1954 NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament

The 1954 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament was the culmination of the 1953–54 NCAA men's ice hockey season, the 7th such tournament in NCAA history. It was held between March 11 and 13, 1954, and concluded with Rensselaer defeating Minnesota 5-4 in overtime. All games were played at the Broadmoor Ice Palace in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

1954 NCAA Men's
Ice Hockey Tournament
Teams4
Finals site
ChampionsRensselaer Bachelors (1st title)
Runner-upMinnesota Golden Gophers (2nd title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coachNed Harkness (1st title)
MOPAbbie Moore, Rensselaer
Attendance7,800

This was the first championship game to go into overtime.

Rensselaer's title was the only championship won by a team from the Tri-State League. Despite its low membership the Tri-State League would send at least one representative to the tournament every year from 1952 through 1964 before being dissolved in 1972.[1]

Minnesota's victory in the semifinal over Boston College holds two separate records: the most goals scored by one team in an NCAA tournament game (14, tied with Michigan in 1953) and the largest single-game margin of victory in an NCAA tournament (+13).

Boston College, by being outscored 3-21 in their two games, also holds the worst single-tournament goal differential (-18). (as of 2016)

Qualifying teams

Four teams qualified for the tournament, two each from the eastern and western regions. The two best WIHL teams and a Tri-State League representative received bids into the tournament as did one independent school.[2]

East West
Seed School Conference Record Berth type Appearance Last bid Seed School Conference Record Berth type Appearance Last bid
1 Boston College Independent 17–2–0 At-Large 4th 1950 1 Michigan WIHL 14–5–2 At-Large 7th 1953
2 Rensselaer Tri-State League 16–5–0 At-Large 2nd 1953 2 Minnesota WIHL 22–5–1 At-Large 2nd 1953

Format

The eastern team judged as better was seeded as the top eastern team while the WIHL champion was given the top western seed. The second eastern seed was slotted to play the top western seed and vice versa. All games were played at the Broadmoor Ice Palace. All matches were Single-game eliminations with the semifinal winners advancing to the national championship game and the losers playing in a consolation game.

Bracket

  Semifinals
March 11–12
National Championship
March 13
                     
E1 Boston College 1  
W2 Minnesota 14  
  W2 Minnesota 4  
  E2 Rensselaer 5*  
W1 Michigan 4
E2 Rensselaer 6     Third Place Game
  W1 Michigan 7
  E1 Boston College 2

Note: * denotes overtime period(s)

Results

Semifinals

Minnesota vs. Boston College

Michigan vs. Rensselaer

Consolation Game

Michigan vs. Boston College

National Championship

(W2) Minnesota vs. (E2) Rensselaer

Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st RPI Abbie Moore Mosco 17:07 1–0 RPI
RPI Frank ChiarelliPP Paradise 19:42 2–0 RPI
2nd RPI Ambrose Mosco Moore 22:45 3–0 RPI
Minn Ken Yackel unassisted 23:09 3–1 RPI
Minn Dick Dougherty Campbell 25:32 3–2 RPI
3rd Minn John Mayasich Dougherty 44:29 3–3
Minn Dick Dougherty Mayasich 48:30 4–3 Minn
RPI Abbie Moore Chiarelli 56:10 4–4
1st Overtime RPI Gordie PeterkinGW Magadini 61:54 5–4 RPI

All-Tournament Team

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gollark: I just think it's cool to see how much work from various people must have been invested in breeding, say, 31G lineages like my aeon has.
gollark: I basically only either like very cool ones, CB ones or incredibly long ones.
gollark: *begins breeding dragons for AP*
gollark: Oddly generous people, or an accident, I guess.

References

  1. "History of the Tri-State League/ICAC". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
  2. "NCAA Division 1 Tournament". College Hockey Historical Archives. Archived from the original on 2013-06-21. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
  3. http://www.rpihockey.net/article.php?id=660
  4. https://digital.bentley.umich.edu/midaily/mdp.39015071756352/181
  5. http://www.rpi.edu/dept/NewsComm/Magazine/winter03/feature2-3.html
  6. "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved 2013-07-17.
  7. "NCAA Frozen Four Records" (PDF). NCAA.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2013-06-22. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
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