St. Lawrence Saints women's ice hockey

St. Lawrence Saints women's ice hockey

University St. Lawrence University
Conference ECAC
Head coach Chris Wells
7th year, 1319829
Arena Appleton Arena
Capacity: 3,200
Location Canton, New York
Colors Scarlet and Brown

             

NCAA Tournament Frozen Four
2001, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Appearances
2001, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012
Conference Tournament Champions
2012

The St. Lawrence Saints represent St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. The Saints play at Appleton Arena and are part of the Eastern College Athletic Conference. In 2001, St. Lawrence participated in the inaugural NCAA Championship tournament. Their current head coach is St. Lawrence alumna Chris Wells, who is in his second season, and has a record of 131 wins, 98 losses, and 29 ties.

History

Beginning as a club team, the women's program has seen great success since entering Division I in 1997. Currently, the team has made five Frozen Four appearances in the eight years since the creation of a Women's NCAA Division I tournament. With the women's appearance in inaugural Frozen Four (2001), St. Lawrence became the first school to have both their men and women's programs in the NCAA Division I ice hockey tournament in the same year.[1] The women's team also recorded the first ever win in the history of the NCAA Women's Frozen Four.[2]

The first women's hockey game was played in 1974, as a club program. The women's team transitioned to a Division III program in 1979, and won three consecutive ECAC Division III tournaments in 1990, 1991, and 1992.[3]

Following the 2007-08 season, Head Coach Paul Flanagan left St. Lawrence to a position with Syracuse University. Flanagan was the women's program's all-time winningest coach with a nine-season record of 230–83–24. Then Men's Associate Head Coach, Chris Wells was appointed to replace him[4] and in his first season coached the team to a berth in the national championship tournament with a record of 24–11–3.

Year by year

Year Wins Losses Ties Coach Postseason
2014–15 19 12 5 Chris Wells
2013–14 13 19 3 Chris Wells
2012–13 19 14 5 Chris Wells
2011–12 24 10 4 Chris Wells
2010–11 16 18 2 Chris Wells
2009–10 16 14 7 Chris Wells
2008-09 24 11 3 Chris Wells
2007–08 28 10 1 Paul Flanagan
2006–07 29 8 3 Paul Flanagan
2005–06 31 5 2 Paul Flanagan
2004–05 28 8 5 Paul Flanagan
2003–04 28 10 1 Paul Flanagan
2002–03 22 9 4 Paul Flanagan
2001–02 22 10 4 Paul Flanagan
2000–01 24 8 3 Paul Flanagan
1999–2000 18 15 1 Paul Flanagan
1998–99 11 18 2 Ron Waske
1997–98 8 16 3 Ron Waske
1996–97 7 19 0 Pam Mahoney
1995–96 6 15 2 Bernie McKinnon
1994–95 9 10 0 Bernie McKinnon
1993–94 10 9 1 Bernie McKinnon
1992–93 10 8 2 Bernie McKinnon
1991–92 8 9 1 Bernie McKinnon
1990–91 5 11 3 Bernie McKinnon
1989–90 4 13 1 Bernie McKinnon
1988–89 7 16 0 Bernie McKinnon
1987–88 7 11 0 Bernie McKinnon
1986–87 14 9 0 Bernie McKinnon
1985–86 9 10 1 Bernie McKinnon
1984–85 12 7 0 Bernie McKinnon
1983–84 14 5 0 Bernie McKinnon
1982–83 12 7 1 Bernie McKinnon
1981–82 12 5 1 Bernie McKinnon
1980–81 8 10 1 Bernie McKinnon
1979–80 12 4 0 Bernie McKinnon
1978–79 11 5 0 Bernie McKinnon

[5]

Coaches

Years Coach Record
1974 Bill Coakley 1–1–1
1974–77 Tom McDonald
1978–1997 Bernie McKinnon 170–164–14
1996–97 Ron Waske/Pam Seaborn 17–19–0
1997–99 Ron Waske 19–34–5
1999–2008 Paul Flanagan 230–83–24
2008–present Chris Wells 131–98–29

Olympians

Notable players

Scoring leaders

Player Years played Points
Sabrina Harbec 2004–08 217
Rebecca Russell 2001–05 178
Chelsea Grills 2003–08 167
Carson Duggan 2000–04 159
Gina Kingsbury 2000-04 152

[8]

Awards and honors

All-America honors

Patty Kazmaier Award finalists

Main article: Patty Kazmaier Award
Year Player Position
2008 Sabrina Harbec Forward
2007 Sabrina Harbec Forward
2006 Sabrina Harbec

Jessica Moffat

Forward

Goalie

In 2006, Harbec was a top three finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award. She was the first St. Lawrence player to be a finalist for the award.[23]

See also

References

  1. St. Lawrence University: Sesquicentennial
  2. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/history/index?dec=/printer-decorator
  3. St. Lawrence University: Women's Hockey
  4. St. Lawrence University: Women's Hockey
  5. http://www.uscho.com/stats/teamYxY.php/st-lawrence-saints/womens-college-hockey/team,slu/gender,w.html
  6. http://www.stlawu.edu/athletics/saints/women%27s+hockey/story/4089
  7. http://www.stlawu.edu/graduates/amazing.html
  8. http://www.stlawu.edu/athletics/sites/stlawu.edu.athletics/files/whockeynotes.pdf
  9. http://www.dartmouth.edu/~news/releases/2002/march/031402.html
  10. "Karen Thatcher wins prestigious Sarah Devens Award" (PDF). Hockey East. April 11, 2006. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  11. http://www.ncaa.com/sports/m-hockey/spec-rel/031010aaa.html
  12. http://www.brownbears.com/sports/w-hockey/spec-rel/030309aad.html
  13. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/2009-10/20091210_W_Wkly_Awards
  14. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/tournament/Women_All-Tournament_Teams.pdf
  15. April 3, 2009. "Locke Named Sarah Devens Award Winner". ECAC Hockey. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  16. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/2009-10/20091910_W_Wkly_Awards
  17. http://www.brownbears.com/sports/w-hockey/spec-rel/030309aad.html
  18. http://ecachockey.com/women/2009-10/2009_Women-s_Preseaon_All-League_Team.pdf
  19. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/2009-10/Weekly_Awards/20092610_W_Wkly_Awards
  20. http://www.ecachockey.com/women/history/index?dec=/printer-decorator
  21. http://www.stlawu.edu/ucomm/digest/2006/digest0506review.html
  22. http://www.stlawu.edu/ucomm/digest/2008/news_digest033108.html
  23. http://www.stlawu.edu/students/honors.html