Hockey East Association | |
Color: | color:white; background:#003882 |
Font Color: |
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Founded: | 1984 |
Association: | NCAA |
Division: | Division I |
Teams: | 12 |
Sports: | Ice hockey |
Mens: | 11 teams |
Womens: | 10 teams |
Region: | New England |
Headquarters: | Amesbury, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Commissioner: | Steve Metcalf |
Website: | http://www.hockeyeastonline.com |
Map: | Map - College Hockey - Hockey East states.svg |
Map Size: | 250 |
The Hockey East Association, also known as Hockey East, is a college ice hockey conference which operates entirely in New England. It participates in the NCAA's Division I as a hockey-only conference.[1]
Hockey East came into existence in 1984 for men's hockey when most of its current members split from what is today known as ECAC Hockey, after disagreements with the Ivy League members. The women's league began play in 2002.[2] [3]
On October 5, 2011, the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish (an ACC member outside football) announced they would be joining Hockey East as the conference's first non-New England school in 2013 after the CCHA folded.[4] On March 22, 2016, Notre Dame subsequently announced their men's hockey team would leave Hockey East for the Big Ten Conference at the start of the 2017–2018 season.[5] The University of Connecticut (UConn) and Hockey East jointly announced on June 21, 2012, that UConn's men's team, then in Atlantic Hockey, would join the school's women's team in Hockey East in 2014.[6] On October 24, 2013, Merrimack College, already a member of the Hockey East men's league, announced that it would upgrade its women's team from club level to full varsity status effective in 2015 and join the Hockey East women's league.[7]
On May 2, 2017, the College of the Holy Cross announced that it would join Hockey East for women's hockey only starting in 2018–19.[8]
There are currently 12 member schools, with 11 participating in the men's division and 10 in the women's division.[9] [10]
Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts | 1863 | Private/Catholic (Jesuit) | 14,640 | $3,827,000,000 | ACC | Eagles | Eagles | |||
Boston, Massachusetts | 1839 | Private/Non-sectarian (formerly Methodist) | 31,766 | $3,401,000,000 | Patriot League | Terriers | Terriers | |||
Storrs, Connecticut | 1881 | Public | 32,669 | $799,000,000 | Huskies | Huskies | ||||
Worcester, Massachusetts | 1843 | Private/Catholic (Jesuit) | 2,787 | $1,043,000,000 | Patriot League | Crusaders | ||||
Orono, Maine | 1865 | Public | 11,222 | $444,900,000 | America East | Black Bears | Black Bears | |||
1863 | 27,269 | $507,000,000 | Atlantic 10 | Minutemen | ||||||
Lowell, Massachusetts | 1894 | 18,369 | $149,000,000 | America East | River Hawks | |||||
North Andover, Massachusetts | 1947 | Private/Catholic (Augustinian) | 5,418 | $53,601,816 | MAAC | Warriors | Warriors | |||
Durham, New Hampshire | 1866 | Public | 14,761 | $475,000,000 | America East | Wildcats | Wildcats | |||
Boston, Massachusetts | 1898 | Private/Non-sectarian | 20,749 | $1,446,000,000 | CAA | Huskies | Huskies | |||
Providence, Rhode Island | 1917 | Private/Catholic (Dominican) | 4,816 | $234,200,000 | Big East | Friars | Friars | |||
Burlington, Vermont | 1791 | Public | 11,999 | $835,000,000 | America East | Catamounts | Catamounts |
University of Notre Dame | Notre Dame, Indiana | Fighting Irish (Men) | 2013 | 2017 | Big Ten (affiliate) |
Colors = id:men value:rgb(0.6,0.6,1) legend:men id:women value:rgb(0.5,0.8,0.5) legend:women id:both value:rgb(0.5,0.8,0.8) legend:both id:line value:black id:bg value:white
PlotData= width:15 textcolor:black shift:(5,-5) anchor:from fontsize:s
bar:BC color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2002 text:Boston College (men, 1984–present) bar:BC color:both from:06/01/2002 till:end text:(women, 2002–present) bar:BU color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2005 text:Boston University (men, 1984–present) bar:BU color:both from:06/01/2005 till:end text:(women, 2005–present) bar:Low color:men from:06/01/1984 till:end text:UMass Lowell (men, 1984–present) bar:Mne color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2002 text:Maine (men, 1984–present) bar:Mne color:both from:06/01/2002 till:end text:(women, 2002–present) bar:NH color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2002 text:New Hampshire (men, 1984–present) bar:NH color:both from:06/01/2002 till:end text:(women, 2002–present) bar:Nes color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2002 text:Northeastern (men, 1984–present) bar:Nes color:both from:06/01/2002 till:end text:(women, 2002–present) bar:Pro color:men from:06/01/1984 till:06/01/2002 text:Providence (men, 1984–present) bar:Pro color:both from:06/01/2002 till:end text:(women, 2002–present) bar:Mer color:men from:06/01/1989 till:06/01/2015 text:Merrimack (men, 1989–present) bar:Mer color:both from:06/01/2015 till:end shift:(-20) text:(women, 2015–present) bar:Mas color:men from:06/01/1994 till:end text:Massachusetts (men, 1994–present) bar:Con color:women from:06/01/2002 till:06/01/2014 text:UConn (women, 2002–present) bar:Con color:both from:06/01/2014 till:end text:(men, 2014–present) bar:Ver color:both from:06/01/2005 till:end text:Vermont (both, 2005–present) bar:ND color:men from:06/01/2013 till:06/01/2017 text:Notre Dame (men, 2013–2017) bar:HC color:women from:06/01/2018 till:end shift:(-130) text:Holy Cross (women, 2018–present)
ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:2 start:01/01/1984
Teams' records against current conference opponents.
See main article: List of Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament champions.
The Hockey East Championship Game has been held in Boston since 1987, first at the Boston Garden and now the TD Garden,[11] since 1996.[12] The first two were held in Providence, Rhode Island at the Providence Civic Center (now the Dunkin' Donuts Center).
The final game and the semifinal games are held on consecutive nights in mid-March at the Garden. The quarterfinal round takes place the previous weekend. The top eight teams in the league advance to the quarterfinal round: the quarterfinal round series are 2-out-of-3 series with all games played at the higher seed's rink. There have been two cases where the #8 seed won on the #1 team's ice.[13]
See main article: List of Hockey East Women's Ice Hockey Tournament champions. The Hockey East Championship was held in Boston from its inception in 2003 until 2007. The event was held at Northeastern's Matthews Arena in 2003 and 2004 before moving to BU's Walter Brown Arena in 2005. The tournament returned to Matthews Arena in 2006, was held at UNH's Whittemore Center in 2007, and at UConn's Mark Edward Freitas Ice Forum in 2008. The tournament went back to UNH in 2009, Providence in 2010, and the last campus to host was Boston University in 2011. The tournament moved to Hyannis, Massachusetts in 2012, and Lawler Arena on the Merrimack College campus in North Andover, Massachusetts in 2016.
Boston College, Boston University, and Northeastern all take part in the annual Beanpot tournament with Harvard of ECAC Hockey.
The previously existing rivalry between Boston College and Notre Dame, the Holy War on Ice, became a conference matchup with Notre Dame's arrival in Hockey East. The two are rivals in other sports as well, as both are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference for most sports (though Notre Dame's football team remains independent, they play BC in that sport on a regular basis). Maine also has a rivalry with New Hampshire, often called "The Border War". Providence and UConn also have a rivalry which spills over from the basketball court.
— | 135 | 1979 | 2024 | ||
— | 282 | 1918 | 2024 | ||
Lefty Smith – John "Snooks" Kelley Memorial Trophy | 46 | 1969 | 2024 | ||
— | 135 | 1979 | 2024 | ||
67 | 1929 | 2024 |
Boston College | Conte Forum | 7,884 | 1988 | |
Boston University | Agganis Arena (men) Walter Brown Arena (women) | 6,224 3,806 | 2005 1971 | |
Connecticut | Toscano Family Ice Forum | 2,600 | 2023 | |
Holy Cross | Hart Center | 1,600 | 1975 | |
Maine | Alfond Sports Arena | 5,641 | 1977 | |
Massachusetts | Mullins Center | 8,329 | 1993 | |
Massachusetts Lowell | Tsongas Center | 6,496 | 1998 | |
Merrimack | Merrimack Athletics Complex | 2,549 | 1972 | |
New Hampshire | Whittemore Center | 6,501 | 1995 | |
Northeastern | Matthews Arena | 4,666 | 1910 | |
Providence | Schneider Arena | 3,030 | 1973 | |
Vermont | Gutterson Fieldhouse | 4,003 | 1963 |
At the conclusion of each regular season schedule the coaches of each Hockey East team vote which players they choose to be on the three All-Conference Teams:[14] first team, second team and rookie team (except for 1985–86 when no rookie team was selected). Additionally they vote to award up to 6 individual trophies to an eligible player at the same time. Hockey East also awards a Conference Tournament Most Valuable Player and names a tournament all-star team, which are voted on at the conclusion of the conference tournament. Four of these awards have been bestowed every year that Hockey East has been in operation.[15] In addition, the Scoring Champion and Goaltending Champions are named based solely on statistics the players made during the season.
First Team | 1984–85 | |
Second Team | 1984–85 | |
Third Team | 2016–17 | |
Rookie Team | 1984–85 | |
All-Tournament Team | 1985 |
Lamoriello Trophy | 1988 | |
Charlie Holt Team Sportsmanship Award | 1991–92 |
The award for the top HEA player each year is the Cammi Granato Award, awarded since 2009. The NCAA Division I Women's Ice Hockey Player of the year, the Patty Kazmaier Award, has been won by HEA players Brooke Whitney (Northeastern) in 2002, Alex Carpenter (Boston College) in 2015, Kendall Coyne (Northeastern) in 2016, Daryl Watts (Boston College) in 2018, and Aerin Frankel (Northeastern) in 2021.
Since the 2019–2020 season, Hockey East games have aired regionally on NESN and are available in the rest of the United States and in Canada on Paramount+ and SportsLive.[16] [17] [18]
Games previously aired nationally on NBCSN through the 2016 Hockey East Championship game,[19] [20] and on American Sports Network prior to the service's closure.[21]
On April 6, 2022, Hockey East reached a six-year media rights agreement with ESPN and ESPN+ that will bring games to ESPN's television and streaming platforms;[22]