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1956–57 Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey season

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1956–57 Colorado College Tigers
men's ice hockey season
National Champion
WIHL champion
1957 NCAA Tournament, champion
Conference1st WIHL
Home iceBroadmoor World Arena
Record
Overall25–5–0
Home19–1
Road4–4
Neutral2–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachTom Bedecki
Captain(s)Don Wishart[1]
Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey seasons
« 1955–56 1957–58 »

The 1956–57 Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey team represented Colorado College in college ice hockey. In its 2nd year under head coach Tom Bedecki, the team compiled a 25–5–0 record, outscored opponents 205 to 106, and won the 1957 NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. The Tigers defeated Michigan 13–6 in the championship game at the Broadmoor World Arena in Colorado Springs, Colorado. CC tied the record for the most goals scored in a championship game (1950) and combined with the Wolverines for the most total goals in a title game (19). As of 2018 this is the last time Colorado College has won the national title in ice hockey.

Season

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After appearing in the first five national tournaments Colorado College had made the championship once in the next four years. CC's fortunes turned the year before when Bill Hay, a standout junior player from Saskatchewan hitchhiked down to Colorado Springs and was able to talk both himself and his fried Bob McCusker into athletic scholarships.[2] Both players made their varsity debut in 1956–57, as did much of the team, and the Tigers quickly jumped to the top of the standings. After opening the regular season against two junior teams from Canada, CC welcomed four different collegiate opponents into their building and won every single game.

With the Tigers sporting a 12-0 record they hit the road for the first time but didn't have to leave the state when they travelled to Denver to face the Pioneers. Colorado College's perfect record was spoiled with a 3–6 defeat but the returned the favor the next night at home, beating their in-state rival 8–7 in overtime. The Tigers hosted another pair of Canadian junior teams before heading north to face an improving Fighting Sioux team and lost both matches. Two days later CC finally won its first road game of the season, beating Minnesota twice before returning to Colorado to take the second home-and-home series against Denver. After redeeming themselves against North Dakota in two home wins the Tigers split a road series with Michigan Tech to close out their season.

Despite CC's struggles on the road the team was able to win the WIHL title handily and, with a superb 19–1 home record, post the best season in team history (As of 2018). Colorado College was led back to the NCAA tournament by Hay and McCusker who finished first (tied) and third in scoring in the nation. Both players earned their way onto one of the two All-American Teams as did team captain Don Wishart and all three players were first-team All-WIHL.

Befitting the western champion, Colorado College was selected as the #1 seed in the west and opened the tournament against Clarkson who had compiled an undefeated season the year before and followed that up with a stellar 18–2 mark. Despite the two teams' success the Golden Knights were completely outmatched by older and larger CC team. While the final score was relatively close, 5–3 with a hat-trick from Bob McCusker, the Tigers nearly tripled the number of shots from Clarkson (60–21) and the Green and Gold couldn't score enough to reward the valiant effort from the goaltender Eddie MacDonald.

In the title tilt CC found itself pitted against two-time defending champion Michigan who had won five of the six national titles since CC earned its first championship in 1950. The Wolverines had utterly dominated the series between the two teams over the previous decade and won all three games the pair played in the NCAA Tournament despite every game being played at the Broadmoor World Arena. None of those losses, however, had come with Hay and McCusker on the team and the two sophomores combined to score the first three goals of the contest. Showing the championship mettle, Michigan responded with three of their own before the first period was over and erased the CC advantage. CC goalie Bob Southwood settled down in the second period and when the Tigers scored three more times the Wolverines could only muster one in response. Even with a two-goal lead the Tigers didn't pull back in the third and after McCusker opened the scoring with his third of the game the rest of the team followed suit and score five more times before Michigan got its fifth but by then it was far too late and the Tigers eventually cruised to a 13–6 victory, winning their second National Title.

Bob McCusker tied the NCAA records for goals (4) and points (6) in a championship game and was the logical choice for Most Outstanding Player. McCusker was accompanied by Bill Hay and Don Wishart on the All-Tournament First Team while Dick McGhee and John Andrews made the Second Team.

Standings

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Conference Overall
GP W L T PCT PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Colorado College 18 14 4 0 .778 19 93 69 30 25 5 0 205 105
Michigan 18 13 4 1 .750 16½ 76 55 25 18 5 2 112 79
North Dakota 22 13 9 0 .591 13 82 72 29 18 11 0 126 99
Michigan Tech 20 8 8 4 .500 12½ 80 76 28 14 9 5 133 97
Denver 18 6 11 1 .361 9 64 74 28 12 14 2 121 105
Minnesota 24 7 15 2 .333 8 69 92 29 12 15 2 96 96
Michigan State 20 5 15 0 .250 6 42 68 22 7 15 0 62 71
indicates conference regular season champion
Note: All games played between league members counted in the standings. When teams played each other twice, two points were awarded for a win, one point for a tie.

When teams met each other four times, one point was awarded for a win, one-half point for a tie. Maximum 24 points available.[3]

Schedule

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Conference games against Michigan State, Michigan Tech and Minnesota were only worth 1 point in the standings.

Date Opponent Site Result Record
Exhibition
November 30 vs. Colorado College Alumni* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 2–1 
December 1 vs. Colorado College Alumni* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 9–5 
Regular Season
December 6 vs. Humboldt Indians* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 8–4  1–0–0
December 8 vs. Humboldt Indians* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 12–3  2–0–0
December 13 vs. St. Boniface Canadiens* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 12–2  3–0–0
December 15 vs. St. Boniface Canadiens* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 15–5  4–0–0
December 18 vs. Michigan Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 5–4  5–0–0 (1–0–0)
December 19 vs. Michigan Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 7–5  6–0–0 (2–0–0)
December 21 vs. Michigan State Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 8–2  7–0–0 (3–0–0)
December 22 vs. Michigan State Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 7–1  8–0–0 (4–0–0)
January 1 vs. Yale* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 10–0  9–0–0 (4–0–0)
January 2 vs. Yale* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 17–3  10–0–0 (4–0–0)
January 4 vs. Minnesota Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 4–1  11–0–0 (5–0–0)
January 5 vs. Minnesota Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 5–3  12–0–0 (6–0–0)
January 11 at Denver DU ArenaDenver, Colorado L 3–6  12–1–0 (6–1–0)
January 12 vs. Denver Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 8–7 OT 13–1–0 (7–1–0)
January 26 vs. Regina Pats* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 5–3  14–1–0 (7–1–0)
January 28 vs. Regina Pats* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 8–1  15–1–0 (7–1–0)
February 2 vs. Flin Flon Bombers* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado L 3–5  15–2–0 (7–1–0)
February 4 vs. Flin Flon Bombers* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 4–2  16–2–0 (7–1–0)
February 8 at North Dakota Winter Sports BuildingGrand Forks, North Dakota L 3–6  16–3–0 (7–2–0)
February 9 at North Dakota Winter Sports BuildingGrand Forks, North Dakota L 4–5  16–4–0 (7–3–0)
February 11 at Minnesota St. Paul AuditoriumSaint Paul, Minnesota W 3–2 OT 17–4–0 (8–3–0)
February 12 at Minnesota Williams ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota W 5–2  18–4–0 (9–3–0)
February 15 at Denver DU ArenaDenver, Colorado W 6–4  19–4–0 (10–3–0)
February 16 vs. Denver Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 4–3  20–4–0 (11–3–0)
February 19 vs. North Dakota Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 6–4  21–4–0 (12–3–0)
February 20 vs. North Dakota Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado W 7–6 OT 22–4–0 (13–3–0)
March 2 at Michigan Tech Dee StadiumHoughton, Michigan L 3–4  22–5–0 (13–4–0)
March 3 at Michigan Tech Dee StadiumHoughton, Michigan W 5–4  23–5–0 (14–4–0)
NCAA Tournament
March 14 vs. Clarkson* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado (National Semifinal) W 5–3  24–5–0 (14–4–0)
March 16 vs. Michigan* Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs, Colorado (National Championship) W 13–6  25–5–0 (14–4–0)
*Non-conference game.
Source:[4]

Roster and scoring statistics

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No. Name Year Position Hometown S/P/C Games Goals Assists Pts PIM
Bill Hay Sophomore C Saskatoon, SK Saskatchewan 30 28 45 73
Bob McCusker Sophomore F Saskatoon, SK Saskatchewan 47 24 71
Ike Scott Sophomore RW Gravenhurst, ON Ontario 25 21 46
Harry Harasyn Sophomore C Yorkton, SK Saskatchewan 21 17 38
Don Wishart Senior D/F Rosetown, SK Saskatchewan 10 27 37
John Andrews Sophomore LW Fort William, ON Ontario 6 29 35
Bud Hubchik Senior F Grandview, MB Manitoba 21 9 30
George deRappard Senior LW Westlock, AB Alberta 12 14 26
Harley Patterson Sophomore LW Hythe, AB Alberta 16 6 22
Ron Laughlin Sophomore C Drumheller, AB Alberta 6 16 22
Murray Dea Sophomore RW Edmonton, AB Alberta 6 12 18
Gary Hughes Senior D Red Deer, AB Alberta 5 13 18
Gerry Capello Sophomore D/C Ottawa, ON Ontario 4 13 17
Ron Villeneuve Sophomore D Cornwall, ON Ontario 2 7 9
Dick McGhee Sophomore D Calgary, AB Alberta 2 7 9
Bob Tanner Sophomore RW Trail, BC British Columbia 1 4 5
Ernest Rotondo Sophomore D South Porcupine, ON Ontario
Total 212 264 476
  • Colorado College players are reported to have collectively scored 212 goals over the course of the season but the team only scored 205 times during the season.

[5]

Goaltending statistics

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No. Name Games Minutes Wins Losses Ties Goals Against Saves Shut Outs SV % GAA
Bob Southwood 17
Howard Viger 14
Total 30

(W1) Colorado College vs. (W2) Michigan

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March 16[6] Colorado College 13 – 6 Michigan Broadmoor Ice Palace


Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st CC Bob McCusker Scott and McGhee 3:15 1–0 CC
CC Bill Hay McCusker 8:04 2–0 CC
CC Bob McCusker Hay and Capello 11:39 3–0 CC
UM Dick Dunnigan unassisted 13:14 3–1 CC
UM Neil McDonald unassisted 17:30 3–2 CC
UM John Hutton McDonald 17:57 3–3
2nd CC Murray Dea Laughlin 24:52 4–3 CC
CC John Andrews Hubchik 26:18 5–3 CC
UM Ed Switzer Dunnigan 30:18 5–4 CC
CC Bill Hay McCusker and McGhee 34:05 6–4 CC
3rd CC Bob McCuskerGW Dea 41:23 7–4 CC
CC Harley Patterson Harasyn 46:20 8–4 CC
CC Don Hersack Hubchik and Andrews 49:10 9–4 CC
CC Harry Harasyn Patterson 52:59 10–4 CC
CC Bob McCusker Hay 53:47 11–4 CC
CC Don Hersack Hubchik 54:53 12–4 CC
UM Tom Rendall Starr 55:15 12–5 CC
CC Don Wishart deRappard 56:11 13–5 CC
UM Neil McDonald Switzer 56:36 13–6 CC
Penalty summary
Period Team Player Penalty Time PIM
1st CC Bob Southwood 2:00
CC Bunt Hubchik 2:00
2nd UM Bob Schiller 2:00
UM Bob Schiller 2:00
CC Gary Hughes 2:00
3rd UM Dick Dunnigan 2:00
UM Tom Rendall 2:00
CC Bob McCusker 2:00
CC Gerry Capello 2:00

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Colorado College Athletic Hall of Fame". Colorado College Tigers. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  2. ^ "Bill "Red" Hay". Greatest Hockey Legends. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  3. ^ "2009-10 WCHA Yearbook 97-112" (PDF). WCHA. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  4. ^ "Colorado College 2017-18 Hockey Media Guide". Colorado College Tigers. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  5. ^ "Colorado College 1956-57 roster and statistics". EliteProspects. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  6. ^ "Colorado College 2013-14 Media Guide" (PDF). CC Tigers. Retrieved June 21, 2014.