1915–16 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season

The 1915–16 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season was the 19th season of play for the program.

1915–16 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season
Intercollegiate Champion
Intercollegiate Hockey League, Champion
Conference1st IHL
Home iceBoston Arena
Record
Overall8–2–0
Conference4–0–0
Home6–2–0
Road1–0–0
Neutral1–0–0
Coaches and Captains
Head CoachAlfred Winsor
Captain(s)John Morgan
Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey seasons
« 1914–15 1916–17 »

Season

Before the season began, former members of the old Intercollegiate Hockey Association (Cornell and Dartmouth) agreed to join the then current Intercollegiate Hockey League. Instead of playing a best-of-three series against all members, the new squads would only play their conference opponents once during the season.

Harvard began their title defense with a tune-up game against the Boston Athletic Association just before the winter break. After returning the Crimson faced Queen's and lost a close match to their Canadian opponents. The result of the game was secondary to the response from the crowd and an appeal to the Harvard faithful was made to show up in force to the remaining contests.[1]

In their next game against Cornell the offense played rather poorly, with many scoring opportunities failing to the wayside. The team's defense, however, was in its typical stout form. Though the Big Red were hamstrung by a lack of practice, Harvard didn't give the Ithacans any chance and shut out Cornell for their first win of the season.[2] The next game against a stronger Princeton squad and Harvard had to weather a barrage from the Tigers early in the game, but Wylde and the defense turned everything aside. In the second half Princeton got into penalty trouble, allowing the Crimson to score three times with the man-advantage and take the contest 3–0.[3]

The rematch with Princeton one week later turned into a goaltending dual between Ford and Wylde. The two netminders kept their opponents scoreless through forty minutes of regulation and caused a pair of 5-minute overtimes to be used. Halfway through the first extra session Percy finally scored the first goal of the game to give Harvard the lead. Despite a furious pushback, Princeton was unable to solve Wylde and a further Crimson goal in the second overtime gave Harvard the series win over Princeton.[4]

Harvard's three-game shutout streak was finally ended by McGill at the end of the month, but the Crimson were still able to win the match and head into the second half of their season with an excellent chance at winning a championship. In the match against Dartmouth, Harvard continued the season-long shutout against fellow universities and entered the series against Yale just two wins away from the intercollegiate championship. In the initial game Harvard used six substitutions and 13 saves from Wylde to tally its fifth shutout of the season.[5]

Before the rematch with the Elis, Harvard earned a somewhat surprising victory over the St. Nicholas Hockey Club who were led by Hobey Baker. The team speed, particularly from Percy, and the overall defensive effort allowed Harvard to keep their opponents at bay for most of the game and respond when their foes did manage to score.[6] The second game from Yale saw the Crimson receive a better fight that they had all year, with the Bulldogs scoring twice to end Harvard's pursuit of a perfect defensive campaign against intercollegiate competition. Yale scored first in each of the two half but Harvard responded both times with a pair of goals and Harvard skated to a series sweep against the Elis, a perfect record into intercollegiate matches and their second consecutive intercollegiate championship.[7]

John Wylde's 5 shutouts on the season was a program record (tied) for 89 years while his 1.50 goals against average was one of the best results for a Crimson netminder.

Roster

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
Edwin O. Baker Junior C/LW 1896-02-21 Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge Latin School
Robert Baldwin Junior C/RW 1895-04-09 Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts Volkmann School
Henry M. Bliss Junior RW 1895-06-11 Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts Volkmann School
Clarence S. Clark Senior D 165 lb (75 kg) 1893-02-11 Germantown, Pennsylvania Milton Academy
Laurence Curtis II Senior C 172 lb (78 kg) 1893-09-03 Boston, Massachusetts Groton School
Augustus Doty Senior D 193 lb (88 kg) 1894-01-20 Waltham, Massachusetts St. Paul's School
Thomas Eckfeldt Junior D 1896-01-28 New Bedford, Massachusetts St. Andrew's School
Thomas K. Fisher Junior RW 1894-01-11 Clinton, Massachusetts St. Paul's School
Lawrence M. Lombard Junior RW 1895-05-23 Winchester, Massachusetts Milton Academy
John E. P. Morgan (C) Junior D 1895-08-09 Lenox, Massachusetts Middlesex School
William O. P. Morgan Sophomore D 1895-05-14 Chicago, Illinois St. Paul's School
George A. Percy Sophomore C 1895-05-12 Arlington, Massachusetts Arlington High School
Theodore H. Rice Sophomore LW 1894-05-24 Dorchester, Massachusetts Noble and Greenough School
Moseley Taylor Sophomore 1895-01-30 Boston, Massachusetts Phillips Academy
Thomas C. Thatcher Jr. Sophomore RW 1896-08-12 Nahant, Massachusetts St. Mark's School
John Wylde Junior G 1893-08-26 Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Noble and Greenough School

[8]

Standings

1915–16 Collegiate ice hockey standings
Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T PCT. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Army3111.50041042111311
Colgate11001.00061110061
Cornell2110.50023212023
Dartmouth7430.5712513116503727
Harvard66001.000202108203112
Massachusetts Agricultural College7340.429131673401316
MIT6150.1676228161829
New York State College
Princeton9450.4441721105502324
Rensselaer4121.3759134121913
Stevens Tech
Trinity
Williams6420.667221464202214
Yale12750.5833626159604736
YMCA College
Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS SW GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Harvard *44001.0002112108203112
Yale5230.40011212159604736
Princeton5140.2000615105502324
* indicates conference champion

Schedule and Results

Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
December 18 vs. Boston Athletic Association* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 1–3  0–1–0
January 8 vs. Queen's* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 3–4  0–2–0
January 11 vs. Cornell* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 2–0  1–2–0
January 15 vs. Princeton Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 3–0  2–2–0 (1–0–0)
January 22 vs. Princeton St. Nicholas RinkNew York, New York W 2–0  3–2–0 (2–0–0)
January 29 vs. McGill* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 4–1  4–2–0
February 4 vs. Dartmouth* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 6–0  5–2–0
February 12 vs. Yale Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 2–0  6–2–0 (3–0–0)
February 19 vs. St. Nicholas Hockey Club* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 4–2  7–2–0
February 26 at Yale New Haven ArenaNew Haven, Connecticut W 4–2  8–2–0 (4–0–0)
*Non-conference game.

[9]

References

  1. "GIVE HOCKEY SOME SUPPORT". The Harvard Crimson. January 10, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  2. "SEVEN DEFEATED CORNELL TEAM BY 2 TO 0 SCORE". The Harvard Crimson. January 12, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  3. "Volume 38, No. 346". The Daily Princetonian. January 17, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  4. "Volume 38, No. 342". The Daily Princetonian. January 24, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  5. "YALE HOCKEY TEAM WENT DOWN WITH 2-0 DEFEAT". The Harvard Crimson. February 14, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  6. "UNIVERSITY HOCKEY TEAM OUTPLAYED ST. NICHOLAS". The Harvard Crimson. February 21, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  7. "Vol. XXXIX No. 116". Yale Daily News. February 28, 1916. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  8. "1915-1916 Roster". Elite Prospects. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  9. "Harvard Men's Hockey year-By-year results" (PDF). Harvard Crimson. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.