Skating Saints

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The St Lawrence University Skating Saints vs. Quinnipiac University.  March 16, 2007.
The St Lawrence University Skating Saints vs. Quinnipiac University. March 16, 2007.

The Skating Saints of St. Lawrence University, in Canton, New York, is part of the Division-I ECACHL ice hockey league. The University hosts both a men's and women's ice hockey program.

Since 1951, the Skating Saints' home arena has been Appleton Arena. Prior to the arena's construction, the men's team played outdoors, at the current location of Whitman Hall.

Contents

[edit] Men's Program

Since the team's inception in 1925, the Skating Saints (known as the "Larries" until the mid 1970's) men's hockey program has been a competitive team at the top ranks of American college hockey. Due to World War II, there were no teams during the 1941-42 season, or the 1943-44 through 1945-46 seasons.[1]

The team plays in the ECAC Hockey League, one of six Division I leagues. This league currently includes six Ivy League teams, including perennial powers Cornell and Harvard as well as six colleges from upstate New York and Connecticut. Since the inception of the ECAC in 1961, SLU has won six ECAC tournament titles and two ECAC regular season titles.

Since the 1951-52 season, SLU has made sixteen NCAA tournament appearances. St. Lawrence has been to the Frozen Four and its antecedent the four team NCAA Championships a total of nine times, playing in the title games in 1961 and 1988. St. Lawrence has accomplished this despite being, at approximately 2,000 students, one of the smallest colleges to play at the Division I level. A Division III school in all other sports, St. Lawrence has maintained Division I "play-up" status in hockey thanks to a 2004 NCAA resolution, allowing it (along with 11 other schools) to offer Division I scholarships in only one sport.[2] St. Lawrence did not offer grant-in-aid hockey scholarships until the mid-1990's.

In 1988, the Saints played in the NCAA national championship game at the Olympic Arena in Lake Placid, NY, losing to Lake Superior State University 4-3 in overtime. The 1987-88 season was the most successful in team history, with an overall record of 29-9-0. In 2000, the Saints played in the longest NCAA tournament game on record; a 3-2, quadruple overtime victory over Boston University. The Men's program has produced twenty-eight All-American players, seven ECAC torunament MVPs, six ECAC players of the year, four ECAC rookies of the year, and seven Hobey Baker Memorial Award finalists.

Since 1985, Joe Marsh has been the head coach at St. Lawrence. In 2007, he won his 400th Division I game (all at St. Lawrence) placing him in 6th place among active NCAA Division I coaches in career wins. Marsh is a two time winner of the Spencer Penrose award given to the best college coach of the year.

St. Lawrence's biggest hockey rival is Clarkson University, located ten miles from the St. Lawrence campus. For many years, the road trip by opponents to play these two North Country teams has been considered to be one of the most grueling weekends on any college hockey schedule.

St. Lawrence plays it's home hockey games at Appleton Arena, a classic old time hockey barn which has seen many upgrades since opening in 1950 with a 4-2 St. Lawrence win over Dartmouth College [3]

[edit] Hobey Baker Award Finalists

Main article: Hobey Baker Award
Year Player Position
2007 Drew Bagnall Defense
2006 T. J. Trevelyan Forward
2001 Eric Anderson Forward
1999 Eric Heffler Goalie
1996 Burke Murphy Forward
1992 Daniel Laperriere Defense
1988 Peter Lappin Forward

[edit] Coaches

Years Coach Record
1925-26 D.F. McCarthy 0-2-0
1926-28 Degre Formoza 5-6-0
1929-30 James Mallon 3-8-1
1938-41 Alfred Sheard 4-19-0
1946-47 John Klemens 3-3-0
1947-50 Paul Patten 20-5-0
1950-55 Olav Kollevoll 72-25-2
1955-67, 1968-71 George Menard 204-137-14
1967-68, 1971-76 Bernie McKinnon 72-84-6
1976-80 Leon Abbott 34-85-2
1980-85 Mike McShane 93-65-6
1985-Present Joe Marsh 415-349-55

[edit] Women's Program

The St Lawrence women take on Clarkson in the 2007 ECACHL quarterfinals
The St Lawrence women take on Clarkson in the 2007 ECACHL quarterfinals

Beginning as a club team, the women's program has seen great success since entering Division-I in 1997. Currently, the team has made five Frozen Four appearances in the eight years since the creation of a Women's NCAA Division-I tournament. With the women's appearance in inaugural Frozen Four (2001), St. Lawrence became the first school to have both their men and women's programs in the NCAA Division-I ice hockey tournament in the same year.[4]

The first women's hockey game was played in 1974, as a club program. The women's team transitioned to a Division-III program in 1979, and won three consecutive ECAC Division-III tournaments in 1990, 1991, and 1992.[5]

Following the 2007-08 season, Head Coach Paul Flanagan left St. Lawrence to a position with Syracuse University. Flanagan was the women's program's all-time winningest coach with a nine-season record of 230-83-24. Men's Associate Head Coach, Chris Wells has been appointed to replace him.[6]

[edit] Patty Kazmaier Award Finalists

Main article: Patty Kazmaier Award
Year Player Position
2008 Sabrina Harbec Forward
2007 Sabrina Harbec Forward
2006 Sabrina Harbec

Jessica Moffat

Forward

Goalie

[edit] Coaches

Years Coach Record
1974 Bill Coakley 1-1-1
1974-77 Tom McDonald
1978-1997 Bernie McKinnon 170-164-14
1996-97 Ron Waske/Pam Seaborn 17-19-0
1997-99 Ron Waske 19-34-5
1999-2008 Paul Flanagan 230-83-24
2008-Present Chris Wells NA

[edit] Uniforms

Traditionally, the Skating Saints home jersey is white with scarlet shoulders and brown trim. The end of the sleeves and bottom of the sweater feature scarlet and brown stripes. The school’s StL logo and the player’s name and number all appear in scarlet with brown trim. The road jersey are identically designed, but with the white and scarlet portions reversed. In 2002, a lace-up neck was adopted by the men’s team.

In 2001, in honor of Appleton Arena’s fiftieth anniversary, an alternate “throw-back” jersey was introduced for the men’s team. The alternate jersey is white but does not feature colored shoulders. The StL logo is significantly smaller, and “St. Lawrence” is spelled out across the chest. The school seal also appears on both shoulders of the sweater. This jersey continued to be used occasionally until gaining popularity during the 2006-07 season, when the men’s team exhibited frequent success when wearing the alternate jerseys on home ice. As a result, the alternate jersey quickly became the staple home jersey.

Originally, the women’s program wore jerseys that were identical to the men’s jerseys. However, in fall 2005, the women’s jerseys were designed to be unique from the men’s jerseys. The scarlet and brown on the shoulders of the home jersey was extended down the arms until it met with the trim at the end of the sleeve. The player’s number appears within the scarlet portion and is white with brown trim. The road jerseys feature a similar pattern, but the shoulders and sleeves are brown with white trim (a reverse of the traditional road-jersey scheme) on a red background.

In tribute to Mike Pelletier and Rich Stewart, teammates on the 1988 NCAA finalist team who were among the victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks,[7] the 2001-02 men's team wore a patch on the shoulder of their jerseys with both players' initials. Pelletier and Stewart had both been employees of Cantor Fitzgerald working in the World Trade Center. [8][9]

[edit] Traditions

Max Taylor '07 Skates with the St. Lawrence flag.  March 2007
Max Taylor '07 Skates with the St. Lawrence flag. March 2007
  • Whenever the Skating Saints are introduced or score a goal on home ice, a siren sounds and "When the Saints go Marching in" plays. A skating saint logo in the corner of the arena lights up as well. Since NCAA rules limit the time for a stoppage of play to 18 seconds[10] and amplified music ceases when the puck is dropped, Saints fans will continue to sing "When the Saints go Marching in" a cappella after the puck drops.
  • When the final minute of the period is announced, Skating Saints fans will respond by yelling “And Clarkson Still Sucks!” referring to St Lawrence’s nearby rival school. This same cheer is often used by fans at Rensselaer, whose rivalry with Clarkson stems from being another engineering school in the ECACHL, and not from geographic location.
  • Due to St Lawrence’s proximity to Canada, both the American and Canadian national anthems are played prior to home games. Many fans will shout the word “saints” over the final word of the American national anthem. This is a shared tradition among schools in the ECACHL; notably Clarkson fans and Cornell fans will shout "knights" and "red," respectively, when those words appear in the anthem's lyrics.
  • Since the fall of 1999, fans have brought a school flag into the stands to wave when team takes the ice and when they score. Cowbells have also become popular among fans (possibly due to the large population of dairy farmers in the region), and are sold at the school’s bookstore, with the StL logo printed on them.
  • Other traditions have included throwing a rubber chicken onto the ice, which is then reeled in by a fishing pole, and hanging a bull’s-eye behind the opposing team’s goalie.

[edit] Notable Skating Saints Alumni

[edit] References

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