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1953–54 RPI Bachelors men's ice hockey season

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1953–54RPI Bachelors
men's ice hockey season
NCAA Champion
Tri-State League co-champion
1954 NCAA, champion
ConferenceT–1stTri-State League
Home iceHouston Field House
Record
Overall18–5–0
Home12–1–0
Road4–4
Neutral2–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachNed Harkness
Captain(s)Frank Chiarelli
Jim Shildneck
RPI Engineers men's ice hockey seasons
«1952–43 1954–55 »

The1953–54 RPI Bachelors men's ice hockey team representedRensselaer Polytechnic Institute in intercollegiatecollege ice hockey during the1953–54 NCAA men's ice hockey season. Thehead coach wasNed Harkness and the teamco-captains were Frank Chiarelli and Jim Shildneck. The team won the1954 NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. The team's leading scorer wasAbbie Moore, who finished tied for second in the nation with 68 points.

Season

[edit]

Coming off aTri-State League championship and the program's first appearance in theNCAA tournament, Rensselaer was primed to build on the previous years' success with the top five scorers all returning for another season.[1] Also from the previous campaign was starting netminderBob Fox who was among the best goalies in the nation in 1953.

The Bachelors opened their season with nine of their first ten games at home and used that to their advantage, sweeping the five games they played before the winter break. Their first big game came againstYale inNew Haven where RPI would defeat a team that finished 4th in the east 4–2. After the break Rensselaer hosted their thirdHoliday Tournament and after winning games overBrown andPrinceton they lost their first game of the season againstSt. Francis Xavier in the tournament championship.[2] RPI won two more games, pushing their record to 9–1–0, before taking a week off in preparation for their weekend trip toColorado.

Playing at high altitude for the first time since the previous year's tournament Rensselaer came out flat against a decentDenver squad, dropping their first contest 3–8 and followed that up with an identical loss toColorado College the next night. After a day off the Bachelors returned toDenver for a rematch with the Pioneers and though they lost once more the fared much better in the game, losing 2–3 as they seemed to finally find their skating legs. Three days later RPI was back inNew York facingHamilton on the road and despite thejet lag they trounced the Continentals 11–0. Two days later the Bachelors finally opened their conference schedule with a win atClarkson but after another win atMiddlebury they dropped a match atSt. Lawrence 4–5.

With RPI in danger of losing a chance at the NCAA tournament to the Saints they had no margin for error and swept the rest of their schedule until the rematch with the Larries on March 5. The game had been sold out for months and when the teams met they produced one of the most exciting games ever held atHouston Field House.[3] Rensselaer skated away with the victory, earning them a tie with St. Lawrence as the co-champions of the Tri-State League. Despite the victory, however, the Saints had a better record, going 18–3–1 over the course of the season and were expected to be picked for the tournament but a selection of coaches and officials chose the Bachelors to head to the championship instead. Rensselaer's appearance was such a surprise that St. Lawrence had been included on the tournament programs and had their logo on the wooden pennant hanging outside theBroadmoor World Arena.[3]

The "RIP" Bachelors entered as the fourth seed and drewMichigan who, despite having a lesser record thanMinnesota, was the three-time defending champion and was riding a 7-game tournament winning streak. Rensselaer would have to wait, however, asBoston College opened against the Golden Gophers and were mercilessly eviscerated by Minnesota, losing by the largest margin in tournament history (1–14). Rensselaer had been given no chance entering the tournament but after the first semifinal there was a feeling from the spectators that Michigan would produce an equally lopsided victory.[4] With all of the insults, slights and dismissals levied at their team the Bachelors responded in the only way they could; the small but fast team outskated the heavily favored Wolverines and with Gordie Peterkin recording ahat-trick, including the game-winner, Rensselaer won what was then considered the biggest upset the tournament had ever seen. Not only was their 6–4 win the first tournament victory by an eastern team over a western team in three years but it was the first time Rensselaer had ever defeated a western school.[3]

While the defeated Wolverines took their frustrations out on their hotel rooms, the Bachelors had to prepare themselves for a showdown with the Golden Gophers the next night. The Bachelors opened the game with the first three goals of the contest, one from each of their top three scorers. While the crowd may have been stunned Minnesota was not and they came roaring back with four consecutive goals to take the lead in the third period. Just when it looked like Rensselaer's chance at the title had slipped away Frank Chiarelli set upAbbie Moore for his second goal of the game to tie the score with 3:50 left in regulation and sent the game into overtime, the first time the championship game would need an extra period. The tying goal seemed to buoy RPI who came out of the intermission flying and before two minutes had elapsed Peterkin had notched his second winning goal of the tournament.

Rensselaer's win was so improbably that it apparently flummoxed the voters for the tournament awards. Four Bachelors made their way onto the FirstAll-Tournament Team:Bob Fox,Jim Pope,Frank Chiarelli andGordie Peterkin. However it was Abbie Moore who was named as theMost Outstanding Player, the only time in tournament history that the MOP was not on the top team.

The Bachelors returned home to a hero's welcome and, though few continued to play once their time at Rensselaer was over, the thirteen men who had earned one of the most improbable championships in history would be remembered by the RPI faithful.[5]

Note: In the Spring of 1953 the Student Body voted that 'Bachelors' would be the new nickname of all athletic teams for RPI.[6] The moniker would revert to Engineers in 1958.

Standings

[edit]
ConferenceOverall
GPWLTPTSGFGAGPWLTGFGA
Rensselaer651010281423185014159
St. Lawrence541010291522183113656
Clarkson514041127177828373
Middlebury4040082017980
indicates conference regular season champion

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponent#Rank#SiteDecisionResultRecord
Regular Season
November 28vs. McGill*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 7–3 1–0–0 (0–0–0)
December 5vs. Providence*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 14–3 2–0–0 (0–0–0)
December 10at Yale*New Haven ArenaNew Haven,ConnecticutFoxW 4–2 3–0–0 (0–0–0)
December 12vs. Boston University*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 8–2 4–0–0 (0–0–0)
December 18vs. Hamilton*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 15–0 5–0–0 (0–0–0)
Rensselaer Holiday Tournament
December 30vs. Brown*Houston Field HouseTroy,New York (Rensselaer Holiday Tournament)FoxW 5–1 6–0–0 (0–0–0)
January 1vs. Princeton*Houston Field HouseTroy,New York (Rensselaer Holiday Tournament)FoxW 5–0 7–0–0 (0–0–0)
January 2vs. St. Francis Xavier*Houston Field HouseTroy,New York (Rensselaer Holiday Tournament)FoxL 1–4 7–1–0 (0–0–0)
January 9vs. Northeastern*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 7–1 8–1–0 (0–0–0)
January 15vs. Princeton*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 5–2 9–1–0 (0–0–0)
January 29at Denver*DU ArenaDenver,ColoradoFoxL 3–8 9–2–0 (0–0–0)
January 30at Colorado College*Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs,ColoradoFoxL 3–8 9–3–0 (0–0–0)
February 1at Denver*DU ArenaDenver,ColoradoFoxL 2–3 9–4–0 (0–0–0)
February 4at Hamilton*Russell Sage RinkClinton, New YorkFoxW 11–0 10–4–0 (0–0–0)
February 6vs. ClarksonHouston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 8–0 11–4–0 (1–0–0)
February 8vs. MiddleburyThe War Memorial Field HouseMiddlebury,VermontFoxW 4–2 12–4–0 (2–0–0)
February 12at St. LawrenceAppleton ArenaCanton,New YorkFoxL 4–5 12–5–0 (2–1–0)
February 13at ClarksonWalker ArenaPotsdam,New YorkFoxW 4–3 13–5–0 (3–1–0)
February 19vs. American International*Houston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 12–0 14–5–0 (3–1–0)
February 27vs. MiddleburyHouston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 4–2 15–5–0 (4–1–0)
March 5vs. St. LawrenceHouston Field HouseTroy,New YorkFoxW 4–2 16–5–0 (5–1–0)
NCAA Tournament
March 12vs. Michigan*Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs,Colorado (National Semifinal)FoxW 6–4 17–5–0 (5–1–0)
March 13vs. Minnesota*Broadmoor World ArenaColorado Springs,Colorado (National championship)FoxW 5–4 OT18–5–0 (5–1–0)
*Non-conference game.
Source:[7]

Roster and scoring statistics

[edit]
No.NameYearPositionHometownS/P/CGamesGoalsAssistsPtsPIM
7Abbie MooreSeniorCOttawa,ONOntario2336326814
8Frank ChiarelliJuniorFOttawa,ONOntario2335276221
9Ambrose MoscoJuniorLWRenfrew,ONOntario2323234627
4Frank ParadiseSeniorFSomerville,MAMassachusetts2310172715
5John MagadiniJuniorFPatchogue,NYNew York (state)2314102426
10Gordie PeterkinJuniorCOttawa,ONOntario231572274
18Jim PopeJuniorD/FOttawa,ONOntario23461036
11Bill MouzaviresSophomoreFNew York,NYNew York (state)151344
15Harry WilliamsFreshmanCNew York,NYNew York (state)183036
14Bruce BaumSophomoreFLarchmont,NYNew York (state)200110
2Lloyd BauerJuniorDNew Haven,CTConnecticut2101118
Erik LarsonSeniorF10000
Ray WeinzlerSenior10000
6Jim ShildneckSeniorDMarblehead,MAMassachusetts70008
16Marty KarchSophomoreDNew York,NYNew York (state)2100020
1Bob FoxJuniorGVerdun,PQQuebec230000
Total141127268

[1]

Goaltending Statistics

[edit]
No.NameGamesMinutesWinsLossesTiesGoals AgainstSavesShut OutsSV %GAA
1Bob Fox2313811850595025.8952.56
Total2313811850595025.8952.56

[8]

1954 championship

[edit]

(W2) Minnesota vs. (E2) Rensselaer

[edit]
March 17[9][10][11]Minnesota4 – 5OTRensselaerBroadmoor Ice PalaceRecap
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stRPIAbbie MooreMosco17:071–0 RPI
RPIFrank ChiarelliPPParadise19:422–0 RPI
2ndRPIAmbrose MoscoMoore22:453–0 RPI
MINKen Yackelunassisted23:093–1 RPI
MINDick DoughertyCampbell25:323–2 RPI
3rdMINJohn MayasichDougherty44:293–3
MINDick DoughertyMayasich48:304–3 Minn
RPIAbbie MooreChiarelli56:104–4
1st OvertimeRPIGordie PeterkinGWMagadini61:545–4 RPI
Shots by period
Team123OTT
Minnesota81422044
Rensselaer1184225
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
MINJim Mattson205
RPIBob Fox404

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Year-by-Year Scoring Statistics (since 1950-51)"(PDF). RPI Engineers. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  2. ^"Rensselaer Holiday Tournament".College Hockey Historical Archives. RetrievedJuly 31, 2010.
  3. ^abc"RPI Glory Days pg. 3".Rensselaer Alumni Magazine. Archived fromthe original on March 7, 2016. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  4. ^"In '54, RPI Had Its Own Miracle on Ice".Rensselaer Engineers. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  5. ^"Returning Heroes: 1954 Championship Hockey Team Returns Feb. 7".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^"Symbols of the Institute".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. RetrievedJanuary 9, 2020.
  7. ^"Results by Season"(PDF). RPI Engineers. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  8. ^"Goaltending by Season (since 1950-51)"(PDF). RPI Engineers. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  9. ^"RPI Hockey :: Schenectady Daily Gazette Articles :: 02.06.04".
  10. ^"March 14, 1954 (Vol. 64, iss. 112) - Image 5".
  11. ^"Rensselaer Magazine, Winter 2003: Glory Days (Page 3 of 4)". Archived fromthe original on March 7, 2016. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.

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