2009–10 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season

2009–10 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season
National Champions
Hockey East Tournament Champions
Beanpot Champions
NCAA Championship Game, W 5–0 vs. Wisconsin
Hockey East Championship, W 7–6 (OT) vs. Maine
Beanpot Championship, W 4–3 vs. Boston University
Conference 2nd Hockey East
Home ice Kelley Rink
Rankings
USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine #1
USCHO.com/CBS College Sports #3
Record
Overall 29–10–3
Home 14–2–0
Road 7–6–3
Neutral 8–2–0
Coaches and Captains
Head Coach Jerry York
Assistant Coaches Mike Cavanaugh
Greg Brown
Jim Logue
Captain(s) Matt Price
Alternate captain(s) Ben Smith, Matt Lombardi
Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey seasons
« 2008–09 2010–11 »

The 2009–2010 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey team represented Boston College in the 2009–2010 college hockey season. The team was coached by Jerry York, '67, his sixteenth season behind the bench at Boston College. The Eagles played their home games at Kelley Rink on the campus of Boston College, and competed in Hockey East.

Boston College defeated Wisconsin 5–0 in the 2010 Frozen Four Championship Game, earning the school's fourth national championship and second title in three years. The Eagles defeated Alaska and Yale in the Northeast Regional in Worcester, earning them a berth in the Frozen Four to be played at Ford Field in Detroit. BC defeated Miami (OH) 7–1 in the national semifinal, the fourth time in five years that the Eagles ended the RedHawks' season in the NCAA Tournament, before meeting Wisconsin in the final. The game was played before a record crowd of 37,592, the largest to attend an indoor hockey game.[1] The 5–0 win in the National Championship Game was also Jerry York's 850th career victory.

After finishing second behind New Hampshire in the 2009–2010 Hockey East Regular Season, the Eagles won the 2010 Hockey East Tournament, defeating Maine 7–6 in overtime in the championship game, gaining their record ninth league title. BC also won the 2010 Beanpot Tournament, defeating rivals Boston University 4–3 in the final game to earn their fifteenth championship.

On January 8, 2010, Boston College and Boston University faced off at Fenway Park in the first men's college hockey game played at the home of the Boston Red Sox. BU edged BC 3–2 before a sellout crowd of 38,472.[2]

Recruiting

Boston College added nine freshmen for the 2009–2010 season, including four defensemen, four forwards, and one goalie.

PlayerPositionNationalityNotes
Brian DumoulinDefense United StatesBiddeford, ME; Selected 51st overall by CAR in 2009 draft.
Philip SamuelssonDefense United StatesScottsdale, AZ; Selected 61st overall by PIT in 2009 draft.
Patrick WeyDefense United StatesPittsburgh, PA; Selected 115th overall by WAS in 2009 draft.
Pat MullaneForward United StatesWallingford, CT; Played alongside teammate Cam Atkinson at Avon Old Farms.
Brooks DyroffForward United StatesBoulder, CO; Also an accomplished young filmmaker.
Chris KreiderForward United StatesBoxford, MA; Selected 19th overall by NYR in 2009 draft.
Steven WhitneyForward United StatesReading, MA; Younger brother of teammate Joe Whitney.
Patch AlberDefense United StatesClifton Park, NY; Earned EJHL All-Star recognition with Boston in 2008–09.
Parker MilnerGoalie United StatesPittsburgh, PA; Voted Waterloo's Most Improved Player in 2008–09.

2009–2010 Roster

Departures from 2008–2009 Team

  • Anthony Aiello, D – Graduation
  • Tim Filangieri, D – Graduation
  • Tim Kunes, D – Graduation
  • Kyle Kucharski, F – Graduation
  • Brock Bradford, F – Graduation
  • Benn Ferriero, F – Graduation
  • Andrew Orpik, F – Graduation
  • Alex Kremer, G – left team
  • Nick Petrecki, D – signed with SJS

2009–2010 Eagles

Goaltenders
# State Player (Draft) Catches Year Hometown Previous team
1 Massachusetts John Muse L Junior East Falmouth, Massachusetts Nobles
30 Massachusetts Chris Venti L Sophomore Needham, Massachusetts Buckingham Browne & Nichols
35 Pennsylvania Parker Milner L Freshman Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Waterloo (USHL)
Defensemen
# State Player (Draft) Shoots Year Hometown Previous team
2 Maine Brian Dumoulin (CAR, 51st overall 2009) L Freshman Biddeford, Maine New Hampshire (EJHL)
4 Connecticut Tommy Cross – (BOS, 35th overall 2007) L Sophomore Simsbury, Connecticut Westminster School
5 Arizona Philip Samuelsson (PIT, 61st overall 2009) L Freshman Scottsdale, Arizona Chicago (USHL)
6 Pennsylvania Patrick Wey (WAS, 115th overall 2009) R Freshman Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Waterloo (USHL)
7 Minnesota Carl Sneep (PIT, 32nd overall 2006) R Senior Nisswa, Minnesota Brainerd
8 Massachusetts Edwin Shea R Sophomore Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Boston (EJHL)
23 Florida Malcolm Lyles R Sophomore Miami Gardens, Florida Deerfield Academy
27 New York (state) Patch Alber R Freshman Clifton Park, New York Boston (EJHL)
Forwards
# State Player (Draft) Shoots Year Hometown Previous team
9 Massachusetts Barry Almeida L Sophomore Springfield, Massachusetts Omaha (USHL)
10 Massachusetts Jimmy Hayes (TOR, 60th overall 2008) R Sophomore Dorchester, Massachusetts Lincoln (USHL)
11 Connecticut Pat Mullane L Freshman Wallingford, Connecticut Omaha (USHL)
12 Connecticut Ben SmithA (CHI, 169th overall 2008) R Senior Avon, Connecticut Westminster School
13 Connecticut Cam Atkinson (CBJ, 157th overall 2008) R Sophomore Greenwich, Connecticut Avon Old Farms
14 Colorado Brooks Dyroff R Freshman Boulder, Colorado Phillips Andover
15 Massachusetts Joe Whitney L Junior Reading, Massachusetts Lawrence Academy
17 Massachusetts Brian Gibbons L Junior Braintree, Massachusetts Salisbury School
19 Massachusetts Chris Kreider (NYR, 19th overall 2009) L Freshman Boxford, Massachusetts Phillips Andover
21 Massachusetts Steven Whitney R Freshman Reading, Massachusetts Lawrence Academy
22 Massachusetts Paul Carey (COL, 135th overall 2007) L Sophomore Weymouth, Massachusetts Indiana (USHL)
24 Massachusetts Matt Lombardi – A R Senior Milton, Massachusetts Governor's Academy
25 Ontario Matt Price – C R Senior Milton, Ontario Milton Icehawks (OPJHL)
28 Connecticut Tommy Atkinson L Sophomore Greenwich, Connecticut Avon Old Farms

Standings

Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#11 New Hampshire2715663698773918147131122
#1 Boston College*2716833599614229103171104
Boston University27131222893913818173123124
Maine27131222895903919173143130
Massachusetts–Lowell2712114288272391916411492
Merrimack27121322682853716192109116
Massachusetts27131402672863618180105117
Vermont2791172578823917157113112
Northeastern2711142247087341616293100
Providence27518414468434102046899
Championship: Boston College
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Final rankings: USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Top 15 Poll

Schedule

2009–2010 Regular Season

DateOpponentTimeScoreRink
Oct. 4vs. St. Francis Xavier (exhib.)5:00 p.m.W 4–1Kelley Rink
Oct. 9vs. USA U-18 (exhib.)7:00 p.m.W 6–3Kelley Rink
Oct. 18at Vermont*5:05 p.m.L 4–1Gutterson Fieldhouse
Oct. 23at Notre Dame7:30 p.m.W 3–2Joyce Center
Oct. 30vs. Merrimack*7:00 p.m.W 3–2Kelley Rink
Nov. 1at Merrimack*7:00 p.m.L 5–3Lawlor Arena
Nov. 6at New Hampshire*7:00 p.m.T 4–4Whittemore Center
Nov. 7vs. Northeastern*7:00 p.m.W 5–1Kelley Rink
Nov. 14vs. Vermont*7:00 p.m.W 7–1Kelley Rink
Nov. 15vs. Vermont*4:00pmL 3–2Kelley Rink
Nov. 20at Maine*7:00 p.m.W 4–3Alfond Arena
Nov. 21at Maine*7:00 p.m.T 3–3Alfond Arena
Nov. 27vs. Clarkson5:00 p.m.W 6–5Kelley Rink
Dec. 4at Massachusetts*7:00 p.m.W 3–1Mullins Center
Dec. 5at Boston University* (Green Line Rivalry)7:00pmW 4–1Agganis Arena
Dec. 9at Harvard7:00 p.m.W 3–2Bright Hockey Center
Dec. 12at Providence*7:00 p.m.W 3–1Schneider Arena
Jan. 1vs. St. Lawrence %4:00 p.m.L 5–2Magness Arena
Jan. 2vs. Denver %7:00 p.m.L 4–3Magness Arena
Jan. 8vs. Boston University* (Green Line Rivalry)8:00pmL 3–2Fenway Park
Jan. 12vs. Providence*7:00 p.m.W 4–1Kelley Rink
Jan. 15vs. Maine*7:00 p.m.W 6–1Kelley Rink
Jan. 22vs. Boston University* (Green Live Rivalry)7:30 p.m.L 4–3 (OT)Kelley Rink
Jan. 23at UMass Lowell*7:00 p.m.L 3–1Tsongas Arena
Jan. 29vs. Providence*7:00pmW 5–2Kelley Rink
Feb. 1vs. HarvardBeanpot5:00 p.m.W 6–0TD Garden
Feb. 5at Massachusetts*7:00 p.m.W 7–1Mullins Center
Feb. 8vs. Boston University (Green Line Rivalry)Beanpot Champ.8:00 p.m.W 4–3TD Garden
Feb. 12at. UMass Lowell*7:00 p.m.L 4–1Tsongas Arena
Feb. 13vs. UMass Lowell*5:00 p.m.W 2–1Kelley Rink
Feb. 19at Northeastern*7:00 p.m.L 3–2Matthews Arena
Feb. 21vs. Northeastern*7:00pmW 7–1Kelley Rink
Feb. 23vs. Merrimack*7:00 p.m.W 7–0Kelley Rink
Feb. 26vs. Massachusetts*7:00 p.m.W 2–1 (OT)Kelley Rink
Mar. 5at New Hampshire*7:30 p.m.T 3–3Whittemore Center
Mar. 6vs. New Hampshire*7:00 p.m.W 3–2Kelley Rink

All times Eastern
* = Hockey East Conference Play
% = 2010 Denver Cup in Denver, CO
Beanpot = 58th Annual Beanpot Tournament in Boston, MA

2010 Post-Season

DateOpponentTimeScoreRink
Mar. 12vs. Massachusetts
Hockey East Quarterfinals
7:00 p.m.W 6–5Kelley Rink
Mar. 13vs. Massachusetts
Hockey East Quarterfinals
7:00 p.m.W 5–2Kelley Rink
Mar. 19vs. Vermont
Hockey East Semifinals – Boston, MA
5:00 p.m.W 3–0TD Garden
Mar. 20vs. Maine
Hockey East Championship – Boston, MA
7:00 p.m.W 7–6 (OT)TD Garden
Mar. 27vs. Alaska
NCAA Northeast Regional Semifinal – Worcester, MA
1:30 p.m.W 3–1DCU Center
Mar. 28vs. Yale
NCAA Northeast Regional Final – Worcester, MA
5:30 p.m.W 9–7DCU Center
Apr. 8vs. Miami (OH)
NCAA Frozen Four Semifinal – Detroit, MI
8:40 p.m.W 7–1Ford Field
Apr. 10vs. Wisconsin
NCAA Frozen Four Championship – Detroit, MI
7:00 p.m.W 5–0Ford Field

All times Eastern

Awards and honors

2010 USCHO Coach of the Year

2010 Len Ceglarski Individual Sportsmanship Award

2010 NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player

  • Ben Smith, F

2010 Hockey East Tournament MVP

  • Matt Lombardi, F

2010 Beanpot Tournament MVP

  • John Muse, G

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-04-14. Retrieved 2010-09-24.
  2. http://hockeyeastonline.com/men/recaps10.php?mbc_bu_1.j08
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.