Wide: | yes |
Holy War on Ice | |
Team1: | Boston College |
Team1logo: | Boston College Eagles wordmark.svg |
Team2: | Notre Dame |
Team2logo: | Notre Dame Fighting Irish logo.svg |
Firstmeeting: | December 20, 1969 Boston College 7, Notre Dame 3 |
Mostrecent: | November 24, 2023 Boston College 6, Notre Dame 1 |
Nextmeeting: | TBD |
Total: | 49 |
Series: | Boston College leads 25–22–2 |
Largestvictory: | Notre Dame, 14–3 (1971) |
Longeststreak: | Boston College, 4 (1977–1991) |
Longestunbeatenstreak: | Boston College, 8 (1995–2002) |
Currentstreak: | Boston College, 1 (2023–present) |
Currentunbeatenstreak: | Boston College, 1 (2023–present) |
Trophy: | Lefty Smith – John "Snooks" Kelley Memorial Trophy |
The Holy War on Ice refers to the college ice hockey series between Boston College and Notre Dame. Boston College is a member of the Hockey East conference, while Notre Dame is a member of the Big Ten for ice hockey. The two teams first met in 1969, predating the football rivalry from which the hockey series gets its name.
The teams play for the Lefty Smith – John "Snooks" Kelley Memorial Trophy.
The men's ice hockey series between the two schools originated in 1969, predating the football rivalry. Since Jerry York began his tenure as coach at BC in 1994, the series has been played regularly, receiving the moniker "Holy War on Ice," a reference to the football rivalry.[1] [2] [3]
Boston College leads the all-time series 25–22–2, with the last meeting resulting in a 6–1 Eagles' victory on November 24, 2023 in South Bend.
The victor of the game between the Eagles and Irish is awarded the Lefty Smith – John "Snooks" Kelley Memorial Trophy, named for the teams' coaches when the series began in 1969.[4]
In 2008, the two schools met in the 2008 Frozen Four final in Denver, CO, the first time the Eagles and Irish have met in the NCAA Tournament. Boston College skated to a 4–1 victory, claiming their third national championship and denying Notre Dame, a four-seed, the program's first.[5] [6]
Notre Dame briefly joined Boston College in Hockey East from 2013–14 to 2016–17.[7] The two teams met twice annually during those four seasons, and their first contest as conference foes took place outdoors at Frozen Fenway in Boston, MA, where the Eagles skated to a 4–3 victory. They also met once in the postseason during the 2014 Hockey East Tournament. In that series, which was the first year of Notre Dame's league membership, the 8th seeded Irish defeated the top seeded Eagles in a best-of-three Quarterfinals at Chestnut Hill.
While Notre Dame left Hockey East to join the Big Ten in 2017–18, the series continued with at least one game annually.
Despite not meeting during the regular season of 2020–21 due to the COVID-19 pandemic preventing inter-conference games, the two teams seemed destined to meet regardless. The Eagles and Irish were slated to face each other in the first round of the 2021 NCAA tournament, playing in the Northeast regional at the Times Union Center, in Albany, New York. However, before the postseason meeting could happen, Notre Dame was forced to withdraw from the tournament due to positive COVID-19 tests among the team's personnel; the match was ruled a no-contest as the Eagles automatically advanced to the Regional Final.
The series resumed in 2022 after a two-season hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Statistic | BC | ND | |
---|---|---|---|
Games played | align=center colspan=2 | 49 | |
Wins | 25 | 22 | |
Home wins | 10 | 8 | |
Road wins | 12 | 12 | |
Neutral site wins | 3 | 2 | |
Most goals scored in a game by one team | 11 ('72) | 14 ('71) | |
Most goals in a game by both teams | align=center colspan=2 | 17 (1971 – ND 14, BC 3) | |
Fewest goals in a game by both teams | align=center colspan=2 | 1 (2003 – ND 1, BC 0) | |
Fewest goals scored in a game by one team in a win | 2 ('15) | 1 ('03) | |
Most goals scored in a game by one team in a loss | 5 ('75) | 5 ('78, '89, '95) | |
Largest margin of victory | 7 ('72, '91) | 11 ('71) | |
Smallest margin of victory | 1 ('73, '97, '09, '14) | 1 ('75, '94, '03, '04, '10, '11, '14, '16) | |
Longest winning streak | 4 ('77–'91) | 3 ('70–'71, '74–'76, '03–'06) | |
Longest unbeaten streak | 8 ('95–'02) | 4 ('02–'06) |