Rob Riley (ice hockey)

Rob Riley (born January 15, 1955) is an American ice hockey coach.

Rob Riley
Born (1955-01-15) January 15, 1955
West Point, NY, USA
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 174 lb (79 kg; 12 st 6 lb)
Position Center
Played for Boston College (ECAC)
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 19741978

Riley was the head coach at the United States Military Academy from 1986 to 2004.[1][2] [3] On August 3, 2010, he was named the head coach of the Springfield Falcons, replacing Rob Daum. He is currently an amateur scout for the Columbus Blue Jackets.[4]

His son Brett became the first head coach of the newly launched men's team at Long Island University in 2020.[5]

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Babson Beavers (ECAC 2) (1983–1995)
1983–84 Babson 27–5–117–3–12ndNCAA National Champion
1984–85 Babson 22–9–016–6–02ndNCAA Quarterfinals
Babson: 49–14–123–9–1
Army Cadets (ECAC Hockey) (1986–1991)
1986–87 Army 9–19–16–16–011th
1987–88 Army 9–19–23–17–211th
1988–89 Army 13–16–16–15–110th
1989–90 Army 10–16–44–15–312th
1990–91 Army 8–18–33–17–211th
Army: 49–88–1122–80–8
Army Cadets (Division I Independent) (1991–1999)
1991–92 Army 13–17–1
1992–93 Army 16–11–1
1993–94 Army 14–16–0
1994–95 Army 20–13–1
1995–96 Army 24–9–1
1996–97 Army 19–13–2
1997–98 Army 18–15–1
1998–99 Army 16–16–3
Army: 140–110–10
Army Cadets (CHA) (1999–2000)
1999-00 Army 13–18–21–9–06th
Army: 13–18–21–9–0
Army Cadets (MAAC) (2000–2001)
2000–01 Army 14–20–111–15–07thMAAC Quarterfinals
Army: 14–20–111–15–0
Army Black Knights (MAAC) (2001–2003)
2001–02 Army 11–18–69–11–68thMAAC Quarterfinals
2002–03 Army 18–16–013–13–0t-5thMAAC Quarterfinals
Army: 29–34–622–24–6
Army Black Knights (Atlantic Hockey) (2003–2004)
2003–04 Army 12–18–36–15–38thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
Army: 12–18–36–15–3
Total:306–302–34

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

[6]

gollark: In general. Radio telescopes are INCREASINGLY good.
gollark: We are perfectly able to notice weird radio things like pulsars.
gollark: You're wrong, actually.
gollark: If it's high-power enough someone will notice it.
gollark: That's the electrical engineers' problem.

References

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Bob Peters
Edward Jeremiah Award
1984–85
Succeeded by
Terry Meagher


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