 2004-05 First Noah Welch 1980-81 First Mark Fusco Second Tom Cavanagh 1981-82 Second Mark Fusco Second Dov Grumet-Morris 1982-83 First Mark Fusco 2005-06 Second Dylan Reese First Scott Fusco Third Kevin Du 1984-85 First Scott Fusco 2006-07 Second Dylan Reese 2007-08 First Kyle Richter Third Alex Biega All-Rookie Team Selections 1987-88 Peter Ciavaglia 1993-94 Ashlin Halfnight 1988-89 Chuckie Hughes 1995-96 Ben Storey Allain Roy Craig Adams Kevin Sneddon Craig MacDonald 1989-90 Ted Drury 1996-97 J.R.Prestifilippo 1990-91 Derek Maguire 1997-98 Chris Bala Sean McCann Steve Moore 1991-92 Ben Coughlin 1999-2000 Dominic Moore Brad Konik 2000-01 Tim Pettit Steve Martins 2001-02 Noah Welch Steve Martins ’95 1992-93 Aaron Israel 2006-07 Alex Biega Tripp Tracy

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History ECAC Hockey Championship History

Year-by-Year Harvard Results Champions Year Round Opponent Result Year Round Opponent Result 1962 Q ARMY W, 2-1 (ot) 1988 Q RENSSELAER W; 5-4, 6-4 1962...... St. Lawrence S vs. St. Lawrence L, 5-6 S vs. Clarkson L, 4-6 1963...... Harvard Co vs. Colby W, 2-0 Co vs. Vermont W, 7-1 1964...... Providence 1963 Q COLGATE W, 5-3 1989 Q RENSSELAER W; 7-3, 5-4 1965...... Boston College S vs. Clarkson W, 6-4 S vs. Vermont L, 2-3 (ot) 1966...... Clarkson Ch BOSTON COLLEGE W, 4-3 (ot) Co vs. Cornell W, 6-3 1967...... Cornell 1964 Q at Clarkson L, 4-6 1990 Q at Cornell L; 2-6, 2-4 1968...... Cornell 1967 Q at Boston U. L, 2-6 1991 Q RENSSELAER W; 7-3, 3-3 (ot) 1969...... Cornell S vs. Clarkson L, 2-3 1968 Q BOSTON U. L, 3-6 1970...... Cornell 1992 Q RENSSELAER L, 3-4 (ot) 1969 Q NEW HAMPSHIRE W, 4-3 (ot) 1971...... Harvard S vs. Clarkson W, 8-6 1993 Q PRINCETON W; 6-2, 8-0 1972...... Boston University Ch vs. Cornell L, 2-4 S vs. Brown L, 1-3 Co vs. Rensselaer W, 6-3 1973...... Cornell 1970 Q at Boston College W, 10-5 1974...... Boston University S vs. Cornell L, 5-6 1994 Q CORNELL W; 5-4, 5-3 Co vs. Boston U. L, 2-8 S vs. Brown W, 5-1 1975...... Boston University Ch vs. Rensselaer W, 3-0 1971 Q BROWN W, 4-3 1976...... Boston University S vs. Boston U. W, 4-2 1995 Q RENSSELAER L; 2-2 (ot), 1-3 1977...... Boston University Ch vs. Clarkson W, 7-4 1996 Q at St. Lawrence W; 5-2, 2-3, 8-4 1978...... Boston College 1972 Q CLARKSON W, 6-5 (ot) S vs. Vermont W, 4-3 1979...... New Hampshire S vs. Boston U. L, 1-3 Ch vs. Cornell L, 1-2 1980...... Cornell Co vs. New Hampshire L, 1-4 1997 P ST. LAWRENCE W, 4-2 1981...... Providence 1973 Q CLARKSON L, 4-7 Q at Cornell L; 2-2 (ot), 1-4 1982...... Northeastern 1974 Q PROVIDENCE W, 9-3 1998 Q COLGATE W; 5-4, 4-2 1983...... Harvard S vs. Rensselaer W, 7-2 S vs. Clarkson L, 2-6 Ch vs. Boston U. L, 2-4 Co vs. Yale W, 4-1 1984...... Rensselaer 110 1985...... Rensselaer 1975 Q CLARKSON W, 10-5 1999 Q at Rensselaer L; 2-1, 0-4, 2-4 S vs. Cornell W, 6-4 1986...... Cornell 2000 Q at Cornell L; 3-4, 3-4 Ch vs. Boston U. L, 3-7 1987...... Harvard 2001 Q YALE W; 5-4, 7-4 1976 Q NEW HAMPSHIRE W, 4-3 1988...... St. Lawrence S vs. Cornell L, 2-5 S vs. Boston U. L, 4-8 Co vs. Dartmouth W, 3-2 (ot) 1989...... St. Lawrence Co vs. Cornell L, 6-7 2002 Q BROWN W; 4-1, 2-1 (2ot) 1990...... Colgate 1982 Q BOSTON COLLEGE W, 2-0 S vs. Clarkson W, 3-2 (ot) 1991...... Clarkson S vs. Clarkson W, 7-1 Ch vs. Cornell W, 4-3 (2ot) Ch vs. Northeastern L, 2-5 1992...... St. Lawrence 2003 Q VERMONT W; 4-2, 5-1 1983 Q RENSSELAER W; 5-1, 4-2 1993...... Clarkson S vs. Dartmouth W, 5-3 S vs. New Hampshire W, 6-3 1994...... Harvard Ch vs. Cornell L, 2-3 (ot) Ch vs. Providence W, 4-1 1995...... Rensselaer 2004 F VERMONT W; 3-0, 5-3 1984 Q CLARKSON L; 1-3, 2-2 (ot) Q at Brown W; 4-2, 3-2 (ot) 1996...... Cornell 1985 Q COLGATE W; 4-2, 10-2 S vs. Dartmouth W, 2-1 1997...... Cornell S vs. Clarkson W, 2-1 Ch vs. Clarkson W, 4-2 1998...... Princeton Ch vs. Rensselaer L, 1-3 2005 Q ST. LAWRENCE W; 2-0, 3-2 1999...... Clarkson 1986 Q COLGATE W; 2-0, 6-4 S vs. Colgate W, 4-3 (2ot) 2000...... St. Lawrence S vs. Clarkson L, 2-4 Ch vs. Cornell L, 1-3 Co vs. Yale W, 6-3 2001...... St. Lawrence 2006 Q ST. LAWRENCE W; 1-5, 3-2, 8-4 2002...... Harvard 1987 Q BROWN W; 6-2, 5-2 S vs. Dartmouth W, 10-1 S RENSSELAER W, 4-1 Ch vs. Cornell W, 6-2 2003...... Cornell Ch vs. St. Lawrence W, 6-3 2007 F YALE W; 5-2, 2-1 2004...... Harvard Q at Clarkson L; 0-3, 1-2 2005...... Cornell 2008 Q QUINNIPIAC W; 11-0, 4-7, 3-1 2006...... Harvard S vs. Cornell W, 3-1 2007...... Clarkson Ch vs. Princeton L, 1-4 2008...... Princeton F – First Round P – Preliminary Q – Quarterfinal S – Semifinal Home games in ALL CAPS Co – Consolation Away games designated by ’at’ Ch – Championship Neutral site designated by ’vs.’

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Harvard Coaching Records Coach Years W L T Pct. Titles Cooney Weiland 1962-71 11 7 0 .611 2 Bill Cleary 1972-90 28 15 1 .648 2 Ronn Tomassoni 1991-99 16 11 3 .583 1 Mark Mazzoleni 2000-04 16 4 0 .800 2 Ted Donato 2005-present 12 5 0 .705 1 Total 40 appearances 83 42 4 .659 8

All-Time ECAC Hockey Championship Standings School Years W L T Pct. Titles Last Title Boston University 17 34 15 1 .690 5 1977 Quinnipiac 3 11 5 0 .688 0 –– Cornell 39 85 39 4 .680 11 2005 Harvard 40 83 42 4 .659 8 2006 Clarkson 45 78 55 5 .583 4 2007 St. Lawrence 34 48 42 3 .532 6 2001 Northeastern 4 3 3 0 .500 1 1982 Boston College 17 16 17 0 .485 2 1978 Providence 16 14 15 0 .483 2 1981 Dartmouth 15 21 23 0 .477 0 –– Rensselaer 35 45 51 3 .470 3 1995 New Hampshire 13 12 14 1 .463 1 1979 Colgate 29 32 49 3 .399 1 1990 Princeton 21 19 35 1 .355 1 2008 Vermont 21 18 34 3 .355 0 –– Colby 1 1 2 0 .333 0 –– Kenny Smith poses with the 2004 Whitelaw Trophy. Brown 27 19 44 1 .305 0 –– The Class of 2004 became the first at Harvard to Yale 22 13 39 5 .272 0 –– graduate with two ECAC tournament titles, a feat Penn 3 1 4 0 .200 0 –– matched by the Classes of 2005, 2006 and 2007. Union 10 2 19 0 .095 0 –– 111 Maine 1 0 1 0 .000 0 –– Army 3 0 3 0 .000 0 ––

Harvard ECAC Hockey Championship Records Team Penalty Minutes, Game, Both Teams Assists, Game Goals, Period 134* vs. Yale, 3/21/98 7* George McManama 6^ vs. Boston College, 3/10/70 Longest Game vs. Boston College, 3/10/70 vs. Colgate, 3/8/86 96:01 vs. Colgate (2ot), 3/18/05 Assists, Tournament Goals, Period, Both Teams Shots, Game 10 Lane MacDonald, 1987 10* vs. Boston College, 3/10/70 68 vs. Brown, 3/9/02 Assists, Career Goals, Game Shots, Game, Both Teams 20* Lane MacDonald, 1985-87, 1989 11 vs. Qunnipiac (0), 3/14/08 100 vs. Brown (68-32), 3/9/02 Points, Game Goals, Game, Both Teams 7* George McManama 15 vs. Boston College (10-5), 3/10/70 Individual vs. Boston College, 3/10/70, 7a vs. Clarkson (10-5), 3/4/75 Goals, Game Points, Tournament Goals, Tournament 5* Jack Turco 15* Lane MacDonald, 1987 vs. Boston College, 3/10/70 28* 2006, 5 games Points, Career Margin of Victory Goals, Tournament 39* Lane MacDonald, 1985-87, 1989 6 Gene Kinasewich (3 games), 1963 11^ vs. Qunnipiac (0), 3/14/08 Saves, Tournament Henry Higdon (5 games), 1996 Fastest Consecutive Goals Lane MacDonald (4 games), 1989 158 Tripp Tracy, 1996, 5 games 0:05* vs. Rensselaer, 1988 Goals, Career Wins, Tournament (Andy Janfaza, Peter Ciavaglia) 19* Lane MacDonald, 1985-87, 1989 6* Dov Grumet-Morris, 2004, 6-0 Consecutive Games with a Goal Fastest Overtime Goal Wins, Career 88* 1962-99 1:32 Dominic Moore vs. Dartmouth, 16* Dov Grumet-Morris, 2002-05, 16-2-0 Fewest Penalties 3/17/01 0^ vs. Boston University, 3/12/71 Fastest Consecutive Hat Trick * also tournament record Penalty Minutes, Game 3:22* Danny Bolduc vs. Clarkson, 3/4/75 ^ also tied for tournament record 66 vs. Yale, 3/21/98

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History

Harvard vs. All Opponents, by Round OPPONENT Preliminary * First Round** Quarterfinals Play-In *** Semifinals Consolation Final TOTAL Brown - - 7-0 - 1-1 - - 8-1 Clarkson - - 2-5-1 - 5-4 - 2-0 9-9-1 Colgate - - 7-0 - 1-0 - - 8-0 Cornell - - 2-5-1 - 2-2 1-1 2-4 7-12-1 Dartmouth - - - - 3-0 1-0 - 4-0 Princeton - - 2-0 - - - 0-1 2-1 Quinnipiac 2-1 - - - - 2-1 Rensselaer - - 8-4-2 - 2-0 1-0 1-1 12-5-2 St. Lawrence 1-0 - 6-2 - 0-1 - 1-0 8-3 Yale - 2-0 2-0 - - 2-0 - 6-0 # Army - - 1-0 - - - - 1-0 # Boston College - - 2-0 - - - 1-0 3-0 # Boston University - - 0-2 - 1-2 0-1 0-2 1-7 # Colby - - - - - 1-0 - 1-0 # New Hampshire - - 2-0 - 1-0 0-1 - 3-1 # Northeastern ------0-1 0-1 # Providence - - 1-0 - - - 1-0 2-0 # Vermont - 2-0 2-0 - 1-1 1-0 6-1 TOTAL 1-0 4-0 46-19-4 0-0 17-11 7-3 8-9 83-42-4

* Preliminary game (1990-1997): In these seasons, the No. 10 seed played the No. 7 seed and No. 9 played No. 8 to advance into the quarterfinals. Harvard made just one appearance in this round, in the final season under the format. ** ECAC first round games were instituted with the 2003 championship, as the playoff format changed to a 12-team tournament in which the top four teams receive byes. *** The Lake Placid play-in game was instituted in the 1997-98 season, when the league went to a “final five” format in Lake Placid. In this format, quarterfinal winners advanced to the final five and were reseeded (if necessary) according to their regular-season finish. The No. 5 and No. 4 seeds played the preliminary game, with the winner advancing to the semifinal against the top seed. This format was abandoned after the 2002 championship. # Indicates teams no longer affiliated with ECAC Hockey 112

All-Tournament Team Selections 1962 Dave Johnston 1 1994 Sean McCann (MOP) Tim Taylor 1 Aaron Israel Gene Kinasewich 2 Derek Maguire 1963 Gene Kinasewich 1 (MOP) Steve Martins Dave Johnston 1 1996 Tommy Holmes Tim Taylor 2 Jeremiah McCarthy 2 Godfrey Wood 2001 Tyler Kolarik 1 1969 Joe Cavanagh 2002 Tyler Kolarik (MOP) 1 Chris Gurry Tim Pettit Terry Flaman 2 2003 Brendan Bernakevitch 1 1970 Joe Cavanagh Dov Grumet-Morris 2 Bruce Durno Dominic Moore Brendan Bernakevitch ’05 (above) and John Daigneau ’06 accept the George McManama 2 2004 Brendan Bernakevitch (MOP) tourmament Most Outstanding Player awards in 2004 and 2006, respectively. 1 1971 Dave Hynes (MOP) Tom Cavanagh 1 Joe Cavanagh Dov Grumet-Morris 2 Bruce Durno Dave McCulloch 1972 Mark Noonan 2005 Kevin Du 1973 Bob McManama 2006 John Daigneau (MOP) 1983 Mitch Olson (MOP) Kevin Du 1987 Lane MacDonald (MOP) Jimmy Fraser Dan Murphy 1988 Peter Ciavaglia Dylan Reese 1989 Lane MacDonald 2008 Alex Biega 1993 Matt Mallgrave Jon Pelle 1 First Team 2 Second Team

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey ECAC Hockey All-Decade Teams 1970s Joe Cavanagh, Harvard (F, 1968-71) – Cavanagh splashed onto the scene in his sophomore year, winning ECAC Rookie of the Year honors (Ivy League freshmen were not eligible to compete on the varsity squad until 1973). He earned All-America honors in each of his three varsity seasons and twice led the Crimson to the NCAA tournament semifinals.

Other selections: Ron Wilson, (Providence, D, 1973-77); (Boston University, F, 1973-77); Bill Blackwood (Clarkson, D, 1974-78); (Cornell, F, 1975-79); (Clarkson, G, 1967-71); Jim Craig (Boston University, G, 1967-71); Brian Shields (Clarkson, G, 1973-77); Pete Brown (Boston University, D, 1972-76); (Clarkson, F, 1973-77); Mike Eruzione (Boston University, F, 1973-77); Vic Stanfield (Boston University, D, 1971-75); (Boston College, F, 1975-79); Gordie Clark (New Hampshire, F, 1970-74)

1980s Mark Fusco, Harvard (D, 1979-83) – The 1980 ECAC Rookie of the Year was a three-time all- conference selection and the first ECAC hockey player to win the Hobey Baker Award (1983).

Scott Fusco, Harvard (F, 1982-86) – This two-time first-team All-American won the 1986 Hobey Baker Award. He was named all-conference first team three times and earned a spot on the NCAA All- Tournament team as a freshman. 113

Lane MacDonald, Harvard (F, 1984-87, 1988-89) – This two-time first-team All-American capped off a magnificent career by winning the Hobey Baker Award and being named the ECAC Player of the Year in 1989. The Crimson finished as the ECAC regular-season champion in each of his four seasons.

Other selections: Dave Fretz (Clarkson, D, 1981-85); Don Sylvestri (Clarkson, G, 1981-85); Ed Small (Clarkson, D, 1977-81); Steve Cruickshank (Clarkson, F, 1978-82); Joe Nieuwendyk (Cornell, F, 1984-87); Pete Lappin (St. Lawrence, F, 1984-88); (Rensselaer, F, 1981-85); (Boston University, G, 1980-84); Randy Velischek (Providence, D, 1979-83)

1990s Peter Ciavaglia, Harvard (F, 1987-91) – Ciavaglia was a top forward for the Crimson during his four years, as he led the league in scoring in 1988-89 and again as a senior in 1990-91. Ciavaglia won the ECAC Player of the Year Award in his senior campaign and helped lead Harvard to the NCAA title as a sophomore.

Ted Drury, Harvard (F, 1989-93) – Drury had a terrific senior year for the Crimson, leading the team to the ECAC regular-season title and a berth in the NCAA Tournament. He was the ECAC Player of the Year in 1992-93 and was also a first-team All-America and all-conference selection. Drury went on to a successful career in the NHL.

Sean McCann, Harvard (D, 1990-94) – One of the top defensemen in Crimson history, McCann set the current single-season record for goals by a defenseman (22) as a senior. He helped his teams to regular-season titles in 1991-92, 1992-93 and 1993-94, and the ECAC Tournament championship in 1993-94. He also guided the squad to a berth in the NCAA Tournament semifinals during his senior campaign before losing in overtime to the eventual national champion, Lake Superior State.

Other selections: First Team: Martin St. Louis (Vermont, F, 1993-97); (Clarkson, F, 1993-97); Joe Juneau (Rensselaer, , 1987-91); Ray Giroux (Yale, D, 1994-98); Brian Mueller (Clarkson, D, 1991-95); , (Vermont, G, 1993-97). Second Team: Eric Perrin (Vermont, F, 1993-97); Mike Harder (Colgate, F, 1993-97); Daniel Laperriere (St. Lawrence, D, 1988-92); Trevor Koenig (Union, G, 1994-98)

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History NCAA Championship History

The NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Championship has been held every year since 1948. Harvard won the 1989 title, has reached the final three times (1983, ’86 and ’89) and has made 21 trips to the tournament.

All-Tournament Selections 1969 Ron Mark, F 1974 Jim McMahon, F 1983 Scott Fusco, F Mark Fusco, D 1986 Mark Benning, D Allen Bourbeau, F 1989 Allain Roy, G Kevin Sneddon, D Lane MacDonald, F Dominic Moore was an All-Northeast Ted Donato, F * Regional pick in 2003. 2003 (Northeast Regional) Dominic Moore, F * Most Outstanding Player

114

Classmates Kevin Sneddon ’92 (left) and Allain Roy ’92 were named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team when the Crimson won the title in 1989.

2009 NCAA Championship East Regional Bridgeport Arena at Harbor Yard; Bridgeport, Conn. March 27-28 West Regional Nick Coskren and the Crimson faced Maine in the first round of the 2006 Mariucci Arena; NCAA Championship, at Pepsi Arena in Albany, N.Y. Minneapolis, Minn. March 27-28 Midwest Regional ECAC Hockey Teams in the NCAA Championship Van Andel Arena; Team (Last Appearance) Yrs. Won Lost Tied Pct. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Grand Rapids, Mich. Harvard (2006) 21 14 29 1 .330 1 2 3 6 March 28-29 Clarkson (2008) 20 13 23 1 .360 0 3 4 0 Northeast Regional St. Lawrence (2001) 16 5 25 0 .167 0 2 2 5 Verizon Wireless Arena; Cornell (2006) 15 14 16 0 .467 2 2 1 2 Manchester, N.H. Rensselaer (1995) 8 7 8 1 .469 2 0 2 1 March 29-30 Brown (1993) 4 2 5 0 .286 0 0 0 0 Colgate (2005) 4 3 5 0 .375 0 1 0 0 Frozen Four Verizon Center; Dartmouth (1980) 4 4 4 0 .500 0 2 2 0 Washington, D.C. Yale (1998) 2 1 2 0 .333 0 0 1 0 April 9 and 11 Princeton (2008) 2 0 2 0 .000 0 0 0 0

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Year-by-Year Harvard Results Harvard All-Time Year Round Opponent Result Finish Location 1955 S Michigan L, 3-7 Colorado Springs, Colo. NCAA Championship Record Co St. Lawrence W, 6-3 Third Colorado Springs, Colo. 14-29-1 (.330), 21 appearances

1957 S Michigan L, 1-6 Colorado Springs, Colo. vs. Opponents Co Clarkson L, 1-2 (2ot) Fourth Colorado Springs, Colo. Hockey East...... 1-5-0 Boston University*...... 0-3-0 1958 S North Dakota L, 1-9 Minneapolis, Minn. Maine...... 0-3-0 Co Clarkson L, 1-5 Fourth Minneapolis, Minn. New Hampshire...... 1-1-0 1969 S Denver L, 2-9 Colorado Springs, Colo. ECAC Hockey *...... 1-4-0 Co Michigan Tech W, 6-5 (2ot) Third Colorado Springs, Colo. St. Lawrence...... 1-0-0 1971 S Minnesota L, 5-6 (ot) Syracuse, N.Y. Clarkson ...... 0-2-0 Co Denver L, 0-1 Fourth Syracuse, N.Y. CCHA...... 8-7-1

1974 S Michigan Tech L, 5-6 (ot) Boston, Mass. Michigan...... 0-2-0 Co Boston University L, 5-7 Fourth Boston, Mass. Michigan State...... 2-3-1 Western Michigan...... 2-0-0 1975 S Minnesota L, 4-6 St. Louis, Mo. Co Boston University L, 5-10 Fourth St. Louis, Mo. Bowling Green ...... 2-0-0 Lake Superior State...... 2-1-0 1982 Q Wisconsin L, 1-6 Madison, Wis. Northern Michigan...... 0-1-0 Q Wisconsin L, 3-4 Madison, Wis. WCHA...... 4-13-0 1983 Q Michigan State W, 6-5 Cambridge, Mass. Denver ...... 1-2-0 Q Michigan State T 3-3 Cambridge, Mass. Minnesota...... 2-3-0 S Minnesota W, 5-3 Grand Forks, N.D. Ch Wisconsin L, 2-6 Second Grand Forks, N.D. North Dakota...... 0-2-0 Michigan Tech...... 1-1-0 1985 Q Minn.-Duluth L, 2-4 Duluth, Minn. Wisconsin...... 0-3-0 Q Minn.-Duluth L, 2-4 Duluth, Minn. Minnesota Duluth...... 0-2-0 1986 Q Western Michigan W, 4-2 Cambridge, Mass. * Two games against Boston University in the 115 Q Western Michigan W, 7-2 Cambridge, Mass. NCAA tournament were when the Terriers were S Denver W, 5-2 Providence, R.I. a member of ECAC Hockey. Ch Michigan State L, 5-6 Second Providence, R.I. Games By City 1987 Q Bowling Green W, 7-1 Cambridge, Mass. Albany, N.Y...... 1-2-0 Q Bowling Green W, 3-0 Cambridge, Mass. Amherst, Mass...... 0-1-0 S North Dakota L, 2-5 Detroit, Mich. Boston, Mass...... 0-2-0 Co Minnesota L, 3-6 Fourth Detroit, Mich. Cambridge, Mass...... 7-2-1 1988 F Michigan State L, 5-6 Cambridge, Mass. Colorado Springs, Colo...... 2-4-0 F Michigan State L, 3-5 Cambridge, Mass. Detroit, Mich...... 0-2-0 1989 Q Lake Superior State W, 4-2 Cambridge, Mass. Duluth, Minn...... 0-2-0 Q Lake Superior State W, 5-2 Cambridge, Mass. Grand Forks, N.D...... 1-1-0 S Michigan State W, 6-3 St. Paul, Minn. Madison, Wis...... 0-2-0 Ch Minnesota W, 4-3 (ot) First St. Paul, Minn. Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn...... 2-3-0 1993 F Northern Michigan L, 2-3 (2ot) Worcester, Mass. Providence, R.I...... 1-1-0 1994 Q New Hampshire W, 7-1 Albany, N.Y. St. Louis, Mo...... 0-2-0 S Lake Superior State L, 2-3 (ot) Third (tie) St. Paul, Minn. Syracuse, N.Y...... 0-2-0 Worcester, Mass...... 0-3-0 2002 F Maine L, 3-4 (ot) Worcester, Mass. Top Finishes 2003 F Boston University L, 4-6 Worcester, Mass. First...... 1 (1989) 2004 F Maine L, 4-5 Albany, N.Y. Second...... 2 (1983, ’86) Third...... 3 (1955, ’69, ’94) 2005 F New Hampshire L, 2-3 (ot) Amherst, Mass. Fourth...... 6 (1957, ’58, ’71, ’74, ’75, ’87) 2006 F Maine L, 1-6 Albany, N.Y. Fifth...... 2 (1982, ’85)

F – First round; Q – Quarterfinal; S – Semifinal; Co – Consolation; Ch – Championship

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History 1989 NCAA Championship

“Peter Ciavaglia, perhaps the best faceoff man ever at Harvard, routinely won a draw in the Gopher zone. Krayer stepped into the left circle and laid a pass back to freshman Brian McCormack, who quickly sent a low shot netward, where Stauber made a pad save. Then, time stood still. There was a rebound. It was there as clear as day for all to see. Weisbrod tried to get to it, but couldn’t. He was being dragged down by a Minnesota defenseman. Finally, Krayer appeared. He was cool, carrying the puck an extra stride across the crease, before sliding his backhander slowly toward its destination. Victory, like no other Harvard had ever experienced in athletics, had been achieved as the puck made its way across the line into the net.”

“The Goal”: Ed Krayer ’89 (11) slides the puck past Minnesota goalie after — Jeff Bradley, Harvard News & Views, April 1989 John Weisbrod ’91 is hauled down in the slot.

Everyone knew Bill Cleary had a skilled team in with a 24-2 record, good for the ECAC regular- championship game against Minnesota. 1989. Developed in the mold of its mentor—a season championship. Playing in St. Paul, the Crimson wore their former All-American, two-time Olympian and The conference tournament, however, brought home white uniforms, but there was no doubt noted hockey purist who has always emphasized a stinging shock. In the seminfinals, Harvard that the Golden Gophers owned the home-ice the fundamentals—the Cleary-led Crimson was a dropped a 3-2 overtime decision to Vermont. advantage. The pro-Minnesota crowd erupted 116 collection of pure skaters, deft puckhandlers and The Crimson won its ensuing consolation match early in the first period, when the Gophers drew expert passers. against Cornell, but the echoes of the jarring loss first blood. But Harvard came storming back in The only problem was, finesse teams didn’t win to Vermont were still ringing in its ears. It was, the second, as Donato scored on a power play with national championships. to say the least, a sobering defeat for a team with a slap shot to tie the game. Or so the hockey world thought. visions as grand as Harvard’s. Roy had been the hero against Michigan State, Harvard’s clean, open-ice style of play may not But while some teams never recover after falling but in the championship, it was Hughes’ turn have endeared the Crimson to hockey followers back to Earth, the great teams learn from the in the Crimson’s two-goalie rotation. The local out West, where Eastern hockey had long been experience and find a way to rally back. To this product played beyond his years, as his 33 saves on dismissed as a softer version of the game. But day, Cleary still maintains that the loss to Vermont the night kept the game knotted at 2-2 until late midway through the 1988-89 campaign, Harvard was precisely the dose of reality his team needed as in the third period. Then, with seven minutes to had forced everyone in the country to take it geared up for its championship run. play, Donato scored a second time to give Harvard notice. A convincing 5-1 thumping of previously Harvard had as tough a challenge as one could a 3-2 lead. unbeaten St. Lawrence on Jan. 14 launched imagine to start the NCAA tournament, facing off But as his teammates mobbed him in Harvard to a perfect 15-0 record and the No. 1 against defending champ Lake Superior State in celebration, the cool-headed Donato, who would ranking in the land. the best-of-three quarterfinals. But after securing be named the tournament MVP, was reminding The 15-0 mark matched the school’s best a 4-2 victory in the series opener, Harvard was his teammates, “This one’s not over!” Indeed, start to a season since the 1930s. If that wasn’t able to complete the sweep in the second game, as Minnesota would not go quietly into the night. indication enough that 1989 was a special season Ciavaglia pulled off a hat trick to guide Harvard With just under five minutes to play, the Golden in Harvard hockey, the Crimson’s first Beanpot to a come-from-behind 5-2 win. In his postgame Gophers capitalized on a Harvard penalty to knot championship in eight years, clinched that remarks, Laker coach Frank Anzalone, who had the score at three goals apiece. This epic battle was February, surely hinted that this Crimson team served on the Hobey Baker selection committee, now headed to sudden-death overtime. was heading toward something extraordinary. admitted that the group had committed a gaffe in Early in the extra period, Minnesota pushed Harvard’s top scoring line in 1989—dubbed not naming Ciavaglia as a finalist. Harvard to the brink of defeat, ringing a would-be the “Line of Fire”—remains arguably the best in Hobey consideration may have been nice, but game-winning blast off the post of the Crimson school history, featuring captain Lane MacDonald, Ciavaglia had other matters to attend to—namely goal. But hearing what was almost its own death Allen Bourbeau and C.J. Young. MacDonald, the Michigan State, the Crimson’s semifinal opponent. knell, the Crimson rallied back to life. A face off Hobey Baker Award winner in his senior season, Against the Spartans, Ciavaglia racked up a goal in the Minnesota zone. Ciavaglia, perhaps the and Bourbeau, also a Hobey finalist that year, had and three assists as Harvard exploded for six goals best draw man Harvard has ever had, tapped the both played for the U.S. Olympic Team in Calgary and Roy made the lead stand up. The rookie, who puck to Ed Krayer, who fed a pass to freshman in 1988. Young, along with fellow forwards Peter finished with 30 saves to earn all-tournament Brian McCormack. The freshman unleashed a low Ciavaglia and Ted Donato, would go on to play in recognition, made at least two positively shot that bounced off the pad of Minnesota goalie the 1992 Olympics. breathtaking stops, including a sprawling stick save Robb Stauber. Led by that core of offensive stars and the on a wraparound effort by Michigan State’s Bobby The rebound was loose. Finally, Krayer appeared rookie goaltending tandem of Allain Roy and Reynolds in the first period. The Crimson rolled, and was able to corral the puck. Krayer, the senior Chuckie Hughes, the Crimson entered the playoffs 6-3, setting the stage for a clash of the titans in the veteran who had taken 1988 off from school, had

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

The 1988-89 Harvard Hockey Team Front row (from left): 1-Michael Francis, 9-Paul Howley, 15-Nick Carone, 18-Scott Farden, 10-Craig Taucher, 19-Lane MacDonald (captain), 24-Allen Bourbeau, 7-Josh Caplan, 8-Ed Presz, 11-Ed Krayer, 5-Kevan Melrose, 30-Chuckie Hughes. Middle row: Associate Coach Ronn Tomassoni, Manager Jason Wenglin, Asst. Manager Julie Rim, 31-Allain Roy, 26-John Murphy, 25-Tod Hartje, 23-Scott McCormack, 29-Mike Vukonich, 2-Rich DeFreitas, 27-John Weisbrod, 22-Brian McCormack, 4-Greg Hess, 3-Brian Popiel, Equipment Manager Chet Stone, Assistant Coach Kevin Hampe, Head Coach Bill Cleary. Back row: 6-Ted Donato, 21-Kevin Sneddon, 20-Jimmy Coady, 16-Timmy Burke, 14-C.J. Young, 17-Peter Ciavaglia.

struggled throughout much of 1989 to rediscover students first, athletes second. They had won the did for these kids and the world at large was to his niche on the team, finishing the regular season title the hard way, facing the best three teams the show them how a gentleman can take a squad with just 14 points. In the playoffs, however, he re- West had to offer. As one astute Harvard observer of students and make them national champions. emerged as a leader. And now, on the grandest of noted, “the league with the reputation for being College athletics had forgotten that.” stages, he was poised to make sure history would the toughest in college hockey was not tough In the hotel lobby after the game, Cleary stood never forget his name. In what appeared like slow enough in 1989.” atop a coffee table amid a crowd of Harvard fans 117 motion, Krayer slid the puck through the legs of And they did it all by virtue of their speed and that had made the trip to Minneapolis. Reveling the diving Stauber and across the goal line. Victory skill, without clutching and grabbing, proving that in what remains Harvard’s crowning team belonged to the Crimson by the count of 4-3. hockey as it was meant to be played would never achievement, Cleary raised the championship All at once, Harvard gained its first NCAA go out of style. trophy and proclaimed through his boyish grin, championship in any team sport and most of those “Now hockey has a new set of heroes,” wrote “This isn’t just for the hockey team, this is for in attendance, as well as any remaining skeptics of David Nyhan ’62 of the Boston Globe three days every Harvard alumnus in the country … in the Eastern hockey, fell into a state of deafening quiet. after Harvard clinched the title. “What Cleary world.” The scene immediately following Krayer’s goal was priceless. In one of the more enduring, utterly heartwearming images from that magical night in Minneapolis, here was Cleary, with his face aglow and arms aloft, scrambling across the ice desperately looking for someone to hug. The coach eventually found his players, huddled together in celebration. But what Cleary found in that joyous mob was more than just great hockey players; it was, in fact, a band of pure salt-of- the-earth types, a team that all of Harvard—and indeed, all of hockey—could take pride in. He found MacDonald, the soft-spoken captain who played his entire career through chronic migraines that eventually impaired his vision. Bourbeau, the sixth-year senior who, Cleary once joked, had been around so long he’d probably played against Hobey Baker. He found Ciavaglia, whose play was so selfless that the coaches were constantly ordering him to shoot more; then Hughes, the irrepressible freshman and the son of a Boston police officer. He found Donato, who had turned down full scholarships to other schools for the chance to play at Harvard, where he worked part-time in the equipment room to help pay his tuition. Cleary had won with a roster of kids who were

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Beanpot Tournament

On Dec. 26, 1952, the four Division I hockey-playing schools in Boston came together for a two-day tournament at Boston Arena. The brainchild of sports promoter Walter Brown, the tournament was called the “New England Champions Invitation Hockey Tournament.” In the first game, Boston University defeated Northeastern, 4-1, while Harvard 1952...... Harvard needed overtime in the nightcap to edge Boston College, 3-2. A total of 3,832 fans saw the Crimson claim the first 1954...... Boston College championship the next night with a 7-4 win against the Terriers. 1955...... Harvard The following year, the tournament moved to Boston Garden, where a mere 711 fans turned out for the opening 1956...... Boston College round in January. The event, soon to be called “The Beanpot,” would rapidly grow in prestige, and the pride of 1957...... Boston College being known as the best team in Boston produced fiercely competitive hockey that attracted the local fandom. By the 1960s, the tournament was being played on the familiar first two Mondays in February and was drawing sellout 1958...... Boston University crowds to the Garden. One coach proclaimed the Beanpot “the social event of the season.” With the closing of the 1959...... Boston College Boston Garden in 1995, the Beanpot shifted next door to 1960...... Harvard FleetCenter (now TD Banknorth Garden) in 1996. The 1961...... Boston College event continues to draw capacity crowds and remains one of Beanpot Titles 1962...... Harvard the most anticipated events in college hockey. School Titles Most Recent 1963...... Boston College This prestigious event celebrates its 57th year in 2009, Boston University...... 28...... 2007 1964...... Boston College and the tournament promises to be as competitive as Boston College...... 14...... 2008 1965...... Boston College ever. The Crimson will take on Boston University in the Harvard...... 10...... 1993 1966...... Boston University first round Feb. 2 and will play either Boston College or Northeastern...... 4...... 1988 1967...... Boston University Northeastern the following Monday, Feb. 9. 1968...... Boston University 1969...... Harvard Harvard’s Coaching Records Harvard’s Finishes 1970...... Boston University 1971...... Boston University Coach (Beanpot years) No. Record Pct. Titles Most 1972...... Boston University Place No. Recent Cooney Weiland (1952-71) 19 22-16 .579 5 1973...... Boston University First 10 1993 Bill Cleary (1972-90) 19 17-21 .447 4 1974...... Harvard Second 15 2008 Ronn Tomassoni (1991-99) 9 5-13 .278 1 1975...... Boston University Third 13 2006 Mark Mazzoleni (2000-04) 5 2-8 .200 0 1976...... Boston College Ted Donato (2005-present) 4 2-6 .250 0 Fourth 18 2007 1977...... Harvard Totals 56 48-64 .429 10 1978...... Boston University 118 1979...... Boston University 1980...... Northeastern 1981...... Harvard 1982...... Boston University 1983...... Boston College 1984...... Northeastern 1985...... Northeastern 1986...... Boston University 1987...... Boston University 1988...... Northeastern 1989...... Harvard 1990...... Boston University 1991...... Boston University 1992...... Boston University 1993...... Harvard 1994...... Boston College 1995...... Boston University 1996...... Boston University 1997...... Boston University 1998...... Boston University 1999...... Boston University 2000...... Boston University 2001...... Boston College 2002...... Boston University 2003...... Boston University 2004...... Boston College 2005...... Boston University 2006...... Boston University 2007...... Boston University 2008...... Boston College Lou Body hoists the 1993 Beanpot as Peter McLaughlin (20), Steve Martins (27) and Chris Baird (14) look on

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Harvard in the Beanpot vs. ... Boston College Boston University Northeastern Series Record Series Record Series Record Boston College leads, 22-13 Boston University leads, 25-13 Harvard leads, 22-15 Last Meeting Last Meeting Last Meeting Feb. 11, 2008 Feb. 6, 2006 Feb. 5, 2008 Final; Boston College won, 6-5 (ot) Semifinal; Boston University won, 5-3 Semifinal; Harvard won, 3-1 Current Streak Current Streak Current Streak Lost 7 Lost 6 Won 1

Harvard’s Beanpot Records Harvard Award Winners Team Most Valuable Players Most Goals, Single Game, Both Teams 17 vs. Boston College, 1974 1952...... Walt Greeley, F Tied with two others 1955...... Bill Cleary, F 1960...... Bob Bland, G Fastest Consecutive Goals 1962...... Gene Kinasewich, F 0:10 vs. Northeastern, 1973 1969...... Joe Cavanagh, F (Jim McMahon, Dave Gauthier) 1974...... Randy Roth, F 1977...... Brian Petrovek, G Consecutive Games Scoring 1981...... Wade Lau, G 77 (1952-91) 1989...... Lane MacDonald, F Individual 1993...... Ted Drury, F Most Goals, Period Eberly Award 4 Bill Cleary vs. Northeastern, 1955 (top goaltender; began in 1974) Most Goals, Game 1977...... Brian Petrovek, G 5 Bill Cleary vs. Northeastern, 1955 Ted Drury ’93 accepts the 1993 Beanpot MVP trophy from 1981...... Wade Lau, G Tied with two others tournament director Steve Nazro. 119 Most Goals, Tournament 7 Bill Cleary, 1955 Most Assists, Career 12 Joe Cavanagh, 1969-71 Tied with Boston College’s Harvard’s Beanpot Hall-of-Famers Richie Smith, 1973-76 Most Points, Period 5 Bill Cleary, 1955 vs. Northeastern (4g, 1a) Most Points, Game 7 Bill Cleary, 1955 vs. Northeastern (5g, 2a)

Most Points, Tournament Bob Bland ’62 Joe Cavanagh ’71 Bill Cleary ’56 Mark Fusco ’83 11 Bill Cleary, 1955 (7 g, 4 a) Inducted 2004 Inducted 1995 Inducted 1995 Inducted 1997 Most Points, Career 19 Joe Cavanagh, 1969-71 (7 g, 12 a) Fastest Goal, Start of Game 0:13 Ike Ikauniks, 1962 vs. Boston University Most Saves, Tournament 91 Bill Fitzsimmons, 1965 (8 goals allowed) Walter Greeley ’53 Gene Kinasewich ’64 Randy Roth ’75 Cooney Weiland Inducted 2002 Inducted 1996 Inducted 2000 Inducted 1999

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Hobey Baker Memorial Award

Presented by the Decathalon Athletic Club in Bloomington, Minn., the Hobey Baker Memorial Award was established in 1981 and is awarded annually to the outstanding collegiate hockey player in the United States. A 40-pound, 16-inch-tall figure made of bronze and clear, etched acrylic, the Hobey has become recognized as college hockey’s premier individual honor. Harvard has produced three Hobey Baker Memorial Award winners: defenseman Mark Fusco ’83 in 1983, forward Scott Fusco ’85-86 in 1986 and forward Lane MacDonald ’88-89 in 1989. The Harvard trio are the only Hobey winners in ECAC history, and only two schools, Minnesota and Minnesota Duluth have had more winners (four each). To this day, the Fuscos represent the only brother combination to win the Hobey and are one of four sets of brothers to be finalists. (Ted Drury ’93 and younger brother Chris (Boston University ’98) were both finalists. Chris won the Hobey as a senior.) Harvard players have been named finalists on six other occasions. Scott Fusco and MacDonald were finalists in the seasons prior to their winning the award, while Allen Bourbeau ’89, Peter Ciavaglia ’91, Drury, Sean McCann ’94 and Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 were all finalists during their senior seasons.

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Harvard’s Hobey Baker winners: (from left) Mark Fusco ’83, Lane MacDonald ’88-89 and Scott Fusco ’85-86

Harvard’s Hobey Baker Finalists

Hobey Baker Winners, by School Minnesota...... 4 Minnesota Duluth...... 4 Harvard...... 3 Allen Bourbeau ’88-89 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 Ted Drury ’93 Mark Fusco ’83 1989 1991 1993 1983 Boston College...... 2 Bowling Green...... 2 Colorado College...... 2 Maine...... 2 Michigan...... 2 Michigan State...... 2 North Dakota...... 2 Boston University...... 1 Denver...... 1 Scott Fusco’85-86 Lane McDonald ’88-89 Sean McCann ’94 Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 1985 and ’86 1988 and ’89 1994 2005 New Hampshire...... 1

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

1983—Mark Fusco, Defenseman First defenseman to receive the Hobey ... Holds Harvard record for most career goals by a defenseman (44), most points by a defenseman in a season (46 in 1982-83) and most career points by a defenseman (135) ... A first-team All- America, All-ECAC and All-Ivy League selection in 1981, 1982 and 1983 ... Received Harvard’s John Tudor Memorial Cup as the Crimson’s team MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1983 ... A member of the 1984 U.S. Olympic hockey team ... Played 80 games during two NHL seasons with the ... Graduated from Harvard Business School in 1990 and served as director of sales and marketing for Analysis and Computer Systems, Inc. ... Currently chief executive of Aspen Tech, a software company in Burlington, Mass. ... Member of the U.S. Olympic Committee Board and the USA Hockey Board of Directors.

1983 Finalists: Scott Bjugstad, Minnesota; Bob Brooke, Yale; Mike Carr, UMass Lowell; Bryan Erickson, Minnesota; Brian Hills, Bowling Green; , Providence; James Patrick, North Dakota; Ron Scott, Michigan State; Randy Velischek, Providence

1986—Scott Fusco, Forward Reigns as the Crimson’s all-time scoring leader with 240 points (107 goals, 133 assists) ... Was a finalist for Hobey Baker Award as a junior in 1985 ... Named a first-team All-American in both 1985 and 1986 ... One of only two players to be named ECAC Player of the Year twice (1985 and 1986) ... Four-time first-team All-Ivy and three-time first-team All-ECAC selection ... Captured the Ivy League scoring title during his freshman, junior and senior years ... Led ECAC in scoring as both a junior and senior ... His 81 points (34 goals, 47 assists) in 1984-85 were the second-best single-season total by a Harvard player (Bill Cleary ’56 had 42 goals and 47 assists for 89 points in 1954-55) ... Played for Team USA with his brother, Mark, during the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, and with 1989 Hobey winner Lane MacDonald 121 during the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta ... Graduated from Harvard with a degree in economics in 1986 ... Was vice president of finance for Analysis and Computer Systems, Inc. and currently runs The Edge, a sports center in Bedford, Mass.

1986 Finalists: Mike Donnelly, Michigan State; , Western Michigan; Gary Emmons, Northern Michigan; Dallas Gaume, Denver; Scott Harlow, Boston College; , Minnesota Duluth; Norm Maciver, Minnesota Duluth; Scott Sandelin, North Dakota; , Providence

1989—Lane MacDonald, Forward Set the Harvard career goals mark with 111 tallies and added 114 assists to finish second in career points with 225 ... Recorded 60 points on 31 goals and 29 assists in the 1988-89 season and served as team captain while leading the Crimson to the NCAA championship ... An NCAA All-Tournament selection in 1989 ... A first- team All-American in both 1987 and 1989 ... A Hobey Baker Award finalist as a sophomore in 1986-87 after scoring 67 points on 37 goals and 30 assists ... Named Most Valuable Player of the 1987 ECAC tournament and 1989 ECAC Player of the Year ... Voted to All-ECAC first team and All-Ivy League first team in 1986-87 and 1988-89 ... Played for Team USA in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta ... Selected by the in the third round of the 1985 NHL Entry Draft ... Turned down a contract offer from the Hartford Whalers to play professional hockey in Switzerland ... Returned to Harvard in 1990-91 and spent one season as an assistant coach ... Currently resides in Boston and is a general partner at Alta Communications after earning his MBA at Stanford University.

1989 Finalists: Allen Bourbeau, Harvard; Greg Brown, Boston College; David Capuano, Maine; Nelson Emerson, Boston College; Bruce Hoffort, Lake Superior State; , Michigan State; Bobby Reynolds, Michigan State; Robb Stauber, Minnesota; Tim Sweeney, Boston College

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Head Coaches Coaching Records Years Coach Seasons W L T Pct. 1897-1905 Coached by Captains 8 26 6 0 .813 1905-1917 Alfred Winsor, Jr. 12 80 25 0 .762 1917-1918 No Formal Team 1 1918-1921 Coached by Captains 3 17 3 0 .850 1921-1922 Winsor/Claflin 1 7 2 0 .778 1922-1924 William H. Claflin, Jr. 2 14 10 0 .583 1924-1925 Edward L. Bigelow 1 8 2 0 .800 1925-1927 Bigelow/Joseph Stubbs 2 17 4 2 .783 1927-1938 Joseph Stubbs 11 95 43 6 .681 1938-1942 Clark Hodder 4 20 34 3 .377 1942-1943 John P. Chase 1 14 3 1 .806 1943-1945 No Formal Team 2 1945-1950 John P. Chase 5 39 40 2 .494 1950-1971 Ralph “Cooney” Weiland 21 315 173 17 .641 1971-1990 William J. Cleary, Jr. 19 324 201 22 .612 1990-1999 Ronn Tomassoni 9 140 115 26 .544 1999-2004 Mark Mazzoleni 5 82 72 13 .536 2004-present Ted Donato 4 73 52 11 .577

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Alfred Winsor, Jr. John Chase Bill Cleary 1905-17, 1921-22 1942-43, 1945-50 1971-90 Cooney Weiland was the coach of the Crimson for 21 seasons

Ronn Tomassoni Mark Mazzoleni 1990-99 1999-2004 Bill Cleary served as head coach of the Crimson for 19 seasons from 1971-1990. His assistant coach, Ronn Tomassoni, took over the head coaching duties from 1990-1999.

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Bill Cleary ’56

to Harvard in 1968 as the freshman hockey periods of the Crimson’s meeting with archrival coach. After spending some time as the assistant Yale. It is the only jersey number retired in any varsity coach, he began his tenure as the men’s sport in the history of Harvard Athletics, which hockey head coach in 1971. He posted a 324- includes 41 varsity sports and over 150 years of 201-22 record in 19 seasons. In 1989, he guided intercollegiate athletic tradition. Harvard’s three the Crimson to a 31-3 record and the NCAA Hobey Baker Award winners — Mark Fusco ’83, championship, the first NCAA team title in Scott Fusco ’85-86 and Lane MacDonald ’88-89 school history. Under Cleary, Harvard reached — were on hand to watch as Tim Stay ’01, who college hockey’s final four on seven occasions wore Cleary’s No. 4, skated from the dressing and advanced to the national championship room, removed his sweater and surrendered the game three times. Harvard also won two ECAC number to Cleary at center ice. Stay wore No. 3 tournament titles, four Beanpot championships for the remainder of his career. and 11 Ivy League championships under his Two weeks later in Lake Placid, N.Y., guidance. Cleary was bestowed another honor, as ECAC On numerous occasions, Cleary has been commissioner Phil Buttafuoco announced that recognized for both his athletic ability and the trophy which is awarded to the regular-season commitment to amateur athletics. He was the champion would thereafter be known as the recipient of the Hobey Baker Legend of Hockey Cleary Cup, honoring the longtime coach and William J. Cleary, Jr. ’56 — whose association Award in 1993. In 1997, Cleary received the administrator for his contributions to the ECAC with Harvard spanned six decades and included Lester Patrick Award for contributions to and college hockey as a whole. experiences as a student-athlete, coach and hockey, was named to the administrator — retired June 30, 2001. His NCAA Ice Hockey 50th Harvard career began in his early years as a Anniversary Team, was program seller at Harvard Stadium, continued chosen a U.S. Hockey Player through his days as a standout player, included of the Decade (1956-66) his 19-year head coaching tenure and concluded and was inducted into the with his 11-year term as the Nichols Family International Ice Hockey Director of Athletics. Hall of Fame. In 1989, he Cleary ranks among the greatest athletes to was inducted into the United play for Harvard — lettering in both baseball States Olympic Hall of Fame, 123 and ice hockey — and still holds or shares seven which was followed by his school records in hockey. He was a first-team All- selection as one of the “100 America selection in 1954-55 when he helped Golden Olympians” by the the Crimson to the Beanpot title, a berth in the U.S. Olympic Committee NCAA Frozen Four and a 17-3-1 record. in 1996. In 1999, he was In 1956, Cleary was a member of the U.S. named by Sports Illustrated Olympic hockey team that captured a silver as Massachusetts’ 33rd medal. Four years later, he was the top scorer for best athlete of the 20th the U.S. team that won gold at Squaw Valley, century. The Boston Globe, Calif. Cleary was also the leading scorer for the meanwhile, placed him 68th 1957 U.S. National Team and captain and MVP on its list of the top 100 New for the 1959 U.S. National Team. England athletes of the past Tim Stay ’01, Cleary, Lane MacDonald ’89, Scott Fusco ’86 and Mark Fusco ’83 on the night of Cleary’s jersey retirement Cleary, a Cambridge, Mass., native, graduated century. from Belmont Hill School in 1952. At Harvard, Cleary’s retirement brought he earned a Bachelor of Arts in government forth a landslide of recognition for the and served in the United States Army from Harvard legend. On March 2, 2001, 1955 until 1957. After several years as a high Cleary’s No. 4 hockey jersey was retired in school and college hockey official, he returned a ceremony at the Bright Center between

Cleary skates in for a goal on the way to MVP honors in the 1955 Beanpot.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History All-Americans

Harvard hockey players have a long history of being among the best players in the nation. Over the years, 24 different Crimson players have been named first- or second-team All-America a total of 36 times. Joe Cavanagh ’71 and Mark Fusco ’83 lead the steller group with three first-team selections each, while five players have received the recognition twice during their careers. Following two seasons, 1985-86 and 1993-94, Harvard landed three players on the All-America teams. Following six seasons, there have been two Crimson players named to the squads. The most recent players to join these prestigious ranks were defenseman Noah Welch ’05 and goaltender Dov Grumet-Morris ’05, who earned first- and second-team honors, respectively, after the 2004-05 season.

Harvard’s Selections Breakdown Name Position Season Team Mark Benning ’86-87 Defense 1985-86 Second First Team 1986-87 First 18 different players have been named first-team All-America Grant Blair ’86 Goaltender 1985-86 Second a total of 27 times. Joe Cavanagh ’71 Forward 1968-69 First Two players earned the honor three times 1969-70 First Joe Cavanagh ’71 1970-71 First Mark Fusco ’83 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 Forward 1990-91 Second Five players earned the honor two times Bob Cleary ’58 Forward 1956-57 First Bob Cleary ’58 1957-58 First Scott Fusco ’85-86 Bill Cleary ’56 Forward 1954-55 First ’63 Lane MacDonald ’88-89 Ted Drury ’93-94 Forward 1992-93 First Randy Roth ’75 Chuck Flynn ’56 Goaltender 1954-55 First 11 players earned the honor one time Mark Fusco ’83 Defense 1980-81 First Mark Benning ’86-87 1981-82 First Bill Cleary ’56 1982-83 First Ted Drury ’93 Scott Fusco ’85-86 Forward 1984-85 First Chuck Flynn ’56 1985-86 First David Hynes ’73 Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 Goaltender 2004-05 Second Steve Martins ’95 124 David Hynes ’73 Forward 1971-72 First Sean McCann ’94 David Johnston ’63 Defense 1961-62 First Bob McManama ’73 1962-63 First Dominic Moore ’03 Lane MacDonald ’88-89 Forward 1986-87 First Brian Petrovek ’77 1988-89 First Noah Welch ’05 Derek Maguire ’94 Defense 1993-94 Second Second Team Steve Martins ’95 Forward 1993-94 First Seven different players have been named second-team All-America Sean McCann ’94 Defense 1993-94 First a total of nine times. Bob McManama ’73 Forward 1972-73 First One player earned the honor two times Dominic Moore ’03 Forward 2002-03 First C.J. Young ’90 Brian Petrovek ’77 Goaltender 1974-75 First Seven players earned the honor one time Randy Roth ’75 Forward 1973-74 First Mark Benning ’86-87 1974-75 First Grant Blair ’86 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 Don Sweeney ’88 Defense 1987-88 Second Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 Noah Welch ’05 Defense 2002-03 Second Derek Maguire ’94 2004-05 First Don Sweeney ’88 C.J. Young ’90 Forward 1988-89 Second Noah Welch ’05 1989-90 Second

Bob Cleary ’58 Dave Hynes ’73 Mark Benning ’87 Steve Martins ’95 Dominic Moore ’03

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey Olympians and National Team Members

Ivy League student-athletes have competed in every modern Olympics, and Harvard ice hockey has had a significant impact in Winter Olympics. Both on the ice and behind the bench, Crimson players have participated in 14 different winter games dating back to 1932. Harvard has twice had a pair of brothers on the same team, including 1960 gold-medal winners Bill ’56 and Bob Cleary ’58. Olympians 1932 – Lake Placid 1984 – Sarajevo John Chase ’28 Mark Fusco ’83 John Garrison ’31 Scott Fusco ’85-86 Alfred Winsor ’02 (head coach) Tim Taylor ’63 (assistant coach/assistant GM) 1936 – Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1988 – Calgary John Garrison ’31 Allen Bourbeau ’88-89 Frank Stubbs ’32 Scott Fusco ’85-86 Lane MacDonald ’88-89 1948 – St. Moritz Ben Smith ’68 (assistant coach) John Garrison ’31 (head coach) Goodwin Harding ’43 1992 – Albertville Ted Donato ’91 1952 – Oslo Ted Drury ’93 Bob Ridder ’41 (manager) C.J. Young ’90 1956 – Cortina d’Ampezzo 1994 – Lillehammer Bill Cleary ’56 Peter Ciavaglia ’91 Bob Ridder ’41 (manager) Ted Drury ’93-94 1960 – Squaw Valley Allain Roy ’92 (Canada) Bill Cleary ’56 Tim Taylor ’63 (head coach) Harvard brothers Bill ’56 and Bob Cleary ’58 led Team USA to Olympic gold in 1960. Bob Cleary ’58 Joe Bertagna ’73 (assistant coach) Bob McVey ’58 1998 – Bob Owen ’58 Ben Smith ’68 (women’s head coach) Gold medal; USA def. USSR, 3-2 2002 – 125 1976 – Innsbruck Ben Smith ’68 (women’s head coach) Dan Bolduc ’76 Gold medal; USA def. Canada, 3-1 Ted Thorndike ’75 2006 – Torino Ben Smith ’68 (women’s head coach)

National Team Members U.S. National Team U.S. National Junior Team Dan Bolduc ’76...... 1979 Chris Biotti ’89...... 1985, ’86, ’87 Peter Ciavaglia ’91...... 1994 Allen Borbeau ’88-89...... 1984, ’85 Bill Cleary ’56...... 1957, ’59 Peter Ciavaglia ’91...... 1989 Bob Cleary ’58...... 1957, ’59 Ted Donato ’91...... 1988 Ted Drury ’93 is one of four former Harvard players Bill Corkery ’73...... 1972 Ted Drury ’93...... 1990, ’91 to skate in two Olympic Games. Ted Donato ’91...... 1997, ’99, 2002 Jimmy Fraser ’09...... 2007 Ted Drury ’93...... 1993, ’98 Mark Fusco ’83...... 1981 Mark Fusco ’83...... 1985 Scott Fusco ’85-86...... 1982 Walter Greeley ’53...... 1955 Ashlin Halfnight ’97...... 1994, ’95 Bob Goodenow ’75...... 1974, ’75 Chuckie Hughes ’92...... 1990 Dave Hynes ’73...... 1972, ’73, ’77 Jason Karmanos ’89...... 1994 Lane MacDonald ’88-89...... 1987 Ed Krayer ’91...... 1987 Bob McManama ’73...... 1972, ’73 Lane MacDonald ’88-89...... 1986 Neil Sheehy ’83...... 1985, ’92 Jeremiah McCarthy ’98...... 1996 Tim Taylor ’63...... 1965 Brett Nowak ’03...... 2000, ’01 Greg Olson ’81...... 1981 Canadian National Team Dylan Reese ’07...... 2004 Ashlin Halfnight ’97...... 1993 Noah Welch ’05...... 2002 Kevan Melrose ’90...... 1987 C.J. Young ’90...... 1988 Allain Roy ’92...... 1990, ’93, ’94 Scott Fuso’85-86, Lane MacDonald ’88-89 and Allen Don Sweeney ’88...... 1997 Bourbeau ’88-89 played together for Team USA.

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History National Hockey League Draft Picks

Name Position Drafted Round No. NHL Team Craig Adams ’99 F 1996 9 223 Hartford Whalers Chris Bala ’01 F 1998 2 58 Tim Barakett ’87 F 1986 Supplemental New Jersey Devils Dave Bell ’77 F 1975 11 187 Alex Biega ’10 D 2006 5 147 Buffalo Sabres Chris Biotti ’89 D 1985 1 17 Calgary Flames Grant Blair ’86 G 1983 6 111 Calgary Flames Allen Bourbeau ’88-89 F 1983 4 81 Tom Cavanagh ’05 F 2001 6 182 San Jose Sharks Peter Ciavaglia ’91 F 1987 7 145 Calgary Flames Kyle Clark ’02 F 1999 6 175 Grant Blair ’86 John Cochrane ’79 F 1978 14 214 St. Louis Blues Rich DeFreitas ’92 D 1987 6 120 Washington Capitals Ted Donato ’91 F 1987 5 98 Boston Bruins Ted Drury ’93 F 1989 2 42 Calgary Flames Doug Elliott ’73 D 1971 7 88 Pittsburgh Penguins Brian Farrell ’94 F 1990 5 89 Pittsburgh Penguins Steve Flomenhoft ’93 F 1992 Supplemental Ottawa Senators Rob Flynn ’05 F 2002 9 270 Rob Fried ’04 F 2000 3 77 Florida Panthers Mike Francis ’91 G 1988 12 240 St. Louis Blues Scott Fusco ’85-86 F 1982 11 211 New Jersey Devils Dov Grumet-Morris ’05 G 2002 5 161 Philadelphia Flyers Ben Storey ’99 126 Peter Hafner ’06 D 2002 8 232 Florida Panthers Ashlin Halfnight ’97 D 1994 9 213 Hartford Whalers Tod Hartje ’90 F 1987 7 142 Chuckie Hughes ’92 G 1988 11 222 New Jersey Devils Jack Hughes ’79 D 1977 8 142 Colorado Rockies Dave Hynes ’73 F 1971 4 56 Boston Bruins John Hynes ’80 G 1978 6 91 Colorado Rockies Aaron Israel ’94 G 1993 7 166 Philadelphia Flyers Alex Killorn ’12 F 2007 3 77 Tampa Bay Lightning Tyler Kolarik ’04 F 2000 5 150 Columbus Blue Jackets Ed Krayer ’89 F 1985 8 150 New Jersey Devils Ryan Lannon ’06 D 2002 8 239 Pittsburgh Penguins Bryan Lonsinger ’95 D 1990 7 139 New York Rangers Craig MacDonald ’97 F 1996 4 88 Hartford Whalers Chris Biotti ’89 David MacDonald ’08 D 2004 7 225 San Jose Sharks Lane MacDonald ’88-89 F 1985 3 59 Calgary Flames Derek Maguire ’94 D 1990 9 186 Montreal Canadiens Ryan Maki ’07 F 2005 6 176 Matt Mallgrave ’93 F 1988 7 132 Steve Martins ’95 F 1994 Supplemental Hartford Whalers Sean McCann ’94 D 1994 Supplemental Florida Panthers Matt McCollem ’11 F 2006 6 154 St. Louis Blues Brian McCormack ’92 D 1988 8 164 Scott McCormack ’90 D 1986 9 171 New Jersey Devils Peter McLaughlin ’96 D 1991 8 170 Pittsburgh Penguins Kevan Melrose ’90 D 1984 7 138 Calgary Flames Dominic Moore ’03 F 2000 3 95 New York Rangers Chris Bala ’01

GoCrimson.com History :: 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey

Mark Moore ’00 D 1997 7 179 Pittsburgh Penguins Steve Moore ’01 F 1998 2 53 Colorado Avalanche By the Numbers Kirk Nielsen ’96 F 1994 Supplemental Philadelphia Flyers By NHL Team Jay North ’84 F 1980 3 62 Buffalo Sabres Pittsburgh Penguins...... 7 Calgary Flames...... 6 Brett Nowak ’03 F 2000 4 103 Boston Bruins New Jersey Devils...... 6 Jerry Pawloski ’88 D 1985 11 215 Hartford Whalers Philadelphia Flyers...... 6 Hartford Whalers...... 5 Dennis Packard ’04 F 2001 7 219 Tampa Bay Lightning Boston Bruins...... 4 Brian Petrovek ’77 G 1975 10 172 New York Rangers...... 4 Buffalo Sabres...... 3 Ethan Philpott ’97 F 1993 3 64 Buffalo Sabres Colorado Avalanche...... 3 J.R. Prestifilippo ’00 G 1996 7 165 New York Islanders Florida Panthers...... 3 Los Angeles Kings...... 3 Dylan Reese ’07 D 2003 7 209 New York Rangers San Jose Sharks...... 3 Doug Rogers ’10 F 2006 4 119 New York Islanders Ottawa Senators...... 3 St. Louis Blues...... 3 Allain Roy ’92 G 1989 4 69 Winnipeg Jets Colorado Rockies...... 2 Matt Scorsune ’00 D 1996 8 214 Colorado Avalanche Montreal Canadiens...... 2 New York Islanders...... 2 Kenny Smith ’04 D 2001 3 84 Tampa Bay Lightning...... 2 Kevin Sneddon ’92 D 1989 12 249 Los Angeles Kings Washington Capitals...... 2 Winnipeg Jets...... 2 Doug Sproule ’98 F 1994 7 159 Ottawa Senators Columbus Blue Jackets...... 1 Ben Storey ’99 D 1996 4 98 Colorado Avalanche Detroit Red Wings...... 1 Don Sweeney ’88 D 1984 8 166 Boston Bruins Edmonton Oilers...... 1 ...... 1 Randy Taylor ’87 D 1986 Supplemental Pittsburgh Penguins Nashville Predators...... 1 Tripp Tracy ’96 G 1993 9 218 Philadelphia Flyers Toronto Maple Leafs...... 1 Jim Trainor ’79 D 1977 10 165 Philadelphia Flyers By Draft Year Mike Vukonich ’91 F 1987 5 90 Los Angeles Kings 1971...... 2 1975...... 2 Tom Walsh ’06 D 2001 5 163 San Jose Sharks 1977...... 2 John Weisbrod ’91 F 1987 4 73 Minnesota North Stars 1978...... 2 1980...... 1 Noah Welch ’05 D 2001 2 54 Pittsburgh Penguins 1982...... 1 C.J. Young ’90 F 1989 Supplemental New Jersey Devils 1983...... 2 1984...... 2 127 1985...... 4 1986...... 3 1987...... 6 1988...... 4 1989...... 4 1990...... 3 Current Crimson in the Draft 1991...... 1 1992...... 1 Harvard has four players on its 2007-08 roster who have been drafted 1993...... 3 by NHL teams: 1994...... 5 Doug Rogers ’10...... 2006, N.Y. Islanders, 4th round, 119 overall 1996...... 5 1997...... 1 Alex Biega ’10...... 2006, Buffalo Sabres, 5th round, 147 overall 1998...... 2 Matt McCollem ’11...... 2006, St. Louis Blues, 6th round, 154 overall 1999...... 1 2000...... 4 Alex Killorn ’12...... 2007, Tampa Bay Lightning, 3rd round, 77 overall 2001...... 5 2002...... 4 Jack Hughes ’79 2003...... 1 2004...... 1 2005...... 1 2006...... 3 2007...... 1 By Round First...... 1 Second...... 4 Third...... 7 Fourth...... 8 Fifth...... 7 Sixth...... 7 Seventh...... 13 Eighth...... 8 Ninth...... 6 10th...... 2 11th...... 4 12th...... 2 13th...... 0 14th...... 1 Jerry Pawloski ’88 Allen Bourbeau ’88-89 Don Sweeney ’88 Supplemental Draft Picks...... 7

GoCrimson.com 2008-09 Harvard Men’s Ice Hockey :: History Harvard and the National Hockey League

There have been 23 Harvard Hockey Players who have gone on to play in the National Hockey League. In 2007-08, five former Crimson skaters (noted inbold below) saw time with NHL teams. Name Season(s) Team(s) Craig Adams ’99 2000-08 Carolina, Chicago Chris Bala ’01 2001-02 Ottawa Dan Bolduc ’76 1978-80, 83-84 Detroit, Calgary Greg Britz ’83 1983-85, 86-87 Toronto, Hartford Peter Ciavaglia ’91 1991-93 Buffalo Tom Cavanagh ’05 2007-08 San Jose Ted Donato ’91 1991-2004 Boston, N.Y. Islanders, Ottawa, Anaheim, Dallas, Los Angeles, St. Louis, N.Y. Rangers Ted Drury ’93 1993-01 Calgary, Hartford, Ottawa, Anaheim, N.Y. Islanders, Columbus Mark Fusco ’83 1983-85 Hartford Jack Hughes ’80 1980-81 Colorado Rockies Dave Hynes ’73-75 1973-75 Boston Craig MacDonald ’99 1998-2008 Carolina, Florida, George Owen ’23 was Harvard’s first alum Craig Adams ’99 and the Carolina to play in the NHL. Boston, Calgary, Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup in 2006. Chicago, Tampa Bay Steve Martins ’95 1995-2006 Hartford, Carolina, Ottawa, Tampa Bay, N.Y. Islanders, St. Louis Bob McManama ’73 1973-76 Pittsburgh Dominic Moore ’03 2003-08 N.Y. Rangers, Pittsburgh, Minnesota, Toronto Steve Moore ’01 2001-04 Colorado 128 Kirk Nielsen ’96 1997-98 Boston George Owen ’23 1928-33 Boston Neil Sheehy ’83 1983-92 Calgary, Hartford, Washington Don Sweeney ’88 1988-2004 Boston, Dallas Tripp Tracy ’96 1997-98 Carolina Noah Welch ’05 2005-08 Pittsburgh, Florida C.J. Young ’90 1992-93 Calgary, Boston

Current Professional Players Tom Cavanagh ’05 debuted with the Noah Welch ’05 was traded to the Florida San Jose Sharks in 2008. Player Pro Camp or Team Last Season Panthers from Pittsburgh in 2007. Craig Adams ’99...... Chicago Blackhawks (NHL) Brendan Bernakevitch ’05...... HC Val Pusteria Wolves (Italy) Tom Cavanagh ’05...... San Jose Sharks (NHL) Dov Grumet-Morris ’05...... EC Graz 99ers (Austria) Kevin Du ’07...... China Sharks (Asia) Oliver Jonas ’01...... Wolfsburg Grizzly Adams (Germany) Ryan Lannon ’05...... Phoenix Coyotes (NHL) Craig MacDonald ’99...... Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL) Ryan Maki ’07...... Nashville Predators (NHL) Steve Martins ’95...... (AHL) J.D. McCabe ’08...... Heerenveen Flyers (Netherlands) Alex Meintel ’08...... Herner EV (Germany) Dominic Moore ’03...... Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL) Dennis Packard ’04...... Philadelphia Flyers (NHL) Jon Pelle ’08...... Frederikshavn White Hawks (Denmark) Dylan Reese ’07...... Phoenix Coyotes (NHL) Kenny Smith ’04...... (ECHL) Mike Taylor ’08...... New York Rangers (NHL) Brothers Steve ’01 (left) and Dominic Don Sweeney ’88 played 16 NHL seasons Moore ’03 played against each other. Tom Walsh ’05...... HIFK Helsinki (Finland) and is now the Bruins’ director of hockey Dominic now plays for Toronto. Noah Welch ’05...... Florida Panthers (NHL) operations and player development.

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