1905–06 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season

The 1905–06 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season was the 9th season of play for the program.

1905–06 Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey season
Intercollegiate Champion
Intercollegiate Hockey Association, Champion
Conference1st IHA
Home iceHarvard Stadium Rink
Record
Overall5–0–1
Conference4–0–0
Home2–0–0
Road1–0–1
Neutral2–0–0
Coaches and Captains
Head CoachAlfred Winsor
Captain(s)Daniel Newhall
Harvard Crimson men's ice hockey seasons
« 1904–05 1906–07 »

Season

For the fourth straight year Harvard finished undefeated, claiming the intercollegiate title. While their winning streak came to an end at 30 their intercollegiate winning streak was continued at 20 games. Harvard entered the game against Yale with both teams undefeated in conference play. Harvard scored 3 times in the first half but were equaled by the Elis in the second. Because the victory would win the IHA championship the game continued on through four scoreless sessions before Richard Townsend ended the game in the fifth 5-minute overtime.[1] The title game possessed the most overtime periods Harvard has ever played, however, because regulation was only 40 minutes, the game time was swiftly surpassed once the college game shifted to three 20-minute periods.

Roster

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
Stephen Edgell Junior F
Arnold Fraser-Campbell Sophomore F
Malcolm Ivy Graduate G
Eldon MacLeod Senior F 1883-03-18
Daniel Newhall (C) Senior D 1884-12-03 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Morton Newhall Sophomore F 1886-09-15 Germantown, Pennsylvania
Clarence Pell Sophomore F 1885-07-29 Newport, Rhode Island
Thompson Sampson Freshman D 1886-04-23 Boston, Massachusetts
Richard Townsend Junior F 1885-07-27 Roxbury, Massachusetts
Joseph Willetts Freshman D 1886-10-17 Brooklyn, New York

[2]

Standings

1905–06 Collegiate ice hockey standings
Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T PCT. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Army2110.50091065103013
Brown7070.0007378080740
Carnegie Tech1010.000053120211
Columbia5320.6001017124712453
Dartmouth2110.50077211077
Harvard44001.0001856501358
MIT11001.000532110613
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn
Princeton5230.4001317136704062
Trinity
Union2011
Williams3030.00091362401620
Yale8710.875458117315522
† There is a scoring discrepancy in a game between Brown and Yale. The game was won by Yale either 7–3 or 3–1.
Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Harvard *440081856501358
Yale43106194117315522
Columbia42204614124712453
Princeton41302914136704062
Brown404005208080740
* indicates conference champion

Schedule and Results

Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
January 13 at Columbia St. Nicholas RinkNew York, New York W 7–0  1–0–0 (1–0–0)
January 20 vs. Princeton St. Nicholas RinkNew York, New York W 3–2  2–0–0 (2–0–0)
February 3 vs. Roxbury Hockey Club* Harvard Stadium RinkCambridge, Massachusetts W 15–1  3–0–0
February 7 vs. Brown Harvard Stadium RinkCambridge, Massachusetts W 4–0  4–0–0 (3–0–0)
February 12 at St. Paul's School* Concord, New Hampshire T 2–2 2OT 4–0–1
February 18 vs. Yale St. Nicholas RinkNew York, New York W 4–3 5OT 5–0–1 (4–0–0)
*Non-conference game.

[3]

Scoring Statistics

Name Position Games Goals
Eldon MacLeodF611
Richard TownsendF58
Clarence PellF67
Morton NewhallF65
Daniel NewhallD63
Arnold Fraser-CampbellF21
Stephen EdgellF10
Thompson SampsonD20
Joseph WillettsD50
Malcolm IvyG60
Total35

Note: Assists were not recorded as a statistic.

[4]

gollark: I assume you're doing binomial distributions if whatever A-level spec you do is similar to mine, which it probably is, in which case I don't think they cover anything more advanced than trial and error/look at a table for that. Although it's probably <=/>= instead of = 0.02, as there's no guarantee that there is any x satisfying the = version.
gollark: It *also* matters how it's distributed.
gollark: I'm pretty sure you need information about what "X" is there.
gollark: I suppose you could just work out how many possible 50-move sequences exist somehow. There's definitely more than you could tractably store, at least.
gollark: Is it two images for the real and imaginary part or what?

References

  1. "HARVARD HOCKEY CHAMPION". The Harvard Crimson. February 19, 1906. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  2. "1905-1906 Roster". Elite Prospects. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  3. "Harvard Men's Hockey year-By-year results" (PDF). Harvard Crimson. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  4. "Archives → 1906". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
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