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The Hartford Wolf Pack is a hockey team based in Hartford that plays in the American Hockey League (AHL). They are affiliated with the New York Rangers of the NHL. They play their home games at the XL Center. Danbury Hat Tricks The Danbury Hat Tricks is a Single-A hockey team that plays in the Federal Prospects Hockey League.
The former Hartford Whalers were the first and only major league hockey team located in Connecticut, nestled halfway between the Boston Bruins and New York Rangers/Islanders hockey markets. The team was founded in Boston as the New England Whalers, one of the original World Hockey Association teams (from whose initials "WHA" inspired the Whaler ...
Defunct ice hockey teams in Connecticut (3 C, 25 P) B. Bridgeport Sound Tigers (2 C, 3 P) H. Hartford Wolf Pack (3 C, 3 P) N. Ice hockey teams in New Haven ...
Team School City Conference Sport sponsorship Foot-ball Basketball Base-ball Soft-ball Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W Central Connecticut Blue Devils: Central Connecticut State University: New Britain: Northeast: FCS: Connecticut Huskies [a] University of Connecticut: Storrs: Big East: FBS [b] [c] [c] Fairfield Stags: Fairfield University ...
The Atlantic Coast Collegiate Hockey League (ACCHL) is a non-NCAA collegiate ice hockey league in the mid-atlantic and southeast regions of the United States.The Mission of the ACC Hockey League is to provide student-athletes an option to compete in organized intercollegiate ice hockey without the high expenses of NCAA level hockey.
Connecticut Ice is an annual ice hockey event celebrating the tradition and progress of youth and amateur hockey in the state of Connecticut.The three-day event is headlined by a four-team tournament with participation from all of the state's four Division I programs: Connecticut, Quinnipiac, Sacred Heart and Yale.
Source: National Hockey League [1] Rules for classification: 1) Fewer number of games played (GP, only during regular season); 2) Greater number of regulation wins (RW); 3) Greater number of wins in regulation and overtime, excluding shootout wins (ROW); 4) Greater number of total wins, including shootouts (W); 5) Greater number of points earned in head-to-head play; if teams played an uneven ...
A year later, nine more teams split off to join their primary athletic conference, NESCAC, followed by the women's programs in 2001. Membership numbers held steady over the succeeding 15 years, though several teams came and went. In 2015 the conference rebranded itself as the New England Hockey Conference, but no internal changes occurred.