Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey

The Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey program represents Robert Morris University. The Colonials compete in the College Hockey America conference.

Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey
Current season
UniversityRobert Morris University
ConferenceCHA
Head coachPaul Colontino
9 season, 16710640
Arena Clearview Arena
Capacity: 1,200
LocationNeville Township, Pennsylvania
ColorsBlue, White, and Red[1]
              
NCAA Tournament appearances
2017
Conference Tournament championships
CHA: 2012, 2017

History

March 31, 2004: Robert Morris University announced that an NCAA Division I women's ice hockey team would compete, in the College Hockey America (CHA) Conference, starting with the 2005–06 season.

Kevin McGonagle was named the first head coach, but following a 1–7–0 start he was dismissed[2]. Assistant coach Jody Katz[1] was named the interim head coach for the rest of the season, and men's assistant coach Nate Handrahan was named new head coach for the 2006–07 campaign.

Nate Handrahan was head coach for five years from the 2006–07 through the 2010–11 seasons. He successfully built a stable program, bringing talented players into the program who would excel after his tenure. and amassed a 52–111–14 record, before taking the head coaching job of the Ohio State women's hockey program.

Paul Colontino was named head coach for the 2011–12 season, and remains in the position. He made the Colonials a competitive team, finishing with more wins than losses in 5 of 6 years. In his first year, Colontino led the Colonials to their first CHA Tournament championship. As the CHA had not automatic berth in the NCAA tournament at the time, their CHA win ended their season.

The most successful season for the Colonials was the 2016–17 season. Their 24–5–6 record (15–3–2 in the CHA) earned them their first year-ending ranking, 8th, in both the USCHO and USA Today polls. They won the CHA regular season championship for the first time, and took the Tournament Championship as well, to earn their first entry to the NCAA national championship. They were defeated by top ranked Wisconsin 0–7 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Colonials forward Jaycee Gebhard scored 44 points on the season, making her the highest scoring first year player in the country for the season.[2] Brittany Howard became the first Colonial player to be named CHA Player of the Year.[2]

The Colonials went on to finish at the top of the CHA standings in 2017-18 and 2018-19, marking three years in a row that they won the regular season championship. They went to four straight championship games, ending the season as conference runner up in 2018, 2019 and 2020.

Year by year

Won Championship Lost Championship Conference Champions League Leader
Year Coach W L T Conference Conf. W Conf. L Conf. T Finish Conference Tournament NCAA Tournament
2019–20Paul Colontino20124CHA13522nd CHAWon Semifinals vs. Penn State (2–1)
Lost Championship vs. Syracuse (2–6)
Did not qualify
2018–19Paul Colontino16146CHA13431st CHAWon Semifinals vs. Syracuse (5–2)
Lost Championship vs. Mercyhurst (1–2 OT)
Did not qualify
2017–18Paul Colontino2184CHA14331st CHAWon Semifinals vs. Penn State (7–2)
Lost Championship vs. Mercyhurst (3–5)
Did not qualify
2016–17Paul Colontino2456CHA15321st CHAWon Semifinals vs. Lindenwood (2–1)
Won Championship vs. Syracuse (2–0)
1st Appearance
Lost Quarterfinal vs. Wisconsin (0-7)
2015–16Paul Colontino17165CHA7944th CHAWon Quarterfinals vs. Lindenwood (3–4, 3–1, 5–1)
Lost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (2–4)
Did not qualify
2014–15Paul Colontino11195CHA8844th CHALost Quarterfinals vs. RIT (1–3, 0–1)Did not qualify
2013–14Paul Colontino2483CHA13522nd CHALost Semifinals vs. RIT (1–4)Did not qualify
2012–13Paul Colontino15153CHA91014th CHAWon Quarterfinals vs. Lindenwood (2–1 3OT, 2–0)
Lost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (1–2)
Did not qualify
2011–12Paul Colontino1994CHA6332nd CHAWon Semifinals vs. Niagara (3–2)
Won Championship vs. Mercyhurst (3–2)
Did not qualify
2010–11Nate Handrahan6217CHA2954th CHAWon Quarterfinals vs. Wayne State (4–2)
Lost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (1–3)
Did not qualify
2009–10Nate Handrahan11241CHA31215th CHAWon Quarterfinals vs. Wayne State (3–1)
Lost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (1–7)
Did not qualify
2008–09Nate Handrahan12203CHA5923rd CHALost Semifinals vs. Wayne State (3–4)Did not qualify
2007–08Nate Handrahan12221CHA21004th CHALost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (0–4)Did not qualify
2006–07Nate Handrahan11222CHA11104th CHALost Semifinals vs. Marcyhurst (2–5)Did not qualify
2005–06Kevin McGonagle5242CHA1914th CHALost Semifinals vs. Mercyhurst (0–9)Did not qualify
2004–05Jody Katz4172

[3]

Awards and honors

  • Brittany Howard, 2018 Dapper Dan Sportswoman of the Year[4]
  • Brittany Howard, 2017-18 Second Team All-America[5]
  • Brittany Howard, 2016-17 CHA Player of the Year[2]
  • Kirsten Welsh, 2017-18 CHA Defender of the Year[6]
  • Jaycee Gebhard, 2017-18 CHA Rookie of the Year[2]
  • Paul Colontino, 2016-17 CHA Coach of the Year[2]
  • Paul Colontino, 2011-12 USCHO Women's Coach of the Year[7]
  • Paul Colontino, 2011-12 CHA Coach of the Year[2]

International

Olympians

Player Position Nationality Event Result
Brianne McLaughlin[8]Goaltender United States2010 Winter OlympicsSilver
Brianne McLaughlin[8]Goaltender United States2014 Winter OlympicsSilver

See also

References

  1. "RMU Athletics Logo". September 9, 2013. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  2. Saunders, Alan (2017-03-02). "Colonials sweep CHA year-end awards". Pittsburgh Hockey Digest. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  3. "Robert Morris Colonials Women's Hockey: Year-By-Year". USCHO.com. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  4. "'Dominant' Brittany Howard's work fuels Robert Morris women's hockey". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  5. Press Release (15 March 2018). "Four Women's Hockey East Players Named CCM/AHCA All-Americans". Hockey East. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  6. Matt Popchock (1 March 2018). "Colonials Clean Up at CHA Awards: Five Players from No. 9 RMU Hailed by Conference". RMU Colonials. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  7. Candace Horgan (2012-03-21). "Colontino named Women's Coach of the Year". College Hockey | USCHO.com. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  8. Dave McMahon (December 18, 2009). "Vancouver women's hockey team announced". USA Hockey. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.