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1982 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Collegiate ice hockey tournament
1982 NCAA Division I men's
ice hockey tournament
Teams8
Finals site
ChampionsNorth Dakota Fighting Sioux (4th title)
Runner-upWisconsin Badgers (4th title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coachGino Gasparini (2nd title)
MOPPhil Sykes (North Dakota)

The1982 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament was the culmination of the1981–82 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, the 35th such tournament inNCAA history. It was held between March 19 and 27, 1982, and concluded withNorth Dakota defeatingWisconsin 5-2. All Quarterfinals matchups were held at home team venues while all succeeding games were played at theProvidence Civic Center inProvidence, Rhode Island.

Qualifying teams

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The NCAA permitted 8 teams to qualify for the tournament and divided its qualifiers into two regions (East and West). Each of the tournament champions from the threeDivision I conferences (CCHA,ECAC andWCHA) received automatic invitations into the tournament. Two additional automatic bids were received by the two ECAC division champions that did not contain the ECAC champion. At-large bids made up the remaining 3 teams, an additional 1 eastern and 2 western schools.

EastWest
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bidSeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bid
1NortheasternECAC Hockey23–8–1Tournament champion1stNever1WisconsinWCHA32–10–1Tournament champion7th1981
2New HampshireECAC Hockey20–12–0At-large bid3rd19792North DakotaWCHA31–12–0At-large bid9th1980
3ClarksonECAC Hockey26–6–1Division champion8th19813Michigan StateCCHA26–12–2Tournament champion4th1967
4HarvardECAC Hockey13–13–2Division champion8th19754Bowling GreenCCHA27–12–1At-large bid4th1979

[1]

Format

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The tournament featured three rounds of play. The two odd-number ranked teams from one region were placed into a bracket with the two even-number ranked teams of the other region. The teams were then seeded according to their ranking. In the Quarterfinals the first and fourth seeds and the second and third seeds playedtwo-game aggregate series to determine which school advanced to the Semifinals. Beginning with the Semifinals all games were played at the Providence Civic Center and all series becameSingle-game eliminations. The winning teams in the semifinals advanced to the National Championship Game with the losers playing in a Third Place game.

Tournament bracket

[edit]

[2]

Quarterfinals
March 19–21
Semifinals
March 25–26
National championship
March 27
           
E1Northeastern23***5
W4Bowling Green224
E1Northeastern2
W2North Dakota6
W2North Dakota527
E3Clarkson112
W2North Dakota5
W1Wisconsin2
W1Wisconsin6410
E4Harvard134
W1Wisconsin5Third-place game
E2New Hampshire0
E2New Hampshire369E1Northeastern10
W3Michigan State224E2New Hampshire4

Note: * denotes overtime period(s)

Quarterfinals

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(E1) Northeastern vs. (W4) Bowling Green

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March 19Northeastern2 – 2Bowling GreenMatthews Arena
March 20Northeastern3 – 23OTBowling GreenMatthews Arena
Northeastern won series 5–4

(E2) New Hampshire vs. (W3) Michigan State

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March 19[3]New Hampshire3 – 2Michigan StateSnively Arena 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
(Barton, Potter)Brian Byrnes – 14:47Second periodNo scoring
(unassisted)Dan Potter – 07:39
(Doherty, White)Ralph RobinsonGW – 16:20
Third period06:40 –Mark Hamway(Haight)
12:40 –Mark Hamway(Phair, Flegel)
March 20[3]New Hampshire6 – 2Michigan StateSnively Arena 
(Brickley)Paul Barton – 17:03First period18:58 –Lyke Phair(Miller, Martin)
(Ellison, Chisholm)Dan Muse – 08:05
(R. Robinson, Doherty)GWGeorge White – 10:03
(Forget, R. Robinson)Ross Yantzi – 15:12
Second periodNo scoring
(Forget, Lee)Normand Lacombe – 07:14
(Muse, Ellison)Dan Muse – 12:10
Third period17:49 –Newell Brown(Taylor, Phair)
New Hampshire won series 9–4

(W1) Wisconsin vs. (E4) Harvard

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March 20Wisconsin6 – 1HarvardDane County Coliseum
March 21Wisconsin4 – 3HarvardDane County Coliseum
Wisconsin won series 10–4

(W2) North Dakota vs. (E3) Clarkson

[edit]
March 19North Dakota5 – 1ClarksonWinter Sports Center
March 20North Dakota2 – 1ClarksonWinter Sports Center
North Dakota won series 7–2

Semifinal

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(E1) Northeastern vs. (W2) North Dakota

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March 25Northeastern2 – 6North DakotaProvidence Civic Center

(W1) Wisconsin vs. (E2) New Hampshire

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March 26Wisconsin5 – 0New HampshireProvidence Civic Center

Third-place game

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(E1) Northeastern vs. (E2) New Hampshire

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March 27Northeastern10 – 4New HampshireProvidence Civic Center

National Championship

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(W1) Wisconsin vs. (W2) North Dakota

[edit]
March 27[4]Wisconsin2 – 5North DakotaProvidence Civic Center
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stUNDGlen WhitePPSykes and Fester1:261–0 UND
WISRon VincentThomas3:561–1
2ndUNDPhil SykesSherven21:092–1 UND
WISJohn NewberryPearson andFlatley25:302–2
3rdUNDPhil SykesGWLudwig and White46:273–2 UND
UNDCary EadesMurray and Dachyshyn50:074–2 UND
UNDPhil SykesWhite andZombo55:085–2 UND
Shots by period
Team123T
North Dakota12101638
Wisconsin115925
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
UNDDarren Jensen23260:00
WISTerry Kleisinger33560:00

All-Tournament team

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*Most Outstanding Player(s)[5]

[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"NCAA Division 1 Tournament". College Hockey Historical Archives.Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. RetrievedJune 19, 2013.
  2. ^"NCAA Tournament". College Hockey Historical Archives. RetrievedMay 19, 2013.
  3. ^ab"Michigan State 2013-14 Hockey History"(PDF). Michigan State Spartans. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 22, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2017.
  4. ^"- YouTube".YouTube.
  5. ^"NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. RetrievedJuly 17, 2013.
  6. ^"NCAA Frozen Four Records"(PDF). NCAA.org.Archived(PDF) from the original on August 17, 2012. RetrievedJune 19, 2013.
Tournaments
Records & achievements
1948
Michigan
1949
Boston College
1950
Colorado College
1951
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1952
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1953
Michigan
1954
RPI
1955
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1956
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1957
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1958
Denver
1959
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1960
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1961
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1962
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1963
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1964
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1965
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1966
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1967
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1968
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1969
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1970
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1971
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1972
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1973
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1974
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1975
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1976
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1977
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1978
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1979
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1980
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1981
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1982
North Dakota
1983
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1984
Bowling Green
1985
RPI
1986
Michigan State
1987
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1988
Lake Superior State
1989
Harvard
1990
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1991
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1992
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1993
Maine
1994
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1995
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1996
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1997
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1998
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1999
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2000
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2001
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2002
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2003
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2004
Denver
2005
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2006
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2007
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2008
Boston College
2009
Boston University
2010
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2011
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2012
Boston College
2013
Yale
2014
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2015
Providence
2016
North Dakota
2017
Denver
2018
Minnesota–Duluth
2019
Minnesota Duluth
2020
No tournament
2021
UMass
2022
Denver
2023
Quinnipiac
2024
Denver
2025
Western Michigan
Conference
National
1981–82 NCAA Division I championships
† Inaugural championship – ‡ Inaugural combined championship
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