Princeton Tigers men's ice hockey

The Princeton Tigers men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Princeton University. The Tigers are a member of ECAC Hockey. They play at the Hobey Baker Memorial Rink in Princeton, New Jersey.[2] In 1999, future NHL player Jeff Halpern scored 22 goals to tie for the most goals in the ECAC and was co-winner of Princeton's Roper Trophy for athletic and academic achievement.[3] In 2010–11, Andrew Calof was ECAC Rookie of the Year.

Princeton Tigers men's ice hockey
Current season
Princeton Tigers athletic logo
UniversityPrinceton University
ConferenceECAC Hockey
First season1899–1900
Head coachBen Syer
1st season, 0–0–0
ArenaHobey Baker Memorial Rink
Princeton, New Jersey
ColorsBlack and orange[1]
   
NCAA Tournament appearances
1998, 2008, 2009, 2018
Conference Tournament championships
1998, 2008, 2018

History

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Princeton University ice hockey team in 1906–07 season. Players from top row to bottom row, left to right: Charles Coxe, Josh Brush, Chester Levis, Philip Chew, Jay Zahniser, John Chislett, Ralph Osborne and Harral Tenney.

Princeton University had an ice hockey team organized already during the 1894–95 season, when the school still went by the name of College of New Jersey. On March 3, 1895 the university ice hockey team faced a Baltimore aggregation at the North Avenue Ice Palace in Baltimore, Maryland and won by a score of 5–0. The players on the 1895 team were Chester Derr, John Brooks, Howard Colby, James Blair, Frederick Allen, Ralph Hoagland and Art Wheeler.[4]

For the 1899–1900 season the Princeton University ice hockey team became a member of the Intercollegiate Hockey League (ICHL) where they played organized league games against other Ivy League school teams such as Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania and Yale.

Princeton's most famous ice hockey player Hobey Baker (1892–1918) played for the school team between 1911 and 1914, before he graduated and went on to play for the New York City based St. Nicholas Hockey Club.

As many college programs did, Princeton's ice hockey squad suspended operations for the 1917–18 season due to the United States entering World War I but the icers returned after the armistice was signed. A few years later the Tigers hired their first head coach, Russell O. Ellis, but they would go through several more before they could find someone to lead the program for more than a few years. Despite the tumult behind the bench Princeton was still producing some of the best teams in college hockey, setting a program record of 15 wins that would stand for 76 years.

In the midst of the great depression Richard Vaughan came to Princeton and would helm the team for the next quarter-century. Vaughan would keep the Tigers competitive through much of his tenure and his 159 wins remains a program high 60 years after his retirement. Princeton found it difficult to replace Vaughan, going through 5 coaches in 18 years while producing only two winning records in that time. The team's nadir came under Bill Quackenbush who, despite ending up in the Hall of Fame as a player, was the program's worst coach as far as records go. Quackenbush's tenure began well with Princeton making the ECAC tournament for the first time, but the following season the team slid to 16th in the conference and would not win more than 5 games a year for the next 5 seasons. Quackenbush remained with the program even after a 1–22 season but resigned in 1973 with the Tigers an afterthought in ECAC Hockey. Princeton would not play another postseason game until 1985, the year after 7 teams left to form Hockey East, and they would not win a playoff game until 1992 under first-year head coach Don Cahoon.

During Cahoon's time at Princeton the program recovered from decades as a bottom-feeder and in 1995 produced their first winning season in 27 years. Three seasons later the Tigers won their first conference tournament and made the NCAA tournament for the first time. After Cahoon left to head Massachusetts in 2000, he was replaced by long-time assistant Len Quesnelle but after four years the team was back at the bottom of the conference and he was swiftly replaced by Guy Gadowsky.

It took Gadowsky a few years to get the Tigers back on their feet but he led the team to its second conference championship in 2008, setting a program high with 21 wins that he bested by 1 the following year. Two years later Gadowsky left and was replaced by Bob Prier but just as had happened with Cahoon, the successor did not last long and after a dismal third season Ron Fogarty was hired as the 17th head coach in program history. As of 2019 Fogarty's best season came in 2018 when he led an underdog Tigers squad to their 3rd conference title.

2023-2024 Princeton Tigers at Brown's Meehan Auditorium

Season-by-season results

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Records vs. Current ECAC Hockey Teams

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As of the completion of 2018–19 season

SchoolTeamAway ArenaOverall recordWin %HomeAwayLast Result
Brown UniversityBearsMeehan Auditorium 72–90–11.44835–39–633–46–65-6 L (3OT)
Clarkson UniversityGolden Knights Cheel Arena 34–84–7.30024–35–56–45–11-1 T
Colgate University Raiders Class of 1965 Arena 48–59–8.45228–26–615–32–23-4 L
Cornell University Big Red Lynah Rink 53–91–8.37525–39–616–50–22-3 L
Dartmouth College Big Green Thompson Arena 89–104–16.46445–44–834–46–80-5 L
Harvard UniversityCrimson Bright-Landry Hockey Center58–158–12.28127–60–518–75–64-2 W
Quinnipiac University Bobcats People's United Center12–17–1.4174–10–18–7–03-6 L
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Engineers Houston Field House37–69–11.36319–26–518–40–62-6 L
St. Lawrence UniversitySaints Appleton Arena25–70–11.28816–33–59–36–45-3 W
Union College Dutchmen Achilles Rink25–36–7.41916–15–38–21–42-3 L
Yale UniversityBulldogs Ingalls Rink109–141–11.43951–47–432–69–33-2 W

All-time coaching records

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Coaches
Former head coach Ron Fogarty
Former assistant Shane Talarico

As of completion of 2023–24 season[5]

TenureCoachYearsRecordPct.
1899–1917, 1918–1920No Coach20103–87–6.541
1920–1921Russell O. Ellis14–4–0.500
1921–1922Moylan McDonnell13–6–1.350
1922–1924Chippy Gaw224–11–1.681
1924–1927Beattie Ramsay319–25–1.433
1927–1933Lloyd Neidlinger671–31–3.690
1933–1935Frank Fredrickson215–18–0.455
1935–1943, 1945–1959Richard Vaughan22159–211–14.432
1959–1965R. Norman Wood649–88–1.359
1965–1967Johnny Wilson214–27–1.345
1967–1973Bill Quackenbush634–104–2.250
1973–1977Jack Semler425–66–5.286
1977–1991Jim Higgins14130–219–21.380
1991–2000Don Cahoon9122–129–32.488
2000–2004Len Quesnelle429–84–11.278
2004–2011Guy Gadowsky7105–109–15.491
2011–2014Bob Prier325–58–12.326
2014–2024Ron Fogarty990–169–27.362
Totals17 coaches121 Seasons1021–1,446–153.419

Statistical leaders

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The team's statistical leaders are as follows.[6]

Career points leaders

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PlayerYearsGPGAPtsPIM
John Messuri1985–198911060118178
Ryan Kuffner2015–20191327577152
Andre Faust1988–19921066288150
Max Véronneau2015–20191305292144
Jeff Halpern1995–19991326082142
John Cook1960–19636765132
Andrew Calof2010–20141174479123
Greg Polaski1986–1990966457121
Scott Bertoli1995–19991304177118
John McBride1957–19606057117

Career Goaltending Leaders

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GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

Minimum 30 games

PlayerYearsGPMinWLTGASOSV%GAA
Robert O'Connor1947–1949342.38
Zane Kalemba2006–20101086267574452579.9122.46
Mike Condon2009–2013532969182282883.9172.67
Sean Bonar2010–2014633457173361822.8982.84
Erasmo Saltarelli1994–19987639752924111965.8962.94

Statistics current through the start of the 2019–20 season.

Roster

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As of August 2, 2023.[7]

No.S/P/CPlayerClassPosHeightWeightDoBHometownPrevious teamNHL rights
1 Arthur SmithFreshmanG6' 4" (1.93 m)205 lb (93 kg)2004-04-30Farmington, ConnecticutLone Star (NAHL)
3 Mike KennedySeniorD6' 1" (1.85 m)190 lb (86 kg)2000-07-17Holyoke, MassachusettsNanaimo (BCHL)
4 David MaJuniorD5' 11" (1.8 m)180 lb (82 kg)2002-06-22Yonkers, New YorkChicago (USHL)
6 Ian DevlinFreshmanD6' 2" (1.88 m)210 lb (95 kg)2002-01-07Toronto, OntarioCoquitlam (BCHL)
7 Nick CarabinSeniorD5' 10" (1.78 m)175 lb (79 kg)2000-04-30Mahwah, New JerseyCoquitlam (BCHL)
8 Tyler RubinSophomoreD5' 10" (1.78 m)175 lb (79 kg)2003-01-10Natick, MassachusettsWest Kelowna (BCHL)
9 MacKenzie MerrimanSeniorF5' 11" (1.8 m)190 lb (86 kg)2000-04-14White Rock, British ColumbiaNanaimo (BCHL)
10 Alex KonovalovJuniorF5' 10" (1.78 m)180 lb (82 kg)2000-11-12Basking Ridge, New JerseyLone Star (NAHL)
11 Jayden SisonSophomoreF5' 9" (1.75 m)185 lb (84 kg)2003-01-27Paoli, PennsylvaniaCoquitlam (BCHL)
12 Ian MurphyJuniorF5' 11" (1.8 m)176 lb (80 kg)1999-04-06Scituate, MassachusettsTri-City (USHL)
13 Nick SeitzSeniorF6' 1" (1.85 m)190 lb (86 kg)2000-01-18Manhattan, New YorkNew Jersey (NAHL)
14 Carson BuydensFreshmanF6' 3" (1.91 m)185 lb (84 kg)2004-03-10Gladstone, ManitobaNorth Iowa (BCHL)
16 Brendan GormanSophomoreF6' 0" (1.83 m)175 lb (79 kg)2003-02-17Arlington, MassachusettsSt. Sebastian's (USHS–MA)
17 Adam RobbinsSeniorF5' 8" (1.73 m)155 lb (70 kg)2000-04-12New York, New YorkChicago (USHL)
18 Joshua KarnishFreshmanF5' 11" (1.8 m)175 lb (79 kg)2003-08-07Marlton, New JerseyCedar Rapids (USHL)
19 Jack CroninJuniorF5' 11" (1.8 m)185 lb (84 kg)2001-03-31South Hamilton, MassachusettsMinnesota Magicians (NAHL)
20 Kevin AndersonSophomoreF5' 11" (1.8 m)175 lb (79 kg)2003-09-15Regina, SaskatchewanNotre Dame (SJHL)
21 Michael YoungFreshmanF5' 11" (1.8 m)185 lb (84 kg)2002-08-28Kings Park, New YorkNew Jersey (NAHL)
22 Noah de la DurantayeJuniorD6' 1" (1.85 m)205 lb (93 kg)2000-05-27Montreal, QuebecCoquitlam (BCHL)
23 Joe BergSeniorF5' 11" (1.8 m)185 lb (84 kg)1999-10-07Plano, TexasTri-City (USHL)
24 David JacobsSophomoreF5' 10" (1.78 m)180 lb (82 kg)2001-09-26Needham, MassachusettsCowichan Valley (BCHL)
25 Nick MarcianoSophomoreD6' 1" (1.85 m)205 lb (93 kg)2002-05-19Greenwich, ConnecticutPrince George (BCHL)
26 Kai DaniellsFreshmanF6' 0" (1.83 m)185 lb (84 kg)2003-03-07Whistler, British ColumbiaNanaimo (BCHL)
27 Jaxson EzmanSophomoreF6' 1" (1.85 m)185 lb (84 kg)2002-12-22Middleton, WisconsinDubuque (USHL)
28 Brendan WangSophomoreD5' 11" (1.8 m)180 lb (82 kg)2002-02-08Burnaby, British ColumbiaFort McMurray (AJHL)
30 Conor CallaghanFreshmanG6' 0" (1.83 m)185 lb (84 kg)2003-03-02Ho-Ho-Kus, New JerseyMuskegon (USHL)
31 Ethan PearsonJuniorG6' 2" (1.88 m)190 lb (86 kg)2002-07-30Fredericton, New BrunswickMount St. Charles (Midget AAA)

Awards and honors

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NCAA

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All-Americans

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AHCA First Team All-Americans

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

ECAC Hockey

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Individual awards

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All-Conference

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First Team All-ECAC Hockey

Second Team All-ECAC Hockey

Third Team All-ECAC Hockey

ECAC Hockey All-Rookie Team

Olympians

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This is a list of Princeton alumni who have played on an Olympic team.[10]

NamePositionPrinceton TenureTeamYearFinish
Gerard HallockDefenseman1923–1926 USA1932  Silver
Robert LivingstonDefenseman1928–1931 USA1932  Silver
Fred KammerRight Wing1931–1934 USA1936  Bronze
Malcolm McAlpinCenter1930–1932 USA1936  Bronze
Christopher RodgersGoaltender1941–1942 USA1948DQ
Jim SloaneRight Wing1940–1943 USA1948DQ

† denotes the AAU team that marched in the opening ceremony but did not participate.

As of July 1, 2023.

= NHL All-Star team= NHL All-Star[11]= NHL All-Star[11] and NHL All-Star team= Hall of Famers

† Jeff Halpern won a Stanley Cup as an assistant coach with the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2020.

Source:[12]

See also

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References

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