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In 2018 and 2019, the Mavericks played in the Women's Face-Off Classic game hosted by the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Museum. [3] [4] In 2018, they faced off against Bemidji State, at the Brainerd Essentia Health Sports Center. [5] In 2019, they played against the Minnesota Golden Gophers, at the Dakotah! Ice Center at Prior Lake, Minnesota. [6]
The Bemidji State University intercollegiate women's ice hockey program began competition in the 1998–1999 season. The first head coach was Ruthann Cantile. She was head coach from the program's founding to the start of WCHA play, and the beginning of national NCAA Championships in 2001.
[3] [4] As there is no Division II championship for women's ice hockey, this rule applies to the tournament. The official name of the "Division I" tournament is the National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Championship, which reflects the NCAA's formal terminology for championship events that are open to schools from multiple divisions.
The 2021 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament was a single-elimination tournament by eight schools to determine the national champion of women's NCAA Division I college ice hockey. The quarterfinals were played at the Erie Insurance Arena on March 15 and 16, 2021, with the Frozen Four played on March 18 and 20, 2021 at Erie ...
Penn State University is the women's college team with the most titles (with 16 titles overall including 14 during the period when NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program has been in effect). As of the 2016–17 school year, there were seven D-I, three D-II, and four D-III schools participating in varsity competition. [5]
WCHA, ECAC, Hockey East, CHA In the sixth year under this qualification format, the winners of all four Division I conference tournaments received automatic berths to the NCAA tournament. The other four teams were selected at-large.
The Northeast Women's Hockey League (NEWHL; successor of ECAC West) is a women's ice hockey-only conference comprising seven member schools in New York. It was founded in 2017 by the women's ice hockey teams of five schools in the State University of New York Athletic Conference (SUNYAC); its membership was increased to seven programs in 2019 ...
The women's ice hockey program was given the green light to jump directly to the Division I level in July 2020. [3] The women's hockey team joined the WCHA for the 2021–22 season. [4] [5] On May 26, 2021, Robert Morris announced that it was dropping both men's and women's hockey effective immediately. [6]