NCAA Division II independent schools are teams that compete in NCAA ice hockey but are not members of a conference. There are currently no independents at the Division II level, however, several teams were previously independents while under D-II classification.
As of 2022, only six teams play at the Division II level with all belonging to the same conference (Northeast-10 Conference).
The NCAA did not start numerical classification until 1973. Prior to that teams played either in the University Division, which became Division I, or the College Division, which was split into Divisions II and III. College Division independents are listed here for reference as a majority of the College Division programs joined the Division II level regardless of where their respective schools were reclassified.
During the 1960s and 70s most western schools competed in the NAIA and did not fall under the jurisdiction of the NCAA. This began to change once the NCAA instituted the Division II Tournament in 1978. In some cases NCAA teams were invited to participate in the NAIA tournament, leaving the ordering of schools at that time unclear.
School | Team | Location | Years | Subsequent conference(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chargers[1] | 1986–1987 1992–1998 | Played one season at the Division II level after transferring from NAIA before raising to the D-I level. Returned to D-II when the national tournament was restarted and left in preparation to join a D-I conference (CHA). Currently played in the WCHA. | |||
Beavers[2] | 1965–1967 | Currently plays in NEHC. | |||
Falcons[3] | 1998–1999 | Played one season at the Division II level before raising to Division I. Currently plays in the MAAC's successor conference, Atlantic Hockey. | |||
Soaring Eagles[4] | 1974–1976 | Currently plays in UCHC. | |||
Foresters[5] | 1965–1984 | Remained an independent at the D-III level. Currently plays in the NCHA. | |||
Terriers[6] | 1967–1968 | Raised to Division I in 1983. Became University of Massachusetts Lowell in 1993. Currently plays in Hockey East. | |||
Mavericks[7] | 1969–1980 1992–1996 | Left NCHA in 1992 to compete fully at the Division II level. Program was raised to D-I four years later due to the lack of interest from other D-II schools. Became Minnesota State University in 2000. | |||
Pilgrims[8] | 1969–1971 | Currently plays in NEHC. | |||
Bison[9] | 1964–1966† | Currently plays in CCC. | |||
Panthers[10] | 1971–1973 | ||||
Eagles[11] | 2016–2019 | ||||
Vikings[12] | 1964–1967† | Currently plays in MASCAC. | |||
Huskies[13] | 1964–1980† | Program was promoted to Division I in 1987. Currently plays in the NCHC. | |||
Oles[14] | 1950–1974† | School left the MIAC in 1950 and returned in 1974. | |||
Golden Eagles[15] | 1973–1976 | Founded ice hockey division of SUNYAC in 1992. | |||
Knights[16] | 1975–1976 | Founded ice hockey division of SUNYAC in 1992. | |||
Cardinals[17] | 1975–1976 | Founded ice hockey division of SUNYAC in 1992. | |||
Pointers[18] | 1981–1984 | Remained an independent at the D-III level. Currently plays in the WIAC. | |||
School | Team | Location | Years | Subsequent conference(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Warriors | 1964–1966† | Merged with University of Massachusetts Boston in 1982. | |||
1969–1971 | Suspended program in 1987. | ||||
Oilers[19] | 1996–1998 | Joined Division I CHA after one year in the MCHA. Program was suspended in 2004. | |||
Golden Eagles[20] | 1998–1999 | Was forced to leave the MCHA in 2009 due to NCAA regulations barring higher-tier teams from participating in Division III conferences. Suspended program when no other nearby Division II schools were willing to start ice hockey programs. | |||
1971–1972 1974–1975 | School changed name to Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts before dropping ice hockey in 2003. | ||||