| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1949 Milton, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Died | November 2, 1990(1990-11-02) (aged 41) Durham, New Hampshire, U.S. |
| Playing career | |
| 1969–1971 | Bowdoin |
| 1971–1973 | Braintree Hawks |
| 1973–1974 | Manchester Monarchs |
| Position | Defenseman |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1977–1986 | New Hampshire (assistant) |
| 1986–1987 | New Hampshire |
| 1988–1990 | New Hampshire |
Robert A. Kullen (1949 – November 2, 1990) was an Americanice hockey coach and player. He was thehead coach of the University ofNew Hampshire for a short time in the late 1980s before a rare heart condition that necessitated aheart transplant forced him to step away from his position and ultimately cost him his life a month later.[1] In addition to coaching New Hampshire's ice hockey team, he also coached the New Hampshire golf team and soccer team.[2]
Bob Kullen starred as a defenseman forBowdoin College until graduating in the spring of 1971. He continued playing in a short minor league career, appearing for theBraintree Hawks in two seasons then for theManchester Monarchs in the only year theCan-Am Hockey League was in operation before calling it quits after 1974.[3] He turned to coaching afterwards, finding his way onto the staff ofCharlie Holt atNew Hampshire starting in1977–78 and remaining as an assistant there until Holt's retirement in1985–86.[4]
Kullen was chosen as Holt's successor and began rebuilding the team that had won only 5 games the year before.[5] His first two recruiting classes lay the foundation for UNH's success in the 1990s, included NHL players Chris Winnes, Adren Plavisc, Kevin Dean, Scott Morrow, and All-Americans Joe Flanagan and Domenic Amodeo, and Hockey East all-stars David MacIntyre and Savo Mitrovic. After a season of modest gains it was discovered that Kullen suffered from a rare form of heart disease and had to have an immediate heart transplant that caused him to miss the entire1987–88 season.[6] Another long-time UNH assistant,Dave O'Connor filled in for Kullen, but the team was predictably flat in his absence. Kullen returned behind the bench the following year and continued the work he had started, getting the team to 12 wins in1988–89 and then followed it up with a 17–17–5 mark, their first .500 season since leavingECAC Hockey after1983–84. While he was expecting to continue coaching for the foreseeable future, Kullen began rejecting the transplanted heart in the fall of 1990 and was forced to turn over the team toDick Umile to recover but he died about a month later on November 2.[7]
In his memory,Hockey East renamed theirCoach of the Year Award in his honor and fittingly the first recipient of the 'Bob Kullen Coach of the Year Award' was the man who replaced him at New Hampshire.[8] in 1991 Bob Kullen became the first player to have his uniform number retired by Bowdoin College in the history of the athletic department.[9]
| Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Hampshire Wildcats(Hockey East)(1986–1987) | |||||||||
| 1986–87 | New Hampshire | 8–27–3 | 5–24–3 | 7th | |||||
| New Hampshire: | 8–27–3 | 5–24–3 | |||||||
| New Hampshire Wildcats(Hockey East)(1988–1990) | |||||||||
| 1988–89 | New Hampshire | 12–22–0 | 9–17–0 | 6th | Hockey East Quarterfinals | ||||
| 1989–90 | New Hampshire | 17–17–5 | 8–9–4 | 5th | Hockey East Semifinals | ||||
| New Hampshire: | 29–39–5 | 17–26–4 | |||||||
| Total: | 37–66–8 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion | |||||||||