| Michigan Wolverines | ||
|---|---|---|
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| University | University of Michigan | |
| Conference | CCHA | |
| Head coach | Red Berenson | |
| 28th year, 752–352–77[1] | ||
| Arena | Yost Ice Arena Capacity: 6,637[2] |
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| Location | Ann Arbor, Michigan | |
| Colors | Blue and Maize
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| Fight song | The Victors | |
| NCAA Tournament Champions | ||
| 1948, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1964, 1996, 1998[3] | ||
| NCAA Tournament Frozen Four | ||
| 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1977, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2011[3] | ||
| NCAA Tournament Appearances | ||
| 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1977, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 [3] | ||
| Conference Tournament Champions | ||
| 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2010[3] | ||
| Conference Regular Season Champions | ||
| 1952-53, 1955-56, 1963-64, 1991-92, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1995-96, 1996-97, 1999-00, 2001-02, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2007-08, 2010-11[4] | ||
| Current uniform | ||
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The Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team is the college ice hockey team that represents the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Earning varsity status in 1922, the program has completed its 90th season. The school's team currently competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, although it competed in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association between 1959 and 1981.[3] The team has played in 22 consecutive NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournaments, dating back to 1991; this is an NCAA record.[3] The Wolverines have won an NCAA-record nine Division I NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championships,[3] seven of which came during a 17-year stretch between 1948 and 1964. Two more championships were won under current head coach Red Berenson in 1996 and 1998.[3]
Michigan has had many successes as a program including a record-setting number of championships, total championship tournament appearances, and consecutive tournament appearances. In 2010, Michigan hosted a Guinness verified world record crowd in excess of 104,000 in an event known as The Big Chill. Players from the program have earned numerous honors, professional championships, international championships, individual statistical championships, team and individual records. The team is currently led by Berenson, who for nearly fifty years has continued to hold the school single-season goal scoring record, and who was the second player in the program's history to win the Stanley Cup. The program has dozens of National Hockey League alumni and over twenty current players. Their traditional rival is Michigan State and the teams have played an annual game at the Joe Louis Arena since 1990.
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In 1920, "as a result of the interest in the interclass and interfraternity leagues, in which twenty-two teams took part," an informal Michigan hockey team was organized to represent the university.[5][6] Mr. Le Mieux of the Engineering faculty, had played 12 years of professional hockey and offered his services as coach.[7][8] Because of the difficulty in securing intercollegiate competition, the 1920 team played a six-game schedule against an Ann Arbor team, Assumption College, and four games against teams from the Detroit Hockey League. The 1920 Michigan team, with Russell Barkell as the team's high scorer, compiled a 6-0 record and outscored opponents 27 to 7.[5][6] In February 1920, The Michigan Alumnus noted: "There is a big sentiment for a Varsity hockey team. The difficulties are the lack of a University rink, and the arranging of suitable competition."[9] In April 1920, The Michigan Chimes wrote:
"The record of our informal hockey team which was organized at the close of the January interclass sportsw, has been truly remarkable. With only two weeks of practice, it has defeated the three strongest Detroit teams. ... Unfortunately this one team of ours which seems able to win, and shows possibilities of great development has not as yet been recognized as a regular team."[10]
Later, The Michigan Chimes published a lengthy article pleading for the administration to recognize hockey as a varsity sport: "Agitation was started for the recognition of hockey as a varsity sport. What spell, what charm there is in that single appellation bestowed by custom on football, baseball, track, and recently basketball! What obstacles must be overcome, what sacrifices made, to attain the heights!"[7]
With the success of the informal Michigan hockey team in 1920, Michigan moved forward with the development of the hockey team. According to Wilfred Byron Shaw's four-volume history of the University of Michigan, "Hockey also had its beginning in 1921, with Richard Barss as Coach (1921-26). Although officially not on the Western Conference athletic program, hockey provided a number of Big Ten teams with competition."[11] The 1921 season saw the development of intercollegiate hockey at Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.[12][13] In January 1921, Michigan and Wisconsin scheduled four games to be played on consecutive weekends from February 18 to February 26, 1921.[14] The 1921 team began the season with two games against the Michigan College of Mines at Houghton, Michigan. Michigan lost the first game 3-0 but won the second game 4-3. Russell Barkell, the first standout hockey player at Michigan, was the Michigan star in both games against the College of Mines.[15] However, the remainder of the season, including the planned four-game series with Wisconsin, was cancelled due to warm weather. The Michigan Alumnus reported in March 1921: "The warmth of the present winter has made necessary the cancelling of all scheduled hockey games. The informal team had started off well, but lack of ice made the development of a really powerful team impossible."[16]
In December 1921, The Michigan Alumnus wrote: "There will be much pushing of the puck this year. The Athletic Association hopes to have more money to spend for Michigan skaters, and plans to encourage hockey more than ever before. We used to spend our time 'doing the grapevine,' but only because we were not fast enough for shinny. More power to the shinny artists."[17]
Over the course of a 10-game schedule, Michigan's 1922 squad finished with a record of 5-5. The team opened the 1922 season with a 5-1 victory over Michigan Agricultural College (now known as Michigan State University) in the first hockey match between the rival schools.[18] They followed with a 3-2 overtime victory over the Detroit Rayls on January 16, 1922. Later that month, the Notre Dame hockey team defeated Michigan 3-2 in overtime, marking the first defeat for the Michigan hockey team on its home rink in three years.[19] The team traveled to Houghton for night games against the Michigan School of Mines, losing both games by scores of 2-1 and 5-2.[20] The Wolverines beat the School of Mines 4-1 in a rematch in Ann Arbor. In the season's seventh game, Michigan defeated Wisconsin 6-3 in the first match between Western Conference hockey teams.[18] Following another loss to Notre Dame (7-2), Michigan defeated Wisconsin for the second time by a score of 5-1; Barkell scored three goals against Wisconsin and was the high scorer in the game.[21] The season ended with a 5-2 victory over the Windsor Monarchs.[18]
In March 1922, The Michigan Alumnus reported that athletic director Fielding H. Yost had stated that recognition of hockey as a minor sport was very probable in 1923. Yost expressed the view that the sport should be either intramural or intercollegiate and not an informal sport. The same article noted that Michigan's hockey team had already met Notre Dame, Michigan School of Mines, Michigan Agricultural College and many Detroit teams.[22]
According to Bacon's history of the Michigan hockey program, the first "official" college hockey game played west of the Alleghenies was a game between Michigan and Wisconsin, played on January 12, 1923, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The game went into overtime with Michigan prevailing by a score of 2-1. The Capital Times in Madison reported on the game as follows: "Michigan counted the first point, when Kahn, by clever work, rushed the ball through the Badger defense for a goal. In the second period Blodgett for Wisconsin tied the score. The first five minute period of overtime found both teams battling desperately. The second five minutes was a repetition. The Wolverines seemed held on from the side, slipped the puck through the goal for the winning point."[23] In another account, the Madison newspaper wrote that, "after outplaying Michigan all the way through, Wisconsin lost in the second overtime period when a lucky shot went for a goal."[24] Michigan again defeated Wisconsin 1-0 in the second game of the season, played the following day, January 13, 1923.[24]
Barss coached the Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team from 1922 to 1927. In five years as the head coach, the Michigan hockey team compiled a record of 26-21-4.[25]
As the popularity of college hockey grew in the early 1920s, other colleges looked to Barss' pupils for coaching candidates. In January 1923, former Michigan hockey star Russell Barkell was hired as the coach of the hockey team at Williams College.[26]
In February 1924, after a 3-0 victory by Michigan over Wisconsin, a Madison newspaper praised the defensive play of the Barss-coached Wolverines: "With an almost air-tight defense and a definite scoring attack the Michigan hockey team defeated the Badger six by a score of 3 to 0 yesterday afternoon. Wisconsin could not stop Michigan's fast team work and was unable to penetrate their defense to take any close shots at the goal."[27]
Conference affiliation since 1951[28]
| Year | Champion | Score | Runner-up | City | Arena | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1948 | Michigan | 8–4 | Dartmouth | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [29] |
| 1951 | Michigan | 7–1 | Brown | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [30] |
| 1952 | Michigan | 4–1 | Colorado College | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [31] |
| 1953 | Michigan | 7–3 | Minnesota | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [32] |
| 1955 | Michigan | 5–3 | Colorado College | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [33] |
| 1956 | Michigan | 7–5 | Michigan Tech | Colorado Springs, CO | Broadmoor Arena | [34] |
| 1964 | Michigan | 6–3 | Denver | Denver, CO | University of Denver Arena | [35] |
| 1996 | Michigan | 3–2 | Colorado College | Cincinnati, OH | Riverfront Coliseum | [36] |
| 1998 | Michigan | 3–2 | Boston College | Boston, MA | Fleet Center | [37] |
| Season | Conference | Record | Head Coach |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1952-53 | WCHA | 12-4-0 | Vic Heyliger |
| 1955-56 | WCHA | 15-2-1 | Vic Heyliger |
| 1963-64 | WCHA | 12-2-0 | Al Renfrew |
| 1991-92 | CCHA | 22-7-3 | Red Berenson |
| 1993-94 | CCHA | 24-5-1 | Red Berenson |
| 1994-95 | CCHA | 22-4-1 | Red Berenson |
| 1995-96 | CCHA | 22-6-2 | Red Berenson |
| 1996-97 | CCHA | 21-3-3 | Red Berenson |
| 1999-00 | CCHA | 19-6-3 | Red Berenson |
| 2001-02 | CCHA | 19-5-4 | Red Berenson |
| 2003-04 | CCHA | 18-8-2 | Red Berenson |
| 2004-05 | CCHA | 23-3-2 | Red Berenson |
| 2007-08 | CCHA | 20-4-4 | Red Berenson |
| 2010-11 | CCHA | 20-7-1 | Red Berenson |
| Tournament | Conference | Championship Game Opponent | Score | Location | Head Coach |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | CCHA | Lake Superior State | 3-0 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 1996 | CCHA | Lake Superior State | 4-3 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 1997 | CCHA | Michigan State | 3-1 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 1999 | CCHA | Northern Michigan | 5-1 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 2002 | CCHA | Michigan State | 3-2 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 2003 | CCHA | Ferris State | 5-3 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 2005 | CCHA | Ohio State | 4-2 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 2008 | CCHA | Miami University | 2-1 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
| 2010 | CCHA | Northern Michigan | 2-1 | Joe Louis Arena Detroit, MI | Red Berenson |
This is a partial list of the last six seasons completed by the Wolverines.
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties
Records as of October 31st, 2011.[28]
| Season | GP | W | L | T | Finish | Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005–06 | 41 | 21 | 15 | 5 | T-3rd, CCHA | Lost in NCAA West Regional, 1–5 (North Dakota) |
| 2006–07 | 41 | 26 | 14 | 1 | 2nd, CCHA | Lost in NCAA West Regional, 5–8 (North Dakota) |
| 2007–08 | 43 | 33 | 6 | 4 | 1st, CCHA | Lost in NCAA Frozen Four, 4–5 (Notre Dame) |
| 2008–09 | 41 | 29 | 12 | 0 | 2nd, CCHA | Lost in NCAA East Regional, 0–2 (Air Force) |
| 2009–10 | 45 | 26 | 18 | 1 | 7th, CCHA | Lost in NCAA Midwest Regional Final, 2–3 (Miami) |
| 2010-11 | 44 | 29 | 11 | 4 | 1st, CCHA | Lost in NCAA National Championship Game, 2–3 (Minnesota-Duluth) |
| 2011-12 | 41 | 24 | 13 | 4 | T-2nd, CCHA | Lost in NCAA Midwest Regional, 2–3 (Cornell) |
Yost Ice Arena: (1973–present)[2][38]
Top single-game crowds[39]
Top weekend series crowds[39]
Top single-game post-renovation crowds (1996-97 to present)[39]
Michigan has had numerous players recognized with prestigious awards and honors. The following is a summary of some of the other standout Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players.
As of August 4, 2011.[40]
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| # | St/Pr/Co | Player | Year | Hometown | Previous team | NHL rights |
| 30 | Adam Janecyk | Sophomore | Ada, Michigan | Sioux City (USHL) | None | |
| 31 | Shawn Hunwick (A) | Senior | Sterling Heights, Michigan | Alpena (NAHL) | None | |
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| # | St/Pr/Co | Player | Year | Hometown | Previous team | NHL rights |
| 2 | Greg Pateryn (A) | Senior | Sterling Heights, Michigan | Ohio (USHL) | MTL, trade from TOR | |
| 3 | Mike Chiasson | Freshman | Henderson, Nevada | Omaha (USHL) | None | |
| 4 | Kevin Clare | Sophomore | New Rochelle, New York | US NTDP (USHL) | None | |
| 6 | Brennan Serville | Freshman | Pickering, Ontario | Stouffville (OJHL) | WPG, 78th overall 2011 | |
| 13 | Lee Moffie | Junior | Wallingford, Connecticut | Waterloo (USHL) | SJS, 188th overall 2010 | |
| 24 | Jon Merrill | Sophomore | Brighton, Michigan | US NTDP (USHL) | NJD, 38th overall 2010 | |
| 26 | Mike Szuma | Freshman | Novi, Michigan | Michigan (NAHL) | None | |
| 37 | Mac Bennett | Sophomore | Narragansett, Rhode Island | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | MTL, 79th overall 2009 | |
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| # | St/Pr/Co | Player | Year | Hometown | Previous team | NHL rights |
| 7 | Phil Di Giuseppe | Freshman | Maple, Ontario | Villanova (OJHL) | None | |
| 9 | Luke Moffatt | Sophomore | Paradise Valley, Arizona | US NTDP (USHL) | COL, 197th overall 2010 | |
| 10 | Chris Brown | Junior | Flower Mound, Texas | US NTDP (USHL) | PHO, 36th overall 2009 | |
| 11 | Zach Hyman | Freshman | Toronto, Ontario | Hamilton (OJHL) | FLA, 123rd overall 2010 | |
| 14 | Kevin Lynch | Junior | Grosse Pointe, Michigan | US NTDP (USHL) | CBJ, 56th overall 2009 | |
| 17 | Andrew Sinelli | Freshman | Dexter, Michigan | Youngstown (USHL) | None | |
| 19 | Derek DeBlois | Sophomore | Narragansett, Rhode Island | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | None | |
| 20 | Travis Lynch | Freshman | White Lake, Michigan | Green Bay (USHL) | None | |
| 21 | A.J. Treais | Junior | Bloomfield Hills, Michigan | US NTDP (USHL) | None | |
| 22 | Jeff Rohrkemper | Junior | Grosse Pointe, Michigan | Sioux Falls (USHL) | None | |
| 23 | Luke Glendening (C) | Senior | Grand Rapids, Michigan | Hotchkiss (USHS–CT) | None | |
| 25 | David Wohlberg (A) | Senior | South Lyon, Michigan | US NTDP (USHL) | NJD, 172nd overall 2008 | |
| 27 | Alex Guptill | Freshman | Newmarket, Ontario | Waterloo (USHL) | DAL, 77th overall 2010 | |
| 39 | Lindsay Sparks | Junior | Oakville, Ontario | Oakville (OJHL) | None | |
The following individuals have been inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.[41]
The following players have been awarded the Hobey Baker Award.[42]
Jim McCauley (1984)
Michigan has had one hockey Academic All-American.[45]
Michigan has had ten players and one coach participate in the Winter Olympics. Six of these participants earned Olympic medals.[41]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players have been chosen as First team Division I All-Americans by the American Hockey Coaches Association.[74]
Michigan Wolverines Ice Hockey Players
The all-time Michigan single-season goal scoring leaders are Red Berenson (1961–62) and Dave Debol (1976–77) who have each totaled 43. Denny Felsner (1988–92) has totaled 139 in his career for the school record. Brendan Morrison holds the school record for both single-season and career assists with 57 (1996–97) and 182 (1994–97), respectively. Debol (99, 1976–77) and Morrison (284, 1994–97) hold the single-season and career points records, respectively.[75]
On defense, Marty Turco holds the single-season and career win records with 34 (1995–96) and 127 (1995–98). The single-season goals against average is held by Billy Sauer (1.95, 2007–08), while the career record is held by Shawn Hunwick (2.21, 2007–2012). Shawn Hunwick holds the single-season save percentage record, (.925, 2010–11), and also holds the career record (.924, 2007–2012). Montoya's 6 single-season shutouts (2003–2004) is the school record while Turco's 15 is the career record.[75]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players hold NCAA Division I national records:[76]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players formerly held NCAA Division I national records:[77]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey players have been national statistical champions:[78]
The following Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey teams hold NCAA Division I national records:[79]
In addition, the 2005 and 2007 teams led the nation in goals per game, and the 1996 and 1997 teams led the nation in both goals allowed per game and scoring margin per game.[80]
Current records[81]
| Tenure | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1922–27 | Joseph Barss | 5 | 26–21–4 | .549 |
| 1927–44 | Edward Lowrey | 17 | 124–136–21 | .479 |
| 1944–57 | Vic Heyliger | 13 | 228–61–13 | .776 |
| 1957–73 | Al Renfrew | 16 | 222–207–11 | .517 |
| 1973–80 | Dan Farrell | 7 | 135–129–6 | .511 |
| 1980 | Wilf Martin^ | 1^ | 1–1–0 | .500 |
| 1980–84 | John Giordano | 4 | 68–75–6 | .477 |
| 1984–present | Red Berenson | 28 | 752–352–77 | .669 |
| Totals | 8 coaches | 90 seasons | 1,556–982–138 | .607 |
^ Martin coached the first two games of the 1980–81 season before Giordano took over the coaching duties.
Including the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Michigan holds several NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship records: Tournaments (35), consecutive tournaments (22), current consecutive tournaments (22), Frozen Four appearances (24), championships (9).[82] Through the 2012 Tournament, the team has a 50–28 record in the NCAA Tournament, including a 25–15 record in the Frozen Four.[83] The following is the complete history of the Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team in the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship.[84]
| Year | Seed | First Round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | Notes |
| 4-team tournament | ||||||
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| 1948 |
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Boston College W 6–4 OT | Dartmouth College W 8–4 | Fastest consecutive goals record (0:05) still stands (Gordon McMillan and Wally Gacek) vs. Dartmouth[85] | |
| 1949 |
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Dartmouth College L 4–2 | Colorado College WC 10–4 |
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| 1950 |
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Boston University L 4–3 | Boston College WC 10–6 | vs. Boston College only tournament game with no penalties for either team[86] | |
| 1951 |
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Boston University W 8–2 | Brown University W 7–1 | Gil Burford's 9 career Frozen Four goals was a record until 1987.[87] | |
| 1952 |
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St. Lawrence W 9–3 | Colorado College W 4–1 |
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| 1953 |
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Boston University W 14–2 | Minnesota W 7–3 | 14 goals continues to be a tournament record.[85] | |
| 1954 |
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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute L 6–4 | Boston College WC 7–2 |
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| 1955 |
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Harvard University W 7–3 | Colorado College W 5–3 |
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| 1956 |
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St. Lawrence W 2–1 OT | Michigan Technological University W 7–5 |
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| 1957 |
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Harvard University W 6–1 | Colorado College L 13–6 |
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| 1962 |
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Clarkson University L 5–4 | St. Lawrence WC 5–1 |
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| 1964 |
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Providence College W 3–2 | Denver W 6–3 |
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| 5-team tournament | ||||||
| 1977 | W2 |
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Bowling Green W 7–5 | Boston University W 6–4 | Wisconsin L 6–5 OT | Shortest overtime championship game (0:23)[88] |
| 12-team tournament | ||||||
| 1991 | W3 | Cornell W 4–5 OT, 6–4, 9–3 | Boston University L 4–1, 8–1 |
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| 1992 | W1 | bye | Northern Michigan W 7–6 | Wisconsin L 4–2 |
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| 1993 | W2 | bye | Wisconsin W 4–3 OT | Maine L 4–3 OT |
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| 1994 | W1 | bye | Lake Superior State L 5–4 OT |
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| 1995 | W1 | bye | Wisconsin W 4–3 | Maine L 4–3 OT |
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Longest overtime tournament game at the time (100:28)[88] |
| 1996 | W2 | bye | Minnesota W 4–3 | Boston University W 4–0 | Colorado College W 3–2 OT |
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| 1997 | W1 | bye | Minnesota W 7–4 | Boston University L 3–2 |
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| 1998 | W3 | Princeton University W 2–1 | North Dakota W 4–3 | New Hampshire W 4–0 | Boston College W 3–2 OT | Marty Turco's 9 career Frozen Four wins and 2 career shutouts are former records.[85] |
| 1999 | E5 | Denver W 5–3 | New Hampshire L 2–1 OT |
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| 2000 | E5 | Colgate University W 4–3 OT | Maine L 5–2 |
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| 2001 | W3 | Mercyhurst College W 4–3 | St. Cloud State University W 4–3 | Boston College L 4–2 |
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| 2002 | W4 | St. Cloud State W 4–2 | Denver W 5–3 | Minnesota L 3–2 |
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| 16-team tournament | ||||||
| 2003 | MW3 | Maine W 2–1 | Colorado College W 5–3 | Minnesota L 3–2 OT |
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| 2004 | NE2 | New Hampshire W 4–1 | Boston College L 3–2 OT |
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| 2005 | MW2 | Wisconsin W 4–1 | Colorado College L 4–3 |
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| 2006 | W3 | North Dakota L 4–3 |
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| 2007 | W2 | North Dakota L 8–5 |
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| 2008 | E1 | Niagara W 5–1 | Clarkson W 2–0 | Notre Dame L 5–4 OT |
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| 2009 | E1 | Air Force L 2–0 |
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| 2010 | MW3 | Bemidji State W 5–1 | Miami L 3–2 2OT* |
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| 2011 | W2 | Nebraska-Omaha W 3–2 OT | Colorado College W 2–1 | North Dakota W 2–0 | Minnesota-Duluth L 2–3 OT* |
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| 2012 | MW1 | Cornell L 3–2 OT* |
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