2010–11 Colgate Raiders women's ice hockey season

The Colgate Raiders represented Colgate University in the 2010–11 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Raiders head coach was Scott Wiley. Assisting him were Ryan Stone, Karine Senecal, and Karen Thatcher.

2010–11 Colgate Raiders women's ice hockey season
Did not qualify,
ConferenceECAC
Home iceStarr Rink
Rankings
USA Today/USA Hockey MagazineNot ranked
USCHO.com/CBS College SportsNot ranked
Record
Overall11-19-3
Home9-11-0
Road2-8-3
Neutral0-0-0
Coaches and Captains
Head CoachScott Wiley
Assistant CoachesKaren Thatcher
Ryan Stone
Karine Senecal

Offseason

  • May 26, 2010: 2010 Winter Olympian Karen Thatcher has been named an assistant coach[1]

Exhibition

DateOpponentScoreGoal scorers
Sept. 25Bluewater (PWHL)7-1Jordan Brickner (2), Rebecca Walsh, Jocelyn Simpson, Jenna Klynstra, Jacquie Colborne and Hannah Milan [2]
Oct. 2University of Ottawa7-1Jacquie Colborne (2), Brittany Phillips (2), Taylor Volpe, Rachel Walsh, Kristi-Lyn Pollock

Regular season

  • Kimberley Sass recorded 27 saves in a 5-3 win over the Connecticut Huskies. With the win, she is 2-0 overall along with one shutout.[3]
  • January 28: The Colgate women's hockey team raised $12,000 in autism research with its Autism Awareness Project. The Light Up Starr Rink Blue game against RPI on Friday, Jan. 28 attracted 1,038, all of whom were wearing light blue, the color of Autism Speaks. The team wore special puzzle-piece jerseys designed by OT Sports.[4]
  • February 11: Kimberly Sass recorded 26 saves in a 1-0 shutout over the Yale Bulldogs. It was Sass' fifth shutout of the season and third straight at home, both of which are new school records. The game winning goal was scored by Brittany Phillips.[5]

Standings

2010–11 Eastern College Athletic Conference 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

[6]

Schedule

DateOpponentScoreGoal scorers
Oct. 8Boston College0-4None
Oct. 9New Hampshire1-0 (OT)Brittany Phillips[7]
Oct. 15Connecticut5-3Jocelyn Simpson, Hannah Milan, Jessica Hootz, Jenna Klynstra and Jacquie Colborne[8]
Feb. 19Dartmouth3-4Shannon Doyle, Jenna Klynstra, Rachel Walsh[9]

Conference record

CHA schoolRecord
style="background :#321414; color:white"> Brown0-0-0
style="background: yellow; color:green"> Clarkson0-0-0
style="background: red; color:#FFFFFF"> Cornell0-0-0
style="background:green; color:white">Dartmouth0-0-0
style="background: #A50024; color:#FFFFFF"> Harvard0-0-0
style="background: #0a2351; color: #c9b074"> Quinnipiac0-0-0
style="background: orange; color:black">Princeton0-0-0
style="background: red; color:white"> RPI0-0-0
style="background: #733D1A; color:white"> St. Lawrence0-0-0
style="background: #A50024; color:black"> Union0-0-0
style="background: #1c2841; color:white">Yale

Awards and honors

  • Kimberly Sass, ECAC Defensive Player of the Week (Week of October 18, 2011)[10]

Team awards

  • Shannon Doyle, Rookie of the Year
  • Meghan Wickens, Most Improved Player
  • Heidi Peterson, Sportsmanship Award
  • Brittany Phillips, Brad Houston Offensive MVP
  • Amanda Kirwan, Defensive MVP
  • Kimberly Sass, Marian Lefevre Coaches Award
  • Jessi Waters, Don Palmateer Award[11]

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.