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This is a list of men's college ice hockey career coaching wins leaders It is limited to coaches with at least 400 wins. Jerry York , who coached men's ice hockey for 50 years at Clarkson University , Bowling Green State University and Boston College is the all-time leader in wins, losses and ties.
The National Hockey League (NHL) is a professional ice hockey league composed of 32 teams, founded in 1917. Each team is entitled to one head coach who handles the directing of games and team practices, while providing direction and strategy for their players and deciding which players will play in games and the lines they will play on.
While there were informal tiers of play (the WCHA being regarded superior to the MIAC for instance), the delineation of college ice hockey was not formally introduced until ECAC 2 was formed and all lower-tier programs were placed in the College Division. [3] Because of this, all scoring prior to 1964 was done at the equivalent of the Division ...
Maurice is the team's all-time leader for the most games coached, game wins and points in the regular season, and is also all-time leader in playoff games coached and game wins. Peter Laviolette is the only coach to have won the Stanley Cup [2] with the Hurricanes in the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals. [2]
York is the winningest coach in NCAA hockey, and leads the all-time list as the only Division I head coach with over 1,000 wins. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He has won the NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey title five times as a coach, at Bowling Green State University in 1984 and at Boston College in 2001, 2008, 2010 and 2012, tying him with Murray Armstrong ...
Most wins in NFL history. Belichick ranks third all-time in NFL regular-season wins. Below are the 10 winningest coaches from the league's history. Don Shula: 328. George Halas: 318. Bill ...
Most games: Patrick Marleau, 1,779 Most games, including playoffs: Mark Messier, 1,992 Most playoff games: Chris Chelios, 266 Most games played in a single season, not including playoffs: Jimmy Carson (1992–93) and Bob Kudelski (1993–94), 86 (both being traded mid-season, allowing them to play more than the then-team maximum of 84 games in a season)
Most shutouts in a season: 22 of 44 games played (50.0%), by the 1928–29 Montreal Canadiens; Most times shutout in a season: 20 of 44 games played (45.5%), by the 1928–29 Chicago Black Hawks; Notes: Ties were only recorded until 2003–04. In 1983, the NHL added a five-minute overtime, and ties would only occur after 65 minutes.