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Merrimack Warriors men's ice hockey

Merrimack Warriors men's ice hockey
Current season
Merrimack Warriors athletic logo
UniversityMerrimack College
ConferenceHockey East
Head coachScott Borek
7th season, 89–124–12 (.422)
Assistant coaches
  • Dan Jewell
  • Chris Ross
ArenaJ. Thom Lawler Rink
North Andover, Massachusetts
ColorsBlue and gold[1]
   
NCAA tournament champions
DII: 1978
NCAA tournament runner-up
DII: 1984
NCAA tournament Frozen Four
DII: 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984
NCAA tournament appearances
DII: 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984
DI: 1988, 2011, 2023
Conference tournament champions
ECAC 2: 1967, 1968, 1977, 1980 East
ECAC East: 1987, 1988, 1989
Conference regular season champions
ECAC 2: 1968, 1969, 1975, 1976, 1977
ECAC East: 1987, 1988, 1989
Current uniform

The Merrimack Warriors men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Merrimack College. The Warriors are a member of Hockey East. They play at the 2,549-seat J. Thom Lawler Rink in North Andover, Massachusetts, which underwent renovation in 2010. Merrimack's 92.08% capacity during the 2013–14 season was second in Hockey East.[2]

History

The history of hockey at Merrimack started out just a year after the college was founded in 1947, a group of students banded together and formed an informal club they called the "Blue Blades". The Blades rented ice off Merrimack's one-building campus for $30 an hour and played anybody who would agree to a date, time and place The Warriors started. The program gained some instant credibility in 1953 when then President Father Vincent McQuade appointed Father Paul Thabault, recognized as the father of Merrimack hockey, as a moderator/coach of the team. John Twomey '56, an instrumental figure in organizing the program that year, would later serve as captain under Thabault for two seasons. Father Thabault and his skaters constructed Merrimack's first home rink - an outdoor model - and made ice with the help of a fire hose on the North Andover campus in 1954. intercollegiate play began in 1954–55, as the college offered more support to the program in the form of a modest budget, new uniforms and varsity letters. Babson, Worcester Polytechnic Institute and Keene Teachers were among the first intercollegiate competition Merrimack hockey faced that year. And for the first time, the college recognized hockey as a varsity sport.[3] The program took another leap forward in 1956 when Jim Reynolds was hired as its official coach. At that time, statistics and records started to be recorded. The warriors first official season would come be in 1956-57. After a 0-2 start the warriors would pick up the first victory in program history with a 13-6 win over assumption university they would finish the year with a 4-4-1 record showing that they could compete with other local schools. The warriors would be an independent until 1961. When they would be one of the original members of ECAC conference. Reynolds would go on to lead the warriors for another 8 years in total. But after the leading the warriors to a 8-7 record in 1964 he decided to step down as head coach.

The warriors with their 1978 national championship banner

In the 1964 as the ECAC downsized in members. The warriors would move to the ECAC 2 conference and Ron Ryan would be hired as the second head coach in program history. Ryan would leave after just one season. J Thom Lawler who at the time was the athletic director at Merrimack college. Would take over as the programs new head coach. From there Lawler would lead the warriors to great success in the late 1960s. In just his first year he would take the warriors to the ECAC 2 tournament for the first time in program history. They would knock off the 1 seed AIC in the first round 4-1. Before eventually losing to Colby in the championship game. The warriors would build off this going into the next season though. As in just his second year during the 1966-67 season Lawler and the warriors would qualify for the ECAC 2 tournament for the second time as the 4th seed going 13-9 overall. But they would not stop here as they would knock off the 1 seed Norwich 12-3. This would punch their ticket to the championship game Vs Colby for the second year in a row. But this time warriors would go on to win the game 6-4 winning the first championship in program history. The warriors would one up this the following year during the 1967-68 season by going 12-1 in conference play and 18-8 overall securing their first regular season championship. As the 1 seed the warriors would blow out AIC 6-1 in the semifinals. They would then go on to beat Hamilton 5-4 winning back to back ECAC championships to close out the decade.

They were also very successful in the 1970s and 1980s still Lead by coach J Thom Lawler from 1973-1978 they had 5 straight seasons of 20 or more wins. They would also have a dominant conference record of 78-14-4 during this period. This resulted in back to back ECAC 2 regular season titles in 1975 and 1976. During the 1976-77 season the warriors would go 23-11-3 overall and 20-2-1 in conference play. Securing their 3rd straight regular season championship. When the conference tournament rolled around they would beat Elmira and UMass Lowell easily in the quarter and semifinals. Then moving on to face Union in the championship and beating them 6-4 to win their 3rd ECAC tournament championship. During this time Lawler would also be the first coach in program history to hit the 100 win mark, and Defenceman Mark Petit would be the first player in program history to honored as an all American. The following year during the 1977-78 the NCAA would institute a division II national championship. The warriors would go 21-9-2 that year and be invited to the inaugural tournament. They would play Mankato State in the semifinals beating them fairly easily 6-1. They would then go on to destroy Lake Forest 12-2 in the championship game to win the 1978 division II national title. Warriors player Jim Toomey would be named the tournament mosts outstanding player. This would be a historic moment for the program and Merrimack college as a whole. As it was the first national championship in school history. Tragically just two months after winning the national championship head coach Lawler died after suffering from an heart attack. After his untimely death Lawler was honored for his accomplishments and dedication to the program. As Merrimack would rename their home rink in his honor. His son Tom Lawler was a freshman at Merrimack when J. Thom died. He completed his four years at the college, being named captain in his senior year he would end up finishing his time with the warriors top 5 in career points.

Bruce Parker was named as the new head coach after Lawler’s passing. Parker would pick off where Lawler left off leading the warriors to 4 straight winning seasons from 1978-1982. In just his first year he would lead the warriors to a 24-10-1 record but they would lose ECAC 2 semifinals. The following year during the 1979-80 season the warriors would have another 20 win season going 22-13-2. They would run the gauntlet in the ECAC tournament that year eventually beating UMass Lowell 4-0 to win their 4th tournament championship. This would punch the warriors second trip to the 1980 NCAA D2 tournament. Where they would lose to Elmira 4-1 in the frozen four. Tom Lawler would finish that season as a Division II Hobey barker finalist. During the 1981-82 season the NCAA would expand the D2 tournament. The warriors would go 20-15-1 in the regular season that year and get a at large bid to the 1982 NCAA D2 tournament. Making their third appearance. The warriors would beat Mankato State on aggregate 11-7 in the first round. Securing their 3rd frozen four appearance. Where they would play rival UMass Lowell and lose a 4-3. Parker would leave after the 1982-83 season.

From there assistant Coach Ron Anderson would be promoted to head coach. Taking over the program during the 1983-84 season. In just his first year he took the warriors all the way to the 1984 division II national championship. Beating SNHU on aggregate 9-7 in the in the frozen four. before untimely becoming runners up to Bemidji State in the championship game. For the next 5 seasons the warriors became a concurrent NCAA Division I independent and a ECAC East member. During this time the warriors seen even more success. After a 19-12-2 season in 1985-86. The warriors would hit a 3 year streak of dominance. Winning 3 straight ECAC East regular season and conference championships in 1987, 1988 and 1989. During the 1986-87 the warriors would go 22-2 in conference play and 29-7 overall. They would play UConn in the first round and beat them 6-2. They would then beat Norwich 3-2 in the semis. Punching their first ticket to ECAC east championship which they would win 3-0 over babson. Closing out one of the best years in program history. But the warriors would find a way to one up this the following year. During the 1987-1988 season They would go on to have a perfect 22-0 conference record and would once again win the ECAC tournament beating Bowdoin 4-1. Finishing the regular season with a 32-4 record. This led to them getting their first ever bid at the NCAA DI Tournament in 1988. This was the first time an Independent program had been invited to the tournament sense 1960. The warriors faced the Hockey east champions Northeastern in the first round. They lost the first game 5-3 but routed the huskies in the second game 7-3 which gave them the series win 10-7 on aggregate pulling off a huge upset. The Warriors went on to play Lake Superior in the quarterfinal’s. Where their season ultimately came to an end as they as they lost on aggregate 5-8. This was the deepest run the Warriors have made in the D1 tournament. The warriors would finish the year with a program best 34-6 record. Warriors player Jimmy Vesey was named Division II-III Hobey Baker Award winner in 1988 after having a 95 point season with 40 goals and 55 assists. capping of a historic year for the program. Then once again during the 1988-89 season Anderson would lead Merrimack to another terrific season going 27-7 overall and 14-2 in conference. They would get a first round by in the ECAC tournament and would easily take care Massachusetts–Boston in the semis 12-1. They would once again face Bowdoin in the championship game and beat them 9-4. Completing the three peat. During this period the warriors would go 66-4 in conference and 90-20 overall. Closing out their time as a ECAC East member and a D1 independent on a high note. Merrimack did not play a schedule against predominantly Division I teams until they joined the Hockey East conference in 1989.[4][5]

Coach Ron Anderson holding one of 3 straight ECAC East championship trophies

Still Led by Coach Ron Anderson, a new era began for Merrimack hockey. As they would become a full division I member in 1989 when the Warriors competed in their first season as a member of the Hockey East Association. That team posted an overall record of 10–24–1, but pulled off the surprise of the season by taking eventual league champion Boston College to a third and decisive playoff game. And after being picked for the bottom part of the league in three of the last four seasons, the Warriors continued to baffle the experts by battling for home-ice advantage all season long while defeating several Top 20 teams. And with the roots of the Merrimack hockey tree that were planted in Hockey East seven years earlier firmly entrenched, the 1996–97 Warriors entered a new chapter in history by qualifying for a Hockey East playoff home ice berth. Coach Anderson would be named Clark Hodder coach of the year after the 1996-97 season being the first coach in program history to be given the honor. The 1997–98 team raised the bar a little higher by pulling off a massive upset over top-ranked Boston University in the hockey east quarterfinals and earning a trip to the conference semifinals at Boston's FleetCenter for the first time in program history. Anderson contract would not be renewed at the end of the 1997-1998 season. Putting a end to his nearly 2 decade long tenure with the program. Anderson would finish his time with the warriors as the all programs all time wins leader with 254 victories this record still stands to this day (as of 2025).

The 1998–99 season began yet another era in Merrimack hockey history with the dawning of the Serino age. On April 24, 1998, Chris Serino became just the sixth head coach in the program's history. The Warriors posted a mark of 11–24–1 in Serino's inaugural campaign, and senior forward and captain Rejean Stringer was named an All-American, Merrimack's first ever at the Division I level. In Serino's second season, the Warriors set an NCAA record for consecutive overtime contests by playing in six straight at the end of January, and in 2000–01, the Warriors notched 14 victories, the most for Merrimack since 1996–97. Several of those victories were over nationally ranked opponents.

In 2002–03, senior goaltender and captain Joe Exter led Merrimack to a surprising race for home ice throughout much of the season, including the team's first-ever regular season Division I tournament title with wins over host Rensselaer and Wayne State at the 52nd Annual Rensselaer/HSBC Holiday Hockey Tournament in late December. Exter was selected to the All-Hockey East Team by league coaches. Long-time assistant coach Stu Irving was also honored, as the American Hockey Coaches Association presented him with its Terry Flanagan Memorial Award in recognition of an assistant coach's career body of work. The season also saw the inauguration of the Blue Line Club, the program's official support organization.[6]

After the 2004-05 season Merrimack hockey was in a very bad spot. Unconfirmed reports at the time asserted that the players on the team had asked Serino to resign as head coach. Which he would ultimately do at the end of the season. Then at the time Merrimack president Richard Santagati was even publicly questioning the teams viability as a hockey east program. Mark Dennehy would then be named as the 7th head coach in team history before the 2005-06 season. The program struggled in the highly competitive Hockey East. The 2006–07 season, in which they won only 3 games, was the nadir of their struggles. As behind the scenes there were even more problems. As the school named a new president and they were barely putting any money into the program. Coach Dennehy would take matters into his own hands as he fought vigorously for his program. On top of recruiting and building a roster. He was also having numerous meetings with administration trying to convince them why Hockey east and Division I was best for the program. Dennehys hard work and commitment to the team would start to pay off as during the 2009-10 season the warriors showed some improvement going 16-19-2. Dennehy would also be named Hockey coach of the year at the end of that season. Being the first coach in program history to receive the honor. Player Stéphane Da Costa would also win the Tim Taylor award. Then the following year during the 2010–11 season, They had one of the best seasons in years. Having unprecedented success against several of the nation's top teams.[2] They finished the regular season 22–8–4 and were ranked 9th in the nation. Merrimack gained a home ice advantage for the first round for the first time since 1997.[4] The warriors would sweep Umaine in the quarterfinals in best 2 out of 3 series. securing their first appearance at the Boston garden since 1998. They would then beat UNH 4-1 in the Semifinals punching their first ever appearance in the Hockey East championship game. Where they would fall to Boston college 5-3. The warriors would finish the season as the #10 team in the country and get a at large bid to the 2011 ncaa tournament. This would be the warriors first appearance in the tournament since 1988. They would face Norte Dame in the first round and lose 4-3 in overtime. Dennehy Would be named Clark Hodder coach of the year for the second year in a row at the end of the season.

The program received its first No. 1 ranking in the USCHO Poll during the 2011–12 season.

The warriors would go 18-12-7 during the 2011-12 season and finish the season ranked as the #17 team in the country. Just narrowly missing the NCAA tournament. 2012 would mark the last year of warriors goalie Joe Cannata. He would end his tenure with 59 wins the most in program history at the D1 level. After this the warriors would then regress for the next handful of seasons.

During the 2016-17 season the warriors would go 15-16-6. goaltender Collin Delia would lead hockey east in GAA. This would lead to him being the first goalie in program history to be named hockey east goaltending champion. The following year Mark Dennehy was fired as the team's head coach at the conclusion of the 2017–18 season following a 12–21–4 record and a sixth straight losing season.

The warriors celebrating a double overtime victory during the 2023 hockey East semifinals

Scott Borek was hired as the team's head coach on April 9, 2018. After a couple of unsuccessful seasons under Borek things started to change for him and the warriors. During the 2021-22 season the warriors had there first winning season in nearly 10 years going 19-15-1. They kept this momentum going during following year in 2022-23 season. But just before the season would start tragedy struck the program as 6th year assist coach Josh Ciocco would die suddenly.[7] The warriors would wear a black patch on their jerseys this season with the initials JC honoring their former coach. Even with this adversity the warriors would go on to have a great season. As Borek led the warriors to a 23-14-1 record. They were ranked in the top 20 for most of the season and finished 2nd in hockey east. This gave them a first round by in the 2023 Hockey east Tournament. They played Boston college in the quarterfinals and won 1-0 in double overtime advancing to the semifinals in the TD garden for the first time in since 2011. They would face bitter rival Umass Lowell in the semifinals. The warriors would once again win in double overtime 2-1. Making it to the hockey east championship game for the first time since 2011. Where they would lose a heartbreaker to Boston university 3-2 in overtime. The warriors season would not end here though as they would get a at large bid to the 2023 NCAA tournament as the #14 team in the country. This was the third time the warriors had made the D1 tournament. They faced Quinnipiac in the first round and lost 5-0. During the 2023-24 season Merrimack captain Ben Brar broke the program record for most games played. He finished his tenure with 155 total games with the warriors.

Season-by-season results

Source:[8]

Championships

National Championships

Year Champion Score Runner-up City
1978 Merrimack College 12-2 Lake Forest Springfield Massachusetts

Runners-up in 1984.

ECAC 2 Tournament championships

Year Champion Score Runner-up
1967 Merrimack College 6-4 Colby
1968 Merrimack College 5-4 Hamilton
1977 Merrimack College 6-4 Union
1980 Merrimack College 4-0 UMass Lowell

Runners-up in 1966, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1982

(in 1978 the ECAC 2 split into east and a West conferences)

ECAC 2 regular-season championships

Year Conference record Overall record Coach
1967-68 12-1 18-8 J Thom Lawler
1968-69 7-2 8-13 J Thom Lawler
1974-75 22-2-1 23-8-1 J Thom Lawler
1975-76 21-2 24-7 J Thom Lawler
1976-77 20-2-1 23-11-1 J Thom Lawler

ECAC East Tournament championships

Year Champion Score Runner-up
1987 Merrimack College 3-0 Babson
1988 Merrimack College 4-1 Bowdion
1989 Merrimack College 9-4 Bowdion

ECAC East regular-season championships

Year Conference record Overall record Coach
1986-87 22-2 29-7 Ron Anderson
1987-88 22-0 34-6 Ron Anderson
1988-89 14-2 27-7 Ron Anderson

In-season tournament and event championships

All-time coaching records

As of the completion of 2023–24 season[8]

Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1956–1964 Jim Reynolds 8 46–45–3 .505
1964–1965 Ron Ryan 1 6–8–0 .429
1965–1978 J. Thom Lawler 13 218–138–10 .609
1978–1983 Bruce Parker 5 100–76–5 .566
1983–1998 Ron Anderson 15 254–253–24 .501
1998–2005 Chris Serino 7 78–149–27 .360
2005–2018 Mark Dennehy 13 168–243–60 .420
2018–Present Scott Borek 7 89–124–12 .422
Totals 7 coaches 68 seasons 956–1040–141 .480

Awards and honors

NCAA

Individual awards

Division II-III Hobey Baker award

NCAA tournament Most Outstanding player

  • Jim Toomey, F: 1978

All-American Teams

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

AHCA D2 All Americans

  • 1972-73: Mark Petit, D
  • 1974-75: Billy Dunn, F
  • 1975-76: Mike Reynolds’s, F
  • 1976-77: Paul Dunn, F
  • 1978-79: Bob Magnuson, D
  • 1979-80: Dean Fraser, F
  • 1979-80: Tom Lawler, F
  • 1980-81: Tom Lawler, F
  • 1985-86: Jim Vesey, F
  • 1986-87: Bob Fowler, D
  • 1986-87: Jim Hrivnak, G
  • 1986-87: Mike Boyce, D
  • 1986-87: Jim Vesey, F
  • 1987-88: Jim Vesey, F
  • 1987-88: Mike Boyce, D
  • 1987-88 Jim Hrivnak, G

Individual awards

All-Conference teams

First Team

Second Team

Third Team

Rookie Team

ECAC East

ECAC east MVP

Rookie of the year

Other awards

Clark Hodder coach of the year

Statistical Leaders

Source:[9]

Career points leaders

Player Years GP G A Pts PIM
Jim Vesey 1984–1988 140 110 134 244
Richard Pion 1985–1989 124 103 128 231
Mike Reynolds 1972–1976 124 113 111 224
Tom Lawler 1977–1981 138 102 119 221
Jim Toomey 1976–1980 140 99 121 220
Mickey Rego 1977–1981 136 94 108 202
Mark Ziliotto 1985–1989 136 84 100 184
Bob Magnuson 1976–1980 132 90 91 181
Billy Dunn 1972–1975 102 81 96 177
Andy Heinze 1986–1990 144 77 89 166

Career goaltending leaders

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

minimum 30 games played

Player Years GP Min W L T GA SO SV% GAA
Joe Exter 2000-2003 88 7000 31 47 8 271 1 .912 2.32
Jim Hrivnak 1985-1989 113 6594 88 23 2 291 11 .921 2.38
Sam Marotta 2010–2014 47 2360 14 19 4 94 3 .917 2.39
Rasmus Tirronen 2011–2015 68 3893 22 34 8 159 3 .918 2.45
Joe Cannata 2008–2012 122 7145 59 46 16 294 7 .915 2.47
Hugo Ollas 2021–2024 62 3319 27 27 0 82 6 .914 2.48
Collin Delia 2014–2017 56 3240 21 24 10 134 4 .911 2.48

Statistics current through the end of the 2023–24 season.

Merrimack athletic hall of fame

The following is a list of people associated with the Merrimack men's ice hockey program who were elected into the Merrimack college Athletic Hall of Fame (induction date in parentheses)[10]

  • Dave Pollard (1984)
  • J. Thom Lawler (1984)
  • Paul Thabault (1984)
  • Mike Reynolds (1984)
  • Peter Melchiono (1985)
  • Jim Reynolds (1985)
  • Mark Petit (1985)
  • Paul Dunn (1986)
  • Bill Dunn (1986)
  • John Twomey (1989)
  • Thomas Keeling (1991)
  • Gilles Moffet (1991)
  • James Toomey (1993)
  • Robert C. Magnuson Jr. (1993)
  • Jim Vesey (2003)
  • Michael Boyce (2004)
  • Jim Hrivnak (2018)
  • Richard Pion (2023)
  • Ron Anderson (2023)

Lawler Arena

Lawler arena post renovations in 2024

Merrimack Plays its home games at Lawler Arena. Which is located in the Merrimack athletic complex in North Andover Massachusetts. The rink is named after former warriors coach J. Thom Lawler who led the warriors to a division II national championship in 1978. It has a capacity of 2,549 making it the smallest arena in hockey east. In 2023 the arena seen new renovations adding a new video board and the all new Gallant Pavilion.[11]

Current roster

As of September 7, 2024.[12]

No. Nat. Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
2 Nathan King Freshman D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 2004-06-11 Victoria, British Columbia Victoria Grizzlies (BCHL)
3 Seamus Powell Sophomore D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 176 lb (80 kg) 2004-04-26 Marcellus, New York Dubuque Fighting Saints (USHL)
5 Trevor Griebel Junior D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 2001-03-07 Tampa, Florida Fargo Force (USHL)
7 Max Wattvil Sophomore D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 2002-08-11 Stockholm, Sweden Minnesota Wilderness (NAHL)
8 Harrison Roy Graduate F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 194 lb (88 kg) 2000-01-17 Lakeville, Massachusetts Lake Superior State (CCHA)
10 Mark Hillier Senior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2002-03-18 Labrador City, Newfoundland and Labrador Summerside Western Capitals (MHL)
11 Nick Pierre Freshman F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 2004-04-09 Cottage Grove, Minnesota Omaha Lancers (USHL)
13 Jordan Hughesman Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2003-04-24 Winnipeg, Manitoba Brooks Bandits (BCHL)
14 Tyler Young Junior F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2001-05-08 Lancaster, Massachusetts Maryland Black Bears (NAHL)
15 Vann Yuhas Freshman F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 174 lb (79 kg) 2004-02-20 Medicine Hat, Alberta Drumheller Dragons (AJHL)
16 David Sacco Freshman F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 194 lb (88 kg) 2002-01-03 Middleton, Massachusetts Alberni Valley Bulldogs (BCHL)
17 Cam Kungle Freshman D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 202 lb (92 kg) 2002-03-28 Red Deer, Alberta Lake Superior State (CCHA)
19 Jack Richard Sophomore F 6' 4" (1.93 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2002-12-13 Stoney Creek, Ontario Niagara (AHA)
20 Ethan Bono Sophomore F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 201 lb (91 kg) 2004-01-15 Port McNeill, British Columbia Alberni Valley Bulldogs (BCHL)
21 Caden Cranston Freshman F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 174 lb (79 kg) 2004-03-23 Rochester, New York Surrey Eagles (BCHL)
22 Michael Citara Senior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 160 lb (73 kg) 2002-04-22 New Hope, Pennsylvania Providence (HEA)
23 Antonio Venuto Graduate F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 2000-02-26 Whitmore Lake, Michigan Ferris State (CCHA)
24 Josef Myšák Graduate D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1999-09-08 Litvínov, Czech Republic Niagara (AHA)
25 Luke Weilandt Sophomore F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 181 lb (82 kg) 2002-04-04 Northbrook, Illinois Wenatchee Wild (BCHL)
26 Ivan Zivlak Senior D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2002-08-08 Gislaved, Sweden Linköping J20 (J20 Nationell)
28 Ryan O'Connell Freshman F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 2003-10-23 Moorestown, New Jersey Cedar Rapids RoughRiders (USHL)
29 Caelan Fitzpatrick Freshman F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2003-06-17 Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan Brooks Bandits (BCHL)
34 Nils Wallström Sophomore G 6' 3" (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 2003-10-15 Skellefteå, Sweden American International (AHA)
35 Ryan Keyes Freshman G 6' 2" (1.88 m) 172 lb (78 kg) 2003-04-25 Fairbanks, Alaska South Shore Kings (NCDC)
37 Zach Bookman Junior D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 2002-03-29 Syracuse, New York Brooks Bandits (AJHL)
43 Ty Daneault Sophomore F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 2004-12-20 Red Deer, Alberta Drumheller Dragons (AJHL)
47 Max Lundgren Freshman G 6' 5" (1.96 m) 229 lb (104 kg) 2002-04-03 Ängelholm, Sweden Des Moines Buccaneers (USHL)
55 Colby Enns Graduate (RS) D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 201 lb (91 kg) 1999-09-16 Minot, North Dakota Northern Michigan (CCHA)
62 Michael Emerson Sophomore F 6' 1" (1.85 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2003-11-26 Yorktown Heights, New York Chicago Steel (USHL) CAR, 190th overall 2023
72 Hunter Wallace Freshman F 5' 7" (1.7 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 2003-05-02 Oak Lake, Manitoba Brooks Bandits (BCHL)

Olympians

This is a list of Merrimack alumni were a part of an Olympic team.

Name Position Merrimack Tenure Team Year Finish
Karl Stollery Defenseman 2008–2012 Canada CAN 2018  Bronze

Warriors in the NHL

As of February 7, 2025.

Player Position Team(s) Years Games Stanley Cups
Declan Carlile Defenseman TBL 2023–Present 4 0
Greg Classen Center NSH 2000–2003 90 0
Mark Cornforth Defenseman BOS 1995–1996 6 0
Stéphane Da Costa Center OTT 2010–2014 47 0
Collin Delia Goaltender CHI, VAN 2017–2023 52 0
Matt Foy Right Wing MIN 2005–2008 56 0
Jim Hrivnak Goaltender WSH, WIN, STL 1989–1994 85 0
John Jakopin Defenseman FLA, PIT, SJS 1997–2003 113 0
Bob Jay Defenseman LAK 1993–1994 3 0
Johnathan Kovacevic Defenseman WPG, MTL, NJD 2021–Present 199 0
Steve McKenna Defenseman LAK, MIN, PIT, NYR 1996–2004 373 0
Darrel Scoville Defenseman CGY, CBJ 1999–2004 16 0
Brett Seney Left Wing NJD, TOR, CHI 2018–Present 66 0
Karl Stollery Defenseman COL, SJS, NJD 2013–2017 23 0
Jim Vesey Center STL, BOS 1988–1992 15 0

Source:[13]

NHL Entry Draft Selections

As of May 17, 2024.

Player Position Draft Year Selection Team
Bob Magnuson Forward 1978 Round 14 Pick 230 Montreal Canadians
Jim Vesey Center 1984 Round 8 Pick 155 St Louis Blues
Mark Ziliotto Forward 1984 Round 12 Pick 230 Pittsburgh Penguins
Chris Kiene Defenceman 1984 Round 12 Pick 231 New Jersey Devils
Doug Greschuk Defenceman 1985 Round 11 Pick 212 Pittsburgh Penguins
Jim Hrivnak Goalie 1986 Round 3 Pick 61 Washington Capitals
Robert Kelley Left Wing 1987 Round 7 Pick 143 Montreal Canadians
Sean Dooley Defenceman 1987 Round 8 Pick 148 Buffalo Sabers
Alex Weinrich Defenceman 1987 Round 12 Pick 238 Toronto Maple Leafs
Ben Lebeau Forward 1988 Round 5 Pick 101 Winnipeg Jets
Matt Hentges Defenceman 1988 Round 9 Pick 194 Chicago Blackhawks
Mike Doneghey Defenceman 1989 Round 12 Pick 237 Chicago Blackhawks
Dan Hodge Defencemen 1991 Round 9 Pick 194 Boston Bruins
John Jakopin Defenceman 1993 Round 4 Pick 97 Detroit Red Wings
Gaetan Poirier Left Wing 1996 Round 6 Pick 156 Florida Panthers
Marco Rosa Center 2001 Round 8 Pick 255 Dallas Stars
Anthony Aquino Forward 2001 Round 3 Pick 92 Dallas Stars
Matt Foy Forward 2002 Round 6 Pick 175 Minnesota Wild
Kyle Bigos Defenceman 2009 Round 4 Pick 99 Edmonton Oilers
Joe Cannata Goalie 2009 Round 6 Pick 173 Vancouver Canucks
Chris LeBlanc Forward 2013 Round 6 Pick 161 Ottawa Senators
Brent Seney Left Wing 2015 Round 6 Pick 157 New Jersey Devils
Patrick Holway Defenceman 2015 Round 6 Pick 170 Detroit Red Wings
Johnathan Kovacevic Defencemen 2017 Round 3 Pick 74 Winnipeg Jets
Zachary Uens Defencemen 2020 Round 4 Pick 105 Florida Panthers
Alex Jeffries Left Wing 2020 Round 4 Pick 121 New York Islanders
Hugo Ollas Goalie 2020 Round 7 Pick 197 New York Rangers
Matt Copponi Center 2023 Round 7 Pick 216 Edmonton Oilers

References

  1. ^ "Merrimack College Brand Guidelines". Retrieved February 22, 2017.
  2. ^ a b Buckley, Steve (February 13, 2011). "Merrimack foundation... rock solid". The Boston Herald. Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  3. ^ "Warrior Hockey".
  4. ^ a b Powers, John (March 10, 2011). "New ice age dawns at Merrimack". The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 11, 2011.
  5. ^ "Merrimack Men's Hockey Team History". USCHO.com. Retrieved March 11, 2011.
  6. ^ [warriorhockey.org/history "warriorhockey.org/history"]. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  7. ^ Josh Cicco memorial https://merrimackathletics.com/sports/mens-ice-hockey/roster/coaches/josh-ciocco-in-memoriam-/757
  8. ^ a b "Merrimack Warriors men's Hockey 2018-19 Year-By-Year Results" (PDF). Merrimack Warriors. Retrieved January 25, 2018.
  9. ^ "Merrimack men's Hockey 2018-19 Record Book without Year-By-Year" (PDF). Merrimack Warriors. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  10. ^ merrimack hall of fame https://merrimackathletics.com/sports/2017/7/12/HOF-index.aspx
  11. ^ Merrimack College Celebrates Opening of Gallant Pavilion https://www.merrimack.edu/news/merrimack-college-celebrates-opening-of-gallant-pavilion/
  12. ^ "2023-24 Merrimack College Men's Ice Hockey Roster". Merrimack Warriors. Retrieved September 7, 2024.
  13. ^ "Alumni report for Merrimack College". Hockey DB. Retrieved November 26, 2018.
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