1953 NCAA men's ice hockey tournament explained

Year:1953
Gender:men's
Teams:4
Frozenfourarena:Broadmoor Ice Palace
Frozenfourcity:Colorado Springs, Colorado
Champions:Michigan Wolverines
Titlecount:4th
Champgamecount:4th
Champffcount:6th
Runnerup:Minnesota Golden Gophers
Gamecount:1st
Runnerffcount:1st
Semifinal1:Rensselaer Engineers
Frozenfourcount:1st
Semifinal2:Boston University Terriers
Frozenfourcount2:3rd
Coach:Vic Heyliger
Coachcount:4th
Mop:John Matchefts
Mopteam:Michigan
Attendance:7,450

The 1953 NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the culmination of the 1952–53 NCAA men's ice hockey season, the sixth such tournament in NCAA history. It was held from March 12 to 14, 1953, and concluded with Michigan defeating Minnesota 7-3. All games were played at the Broadmoor Ice Palace in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Michigan's win capped off its third consecutive National Championship. As of 2018 no team has been able to match that achievement. Additionally, their 14 goals in the semifinal game against Boston University were the most ever for an NCAA tournament game, matched only by Minnesota in 1954. The Wolverines' goal differential (+16) is also a record for an NCAA tournament, equaling the record set by Colorado College in 1950 and matched by Wisconsin in 1983.

For the first time since the tournament began the 'Most Outstanding Player' was awarded to someone from the championship team.

Qualifying teams

Four teams qualified for the tournament, two each from the eastern and western regions. The two best MCHL teams and a Tri-State League representative received bids into the tournament as did one independent school.

East West
SeedSchoolConference RecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bidSeedSchoolConference RecordBerth type AppearanceLast bid
1RensselaerTri-State League14–3–1At-Large1stNever1MichiganMCHL15–7–0At-Large6th1952
2Boston UniversityIndependent14–5–1At-Large3rd19512MinnesotaMCHL22–5–0At-Large1stNever
[1]

Format

The eastern team judged as better was seeded as the top eastern team while the MCHL champion was given the top western seed. The second eastern seed was slotted to play the top western seed and vice versa. All games were played at the Broadmoor Ice Palace. All matches were Single-game eliminations with the semifinal winners advancing to the national championship game and the losers playing in a consolation game.

Bracket

Note: * denotes overtime period(s)

Results

Semifinals

Michigan vs. Boston University

Consolation Game

Boston University vs. Rensselaer

National Championship

Minnesota vs. Michigan

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stalign=center style=";" UMJim HaasMacLellanalign=center 05:48align=center 1–0 UM
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINDick MeredithYackelalign=center 8:39align=center 1–1
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINDick DoughertyCampbellalign=center 11:34align=center 2–1 MIN
2ndalign=center style=";" UMDoug PhilpottShavealign=center 26:15align=center 2–2
align=center style=";" UMDoug MullenChin and Cooneyalign=center 31:08align=center 3–2 UM
3rdalign=center style=";" UMJohn MatcheftsGW PPunassistedalign=center 43:38align=center 4–2 UM
align=center style=";" UMJim Haasunassistedalign=center 47:17align=center 5–2 UM
align=center style=";" UMDoug Philpott – PPHaasalign=center 49:14align=center 6–2 UM
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MINKen YackelJohnson and Doughertyalign=center 50:42align=center 6–3 UM
align=center style=";" UMJohn MatcheftsENPhilpottalign=center 59:49align=center 7–3 UM
Shots by period
Team123T
align=center style=";" Michigan align=center 14 align=center 11 align=center 9 align=center 34
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " Minnesota align=center 12 align=center 10 align=center 6 align=center 28
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
align=center style=";" UM align=center 25 align=center 3 align=center
align=center style="color:white; background:#862334; " MIN align=center 28 align=center 6 align=center

All-Tournament team

[2]

First Team

* Most Outstanding Player(s)[3]

Second Team

Notes and References

  1. News: NCAA Division 1 Tournament . College Hockey Historical Archives . 2013-06-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140202145059/http://augenblick.org/chha/ncaa_trn.html . 2014-02-02 . live .
  2. News: NCAA Frozen Four Records . NCAA.org . 2013-06-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120817163005/http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/frozen_4/2009/f4recs.pdf . 2012-08-17 . live .
  3. News: NCAA Division I Awards . College Hockey Historical Archives. 2013-07-17.