2010–11 RPI Engineers women's ice hockey season

2010–11 Rensselaer Engineers women's ice hockey season
Conference 8 ECAC
Home ice Houston Field House
Rankings
USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Not ranked
USCHO.com/CBS College Sports Not ranked
Record
Overall 10–18–7
Home 5–5–6
Road 5–13–1
Coaches and Captains
Head Coach John Burke
Captain(s) Kendra Dunlop
Alternate captain(s) Alisa Harrison, Sydney O'Keefe

The Rensselaer Engineers represent Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in ECAC women's ice hockey. The Engineers participated in the ECAC playoffs did not qualify for the NCAA tournament.

Offseason

Recruiting

NamePositionHeightNationalityFormer Team
Nona LetuligasenoaDefense5–6 United StatesNorth American Hockey Academy
Missy MankeyForward5–4 United StatesMinnesota Jr. Whitecaps
Madison MarzarioDefense5–9 United StatesShattuck St. Mary's
Toni SandersForward5–6 United StatesSusquehanna Rapids U-19
Jordan SmelkerForward5–8 United StatesTeam Alaska U-19

Exhibition

DateOpponentLocationScoreGoal scorers
Sept. 25Univ. of MontrealHouston Field House8–3Jill Vandegrift (3),[1] Andie Le Donne, Katie Daniels, Jordan Smelker, Taylor Horton, Toni Sanders

Regular season

Standings

Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#2 Cornell†*22201141353131
Harvard221453313217114
Dartmouth221570308530
Princeton221381273116141
Quinnipiac221291253722123
Clarkson221084243714176
St. Lawrence2211110227430
Rensselaer228122189431
Colgate228122183311193
Yale22812218299173
Brown2211746292234
Union2211924342293
Championship: Cornell
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Current rankings: USCHO.com Division I women's poll

[2]

Schedule

DateOpponentLocationScoreRecordConf. RecordGoal scorers
Oct. 1WisconsinMadison, WI0–70–1–00-0-0None
Oct. 2WisconsinMadison, WI0–60–2–00-0-0None
Oct. 8VermontHouston Field House3–30–2–10-0-0
Oct. 9VermontHouston Field House1–10–2–20-0-0
Oct. 15New HampshireHouston Field House3–40–3–20-0-0
Oct. 22ProvidenceProvidence, RI3–2 (OT)1–3–20-0-0
Oct. 24NortheasternBoston, MA1–51–4–20-0-0
Oct. 29St. LawrenceCanton, NY3–22–4–21–0–0
Oct. 30ClarksonPotsdam, NY1–22–5–21–1–0
Nov. 5PrincetonHouston Field House1–22–6–21–2–0
Nov. 6QuinnipiacHouston Field House2–03–6–22–2–0
Nov. 12YaleNew Haven, CT4–14–6–23–2–0
Nov. 13BrownProvidence, RI0–14–7–23–3–0None
Nov. 19NiagaraHouston Field House1–14–7–33–3–0
Nov. 20NiagaraHouston Field House1–14–7–43–3–0
Nov. 26SyracuseSyracuse, NY2–15–7–43–3–0
Nov. 27SyracuseSyracuse, NY2–25–7–53–3–0
Dec. 3UnionSchenectady, NY4–16–7–54–3–0
Dec. 4UnionSchenectady, NY3–36–7–64–3–1
Jan. 7DartmouthHouston Field House5–27–7–65–3–1

Postseason

  • February 26: The Cornell Big Red eliminated no. 8 seed RPI by a 6–1 tally in game two of ECAC Hockey Quarterfinals.[3]

Awards and honors

  • Alisa Harrison, Finalist, 2010–11 ECAC Women's Best Defensive Forward Award [4]

Team awards

  • Sonja van der Bliek, Team MVP
  • Ashley Gaylord, Bill Cahill Memorial Award
  • Laura Guillemette and Kristen Jakubowski, Robert Conway Scholar-Athlete Award
  • Andie Le Donne, Most Improved Player
  • Jordan Smelker, Rookie of the Year
  • Sydney O'Keefe, Willie Stanton Award

See also

References


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