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Atlantic Hockey: 0 0 0 0 – 0 Boston College: Hockey East: 96 52 44 0 .542 5 Boston University: Hockey East: 87 47 40 0 .540 5 Bowling Green: CCHA: 22 7 14 1 .341 1 Brown: ECAC Hockey: 7 2 5 0 .286 0 Canisius: Atlantic Hockey: 2 0 2 0 .000 0 Clarkson: ECAC Hockey: 38 13 25 1 .346 0 Colgate: ECAC Hockey: 10 3 7 0 .300 0 Colorado College: NCHC ...
The following is a list of the 64 schools that fielded men's ice hockey teams in NCAA Division I in the most recent 2023–24 season, plus the 44 schools that fielded women's teams in the de facto equivalent of Division I, the NCAA's National Collegiate division. [a] Conference affiliations reflect those in place for the current 2024–25 season.
The Pepsi Center, now known as Ball Arena, hosted the 2008 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament. The NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament is a college ice hockey tournament held in the United States by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
Defunct teams are listed at the level and in the conference they were when they ceased sponsoring ice hockey as a varsity sport. For programs that ended prior to the delineation of college hockey in 1961, all will be listed under Division I classification.
In the early years, naming a champion was a fairly easy task as there were few active teams and many played one another during the season. Some upper-echelon schools formed an intercollegiate hockey league around the turn of the century and began playing one another on a consistent basis.
Though U.S. colleges had been fielding men's ice hockey teams since 1895, [1] the NCAA did not have a formal tournament in place to decide a champion until after World War II. [2] Starting with the 1947-48 season, the NCAA tournament invited the four top-ranked teams to Colorado Springs, Colorado to compete for the NCAA Championship.
In the first era, teams played 7-on-7 for (typically) 40 minutes and many teams used the same lineup throughout the match. College hockey shifted to the modern 6-on-6 style shortly after World War I with the final recorded 7-on-7 match being played in 1921 (Harvard was the last holdout). About the same time, teams began playing three 15-minute ...
The following is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey teams that have qualified for the NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship as of 2024 with teams listed by number of appearances. [1]