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2011 MVP2011 MVPPAUL KARPOWICHPAUL KARPOWICH
ASSISTANTCAPTAINNICK
TREMBLAY
CAPTAINJAKE MORLEY
ASSISTANTCAPTAIN
BEN SEXTON
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The CLARKSON Lineup
Index
...................................................................................1Quick
Facts
........................................................................2Administration
....................................................................3Support
Staff
.......................................................................4Coaching
Staff
....................................................................5The
University
..................................................................
11University Quick Facts
.....................................................12Campus Map
.....................................................................13North
Country
...................................................................14Cheel
Arena
.......................................................................15Knights
in the Community
................................................19Top Goals Scored
at Cheel ................................................202010-11
Season in Review
................................................252010-11 Final
Statistics
.....................................................26Last Time
..........................................................................31Boostr
Club Awards
..........................................................322011-12
Outlook
...............................................................332011-12
Roster
..................................................................38Player
Profi les
...................................................................39Pronunciation
Guide
.........................................................642011-12
Opponents
...........................................................65All-time
Standings vs Opponents
.....................................68Hockey Tradition
..............................................................71All-Americas
.....................................................................80Clarkson
Athletic Hall of Fame
........................................87Arnold H. Barben Award
..................................................88Bill Harrison
MVP Award .................................................89
www. clarksonathletics.com
Tabel of Contents
CREDITS
The 2011-12 Clarkson University Hockey Media Guide is published
by the Clarkson University Athletic Department and all rights are
reserved.
Editor and Designer: Gary MikelSpecial Thanks: Tommy Szarka, Bob
Ahlfeld, Frank WilsonPhotography: Gary Mikel, Chris Lenney,Jim
Meagher,
Goaltending Leaders
.........................................................90100-Point
Club
..................................................................92Records
.............................................................................93Clarkson
Hat Tricks
.........................................................94Clarkson
Shutouts
.............................................................96ECAC
Hockey Tournament Results
.................................97Clarkson's ECAC Hockey
Tournament History..............101ECAC Hockey Tournament Champions
.........................102NCAA Tournament Results
............................................103Hockey's Longest
Games ................................................104Records
Through the Years
.............................................105Coaching Records
...........................................................107All-Time
Results
.............................................................10930-Second
Goals
.............................................................122Yearly
Scoring Leaders
...................................................123All-Time
Knights
............................................................125Knights
and the NHL
......................................................139NHL Draft
.......................................................................150Winners
in Life
...............................................................152International
Competitors ...............................................153ECAC
Hockey
................................................................1552010-11
ECAC Hockey Standings .................................156ECAC Top
50 All-time Players .......................................157ECAC
Hockey All-Decade Teams
..................................158Clarkson's ECAC Hockey
All-Stars ...............................1592011-12 ECAC Hockey
Schedule ...................................161Media Information
..........................................................163Travel
Directions
.............................................................164
2011-12
T
Tabel of ContentsTabel of ContentsTTabel offfffffff
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G o l d e n K n i g h t
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Location........................................................
Potsdam, New York, 13699-5830Founded
...........................................................................................................1896Enrollment
.....................................................................................................3,000President
...........................................................................................Tony
CollinsDirector of Athletics
...............................................................
Steve YianoukosAthletic Department Telephone
............................................... 315-268-6622
Head
Coach.......................................................................................Casey
Jones Alma Mater
....................................................................Cornell
University '90 at Clarkson/Overall
..............................................................................First
Year E-mail Address
................................................................
[email protected] Hockey Offi ce Telephone
...........................................................
315-268-7704Assistant Coach
....................................................................Phil
Roy (1st year)Alma Mater
..................................................................
Clarkson University '00E-mail Address
....................................................................proy@clarkson.eduHockey
Offi ce Telephone
...........................................................
315-268-3756Assistant Coach
.............................................................. Andy
Jones (1st year) Alma Mater
........................................................................Amherst
College '00 E-mail Address
................................................................
[email protected] Hockey Offi ce Telephone
...........................................................
315-268-3758Strength & Conditioning Coach
.............................Jaime RodriguezAlma Mater
..............................................................
Lasell College '03E-mail Address
.............................................................
[email protected]'s Hockey Athletic Trainer
..........................................................Mike
PittsAlma Mater
............................................................ SUNY
Cortland '00E-mail Address
................................................................
[email protected]
Nickname
....................................................................................Golden
KnightsColors ..............................................Green
(PMS 3305) and Gold (PMS 116)Conference
.....................................................................ECAC
Hockey LeagueAffi liation
..................................................................................NCAA,
Division I2010-11 Overall Record
........................................................................
15-19-22010-11 ECAC Hockey Record
...............................................9-12-1
(T-7th)Captain
............................................................................................
Jake MorleyAlternate Captains
................................................Nick Tremblay, Ben
SextonLettermen Returning/Lost
...........................................................................20/9
- Forwards Returning/Lost
........................................................................13/5
- Defense
Returning/Lost............................................................................
4/4 - Goaltenders Returning/Lost
....................................................................
3/0
SPORTS INFORMATIONSports Information Director
...........................................................Gary
MikelOffi ce
Telephone...........................................................................
315-268-6673Cell
..................................................................................................
315-212-5908Fax
...................................................................................................
315-268-7613E-mail
................................................................................
[email protected]
...................................................................www.clarksonathletics.comHOME
ICERink .............................................Cheel Arena at
the Cheel Campus CenterCapacity
..........................................................................................................3,000Ice
Sheet
.................................................................................................200'
x 85'First Game .................................. 10/26/91
(Clarkson 9 - Boston College 3)Clarksons Record at Cheel
............................................223-100-36 (20
yrs)Postseason Record at Cheel
........................................25-8 (ECAC Playoffs)Press
Box Telephone
....................................................................
315-268-6688Assisant AD/Arena Director/Ticket Manager
........................ Scott SmallingTicket Offi ce Telephone
..............................................................
315-268-7750
HOCKEY HISTORYFirst Season
..............................................................................................1920-21Overall
Record ...........................................................
1,317-746-124 (89 yrs.) (.630 winning percentage)Winning Seasons
...............................................................................................
69ECAC Regular Season Titles
...........................................................................
10 (1966, 1977, 1981, 1982, 1991, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2008)ECAC
Championship Tournament Titles
...................................................Five (1966,
1991, 1993, 1999, 2007)ECAC Playoff Record
..................................................81-65-5 (.553 win
pct.)NCAA Playoff Appearances
............................................................................
20 (1957, 1958, 1962, 1963, 1966, 1970, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1990,
1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2007,
2008)All-Americas
......................................................... 36 (13
two-time recipients)
RETURNEES - 2010-11 STATISTICS Forwards (13) Gms G-A-Pts Allan
McPherson So. 35 8-15-23 Jake Morley Sr 36 7-15-22$Nick Tremblay
(BOS '08) Sr. 33 9-12-21 Louke Oakley Sr. 32 3-12-15 Matt Zarbo So.
28 6-8-14 Corey Tamblyn Sr. 36 4-8-12 Will Frederick So. 32 2-9-11
Adam Pawlick Jr. 29 3-6-9$Ben Sexton, F (BOS'09) So. 12
5-3-8$Julien Cayer (DET '07) Sr. 23 3-5-8 Jarrett Burton So. 30
3-5-8 Mike Garlasco So. 16 1-3-4 Matt Wilson Jr. 3 0-0-0 Defensemen
(4) David Pratt So. 25 2-7-9 Alex Boak So. 32 2-7-9 Nik Pokulok Jr.
29 4-4-8 Andrew Himelson Jr. 19 2-2-4
Goaltenders (3) Gms Sv% GAA W-L-T$Paul Karpowich (STL '08) Sr.
35 .912 3.05 15-18-2$Cody Rosen (NYI '10) Jr. 3 .940 1.94 0-1-0
Richie LaVeau Sr. 3 .878 5.19 0-0-0
Varsity Candidates (9) Chase Fuchs, D So. Severna Park,
MD/Syracuse Stars JD Carrabino, D Fr. New Canaan, CT/Springfi eld
Pics James Howden, D Fr. Edgeley, SASK/Notre Dame Hounds Sam
Labrecque, D Fr. Granby, QUE/Nanaimo Clippers Patrick Marsh, F Fr.
Oakville, ONT/Burlington Cougars Kevin Tansey, D Fr. Hammond,
ONT/Cumberland Grads Kevin Struempfl er, D Fr. Lincoln Univ,
PA/Springfi eld Pics Joe Zarbo, F Fr. Grand Island, NY/Wellington
Dukes Mitch Zion, F Fr. Manotick, ONT/Cornwall Colts $NHL Draft
Choice (5)
2011-12 CLARKSON UNIVERSITY HOCKEY FACTS
Clarkson Hockey begins its 90th season of play in 2011-12.
CKEY FACTS
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Clarkson University President Anthony G. Collins is a regional
and national advocate for higher education - industrial
partnerships that couple research discovery and engineering
innovation with enterprise for commer-cialization and economic
development. With a focus on advancing sustainable energy solutions
and environmental technology innovation, he serves as the president
of the Seaway Private Equity Corporation that invests in new
technology companies based in St. Lawrence County, New York and on
the board for (TSEC) The Solar Energy Consortium which mobilizes
related resources in New York state.
He is also the vice chair of New Yorks Commission of Independent
Colleges and Universities and the chair of the national Association
of Independent Technological Universities Public Relations
Committee. President Collins serves on the boards of the Business
Council of New York State, the Central New York Metropolitan
Development Authority, the Essential New York Initiative, the New
York Indoor Environmental Quality Center, and the Syracuse Center
of Excellence in Environment and Energy Systems, the New York State
Smart Grid Consortium, and on the
board of advisors of Sriya Innovations, Inc.Dr. Collins was
among the primary architects of the Vision of a Clarkson Education
that has guided evolution of the curriculum since 1995. As
president, he now leads Clarksons Evolution to Excellence, a
comprehensive strategic plan elevating the Universitys academic
reputation, strength-ening its fi nancial resources, and increasing
the lifetime engagement of alumni.
Growing up outside Melbourne, Australia, Dr. Collins earned an
undergraduate civil engineering degree from Monash University, and
then masters and doctoral degrees from Lehigh University in
Pennsylvania. Prior to his doctoral studies, he worked for both
Australian Consolidated Industries and Utah Development Company.
After receiving his Ph.D. in 1982, Dr. Collins launched his career
at Clarkson, in Potsdam, N.Y., as an assistant professor of civil
and environmental engineering. Subsequently rising to the rank of
professor, he also assumed increasing levels of administrative
responsibility, including department chair, dean, vice president
for academic affairs, and provost. He was elected the 16th
president of Clarkson University in 2003. He has received awards
for outstanding teaching, research and advising, lectured globally
and is the author of more than 90 professional publications.
In addition to connecting with Clarkson alumni across the globe,
Dr. Collins; his wife, Karen; and their four children are active in
the Potsdam community and have provided volunteer service to
numerous community groups and youth sports programs.
ANTHONY G. COLLINS PRESIDENT
Tony Collins presents Erik Cole with his Clarkson jersey during
an awards ceremony at Cheel Arena honoring the former Golden
Knight
all-star after his NHL team Carolina won the Stanley Cup in
2006.
Tony Collins joined Golden Knight alumni and Anaheim Ducks
Todd
Marchant (left) and Kent Huskins at a White House reception with
President
George Bush on February 6, honor-ing the 2007 Stanley Cup
Champion
Anaheim Ducks.
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SCOTT SMALLING ASSOCIATE AD/DIRECTOR of CHEEL CAMPUS
CENTER/CHEEL ARENA
A long time director of Clarkson's hockey facilities, Scott
Smalling was named an assistant athletic director in January 2006.
Smalling has served as the Director of the Cheel Campus Center
since October of 2002. He previously held the position of Arena
Director at both Walker Arena and Cheel Arena from 1987-1996.
In his duties as Associate athletic direc-tor, Smalling oversees
the operations of the men's and women's hockey programs,
fun-draising and promotions for the Clarkson Athletic Department
along with supervising
the Sports Information Offi ce. He also continues as the
Director of the Cheel Campus Center, which includes overseeing the
overall operation of the 4,000 capacity Cheel Arena.
Before coming to Clarkson, Smalling worked for the village and
town of Potsdam, serving as the Director of Potsdam Recreation. He
also acted as the Director of the 5,000-seat Pinebridge Coliseum in
Spruce Pine, NC, where he handled the public relations and
scheduling for the Pinebridge Bucks Atlantic Coast Hockey League
team in 1983. Smalling has also served as an assistant coach and
head coach for Clarksons baseball team, and was the head coach for
the Potsdam Central Schools Varsity baseball team from 1985-87.
From January 1996 until October of 2002, Smalling was employed
by A. Cappione, Inc. where he was responsible for all aspects of
promotion, public relations, sales and merchandising in retail
industry. Smalling, who makes his home in Hannawa Falls with his
wife Mary Jane and their three sons, is a 1980 graduate of
Brockport State with a Bachelor of Science degree in Sports
Management.
Mike Pitts - Trainer
Todd Axtell- Equipment Manager
LLING
Clarkson Hockey radio personality Bob Ahlfeld, on WGIX: Cool
95.3 FM, enjoys a moment in the Cheel
Arena pressbox with his son Scotty.
Team DoctorsDr. Chris Comeau
Dr. Michael Maresca
Dr. Luc Perrier
Robin Howard -Hockey Liaison
Trey Smutz-Cheel Campus Center Intern
STEVE YIANOUKOS DIRECTOR INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
St e v e Yi a n o u k o s w a s n a m e d Clarkson Universitys
Director of Ath-letics in August 2005. The Potsdam, NY native, who
became the Universitys eighth athletic director, has been actively
involved with Clarksons Department of Physical Education,
Intercollegiate Athletics and Recreation since his undergraduate
days at the University in the early 1970s.
Steve has played a key role in the Department of Athletics many
successful initiatives and I am confi dent that under Steves
leadership the department will
continue to progress, stated Clarkson President Tony Collins
upon an-nouncing Yianoukos appointment.
He had been the Associate Director of Athletics since 1997 and
before that was the executive offi cer of Physical
Education/Recreation from 1984 to 1997. Yianoukos has overseen
Clarksons Division III athletics programs, managed all home
Division III athletic contests, monitored NCAA/Liberty League
institutional policies and sports guidelines, and led fund-raising
initiatives for the department, including the Green and Gold Club,
Athletic Annual Fund, Athletic Hall of Fame and the Athletic Alumni
Council.
Yianoukos graduated from Clarkson in 1972 with a bachelors
degree in industrial management. He served as the facility manger
for the Town of Potsdams Pine Street Arena from 1972-1977 and was
named the towns recreation director/facility manager in 1977.
Yianoukos also worked as a Zamboni driver in the 1980 Winter
Olympics in Lake Placid. He was inducted into the Potsdam High
School Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007.
He is involved in numerous local professional and civic
organizations. Yianoukos and his wife Joyce, are long time
residents in the Potsdam community, they have two grown children
Fia and John, and several grandchildren.
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COACHNG STAFF
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Two Clarkson hockey legends returned to center ice on January 5,
2008 before the Golden Knights faced off with the Bos-ton College
Eagles, as one Clarkson Athletic Hall-of-Famer honored another in a
very special way.
Clarkson alumnus John T. Jocko McLennan of Mahone Bay, Nova
Scotia, and his family created a $1.5 million endowment to fund the
Leonard S. Ceglarski Chair. Named in honor of legendary Clarkson
and
Boston College hockey coach Len Ceglarski, the chair will fund
the Clarkson Golden Knights mens head hockey coach position.
When Lenny Ceglarski offered me an athletic scholarship to play
hockey at Clarkson in 1964, little did I know then that he was
offering me the most important opportunity Ive ever been presented.
Under his direction and work ethic, I learned how to apply myself
as a student, launch a successful career and enjoy a wonderful
family life, said McLennan in announcing his leader-ship gift to
Claim the Title, a special hockey endowment cam-paign at Clarkson.
My family and I are proud to honor college hockey great Len
Ceglarski.
Coach Ceglarski, a native of East Walpole, Mass., was an
All-America left wing on Boston Colleges 1949 NCAA Champion-ship
team and captain of the 1950-51 squad. He won a Silver Medal as a
member of the United States Hockey Team in the 1952 Olympics at
Oslo. He began his unparalleled coaching ca-reer in 1958 as the
fourth head coach of the Clarkson mens hockey team. Serving for 14
seasons, he com-piled a .717 winning percentage, posting a
254-97-11 overall record from 1958-72, when he left to become
hockey coach at his alma mater Boston College. He guided the Eagles
to over 400 victories through two decades in Boston. Upon his
retirement in 1994, Ce-glarski was inducted into the Clarkson
Athletic Hall of Fame in July 2007.
After learning of the news of the gift through a phone call from
McLennan, Ceglarski said, I am humbled and genuinely honored to be
forever re-membered as part of the Clarkson hockey tradition this
way. While I have maintained great relationships with so many of my
former players and their fami-lies, Jocko and the McLennan family
have always had a special place in my heart. He magnifi ed all of
the attributes I tried to instill in my players and car-ried these
into his own personal and professional life well after he hung up
the jersey. He exemplifi es why I loved coaching college
sports.
We are truly grateful to Jocko and his family for making
this
very generous commitment to our athletics program, said
Clark-son University President Tony Collins. Here at Clarkson we
often speak of our scholar-athletes. Jockos achievements after
graduation are the very embodiment of what we expect all of our
graduates to accomplish. Jockos recognition of the coach, who
brought him to Clarkson and mentored him as a scholar-athlete,
underscores all that we value in our athletic program. The
Ceglar-ski Chair will enable the University to continue our
tradition of hiring and retaining coaching staff who understand
that a Clark-son education occurs both on and off the ice.
Born in Sydney, Nova Scotia, McLennan graduated from high school
in Ottawa, Ontario. An accomplished hockey player, he was recruited
to Clarkson where, in 1966, he led Clarkson to the NCAA Div. I fi
nal. McLennan earned his bachelors degree in industrial management
in 1968 and his masters degree in industrial manage-ment in 1969,
again from Clarkson. McLennan has been involved in the Canadian
telecommunication industry throughout his career and retired as
president and CEO of Bell Canada in 1997.
McLennan has received many honors during his prominent career,
including Clarkson Universitys Barben Award, Golden Knight Award,
and an Honorary Clarkson Degree in 1997. He was inducted into
Clarksons Athletic Hall of Fame in 2004. McLen-nan also served as a
Clarkson trustee from 1989 through 1993.
The Claim the Title campaign is raising $10 million toward an
endowment for mens and womens ice hockey at Clarkson. To learn more
about the campaign, call the Offi ce of Philanthropy at Clarkson
University at 315-268-7718.
Clarkson Alumnus Creates a $1.5 Million Endowment to Honor
Legendary Hockey Coach Len Ceglarski
Len Ceglarski
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John McLennan, George Roll and Clarkson President Tony Collins
honor Len Ceglarski (seated) prior to the start of the
Clarkson-Boston College game on January 5, 2008.
John T. "Jocko" McLennan, created a $1.5 million endow-ment to
honor his former Clarkson coach Len Ceglarski.
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7
CASEY JONES HEAD COACH
Casey Jones, who served as a Golden Knight assistant coach in
the early 1990s, was named the 11th head coach in
Clarkson' Hockey history in May, 2011.
Casey JONES at a GLANCEBorn: May 30, 1968College Degree: B.A.,
Cornell University, 1990
Coaching Experience: 19 years as a Division I
assistant/associate coachCornell Associate Coach: 2008-11Ohio State
Assistant/Associate Coach, 1995-08Clarkson Assistant Coach:
1993-95Cornell Assistant Coach: 1992-94Coaching Highlights: Help to
take Ohio State from 3 CCHA wins to 19 league vic-tories and a NCAA
Frozen Four in fi rst three years at OSU.Participated in 8 NCAA
Tournaments as an assistant coach/associate coach at Clarkson, Ohio
State and Cornell.Recruited and coached 2010 NHL Selke Trophy
winnerRyan Kesler.Was behind the bench in the Knights' 1995 NCAA
appearance.
Collegiate Career Highlights:Four years at Cornell
(1986-90)Served as captain in his senior yearScored 112 points
(30-81) in 110 gamesSelected by Boston Bruins in1987 NHL Entry
Draft(10th rd, #203 overall)
Family: Wife: Kim, Children: Gabrielle (10), Bryan (7)
Casey Jones, Clarkson Universitys Mens Hockey Coach, was
designated the second Leonard S. Ceglarski Chair for the Golden
Knights in May of 2011, becoming one of few coaches nation-ally to
hold an endowed coaching position in the sport of ice hockey.
After an extensive national search Jones returns to the
University after serving the past three years as associate coach at
Cornell University. A native of Temsicaming, Quebec, Jones has
re-cruited players and/or coached teams that have participated in
the NCAA tournament eight times, including three schools and in two
different leagues.
He worked as an assistant for the Golden Knights under head
coach Mark Morris from 1993-95. He spent 13 years (1995-2008) at
Ohio State as a coach before returning to ECAC Hockey when he
joined the staff at his alma mater, Cornell, for the 2008-09
campaign.
"Its a fantastic opportunity here at Clarkson," stated Jones,
the 11th head coach in the Knights' lengthy history. "When I
visited during the interview process every single person I met
with, I knew I wanted the job more and more. The great thing about
this opportunity is the program is rich in tradition. Its a job
that has a history of winning and its why I am coming here."
During the last three years at Cornell, Jones helped the Big Red
return to the NCAA tournament twice, and the ECAC championship game
each year. Jones also spent 13 years in the CCHA at Ohio State, as
associate head coach for the Buckeyes before taking the associate
head coach position at Cornell.
At OSU, he recruited the talent that gave the institution its
national place in college hockey as the Buckeyes qualifi ed for the
NCAA Tournament seven times with players that he recruited,
including a Frozen Four appearance. Ohio State also won the CCHA
Super Six title in 2004, the Buckeyes' fi rst in 32 seasons.
During his tenure at OSU, Jones served as the program's
recruiting coordinator, a position he excelled at as he had fi ve
players drafted in the fi rst two rounds of the National Hockey
League Entry Draft. Last season alone there were 32 players that he
had recruit-
ed playing professional hockey, including 10 who skated at least
one game in the NHL. In addition to his recruiting efforts, Jones,
who worked primarily with the defense and penalty-killing units,
guided the Buckeye defense to a number two national ranking in
goals-allowed per game and third in the nation in penalty killing
in 2002-03. He also led the Buckeyes to a number-fi ve ranking in
penalty-killing percentage in 2004-05, helping Ohio State to the
NCAA West Regional.
When Jones was at Clarkson from 1993 to 1995, he contrib-uted to
the Golden Knights 43-19-9 record, an ECAC Hockey championship and
a berth in the NCAA tournament in 1995.
After graduating from Cornell in 1990, he served two years as an
assistant coach for the Big Red from 1991-93. He recruited players
that helped Cornell win back-to-back ECAC Tr. titles in 1996 and
1997.
Jones philosophy as a coach is an up tempo puck possession style
game that promotes creativity, puck pressure and emphasizes team
discipline and unity. As the Knights new coach, he looks to develop
and foster an environment that is very demanding and embraces the
academic and athletic values and mission of the University.
Jones was a four-year letter winner as a player for the Big Red,
serving as team captain in 1989-90. For his career, he scored 112
points on 30 goals and 82 assists while playing in 112 contests.
Jones was also the winner of the Bill Doran Sports-manship Award
and was selected by the Boston Bruins in the 10th-round of the 1987
NHL Entry Draft.
Jones and his wife, Kimberlee, also a Cornell graduate, have a
daughter, Gabrielle, 10, and a son, Bryan, 7.
Leonard S. Ceglarski Endowed Chair
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PHIL ROY ASSISTANT COACH
A standout defenseman for the Green and Gold in the late 1990s,
Phil Roy returns to the Clarkson Hockey program as a Golden Knight
assistant coach after
three years in Hockey East with Merrimack (2008-11).
Phil ROY at a GLANCE
Born:January 16, 1977
College Degree: B.A., Clarkson University, 2000(Technical
Communications)
Coaching Experience:Merrimack Assistant Coach: 2008-11Neumann
Head Coach: 2007-08Hobart Assistant Coach: 2005-07
Professional Hockey Experience:Five years (2000-05) in North
America and Europe - Mus-kegon (UHL), Johnstown (ECHL), Augusta
(ECHL), St. John (AHL), Cleveland (AHL), Tours (France),
Basingstoke (UK)
Collegiate Career Highlights:Four years with the Golden Knights
(1996-00)Scored 77 points (24-53) in 134 gamesWas a part of two
ECAC RS titles (1996-97 and 1998-99), won a conference tournament
championship (1999) and made three consecutive NCAA Tournament
appearances (1997, 1998, 1999)
Family: Wife: Sonia, Children: Makaelie, Maddox.
One of the fi rst signifi cant moves made by fi rst-year
Clarkson Head Hockey Coach Casey Jones was his hiring of former
Golden Knight standout defenseman Phil Roy as his top assistant. I
am very excited to have Phil join our staff, stated Jones. He is an
alum who has great passion for Clarkson University, the Hockey
program, and the Potsdam Community. He is an up-and-coming coach
who has great energy and work ethic. His experience and the fact
that he played defense made it a perfect fi t.
For the previous three years Roy served as an assistant at
Merrimack College. During his time at Merrimack, where he was part
of the 2010 Hockey East co-Coaching Staff of the Year, Roy was very
active in recruiting efforts that helped turn around the Warriors
program. He also worked primarily with the defense and the power
play unit, which was among the best in the country the past two
seasons. Merrimack defeated every other team in Hockey East in
2009-10 for the fi rst time in the program's history and made its
fi rst ever Division I appearance in 2011.
"This is a great opportunity coming back to my alma mater,
stated Roy. My family and I are very excited. I have always paid
attention to what was going on at Clarkson and hoped to one day
return as a coach. Casey recruited me as a player and now I am
coming back full circle. I look forward to working with Casey on
the Clarkson coaching staff."
Roy, who is bilingual, came to Merrimack after spending the
2007-08 season as the head coach for the Neumann College Knights.
Roy guided the Division III Knights to a 17-9 record and a fourth
place fi nish in the ECAC West Division.
Roy debuted in the coaching world as an assistant at Hobart
College prior to the 2005-06 season. During his tenure there, the
States-men set the school record for most wins in a season and
appeared in the Division III Frozen Four for the fi rst time ever.
He was a member of the 2006 coaching staff that received Coach of
the Year honors from the ECAC West organization.
A productive, offensive-minded defenseman, Roy played a key role
in Clarksons success during the late 1990s. He re-corded 77 career
points through 144 games from 1996-2000. The Knights won two ECAC
Hockey Regular Season titles (1996-97 and 1998-99), claimed a
conference tournament championship (1999) and made three
consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances (1997, 1998, 1999) with Roy
in the Green and Gold lineup.
After graduating from Clarkson in May of 2000 with an
undergraduate degree in technical communications, Roy spent fi ve
years playing professional hockey in North America and Europe. He
served as an assistant captain and assistant coach for the Diables
Noirs de Tours in the France Elite League, where he led the league
in scoring by a defenseman. He was also an assistant coach and a
captain in the United Kingdom Elite League with the Basingstoke
Bison. Prior to his Euro-pean career, Roy played for the Johnstown
Chiefs and Au-gusta Lynx of the East Coast Hockey League and for
the St. John Flames and Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey
League. He was named team Rookie of the Year by the Mus-kegon Fury
and was selected to the UHL All-Rookie Team in 2000-01.
A St. Leonard, Quebec native, Roy and his wife Sonia with their
daughter Makaelie, and son, Maddox will make their home in the
Potsdam area.
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9
ANDY JONES ASSISTANT COACH
Andy JONES at a GLANCE
Born: April 19, 1978
College Degree: B.A., Amherst College, 2000(Psychology)MBA,
University of Massachusetts-Amherst, 2004
Coaching Experience:Sioux Falls (USHL) Assistant Coach:
2006-11Amherst Assistant Coach: 2000-05
Collegiate Career Highlights:Four years at Amherst
(1996-00)School's fi rst NCAA Tr. appearnace (1999)Served as
captain in senior season (1999-00)
The new coaching staff for the Clarkson University Mens Hockey
team was completed with the announcement by Head Coach Casey Jones
that Andy Jones will serve as an as-sistant coach for the Golden
Knights program.
Jones, who completed his fi fth season in 2010-11 as the
assistant coach for the Sioux Falls Stampede in the United States
Hockey League (USHL), joins Phil Roy as an assistant coach for the
Green and Gold.
I am very excited to add Andy to our staff, stated Casey Jones.
He has all the qualities I wanted in an individual for this
position. Andy possesses great communication skills and is a very
good teacher of the game, which will translate well with our
players in our development model. He brings a network of knowledge
in an area that is vital in todays college hockey recruiting world.
Andy will complement our staff perfectly.
Jones, who was with Sioux Falls since the start of the 2006-07
campaign, helped guide the Stampede to their fi rst Clark Cup
Championship that season while leading the defensive unit. In
addition to his on-ice responsibilities, Jones performed extensive
video analysis for the team and each player. In 2009, Jones was
selected and served as an assistant coach for the U.S. Ju-nior
Select Team that captured a gold medal at the World Junior A
Challenge in Canada.
"I am thrilled to be joining the Clarkson hockey family and
Potsdam community," said Andy Jones. "It is an exciting time to be
a part of a program with such a rich tradition. I am looking
forward to contributing to the next chapter of the Clarkson hockey
legacy."
Prior to joining the Stampede, Jones served as an assistant
coach at his alma mater Amherst College in Massachusetts from 2000
to 2005, leading the teams defense and penalty kill unit. He also
served as the recruiting coordinator for the Midwest Region,
scouting the USHL, the North American Hockey League (NAHL), and the
Upper Midwest High School Elite League.
A graduate of Minnetonka High School in Minnesota, Jones was
recruited by Amherst College for hockey and baseball, playing both
during his collegiate career. As a player, Jones guided the Jeffs
to their fi rst NCAA tournament appearance in 1999. During his
senior year, he captained the team to an 18-5-3 record. Jones
received a BA from Amherst in psychology in 2000 and an MBA in 2004
from the Isenberg School of Management at the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst.
After fi ve seasons in the United States Hockey League (USHL) as
a coach for the Sioux Falls Stampede, Andy Jones joins
the Clarkson coaching staff in an assistant's role.
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10
G o l d e n K n i g h t
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JAIME RODRIGUEZ STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH
The Clarkson University Mens Hockey team added a key member to
the staff with the an-nouncement this summer of Jaime Rodriguez as
the new Strength & Conditioning Coach for the Green and Golds
hockey programs.
Rodriguez comes to Clarkson from the American Hockey Leagues
Worcester Sharks where he was the director of strength and
conditioning since 2007. During that time he served as an assistant
for the San Jose Sharks Head Strength and Conditioning Coach
Michael Potenza, where he elevated his coaching experience working
with professional athletes.
I feel extremely privileged to join Clarksons coaching staff,
stated Rodriguez. From my fi rst visit I immediately recognized the
passion and dedication this University has towards their athletics.
Hockey is not just a sport; its a culture to the school and fans.
As the strength and con-ditioning coach my responsibility is to
make sure the success of off- ice training is an important piece of
the puzzle that will help make Clarkson Hockey a successful and
contending program.
Rodriguez also worked alongside strength & conditioning
expert Michael Boyle for eight years at his private facility as a
head strength coordinator. For the past 10 years Rodriguez has
catered to the needs of men and women of all ages helping to
improve an athletes chance to excel to a higher level.
I am extremely pleased to have Jaime on our developmental staff
for Clarkson Hockey, stated Head Coach Casey Jones. Jaime-has a
great track record of working with young, aspiring hockey players.
His knowledge and energy will be exciting for our players to take
advantage of.
Rodriguez has trained ath letes from mid dle school up to
Division 1 Col lege in a vari ety of sports as well as pro fes
sional athletes from the NHL, AHL, NFL, MLS, and MLB. Rodriguez
believes the key to success is stressing the importance of
strength, teamwork, injury reduction, and nutrition.
Rodriguez previously resided in Boston, MA, where he earned his
Bachelors in Exercise Physiology from Lasell College in 2003.
Rodriguez, along with his wife Juliana, and their two young sons
Jayden (2 years) and Jordan (eight-months), will make their home in
the Potsdam area.
RODRIGUEZ at a GLANCE
Born: October 13, 1981
College Degree: B.S., in Exercise Physiology, Lasell College,
2003
Professional Experience:Director of Strength & Conditioning,
Worcester Sharks (AHL) - 2007-11Assistant Director of Strength
& Conditioning, San Jose Sharks (NHL) - 2007-11 Head Strength
Coordinator, Mike Boyle Strength & Conditioning, 2004-11
Family: Wife: Juliana, Children: Jayden (2), Jordan
(9-months)
Jaime Rodriguez was named Clarkson Hockey's Strength &
Conditioning Coach in July, 2011.
G COACH
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11
THE UNIVERSITY
Old Main
Clarkson University was founded in 1896 as a memorial to Thomas
S. Clarkson, successful entrepreneur and Northern New York
businessman who was also distinguished by a deep and abiding
concern for humanity.When Thomas Clarkson died as a result of an
accident in his sandstone quarry, his sisters, Elizabeth,
Frederica, and Lavinia estab-
lished a memorial to his name by building and endowing an
institution that would embody his philosophy. Clarkson's original
motto, "A Workman That Needeth Not to be Ashamed," is taken from
Thomas S. Clarkson's favorite biblical verse. Clarkson's colors,
green and gold, were selected because the goldenrod was Thomas S.
Clarkson's favorite fl ower.
The fi rst classes at the Thomas S. Clarkson Memorial School of
Technology were held on September 2, 1896, for 17 young men and
women. In 1913, the charter was amended, and the name was changed
to the Thomas S. Clarkson Memorial College of Technology.
Steady growth and development resulted in the New York State
Board of Regents designating Clarkson a University on February 24,
1984.
CLARKSON TODAYToday, Clarkson is a nationally ranked research
university offering more than 50 comprehensive programs in
business, engineering, science, liberal arts, health sciences, and
environmental studies. With 221 full-time teacher-scholars engaged
in world-class research, Clarkson has developed an international
reputation in the fi elds of Advanced Materials Science,
Biotechnology, Environment & En-ergy, Entrepreneurship and
Global Supply Chain Management.
Yet the University remains true to Thomas Clarksons enduring
legacy. Our primary mission is to educate talented and motivated
men and women to become successful professionals through quality
precollegiate, undergraduate, graduate, and professional
continu-ing education programs, with particular emphasis on the
undergraduate experience.
At Clarkson, we value the diversity of our University community,
and we strive to attune ourselves and our programs to our global,
pluralistic society.
We share the belief that humane economic and social development
derive from the expansion, diffusion, and application of
knowledge.The Clarkson University educational experience is
designed to provide talented and ambitious students with the
knowledge and
skills necessary to achieve positions of leadership within their
chosen profession. The combination of Clarksons strong
technologi-cally rich curricula and state-of-the-art teaching and
research facilities, coupled with an unparalleled commitment to a
friendly learn-ing environment and to students personal
development, uniquely prepares Clarkson graduates to excel in their
chosen professions and to lead rewarding and creative lives.
Student Center
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G o l d e n K n i g h t
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QUICK FACTSClarkson University8 Clarkson Ave.Potsdam, NY
13699Phone: 315-268-6400Admission phone: 800-527-6577,
[email protected]
Location : Potsdam, N.Y., (pop. 9,500), adjacent to the
six-million acre Adirondack Park.
Campus: 640 wooded acres.
President: Anthony G. Collins.
Programs of Study:50+ in engineering, business, science, liberal
arts, and health sciences.
Degrees granted: Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Professional
Studies, MBA, Master of Science, Master of Engineering, Ph.D.,
DPT
Enrollment:2,848 undergraduates and 482 graduate students from
41 states, 47 countries
Faculty: 221
Faculty-Student Ratio: 15:1
Undergraduate Admission Profi le:34% in top 10% of high school
class.
Study Abroad & Coops:More than 33 study abroad programs in
16 countries; co-ops opportunities.
Athletics:Division I ice hockey (mens and womens); 10 Division
III sports.
Extracurricular:More than 100 clubs and professional
societies275 intramural teams,16 competitive design teams
Fraternities:Five national; Four local
Sororities:Three national
Living Alumni: 36,719
Clarkson is recognized among the fi nest universities in the
nation, according to such diverse measures as U.S. News and World
Report, the Association for Independent Technological Universities,
and corporate recruiters. Clarkson focuses on providing a rigorous
professional experience, connecting discovery and engineering
innovation with enterprise, and developing a collaborative
community for students, faculty and staff.
Top-tier national university, U.S. News & World Report,
America's Best Colleges 2011. 37 on the Great Schools, Great
Prices, list of 50 national universities ranked
according to their quality to price ratio, U.S. News & World
Report, America's Best Colleges 2011.
20 on the Fifty Most Affordable with a Return on Investment
list, Bloomberg Businessweek, 2011.
Among the nations most environmentally responsible colleges,
Princeton Reviews Guide to 311 Green Colleges: 2011.
One of the best undergraduate engineering programs in the
country, U.S. News & World Report, America's Best Colleges
2011.
Among the Top 100 best undergraduate business schools in the
nation, Bloomberg Businessweek 2011.
Among The Best 373 Colleges," The Princeton Review 2011. Digital
Arts & Sciences major at Clarkson has been named the most
innovative
program in North America, International Digital Media and Arts
Association (iDMAa) 2010.
Top 50 Undergraduate Game Design Programs, the Princeton Review
2010. Top 20 in the nation for Production/Operations Management,
U.S. News & World
Report, America's Best Colleges 2010. School of Business supply
chain management program ranks #14 in the nation,
U.S. News & World Report, America's Best Colleges 2011. ROTC
service ranked #2 in the nation, Washington Monthly 2010. Included
in U.S. News & World Report, Best Graduate Schools 2012. Ranks
38th in environmental engineering and 58th in civil
engineering,
U.S. News & World Report, Americas Best Graduate Schools
2012. Ranks #42 for faculty receiving signifi cant research awards
and #80 in the
national universities category, which ranks 258 universities
nationally, Washington Monthly 2010.
Top-ranked military friendly school in the nation, G.I. Jobs
2011. Clarkson is one of only 330 of the country's best and most
interesting colleges and
universities featured in the 2011 Edition of the Fiske Guide to
Colleges.
Snell Hall
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14
POTSDAM and ST. LAWRENCE COUNTY
Market Street, Potsdam
Adirondack Mountains
http://www.potsdam.ny.us/
S t. Lawrence County is a place where you find the best that
America has to offer a place where farmers and professors work near
each other with admiration and respect, a place where Fortune 500
companies operate alongside artisans and mom and pop shops, a place
that is rugged and wild, yet cosmopolitan and home to people from
40 different countries.
St. Lawrence County is the largest geo-graphical county east of
the Mississippi, yet there are only 110,000 residents. The forests
and parks teem with wildlife from bear to fi sh, moose to
white-tailed deer. There are thousands of acres of woods and over
200 ponds, lakes and rivers. The mighty St. Lawrence connects the
country to Canadian neighbors, just minutes away. St. Lawrence
County is an educational community and boasts six colleges and
Universities, which turn out future leaders of the countrys
busi-nesses and communities.
As for recreation, St. Lawrence County has it all: camping, fi
shing, boating, biking, hiking, canoeing, swimming, snowmobil-ing,
cross country skiing, and fairs and festivals of all kinds. Mostly,
what youll fi nd on your visit to St. Lawrence County is an
unhurried atmosphere where people will gladly take a moment to pass
the time of day and tell you stories of life in Border Country. You
will fi nd a place thats safe to visit, with wide open spaces and a
strong regard for those who live, work and visit here.
St. Lawrence County, the North Coast of America, entices both
rugged adventurers and those just content to sit back and watch.
Stretching from the St. Lawrence River, to deep into the famed
Adirondack Park with majestic forests and lakes, St. Lawrence
County encompasses 2,840 square miles. Its New Yorks largest
county. Theres plenty of room for all. No matter what the season,
there is never a limit to the adventures youll fi nd in St.
Lawrence County.
POTSDAMKnown as the cultural and educational center of St.
Lawrence County, Potsdam is a warm and neighborly community, rich
in heritage and tradi-tion while involved in exploration of
cutting-edge technology.
Victorian-style architecture is blended with modern educational
and scientifi c centers, cultural and shopping facilities,
restaurants, medical facilities, airport and accommodations.
Several of the towns earliest homes and public buildings were
constructed of Potsdam sandstone, which was so abundant at the time
the town was fi rst explored for permanent settlement.
Fans of the arts have a wealth of resources available, enriched
by the colleges and universities in the area. Potsdam is home of
Clarkson University, a 4-year private institution specializing in
technology and Potsdam College, a 4-year Liberal Arts College,
which is part of the
State University of New York. Art galleries, visiting theatre
and dance companies, opera and classical musical concerts based at
the schools draw performance artists from around the world.
Contemporary musical
acts fi nd they receive a particularly warm reception in
Potsdam. Performances in the area have included Trisha Yearwood,
The Irish Rovers, The Indigo Girls and Sugar Ray. These are in
addition to a host of lo-cal talent that entertains the community
in frequent open-air concerts and festivals in the summer
months.
Visitors can sample a variety of cuisines any time of the year
from one of Potsdams many eateries. In any season, outdoor
en-thusiasts will feel right at home in Potsdam. The Racquette
River provides the perfect setting for canoeing, kayaking, or
swim-ming. The surrounding woods are ideal for an afternoon of
hiking and exploration or, even, a fall picnic. In the winter, the
gentle slopes provide a great location for cross-country skiers and
sledding fans alike. Nothing beats the view from Potsdam, no matter
what the season is. Discover Pots-dam and see what you have been
missing.
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CHEEL ARENA
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16
G o l d e n K n i g h t
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Regarded by many as among the fi nest college hockey facilities
in the country, Cheel Arena has proved to be an ideal venue in
which to watch some of the best hockey that the NCAA has to offer.
From the inaugural 9-3 opening night victory over Boston College on
October 26, 1991, to their ECAC Hockey regular-season title win
over Princeton in February, 2008, the Golden Knights have supplied
their loyal fans with plenty to cheer about within the spectacular
confi nes of the 3,000-seat arena at the Cheel Campus Center.
Cheel Arena is one of the showcase hockey arenas in the nation,
and a great tribute to all the players,
coaches and staff at Clarkson University and the ECAC, stated
former ECAC Commissioner Clayton Chapman.
For the previous 53 years, the Knights enjoyed a tremendous
home-ice advantage at old Walker Arena. The success and enthusiasm
generated at Cheel Arena, where the Knights have posted a
223-100-36 home record the past 20 seasons, indicates Clarkson
hockey will continue to prosper and reach loftier heights at
Cheel.
The Campus Center provides the University with a
110,000-square-foot campus center and multipurpose arena. A major
gift commitment from Helen Snell Cheel resulted in the building
being called the Cheel Campus Center. The arena features a
regulation ice surface measuring 85' x 200' and
CHEEL CAMPUS CENTERapproximately 3,000 individual backed seats,
reached from sloping aisles. Every seat offers unobs t ruc ted
sight lines to the ice surface. The arena will accommodate an
additional 400-900 spectators in the standing-room areas along its
perimeter. Five spacious carpeted dressing rooms for Clarkson's
men's and women's teams, and visiting teams, plus a complete
training room, a fully equipped weight room, players lounge, and
coaches offi ce, as well as storage and skate-sharpening areas, are
included in the lower level of the complex. The upper level
features a hospitality suite that overlooks the arena surface from
center-ice. Highlighting the arena high above center-ice is a
Fairplay board 14by 13-- 48 by 60 full color for animations,
pictures, and message center.
In addition to hosting some of the fi nest hockey in the
Northeast, the multipurpose arena also serves the entire Clarkson
community, which can congregate in one place for convocations,
commencement, concerts, and other events for the fi rst time in
many years. This facility is located on the hill campus, adjacent
to the CAMP Building, Snell Field and the indoor Recreation Center.
Final design of the Campus Center was conducted by Daniel F. Tully
Associates Inc. of Boston. Construction began June 15, 1990, and
was completed in late August 1991.
Through the fi rst 20 seasons at Cheel, 1,010,308 fans have
witnessed the Knights play. Clarkson has drawn over 3,000 fans to
one game 141 times, and the opening contest against Boston College
attracted 3,843, more than double the listed capacity of 1,800 at
Walker Arena. On January 18, 2003 a record Cheel Arena crowd of
4,125 saw the Golden Knights battle arch-rival St. Lawrence.
They did everything rightthe whole thing, exclaimed Len
Ceglarski, former Clarkson and Boston College head coach, at Cheels
opening. They really needed a student union and a new rink, and
this is going to be a great tool for them. It is just a beautiful
building.
Over a million fans have seen the Golden Knights boast a very
impressive 223-100-36 record at Cheel Arena
since the building's opening in 1991.
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17
CHEEL ARENA FACTS
Att. Date Opponent Score 1. 4,125 - 1/18/03 vs St. Lawrence L
3-2 2. 4,115 - 11/3/01 vs St. Lawrence W 7-6 ot 3. 3,914 - 1/27/06
vs St. Lawrence W 3-2 4. 3,865 - 1/23/99 vs St. Lawrence W 5-4 5.
3,843 - 10/26/91 vs Boston Coll. W 9-3 @ 3,843 - 10/24/09 vs St.
Lawrence W 4-1 7. 3,840 - 1/25/97 vs St. Lawrence W 8-3 8. 3,832 -
11/18/95 vs St. Lawrence W 6-4 9. 3,817 - 11/22/03 vs St. Lawrence
W 3-110. 3,755 - 1/15/05 vs St. Lawrence L 7-211. 3,721 - 11/20/10
vs St. Lawrence W 3-112. 3,723 - 11/15/97 vs St. Lawrence W 4-313.
3,702 - 1/20/96 vs Vermont L 6-314. 3,695 - 10/20/07 vs St.
Lawrence W 5-4 ot15. 3,657 - 10/30/93 vs Boston Coll. W 4-3 ot *16.
3,644 - 10/31/92 vs UNH W 6-1 *17. 3,619 - 12/10/94 vs St. Lawrence
W 9-218. 3,615 - 12/13/91 vs St. Lawrence L 4-319. 3,593 - 3/9/02
vs St. Lawrence W 6-1 $20. 3,587 - 11/13/99 vs Rensselaer L 3-2@
First Game, * Season Opener, $ ECAC Playoff
CLARKSON'SOVERALL RECORD AT CHEEL ARENA (1991-2011): 223-100-36
- .671 winning percentage vs ECAC: 134-60-25, .669 vs ECAC (nl):
1-1-0, .500 vs HEA: 18-8-0, .692 vs CCHA: 9-8-3, .525 vs WCHA:
2-9-3, .250 vs AH: 10-1-2, .846 vs. CHA: 8-2-1, .772 vs Independ.:
3-2-2, .571 vs Div. III: 2-0-0, 1.000 vs Canadian: 11-1-0, .916
Playoffs: 25-8-0, .758
To
p 2
0 A
ll-T
ime C
row
ds
at
Ch
eel A
ren
aClarkson and St. Lawrence have played before
15 of the 20 largest crowds at Cheel Arena with the Knights
winning 12 of those games.
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18
G o l d e n K n i g h t
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Year-by-Year Attendance at Cheel Arena
TOTAL ATTENDANCE: 1,010,308 361 games - 2,798 average
SINGLE GAME ATTENDANCE MARK: 4,125, January 18, 2003 vs St.
Lawrence
TOTAL CLARKSON GOALS: 1,352 (3.74 average), 1991-2011 (361
games)
TOTAL OPPONENTS GOALS: 910 (2.52 average) 1991-2011 (361
games)
SINGLE GAME CHEEL RECORDS MOST CLARKSON GOALS: 12 vs
Northeastern, 11/6/92 MOST OPPONENTS GOALS: 8 Three times vs W.
Michigan 11/4/94 (L 8-4) vs Colgate, 2/18/95 (L 8-5) vs Cornell,
2/11/00 (L 8-3)
MOST COMBINED GOALS: 15 in 8-7 win vs Union, 11/13/93
LONGEST WINNING STREAK: 11 Games (11/22/97 - 3/14/98)
SHUTOUTS OVERALL: 24MOST SHUTOUTS IN A SEASON: 5 - 2007-08
Year Attendance Games Avg.2010-11 44,883 20 2,2442009-10 44,995
17 2,6472008-09 48,269 17 2,8392007-08 54,420 20 2,7212006-07
55,601 21 2,6482005-06 46,855 20 2,3432004-05 39,157 17
2,3032003-04 50,045 20 2,503 2002-03 53,393 19 2,8102001-02 56,530
19 2,9752000-01 48,962 17 2,8801999-00 53,379 19 2,8091998-99
56,541 19 2,9761997-98 45,485 15 3,0321996-97 53,669 18
3,1571995-96 53,430 17 3,1431994-95 53,290 17 3,1351993-94 51,502
17 3,0301992-93 51,833 16 3,2401991-92 48,069 16 3,004
CHEEL ARENA1991-2011
Overall ECACYear Record Record 2010-11 6-12-2* 3-7-12009-10
8-7-2* 3-7-12008-09 5-7-5* 5-4-22007-08 16-3-1* 10-0-12006-07
13-4-4* 5-2-42005-06 16-2-2* 8-1-22004-05 7-6-4* 4-5-22003-04
9-9-2* 4-6-12002-03 10-9 6-52001-02 14-4-1 8-2-12000-01 11-5-1*
7-3-11999-00 9-9-1 5-4-11998-99 14-4-1 9-21997-98 12-1-2 10-0-1
1996-97 13-5* 8-31995-96 13-2-2 9-1-1 1994-95 10-5-2 6-4-11993-94
13-2-2* 8-1-21992-93 12-2-2 8-1-21991-92 14-2* 9-2
Records at Cheel Arena(*includes exhibition games)
Clarkson's Pep Band is considered one of the best in the country
and provides plenty of noise and support
for the Golden Knights at Cheel and on the road.
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19
GOLDEN KNIGHTS in the COMMUNITY
The Clarkson University Hockey team is actively involved with
the local community throughout the school year. Golden Knights
participate in numerous community service functions. Their annual
Skate With A Knight is a very popular event held each season. The
Knights also help out numerous minor hockey programs with free
clinics, participate in events with students from BOCES Life
Skills, and take part in the Village of Potsdams Annual Spring
Community Clean-Up. Clarkson hockey players are also very active in
reading programs at local schools.
For the past eight years, the Clarkson Hockey team has worked to
establish a charity organization to benefi t North Country area
youth. This organization serves as a focal point for all charitable
work done within the Clarkson Golden Knights Hockey organization.
Knights for Kids campaign was started in 2003 and to date has
raised over $15,000 for Camp Ta Kum Ta.
Camp Ta Kum Ta, is a camp for children battling the effects of
cancer. Camp Ta Kum Ta provides an open and loving environment to
foster individual confi dence, self esteem, and assist children in
gaining a positive outlook on their situation. Camp Ta Kum Ta will
give children enduring similar challenges a chance to meet other
children in their situation, while providing motivation and
inspiration to continue fi ghting through their illness.
The Clarkson Hockey team's Knights for Kids campaign has raised
over $15,000 for Camp Ta Kum Ta the past eight years.
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TOP CLARKSON GOALS SCORED AT CHEELOctober 26, 1991 Junior center
Steve Du-binsky nets a hat trick, including the Golden Knights fi
rst goal in their new home, leading Clarkson to a 9-3 victory over
Boston College before 3,843 fans.
December 7, 1991 Todd Marchant makes a big impact as a rookie
center scoring at 3:12 of sudden-death overtime to lift Clarkson to
a 4-3 thriller against Rensselaer as the Knights win their ninth in
a row.
January 4, 1992 Sophomore center Craig Conroy's second goal of
the game, at 10:21 of
the third, lifts C la rkson to a 6-5 victory over Yale.
November 21, 1992 Senior Steve Dubin-sky scores with 54 seconds
left as Clarkson sal-vages a 3-3 tie against Cornell.
M a r c h 1 2 , 1993 Clark-
son takes the fi rst game of the ECAC Quarterfi -nals against
St. Lawrence, 3-1. Freshman right wing Kevin Murphy scores with
less than fi ve minutes to go in the fi rst to give the Green and
Gold a 2-0 advantage.
March 14, 1993 Freshman left wing Steve Palmers second goal of
the game, a shorthanded marker at 13:39 of the third, insures the
Knights 5-3 win over St. Lawrence in the second game of the ECAC
Quarterfi nals.
October 30, 1993 Brian Mueller, a junior defenseman, nets the
winner 2:53 into the extra session as the Knights, after falling
behind 2-0 in the fi rst, knock off Boston College before 3,657 in
the opening game of the 1993-94 campaign.
Steve Dubinsky '93, who went on to play in the NHL with the
Chicago Blackhawks, Calgary Flames, Nashville Predators and St.
Louis Blues, celebrated the grand opening of
Cheel Arena with a hat trick, including the fi rst Clarkson goal
scored in the building, as the Golden Knights defeated Boston
College 9-3 before 3,843 fans on October 26, 1991.
Craig Conroy
November 13, 1993 Brian Mueller scores his second goal of the
game with 44 seconds remaining as Clarkson pulls out a wild 8-7
vic-tory over Union.
December 4, 1993 Sophomore right wing Chris Lipsett tallies the
game-winning goal on the power play at 12:39 of the third as
Clarkson defeats St. Lawrence 5-3 before 3,456.
March 4, 1994 Sophomore Steve Palmer scores on a power play 54
seconds into the third period to tie the game 2-2 against ECAC
front-runner Harvard.
March 11, 1994 While on the power play, junior left wing Marko
Tuomainen scores his second goal of the game, the eventual
game-winner at 13:50 of the fi nal frame, as Clarkson holds on to
down Colgate 7-6 in the fi rst game of the ECAC Quarterfi nals.
November 19, 1994 Clarkson reaches 1,000 wins faster than any
other college hockey pro-gram with a 9-1 win over Yale before
3,156. Sophomore center Todd White records the game-winner early in
the second stanza.
November 23, 1994 Senior left wing Patrice Robitaille tallies
two third-period goals, in-cluding the deciding score on the power
play at 14:31, as Clarkson goes on to defeat Miami 6-4.
February 3, 1995 Junior Steve Palm-er scores twice in the third
period as Clarkson storms back for 4-2 win over Union.
January 12, 1996 The second power-play goal of the game by
junior Todd White, at 16:11 of the fi rst stanza, gives the Knights
a decisive
Patrice Robitaille
Jean-Francois Houle
3-1 advantage over Maine in a game between the two national
powers that ends up in a 3-2 Clarkson victory.
March 1, 1996 Defenseman Phil Lecavaliers fi rst goal of his
junior campaign, two minutes into sudden-death overtime, proves to
be the game-winner in Clarksons 2-1 triumph over Cornell.
March 8, 1996 Junior left wing Jean-F r a n c o i s Houle
becomes the only player to ever record four goals in one game at
Cheel as he completes the scoring at 15:52 of the third in the
Knights 5-2 victory over Brown in fi rst game of ECAC Quarterfi
nals.
March 9, 1996 Todd White puts Clarkson up 4-3 at 8:42 of the
third frame with his second goal in 5-3 win over Brown in the
second game of the ECAC Quarterfi nals.
November 29, 1996 Junior right wing Chris Clark begins the
scoring just 42 seconds after the opening faceoff with the fi rst
of his two goals as the Knights jump out to a 4-1 lead en route to
a 6-3 win over Boston College.
January 4, 1997 Chris Clarks second of three goals, just 53
seconds into the second frame, puts the Green and Gold on top 3-2
as Clarkson comes from behind en route to a 5-2 victory over
Cornell.
March 7, 1997 Junior right wing Dana Mulvihill starts Clarksons
comeback with the Knights fi rst goal, at 12:49 of the fi rst
period as the Green and Gold battle back from a 2-0 defi cit to
down Yale 5-2 in fi rst game of ECAC Quarterfi nals.
-
21
November 22, 1997 Sophomore left wing Matt Reid completes a hat
trick with Clarksons fi nal goal at 18:26 of the third period in an
11-0 rout of Rensselaer.
March 7, 1998 Defense-man Nick Windsor caps
off a steady senior season, scoring 12 seconds into
over t ime to give the Green
and Gold a 4-3 victory over Cornell in the fi nal game of the
regular season and the
ECAC TV Game of the Week.
March 13, 1998 Captain, senior left wing, Ben Maidment nets the
overtime game-winner against Vermont in a 2-1 win of the fi rst
game of the ECAC Quarterfi nals with 1:28 left in the extra
session.
November 28, 1998 Sophomore left wing Erik Cole connects off an
assist from classmate, de-fenseman Willie Mitchell to tie the score
against Boston College at 7:08 of the third period, and then Cole
and Mitchell set-up junior defenseman Philippe Roy's power-play
game-winner at 11:41 as the Knights defeat the Eagles 2-1.
December 12, 1998 Sophomore center Don Smith scores Clarkson's
fi rst and last goals, the game-winner at 15:04 of the third, as
the Knights defeat Ferris State 5-4.
January 23, 1999 Willie Mitchell's fi rst goal of the season
caps off a f ive-goal C l a r k s o n rally as the K n i g h t s
overcome a 3-0 defi -cit to defeat arch-rival
March 11, 2000 The Knights run their post-season record at Cheel
to 17-0 with a 2-1 win over Princeton in the second game of the
ECAC Quarterfi nals. Sophomore left wing David Ev-ans tallies the
game-winner with 3:40 left in the second period.
January 19, 2001 - Senior Don Smith's power-play goal midway
through the second period starts a three-goal outburst as Clarkson
comes from behind to edge Dartmouth 4-3.
February 23, 2001 - Senior Murray Kuntz connects on the power
play midway through the third period as Clarkson takes a 3-1 lead
over Colgate en route to a 3-2 victory and its third win of the
season over the Red Raiders.
February 24, 2001 - Just 57 seconds after the open-ing faceoff,
the Golden Knights' lead-ing score r, junior Matt Poapst, tallies
as Clarkson gets the early jump en route to snapping a fi ve-game
losing skid to Cornell with a 2-0 victory over the Big Red.
March 10, 2001 With perhaps the biggest goal ever scored at
Cheel, ECAC Rookie of the Year, Rob McFeeters ends the longest game
in Clarkson history and the fi fth-longest game ever played in
college hockey at 99:53. With just seven seconds left in the second
overtime session, McFeeters snaps off a low shot during a scramble
in front for the game-winner lifting Clarkson to a 3-2 victory over
Vermont in the second game of the ECAC Quarterfi nals.
Todd White '97, who played 12 seasons in the NHL, scored a
Clark-son best nine game-winning goals in his senior campaign,
including
back-to-back winners in the Knights' victories over Union (3-2)
and Rensselaer (5-1) on February 7-8, 1997 at Cheel Arena.
St. Lawrence 5-4 before the largest crowd (3,865) ever at Cheel
and a live television audi-ence in the ECAC TV Game of the
Week.
February 5, 1999 Clarkson scores two quick goals to start the
second, including freshman right wing Matt Poapst's power-play
marker at 5:48, to defeat Dartmouth 2-1.
March 12, 1999 The Knights knock-off a stub-born Brown squad,
3-2 in overtime, in the fi rst game of the ECAC Quarterfi nals as
sophomore defenseman Kent Huskins scores the game-winner 55 seconds
into the extra session.
December 4, 1999 Freshman left wing Mikko Ruutu tallies the
Knights only goal, despite a 42-18 shot advantage, as Clarkson fi
ghts back to tie St. Lawrence 1-1 before 3,484.
March 3, 2000 Center Kevin OFlaherty comes through in his
freshman campaign by scoring two goals in a 32-second span early in
the third period, including the winner at 7:15, as the Knights come
from behind to defeat Dartmouth 5-4, which clinches home-ice for
the ECAC Quarterfi nals.
March 10, 2000 Sophomore Matt Poapst knocks in a rebound 1:02
into the third period to cap off a three-goal rally in Clarksons
come-from-behind 3-2 victory over Princeton in the fi rst game of
the ECAC Quarterfi nals.
Willie Mitchell
K i ht th i t
Nick Windsor
Murray Kuntz
March 7, 19man Nick
off a steadscorin
and Gover Cgame
ECof
Matt Poapst
-
22
G o l d e n K n i g h t
sGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
November 3, 2001 Senior de-fenseman Kerry Ellis-Toddington ends
a wild game against St. Law-rence by blasting a shot from the point
just under the crossbar at 2:04 of overtime to lift the Knights to
a 7-6 victory over their arch-rivals before a record crowd of
4,115. Kevin O'Flaherty, who registered his fi rst career hat trick
earlier in the contest, helps set up the deci-sive score.
January 12, 2002 With 1:43 left in the second period, freshman
Chris Blight tallies the game's only goal for his third
game-winning marker of the season as Clarkson blanks Union,
1-0.
March 9, 2002 Senior David Evans closes out his college career
at home on a high note by recording his fi rst collegiate hat trick
in the
Knights' 6-1 win over St. Lawrence in the second game of the
ECAC Quarterfi nals. Evans' fi rst goal with 36 seconds left in the
fi rst period proves to be the game-winner.
November 15, 2002 Junior Tristan Lush records his fi rst career
hat trick to lead Clarkson to a 5-1 victory over 15th ranked Brown
as the Knights successfully open a six-game home stand.
January 11, 2003 CU wins its sec-ond straight game and sophomore
de-fenseman Randy Jones caps off a fi ve-point weekend with the
lone goal in the 1-0 shutout over Vermont. Jones breaks a scoreless
tie as he jams in his own rebound at 2:27 of the third.
January 2, 2004 At 1:50 into overtime, sophomore defenseman
Chris Brekelmans scores from the top of the circles to lift
Clarkson to a 4-3 triumph over Mercyhurst.
February 21, 2004 In their fi -nal home game of the season the
Knights snap a six-game losing skid with a 3-2 victory over fi
rst-place Brown. The Green and Gold enjoyed a revitalized power
play as junior Jay Latulippe converts on the man-advantage,
Clarkson's second power-play marker of the contest, for the
eventual winning score at 12:42 of the second.
January 21, 2005 Freshman center Steve Zalewski scores both
goals to lead the Knights to a 2-0 victory over Union.
Kerry Ellis-Toddington
Jay Latulippe
David Evans
February 25, 2005 Senior cen-ter Jay Latulippe scores with
one
second left in regulation to cap off a third-period rally as
Clarkson ties 13th-ranked Colgate 3-3.
November 18, 2005 Sophomore Shawn Weller tallies his second goal
of the game at 2:33 of overtime as Clarkson overcomes a hard-fought
effort by Princeton to defeat the Tigers 4-3.
November 25, 2005 The fi rst goal of the season for junior
defenseman
Michael Grenzy, a power-play tally midway through the second
period, proves to be the game-winner as the Knights snap a
four-game losing skid to Harvard with a 4-3 victory over the
Crimson.
January 27, 2006 With a great individual effort midway through
the third period, freshman Shea Guthrie breaks a 2-2 tie to help
lift Clarkson to its fi rst win in fi ve games, a 3-2 victory over
arch-rival St. Lawrence.
March 3, 2006 Junior Mike Sul-livan scores both goals as
Clarkson downs Princeton 2-1 in opening game of the ECACHL fi rst
round series.
November 25, 2006 Clarkson gains its fi rst victory over a top 5
ranked team in five years by knocking off third-ranked Miami 4-2.
Senior Brodie Rutherglencaps off a three-goal weekend with the
game-winner against the Red-Hawks early in the second period,
scoring just 66 seconds after the visitors had tie it at 2-2.
Brodie Rutherglen
nior cen Michael Grenzy a power play tally
Randy Jones, who is now playing in the NHL for Tampa Bay brought
the Cheel Arena crowd to its feet with a
third-period score in a 1-0 win over Vermont (1/11/03).
-
23
December 5, 2006 Junior Shawn Weller scores twice as the Golden
Knights extend their winning streak to fi ve games with a 3-1
victory over archrival St. Lawrence before 3,525 North Country
fans. Weller scores late in the fi rst and notches his second goal
of the game in the fi nal minute of play.
February 17, 2007 Freshman Matt Beca scores his second goal of
the game with 3.3 seconds remaining in regulation to enable
Clarkson to salvage a 3-3 overtime tie with Rensselaer. Skating
with their goaltender pulled and on their ninth power play of the
night, the Golden Knights send the home crowd into frenzy as Beca
tallies his 10th goal of the season during a wild scramble in front
to tie the game.
March 10, 2007 Senior Mike S u l l i v a n broke a 1-1 deadlock
late
in the third period when he fi nished off a pass in front,
connecting for in his eighth goal of the season with 3:41 remaining
as Clarkson knocked defending ECAC Hockey League tr. champion
Harvard out of the playoffs by winning the second game of the
quarterfi nal series, 2-1.
October 12, 2007 In a rematch of the previous year's NCAA Tr.
game, Clarkson comes out on top in a 2-1 overtime victory against
UMass as junior Dan Tuttle scores on a quick shot just 59 seconds
into the extra
sesssion as the Knights win their first game of the season.
October 20, 2007 Clarkson rallies from a 3-0 fi rst-period defi
cit to defeat St. Lawrence 5-4 on junior Chris D'Alvise's
power-play
goal 1:26 into overtime to
w i n
the opening ECAC Hockey con-test.
November 3, 2007 Sophomore Tim Marks' first career hat trick
leads the Knights past Dart-mouth 4-3. Trailing 2-0 midway through
the fi rst, Clarkson an-swers back with four straight scores,
in-cluding two by Marks in the middle frame.
November 24, 2007 Senior Nick Dodge
scores twice, including the game-winner with just over fi ve
minutes left in regulation as the Green and Gold defeat St. Cloud
State 3-2,
snapping a fi ve-game losing streak to the Huskies.
January 5, 2008 Four different Knights score goals, capped off
by junior Shea Guthrie's game-winner
late in the second period, as Clarkson skates by eventual
national champion Boston Col-
lege 4-2, the Green and Gold's 10th consecutive win over the
Eagles.
February 29, 2008 Clarkson claims the ECAC Hockey RS title with
a 4-3 victory over Princeton. Trailing 3-2 after 40 minutes,
cap-tain Nick Dodge comes through with the game-winner, redirecting
a shot from the point while on the power play at 11:43 of the third
period.
March 14, 2008 The Knights' leading goal scorer, senior Steve
Za-lewski tallies a power-play marker late in the opening stanza
for the only goal as Clarkson wins the fi rst game of the ECAC
Quarterfinal series against Colgate.
October 25, 2008 Sophomore Scott Freeman tallied on the
power
play as Clarkson rallied back to tie #1-ranked Colorado College
for the second straight game, skating to a 2-2 deadlock before a
sold-out crowd of 3,392.
Nick Dodge scored the game-winner in 3-2 victory over St. Cloud
(11/24/07
ing ECAC lege 4 2 the Green and Gold's 10th
The Golden Knights celebrate a goal in the 4-2 victory over
eventual national champion Boston
College at Cheel Arena on January 5, 2008.
Mike Sullivan
-
G o l d e n K n i g h t
sGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
24
Shea Guthrie
to lift the Green and Gold to their third consecutive overtime
triumph, a 4-3 victory over RPI.
October 16, 2009 With 43.4 seconds left in overtime, senior Matt
Beca came through with the game-winner to lift Clarkson to a 4-3
victory over Niagara University in the Golden Knights 2009-10 home
opener before 3,135 fans.
January 23, 2009 Just 1:32 into overtime, senior Shea Guthrie
lift-ed in a rebound and came throughwith the game-winning goal to
lift Golden Knights to a 4-3 victory over Union.
January 24, 2009 For the second straight night, Shea Guthrie
capped off a thrilling fi nish for Clarkson, knocking in the
game-winning goal, 1:51 into the extra session, for his second
score of the night
February 2, 2010 Junior defen-seman Dan Reeds fi rst collegiate
goal highlighted a four-goal effort by the Golden Knights as the
Green and Gold snapped a lengthy win-less skid with a 4-3 victory
over Princeton. Reed's tally, at 4:55 of the third, was Clarkson's
third goal as the Knights' rallied from a 2-1 second-period defi
cit.
February 26, 2010 Freshman defenseman Andrew Himelsons fi rst
collegiate goal proved to be the game-winner as Clarkson defeated
Harvard University 2-1 in overtime. Himelson took a pass from along
the left boards by Matt Beca and fi red a shot from the top of the
right circle that found its way through traffi c in front and past
Crimson goaltender Ryan Carroll for the deciding goal with 1:49
left in the fi ve-minute overtime.
November 5, 2010 Just 18 seconds after the opening faceoff,
Clarkson goes on top when fresh-man Ben Sexton, charging down
One night after scoring the game-winner in overtime in the 4-3
win against Niagara (10/16/09), Matt Beca '10.
tallied twice in the 5-3 victory over RIT (10/17/09).
Junior defen the right wing, puts a shot on goal that defl ects
off a Col-gate defender in front for his third goal of the season.
The celebration was short lived however, as Sexton got tangled up
with a Raider defenseman, who slid into him after his shot, and
fell hard into the backboards. After a lengthy delay, the rookie
was taken off the ice on a stretcher with a broken arm and the
Knights went on to settle for a 4-4 tie.
November 20, 2010 Fresh-man Matt Zarbo scores Clark-son's fi rst
and last goals as the Knights defeat St. Lawrence 3-1 before 3,721
fans.
February 11, 2011 After a scoreless fi rst period, senior
defenseman Tom Pizzo gets Clarkson rolling to a 4-1 vic-tory over
Brown with his fi rst goal of the season to start the scoring
midway in the middle frame.
-
2010-11IN REVIEW
-
G o l d e n K n i g h t
sGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
26
2010-11 CLARKSON STATISTICS (returning players in CAPS) ECAC
CAREER# NAME GMS GLS ASST PTS P/M +/- PPG SHG GWG GMS GLS AST PTS
GMS GLS AST PTS77 B. DeFazio, Sr., F 36 14 12 26 24/56 E 2 0 2 22 8
7 15 141 36 41 7793 A. McPHERSON, Fr. F 35 8 15 23 8/16 -3 1 0 3 22
5 11 16 35 8 15 2314 J. MORLEY, Jr., F 36 7 15 22 16/41 -4 1 2 0 22
2 13 15 103 13 21 3412 N. TREMBLAY, Jr. F 33 9 12 21 9/18 -12 4 1 0
20 4 9 13 106 16 36 529 S. Freeman, Sr. F 31 10 9 19 13/45 -1 2 1 2
18 8 4 12 133 28 60 8819 L. OAKLEY, Jr., F/D 32 3 12 15 11/30 -10 1
0 1 19 3 8 11 99 9 37 4621 M. ZARBO, Fr., F 28 6 8 14 3/6 +6 1 0 2
19 4 3 7 28 6 8 147 C. TAMBLYN, Jr., F 36 4 8 12 16/32 -4 0 0 1 22
4 4 8 91 12 17 2989 B. Rufenach, Sr., D 33 4 7 11 7/14 E 0 0 0 20 1
3 4 136 21 34 5555 M. Borowiecki, Jr., D 31 3 8 11 24/67 -8 3 0 1
17 3 4 7 99 12 20 3237 W. FREDERICK, Fr., F 32 2 9 11 8/16 +3 0 0 0
21 1 5 6 32 2 9 1116 A. PAWLICK, So., F 29 3 6 9 3/17 -9 1 0 0 18 2
4 6 64 12 7 1944. D. PRATT, Fr., D 25 2 7 9 10/20 -3 1 1 1 17 1 4 5
25 2 7 915 A. BOAK, Fr., D 32 2 7 9 25/66 +4 0 0 0 21 1 4 5 32 2 7
974 B. SEXTON, Fr., F 12 5 3 8 6/12 +2 0 0 0 5 2 0 2 12 5 3 82 N.
POKULOK, So., D 29 4 4 8 16/54 E 0 0 1 15 2 4 6 66 4 7 1117 J.
CAYER, Jr., F 23 3 5 8 11/22 +4 0 0 1 16 3 3 6 74 9 14 2320 J.
BURTON, Fr., F 30 3 5 8 5/10 -6 0 1 0 19 2 3 5 30 3 5 826 A.
HIMELSON, So., D 19 2 2 4 4/8 -2 1 0 0 11 1 2 3 41 3 10 1391 M.
GARLASCO, Fr. F 16 1 3 4 8/35 E 0 0 0 9 0 1 1 16 1 3 427 L.
Tuohimaa, Sr., F 9 1 3 4 5/21 +3 0 0 0 12 0 1 1 128 13 30 435 T.
Pizzo, Sr., D 24 1 3 4 8/16 +2 0 0 0 15 1 3 4 93 4 7 114 D. Reed,
Sr., D 18 0 3 3 6/12 -1 0 0 0 12 0 2 2 90 1 9 1011 P. MASSAR, So.,
F 6 1 0 1 1/2 E 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 19 1 1 218 M. WILSON, So., F 3 0 0 0
1/2 E 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 35 0 1 133 P. KARPOWICH, Jr. G 35 0 0 0 1/2 E 0
0 0 22 0 0 0 93 0 1 1BENCH 6/20CLARKSON 36 98 166 264 254/660 18 6
15 22 58 102 160 Opponent 36 117 193 310 200/506 31 4 19 22 78 126
204
SCORING by CLASS GAMES GLS ASST PTS % of overall Scoring Seniors
(7) 159 30 38 68 .26 Juniors (7) 193 27 59 86 .33 Sophomores (5) 87
12 12 24 .09 Freshmen (9) 209 29 57 86 .33 648 98 166 264 1.00
GOALTENDER GMS MIN PLAY SHTS SVS GLS SV% GAA W-L-T SHO Gms Saves
Gls W-L-T Sho 33 P. KARPOWICH, Jr. 35 2006:31 1155 1053 102 .912
3.05 15-18-2 1 93 2643 275 30-51-10 229 C. ROSEN, So. 3 92:43 50 47
3 .940 1.94 0-1-0 0 4 60 6 0-1-0 01 R. LaVEAU, Jr. 3 69:21 49 43 6
.878 5.19 0-0-0 0 24 542 63 4-9-3 0Empty Net 18 11:14 6 6 CLARKSON
36 2179:49 1260 1143 117 .907 3.22 15-19-2 1 Opponents 36 2179:49
1097 999 98 .911 2.70 19-15-2 2
ECAC GOAL GMS MIN PLAY SHTS SVS GLS SV% GAA W-L-T SHO 33 P.
KARPOWICH, Jr. 22 1263:12 767 698 69 .910 3.28 9-12-1 0 1 R.
LaVEAU, Jr. 2 49:21 31 28 3 .903 3.65 0-0-0 0 29 C. ROSEN, So. 1
14:45 8 7 1 .875 4.07 0-0-0 0 Open Net 8 4:55 5 5 CLARKSON 22
1332:13 811 733 78 .904 3.51 9-12-1 0Opponents 22 1332;13 618 560
58 .906 2.61 12-9-1 0
POWER PLAY GLS ATT % CLARKSON 18 for 152 11.8Opponent 31 for 200
15.5
SCORE by PERIODS1 2 3 ot TOTAL21 33 42 2 9830 39 46 2 117
Allan McPherson is the Golden Knights' leading re-turning scorer
after recording 23 points on eight goals
and 15 assists last season in his rookie campaign.
CAREER
-
27
Matt Zarbo made an impression in his fi rst two games against
St. Lawrence. He netted the overtime winner in the 2-1 victory
in
Lake Placid (10/30), and tallied twice in the 3-1 win at Cheel
(11/20).
2010-11 SEASON RESULTSOverall Record 15-19-2, ECAC 9-12-1
(T-7th)ATT CU OPP Clarkson Saves Clarkson Goal Scorers - Gamewinner
in CAPS
Oct. 3 W(H) 1,919 5 CARLETON UNIV. (exh.) 2 KARPOWICH 25 Freeman
3, McPHERSON, Morley
Oct. 8 L(A) 4,793 0 8 KARPOWICH 37
LaVeau 15
Oct. 9 W(N) 5,056 6 #St. Cloud State 2 KARPOWICH 26 Himelson,
Tuohimaa, McPHERSON, Morley, Massar, Rufenach
Oct. 15 W(H) 2,203 4 0 KARPOWICH 31 FREEMAN, Morley, Garlasco,
DeFazio
Oct. 16 L(H) 2,167 0 3 KARPOWICH 21Oct. 22 W(H) 2,550 5 1
KARPOWICH 24 Sexton, PRATT, Zarbo, Tremblay, PawlickOct. 23 T(H)
3,104 3 BENTLEY 3ot KARPOWICH 30 DeFazio, Sexton, TremblayOct. 30
W(N) 5,500 2 St. Lawrence 1ot KARPOWICH 34 Morley, ZARBONov. 5 T(H)
2,010 4 *COLGATE 4ot KARPOWICH 36 Sexton, Borowiecki, Freeman,
Zarbo
Nov. 6 L(H) 2,397 1 *CORNELL 6 KARPOWICH 28 DeFazio
Nov. 12 L(H) 2,144 1 *DARTMOUTH 7 KARPOWICH 34 Boak
LaVeau 13
Nov. 13 W(H) 2,129 3 *HARVARD 1 KARPOWICH 35 McPherson, POKULOK,
FreemanNov. 20 W(H) 3,721 3 *ST. LAWRENCE 1 KARPOWICH 24 Zarbo 2,
FREEMAN
Nov. 26 L(N) 4,535 1 $Air Force 2 ROSEN 32 Tremblay Nov. 27 W(N)
4,535 2 $Lake Superior 1 KARPOWICH 30 Morley, McPHERSONDec. 3 W(A)
1,580 5 *Princeton 3 KARPOWICH 39 Pokulok, Pawlick, Tamblyn, ZARBO,
FreemanDec. 4 W(A) 2,515 5 *Quinnipiac 3 KARPOWICH 37 McPherson,
Rufenach, DeFAZIO 3Dec. 12 W(A) 371 9 Sacred Heart 2 KARPOWICH 27
DeFAZIO 3, Freeman, Pokulok, Rufenach, Frederick,
Tremblay, Morley
Jan. 3 L(H) 1,900 1 MINN.-DULUTH 4 KARPOWICH 25 McPherson
Jan. 4 L(H) 1,943 2 MINN.-DULUTH 4 KARPOWICH 18 Tremblay,
Burton
Rosen 8
Jan. 7 W(A) 3,619 3 *Rensselaer 2ot KARPOWICH 32 Borowiecki,
TAMBLYN 2
Jan. 8 L(A) 2,170 1 *Union 8 KARPOWICH 37 Oakley
Rosen 7
Jan. 21 L(A) 3,500 2 *Yale 5 KARPOWICH 28 Tremblay, CayerJan. 22
W(A) 1,209 3 *Brown 1 KARPOWICH 30 Burton, BOROWIECKI, Tremblay
Jan. 28 L(H) 1,962 2 *QUINNIPIAC 3 KARPOWICH 29 Himelson,
Oakley
Jan. 29 L(H) 2,013 3 *PRINCETON 4ot KARPOWICH 32 Tremblay 2,
McPherson
Feb. 4 L(A) 4,267 2 *Cornell 5 KARPOWICH 23 DeFazio, Pratt
Feb. 5 L(A) 954 2 *Colgate 4 KARPOWICH 35 DeFazio, McPhersonFeb.
11 W(H) 2,236 4 *BROWN 1 KARPOWICH 28 Pizzo, McPHERSON, Frederick,
Freeman
Feb. 12 L(H) 2,173 3 *YALE 6 KARPOWICH 16 Cayer, Freeman,
Burton
LaVeau 15
Feb. 15 W(A) 2,556 2 *St. Lawrence 1 KARPOWICH 37 Freeman,
OAKLEY
Feb. 18 L(H) 2,132 3 *UNION 4ot KARPOWICH 34 Tamblyn, Sexton,
Freeman
Feb. 19 L(H) 2,803 1 *RENSSELAER 5 KARPOWICH 29 DeFazio
Feb. 25 L(A) 2,131 1 *Harvard 3 KARPOWICH 32 MorleyFeb. 26 W(A)
3,611 4 *Dartmouth 1 KARPOWICH 43 DeFazio, CAYER, Pawlick,
Morley
Mar. 4 L(H) 1,656 1 %HARVARD 2 KARPOWICH 16 Boak
Mar. 5 L(H) 1,721 4 %HARVARD 6 KARPOWICH 36 Pokulok, Rufenach,
DeFazio, Sexton
Attendance Total 97,785 #Ohama Stampede, *ECAC Hockey, $Denver
Cup
#Nebraska-Omaha
BOWLING GREEN
BOWLING GREEN
BENTLEY
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28
G o l d e n K n i g h t
sGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
Nick Tremblay led Clarkson with four power-play tal-lies and
also scored a shorthanded marker. in 2010-11.
2010-11 GAME-by-GAME STATISTICS
When CU Scored First: 12-4-2 When Outshooting Opponents: 3-6-1
October Games: 4-2-1 When Opponent Scored First: 3-15-0 When
Outshot By Opponents: 6-17-3 November Games: 3-3-1 When Leading
After the First: 9-1-1 When Shots Are Equal: 3-0-0 December Games:
3-0-0 When Trailing After the First: 0-16-0 January Games: 2-6-0
When Tied After the First: 6-2-1 Longest Winning Streak: 4 games
(11/27 - 12/12) February Games: 3-6-0 When Leading After the
Second: 10-1-1 Longest Unbeaten Streak: 4 games (twice) March
Games: 0-2-0 When Trailing After the Second: 0-15-1 Longest Losing
Streak: 4 games (1/28 - 2/5) When Tied After the Second: 5-3-0
Longest Winless Streak 4 games (0-4-0) (1/28 - 2/5)
CU Power Play CU Penalty Kill CU OPP CU OPP
Date Opponent Score PPG Att % Kills Att % Pen Min Pen Min
Shots
Oct. 8 #at Nebraska-Omaha L(A) 8-0 0 of 5 0.00 7 of 8 0.88 11 22
7 28 26 60Oc. 9 #vs St. Cloud State W(N) 6-2 0 of 4 0.00 6 of 7
0.86 7 14 4 8 23 28Oct. 15 BOWLING GREEN W(H) 4-0 0 of 5 0.00 4 of
4 1.00 6 23 7 14 31 31Oct. 16 BOWLING GREEN L(H) 3-0 0 of 4 0.00 3
of 3 1.00 3 6 4 8 31 24Oct. 22 BENTLEY W(H) 5-1 0 of 5 0.00 3 of 4
0.75 4 8 5 10 53 25Oct. 23 BENTLEY T(H) 3-3ot 0 of 4 0.00 7 of 7
1.00 7 14 4 8 43 33Oct. 30 vs St. Lawrence W(N) 2-1ot 0 of 6 0.00 8
of 8 1.00 8 16 6 12 23 35Nov. 5 *COLGATE T(H) 4-4ot 3 of 6 0.50 6
of 7 0.86 8 16 7 14 36 40Nov. 6 *CORNELL L(H) 6-1 0 of 3 0.00 5 of
6 0.83 10 28 7 22 36 34Nov. 12 *DARTMOUTH L(H) 7-1 0 of 1 0.00 3 of
5 0.60 6 12 2 4 35 54Nov. 13 *HARVARD W(H) 3-1 0 of 2 0.00 5 of 5
1.00 6 12 3 6 35 36Nov. 20 *ST. LAWRENCE W(H) 3-1 0 of 3 0.00 5 of
5 1.00 5 10 3 6 18 25Nov. 26 #vs Air Force L(N) 2-1 0 of 2 0.00 3
of 3 1.00 4 19 2 4 37 34Nov. 27 #vs Lake Superior State W(N) 2-1 1
of 4 0.25 5 of 5 1.00 6 12 5 10 31 31Dec. 3 *Princeton W(A) 5-3 1
of 5 0.20 7 of 10 0.70 12 24 9 29 27 42Dec. 4 *Quinnipiac W(A) 5-3
0 of 1 0.00 4 of 6 0.67 7 14 2 4 27 40Dec. 12 Sacred Heart W(A) 9-2
3 of 8 0.38 3 of 3 1.00 5 21 9 26 46 29Jan. 3 MINN.-DULUTH L(H) 4-1
0 of 6 0.00 6 of 7 0.86 8 16 7 14 34 29Jan. 4 MINN.-DULUTH L(H) 4-2
1 of 10 0.10 5 of 7 0.71 15 76 16 59 35 30Jan. 7 *Rensselaer W(A)
3-2ot 1 of 6 0.17 5 of 5 1.00 5 10 6 12 33 34Jan. 8 *Union L(A) 8-1
0 of 4 0.00 4 of 5 0.80 6 12 5 10 19 52Jan. 21 *Yale L(A) 5-2 1 of
8 0.13 7 of 7 1.00 8 16 9 18 23 33Jan. 22 *Brown W(A) 3-1 1 of 5
0.20 2 of 3 0.67 9 45 11 38 37 31Jan. 28 *QUINNIPIAC L(H) 3-2 2 of
3 0.67 5 of 5 1.00 6 12 4 8 23 32Jan. 29 *PRINCETON L(H) 4-3ot 1 of
2 0.50 4 of 5 0.80 7 25 4 19 34 36Feb. 4 *Cornell L(A) 5-2 1 of 6
0.17 2 of 5 0.40 8 16 9 29 25 28Feb. 5 *Colgate L(A) 4-2 0 of 4
0.00 7 of 8 0.88 9 18 5 10 27 39Feb. 11 *BROWN W(H) 4-1 0 of 2 0.00
8 of 8 1.00 10 20 4 8 29 29Feb. 12 *YALE L(H) 6-3 0 of 3 0.00 3 of
5 0.60 6 12 4 8 25 37Feb. 15 *St. Lawrence W(A) 2-1 0 of 5 0.00 4
of 5 0.80 6 12