2015-16 DIVISION I MEN’S HOCKEY MEDIA KIT

KEY DATES Fri., Oct. 2 Oct. 3-4 Fri., Oct. 9

Alaska Anchorage plays season’s first exhibition game (vs. Mount Royal) First full slate of exhibition games, plus Colgate at Mercyhurst First full slate of games, including the Ice Breaker Tournament in Portland, Maine Arizona State plays its first Division I competition at Alaska Anchorage in the Kendall Hockey Classic Sat., Oct. 10 Vermont faces Minnesota in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Game Fri., Oct. 23 Opening of Omaha’s Baxter Arena vs. Air Force Mon., Nov. 9 Hockey Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony (including Angela Ruggiero) Nov. 27-28 Brown, Colgate, UMass Lowell and Northeastern travel to Belfast, Northern Ireland, for the Friendship Four tournament Thurs., Dec. 17 U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony (including Ron DeGregorio, Chris Drury, Angela Ruggiero) Dec. 26-Jan. 5 IIHF World Junior Championship (Helsinki, Finland) Jan. 8 & 10 Arizona State hosts Connecticut, Michigan Tech and Yale in the Desert Hockey Classic Jan. 30-31 North Star College Cup (Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, Minn.) Feb. 1 & 8 Beanpot (TD Garden, Boston) Feb. 19-21 USA Hockey’s Hockey Weekend Across America Sat., Feb. 20 Colorado College vs. Denver at Denver’s Coors Field March 3-5 Conference tournament play begins in Atlantic Hockey, ECAC Hockey and Hockey East March 11-13 Conference tournament play begins in NCHC, WCHA March 19 Conference championship games March 20 NCAA Selection Show March 25-27 NCAA Regionals (sites) April 7 & 9 NCAA Frozen Four (Amalie Arena, Tampa, Fla.) June 24-25 NHL Draft (First Niagara Center, Buffalo, N.Y.) collegehockeyinc.com | @collegehockey

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT DIVISION I PLAYERS BY HOMETOWN United States – 68% Canada – 30% Europe – 2% (58 players, 13 countries) American players come from 40 states plus D.C. The top 10: Minnesota – 204 Michigan – 144 Massachusetts – 115 New York – 94 Illinois – 73 California – 56 Pennsylvania – 55 New Jersey – 54 Colorado – 44 Wisconsin – 41 Canadian players by province: Ontario – 191 British Columbia – 116 Alberta – 89 Quebec – 35 Saskatchewan – 22 Manitoba – 13 Top European countries: Sweden – 20 Finland – 19 Russia – 4 Slovakia – 3 BY JUNIOR LEAGUE Division I players come from 30 junior leagues. The top producers sending players directly to Division I: USHL – 584 players (includes 47 from the U.S. NTDP) BCHL – 259 NAHL – 236 OJHL – 93 AJHL – 89 CCHL – 77 USPHL – 65 EJHL – 64* * Member teams from the former EJHL now make up the USPHL and EHL (9 players)

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS ENTERING 2015-16 Points: Kevin Roy, Northeastern – 124 Danny O’Regan, Boston University – 110 Andrew Gladiuk, Bentley – 108 Alex Petan, Michigan Tech – 102 Zac Lynch, Robert Morris – 101 Kalle Kossila, St. Cloud State – 99 Jimmy Vesey, Harvard – 98 Tyler Morley, Alaska – 92 Tyson Spink, Colgate – 91 Mario Lucia, Notre Dame – 86 Goals: Jimmy Vesey, Harvard – 56 Kevin Roy, Northeastern – 55 Andrew Gladiuk, Bentley – 55 Bryce Gervais, Minnesota State – 51 Mario Lucia, Notre Dame – 49 Danny O’Regan, Boston University – 49 Sam Anas, Quinnipiac – 45 Assists: Kevin Roy, Northeastern – 69 Kalle Kossila, St. Cloud State – 65 Cristoval Nieves, Michigan – 61 Danny O’Regan, Boston University – 61 Alex Petan, Michigan Tech – 61 Power-Play Goals: Andrew Gladiuk, Bentley – 27 Sam Anas, Quinnipiac – 19 Ahti Oksanen, Boston University – 16 Danny O’Regan, Boston University – 16 Mario Lucia, Notre Dame – 16 Ralph Cuddemi, Canisius – 16 Shorthanded Goals: Zac Lynch, Robert Morris – 6 Bryce Gervais, Minnesota State – 6 JT Compher, Michigan – 4 Dominic Toninato, Minnesota Duluth – 4 Chad McDonald, Ferris State – 4 Tyler Morley, Alaska – 4 Adam Chapie, UMass Lowell – 4

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS ENTERING 2015-16 Game-Winning Goals: Austin Ortega, Omaha – 12 Jimmy Vesey, Harvard – 11 Danny O’Regan, Boston University – 11 Alex Petan, Michigan Tech – 11 Sean Kuraly, Miami – 11 Games Played: Drake Caggiula, North Dakota – 123 Bryce Gervais, Minnesota State – 122 Travis St. Denis, Quinnipiac – 119 Matthew Caito, Miami – 119 Nolan Zajac, Denver – 119 Gabe Levin, Denver – 119 Saves: Jake Hildebrand, Michigan State – 2,778 Kevin Boyle, UMass Lowell – 1,802 Jackson Teichroeb, Niagara – 1,750 Carmine Guerriero, Alabama-Huntsville – 1,644 Michael Garteig, Quinnipiac – 1,632 Save Percentage: Kyle Hayton, St. Lawrence – .937 Jayson Argue, Bentley – .934 Michael Bitzer, Bemidji State – .929 Evan Cowley, Denver – .929 Alex Lyon, Yale – .928 Goaltending Wins: Michael Garteig, Quinnipiac – 46 Charlie Finn, Colgate – 37 Jay Williams, Miami – 36 Thatcher Demko, Boston College – 35 Jake Hildebrand, Michigan State – 35 Shutouts: Michael Garteig, Quinnipiac – 11 Jake Hildebrand, Michigan State – 10 Alex Lyon, Yale – 10 Ryan McKay, Miami – 8 Charlie Finn, Colgate – 7 Cole Huggins, Minnesota State – 7 Jamie Phillips, Michigan Tech – 7 Jay Williams, Miami – 7

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS ENTERING 2015-16 Goals-Against Average: Michael Bitzer, Bemidji State – 1.80 Kyle Hayton, St. Lawrence – 1.95 Michael Garteig, Quinnipiac – 1.99 Cole Huggins, Minnesota State – 1.99 Jayson Argue, Bentley – 2.00 Alex Lyon, Yale – 2.00 RETURNING OFFENSE FROM 2014-15 Most Returning Goals: UMass Lowell – 117 Minnesota State – 107 Harvard – 106 Bowling Green – 103 Michigan Tech – 99 Boston University – 99 Omaha – 96 Minnesota Duluth – 94 Quinnipiac – 94 Robert Morris – 93 Most Returning Points: UMass Lowell – 297 Harvard – 271 Michigan Tech – 266 Boston University – 264 Minnesota State – 262 Minnesota Duluth – 255 Omaha – 254 Michigan – 250 Northeastern – 249 Robert Morris – 245 Highest Percentage of Returning Goals: Omaha – 91.4% Holy Cross – 89.3% Merrimack – 88.9% Quinnipiac – 88.7% Harvard – 87.6% UMass Lowell – 87.3% Bowling Green – 86.6% Yale – 86.0% Ferris State – 83.0% Minnesota Duluth – 81.7%

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT Highest Percentage of Returning Points: Omaha – 90.1% Yale – 88.5% Holy Cross – 87.5% Clarkson – 86.9% Minnesota Duluth 85.0% Harvard – 84.7% UMass Lowell – 84.1% Army – 81.3% Northeastern – 81.1% Ferris State – 80.4% RETURNING ALL-AMERICANS Alex Lyon, Yale (East – first team) Matt Grzelcyk, Boston University (East – first team) Rob O’Gara, Yale (East – first team) Jimmy Vesey, Harvard (East – first team) Jake Hildebrand, Michigan State (West – first team) Sam Anas, Quinnipiac (East – second team) Kevin Roy, Northeastern (East – second team) Trevor Moore, Denver (West – second team) RETURNING FIRST-TEAM ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS Atlantic Hockey Andrew Gladiuk, Bentley Big Ten Zach Werenski, Michigan Jake Hildebrand, Michigan State ECAC Hockey Jimmy Vesey, Harvard Rob O’Gara, Yale Alex Lyon, Yale Hockey East Kevin Roy, Northeastern Matt Grzelcyk, Boston University NCHC Trevor Moore, Denver WCHA Tyler Morley, Alaska Jamie Phillips, Michigan Tech

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT NCAA TOURNAMENT Most Appearances: Minnesota – 36 Michigan – 35 Boston College – 34 Boston University – 32 North Dakota – 30 Michigan State – 27 Most Appearances, Last 10 Years: North Dakota – 10 Boston College – 9 Miami – 9 Denver – 8 Minnesota – 7 New Hampshire – 7 Most Frozen Fours: Boston College – 24 Michigan – 24 Boston University – 22 Minnesota – 21 North Dakota – 21 Most Championships: Michigan – 9 Denver, North Dakota – 7 Wisconsin – 6 Boston College, Boston University, Minnesota – 5 Lake Superior State, Michigan State, Michigan Tech – 3 Colorado College, Cornell, Maine, Rensselaer – 2 Bowling Green, Harvard, Minnesota Duluth, Northern Michigan, Providence, Union, Yale – 1 COLLEGE COACHES Most Career Wins entering 2015-16: *Jerry York (Boston College, Bowling Green, Clarkson) – 984 Ron Mason (Michigan State, Bowling Green, Lake Superior State) – 924 Jack Parker (Boston University) – 897 *Red Berenson (Michigan) – 810 Rick Comley (Michigan State, Northern Michigan, Lake Superior State) – 783 Len Ceglarski (Boston College, Clarkson) – 672 Jeff Sauer (Wisconsin, Colorado College) – 655 *Don Lucia (Minnesota, Colorado College, Alaska Fairbanks) – 646 *Dick Umile (New Hampshire) – 560 John MacInnes (Michigan Tech) – 555 * Active; totals entering 2015-16

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT Most NCAA Tournament Appearances, Active Coaches: 22 – Red Berenson, Michigan 22 – Jerry York, Boston College (and Bowling Green) 18 – Richard Umile, New Hampshire 17 – Don Lucia, Minnesota (and Colorado College) 12 – Jeff Jackson, Notre Dame (and Lake Superior State) New Head Coaches in 2015-16: Brad Berry, North Dakota Coaches Coaching their Alma Mater (24 of 60, 40%): Keith Allain, Yale Tom Anastos, Michigan State Norm Bazin, UMass Lowell Red Berenson, Michigan Brad Berry, North Dakota Enrico Blasi, Miami Greg Carvel, St. Lawrence Ted Donato, Harvard Mike Eaves, Wisconsin Dallas Ferguson, Alaska Bob Gaudet, Dartmouth Walt Kyle, Northern Michigan Jim Madigan, Northeastern Bob Motzko, St. Cloud State Scott Owens, Colorado College Mel Pearson, Michigan Tech Greg Powers, Arizona State David Quinn, Boston University Mike Schafer, Cornell Tom Serratore, Bemidji State Ryan Soderquist, Bentley Dick Umile, New Hampshire Brendan Whittet, Brown Jerry York, Boston College Longest Tenure, Current School: Red Berenson, Michigan – 32nd season Gary Wright, AIC – 32nd season Rick Gotkin, Mercyhurst – 28th season Dick Umile, New Hampshire – 26th season Bob Daniels, Ferris State – 24th season Don Vaughan, Colgate – 23rd season Rand Pecknold, Quinnipiac – 22nd season Jerry York, Boston College – 22nd season

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT Coaches with NHL Coaching Experience: Keith Allain, Yale (Assistant with Washington and St. Louis) Red Berenson, Michigan (Head Coach with St. Louis; Assistant with St. Louis and Buffalo) Brad Berry, North Dakota (Assistant with Columbus) Dean Blais, Nebraska Omaha (Associate with Columbus) Greg Carvel, St. Lawrence (Assistant with Anaheim and Ottawa) Mike Eaves, Wisconsin (Assistant with Pittsburgh and Philadelphia) Red Gendron, Maine (Assistant with New Jersey) Mike Haviland, Colorado College (Assistant with Chicago) Jeff Jackson, Notre Dame (Assistant with NY Islanders) Walt Kyle, Northern Michigan (Assistant with Anaheim and NY Rangers) Andy Murray, Western Michigan (Head Coach with Los Angeles and St. Louis; Assistant with Philadelphia, Minnesota and Winnipeg) David Quinn, Boston University (Assistant with Colorado) Coaches with NHL Playing Experience: Rick Bennett, Union (15 GP) Red Berenson, Michigan (987 GP) Brad Berry, North Dakota (241 GP) Ted Donato, Harvard (796 GP) Mike Eaves, Wisconsin (324 GP) Jim Montgomery, Denver (122 GP) Scott Sandelin, Minnesota Duluth (25 GP) Coaches with Sons Playing NCAA Division I Hockey: Ted Donato, Harvard (son Ryan is a Harvard freshman) Rick Gotkin, Mercyhurst (son Brandon is a Mercyhurst sophomore) Mike Guentzel, Minnesota associate coach (son Jake is an Omaha junior) Don Lucia, Minnesota (son Mario is a Notre Dame senior) Paul Pooley, Notre Dame associate coach (son Scott is a Holy Cross sophomore) Brian Riley, Army (son Jack is a Mercyhurst junior) Tom Serratore, Bemidji State (son Matt is an Air Force freshman) Gary Shuchuk, Michigan Tech assistant coach (son Alex is a Wisconsin freshman) Wayne Wilson, RIT (son Stu is a Yale senior)

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT TEAMS BY THE NUMBERS 10 biggest teams, by average height: Cornell – 6’1.55” Western Michigan – 6’1.15” Princeton – 6’0.93” Maine – 6’0.85” Michigan – 6’0.80” Notre Dame – 6’0.80” Brown – 6’0.75” Boston University – 6’0.73” Merrimack – 6’0.67” Canisius – 6’0.60” 11 smallest teams, by average height: Colorado College – 5’11.00” St. Cloud State – 5’11.00” Ferris State – 5’11.11” Massachusetts – 5’11.15” Northern Michigan – 5’11.19” Denver – 5’11.30” Vermont – 5’11.32” Alaska Anchorage – 5’11.33” Alaska – 5’11.46” Bemidji State – 5’11.48” Ohio State – 5’11.48” 10 biggest teams, by average weight: Western Michigan – 200.63 pounds Cornell – 198.00 Michigan – 197.76 Notre Dame – 195.16 North Dakota – 193.59 Princeton – 193.15 UMass Lowell – 192.86 Miami – 192.71 Clarkson – 192.57 RIT – 192.50 10 smallest teams, by average weight: Colorado College – 176.60 pounds Denver – 179.19 Ohio State – 181.78 Air Force – 182.48 Connecticut – 182.85 Northern Michigan – 182.91 Michigan Tech – 183.68 Alaska Anchorage – 184.48 Sacred Heart – 185.15 Minnesota State – 185.33

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT TEAMS BY THE NUMBERS 10 oldest teams, by average age (as of Oct. 1): Robert Morris – 22 years, 121 days Minnesota State – 22 years, 112 days Sacred Heart – 22 years, 102 days Niagara – 22 years, 100 days Penn State – 22 years, 85 days Alabama-Huntsville – 22 years, 82 days Northern Michigan – 22 years, 78 days RIT – 22 years, 76 days Bentley – 22 years, 62 days Clarkson – 22 years, 61 days 10 youngest teams, by average age (as of Oct. 1): Boston College – 20 years, 169 days Boston University – 20 years, 179 days Michigan – 20 years, 235 days Wisconsin – 20 years, 320 days Notre Dame – 20 years, 333 days North Dakota – 20 years, 352 days Minnesota – 20 years, 364 days Connecticut – 21 years, 8 days Cornell – 21 years, 22 days Canisius – 21 years, 24 days Tallest players: 6’7” – Christian Hilbrich, Cornell 6’7” – Wiley Sherman, Harvard 6’7” – Pat Feeley, Vermont 6’7” – Ben Storm, St. Cloud State Shortest players: 5’5” – Janick Asselin, Clarkson 5’5” – Cody DePourcq, Bentley 5’6” – Myles Fitzgerald, Bemidji State 5’6” – Tyler Kelleher, New Hampshire 5’6” – Ryan Papa, St. Cloud State Youngest players: 12/21/97 – Charlie McAvoy, Boston University 12/4/97 – Luke Kunin, Wisconsin 10/30/97 – Tage Thompson, Connecticut 9/10/97 – Troy Terry, Denver 9/8/97 – Nick Boka, Michigan 8/23/97 – Owen Headrick, Lake Superior State 8/22/97 – Robby Jackson, St. Cloud State 8/12/97 – Brent Gates Jr., Minnesota

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT TEAMS BY THE NUMBERS Largest senior classes: 10 – Dartmouth, Miami 9 – Michigan State, Minnesota Duluth, Providence, Robert Morris 8 – Clarkson, Ferris State, Holy Cross, Michigan Tech, Penn State, Rensselaer, Yale 7 – Bentley, Harvard, UMass Lowell, Merrimack, Minnesota State, Quinnipiac, St. Cloud State Largest freshman classes: 15 – Arizona State 14 – Colorado College 13 – Wisconsin 12 – Air Force, Canisius 11 – Mercyhurst, North Dakota 10 – Alaska Anchorage, Lake Superior State, Minnesota, Northern Michigan, Ohio State, Omaha 9 – American International, Army West Point, Bentley, Boston College, Cornell, Maine, Massachusetts, Niagara, St. Cloud State, Union, Vermont Most freshmen and sophomores: 22 – Mercyhurst, Wisconsin 20 – Air Force, Canisius 19 – Massachusetts 18 – Alaska Anchorage, Colorado College, Connecticut, Lake Superior State, Omaha 17 – Alabama-Huntsville, American International, Arizona State, Army West Point, UMass Lowell, Merrimack, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio State, Vermont 16 – Alaska, Bemidji State, Bowling Green, Brown, Cornell, Holy Cross, Minnesota, Niagara, Northern Michigan, Union Most juniors and seniors: 17 – Michigan State, Northeastern, Quinnipiac 16 – Clarkson, Michigan Tech, Minnesota Duluth, Northern Michigan, Providence, Yale Fewest freshmen 3 – Clarkson 5 – Colgate, Michigan State, Minnesota Duluth, St. Lawrence 6 – Notre Dame, RIT, Robert Morris Fewest seniors 2 – Canisius, Massachusetts 3 – Air Force, Arizona State, Mercyhurst, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio State, Omaha, Wisconsin 4 – Alabama-Huntsville, Alaska Anchorage, American International, Bemidji State, Boston College, Brown, Colorado College, Connecticut, Cornell, Denver, North Dakota, Sacred Heart, Vermont

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT IN THE NHL

286 former NCAA players appeared in an NHL game in 2014-15 – 30% of the NHL Full list: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/2014-15-alums-nhl 49 schools had an alum in the NHL last season Colleges producing the most 2014-15 NHLers: Boston College, Wisconsin – 22 Michigan – 19 Minnesota – 17 Michigan State, North Dakota – 15 Boston University, Denver – 12 NHL players by years in school (73% played at least three years) Four years – 113 Three years – 95 Two years – 57 One year – 21 By position: 159 forwards 104 defensemen 23 goaltenders By NHL Draft status: 99 were first- (55) or second-round (44) picks 82 were undrafted free agents (55% of all undrafted NHL players)

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT By nationality: 183 Americans 95 Canadians 8 Europeans Nearly 200 NHL Draft picks will play college hockey this year. Eight were first-rounders, the most in the NCAA in four years (2012-13): Zach Werenski, Michigan (8th, Columbus) Kyle Connor, Michigan (17th, Winnipeg) Alex Tuch, Boston College (18th, Minnesota) Nick Schmaltz, North Dakota (20th, Chicago) Mark Jankowski, Providence (21st, Calgary) Colin White, Boston College (21st, Ottawa) Brock Boeser, North Dakota (23rd, Vancouver) Jack Roslovic, Miami (25th, Winnipeg) 41 schools have at least one NHL Draft pick on their roster. Colleges with the most draft picks: Boston College – 13 Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota – 12 Boston University – 10 Notre Dame, Omaha – 9 All 30 NHL teams have prospects in college. Those with the most: Chicago – 14 Minnesota – 13 Buffalo, Pittsburgh – 11 Boston, Winnipeg – 10 San Jose – 9 Full list: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/nhl-draft-picks-playing-college-hockey 10 NHL general managers played college hockey: Don Sweeney, Boston (Harvard) Jarmo Kekalainen, Columbus (Clarkson) Peter Chiarelli, Edmonton (Harvard) Dean Lombardi, Los Angeles (New Haven) Chuck Fletcher, Minnesota (Harvard) David Poile, Nashville (Northeastern) Ray Shero, New Jersey (St. Lawrence) Garth Snow, NY Islanders (Maine) Lou Lamoriello, Toronto (Providence) Brian MacLellan, Washington (Bowling Green)

9 NHL head coaches played college hockey: Jeff Blashill, Detroit (Ferris State) Dan Bylsma, Buffalo (Bowling Green) Jack Capuano, NY Islanders (Maine) Jon Cooper, Tampa Bay (Hofstra-club) Dave Hakstol, Philadelphia (North Dakota) John Hynes, New Jersey (Boston University) Peter Laviolette, Nashville (Westfield State) Todd Richards, Columbus (Minnesota) Dave Tippett, Arizona (North Dakota)

Many more former NCAA players play key roles on the draft floor. Full list of former NCAA players in NHL executive roles: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/former-collegians-nhl-front-offices

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT Eight former NCAA players are NHL captains: BUF – Brian Gionta, Boston College CHI – Jonathan Toews, North Dakota FLA – Willie Mitchell, Clarkson MTL – Max Pacioretty, Michigan NJ – Andy Greene, Miami NYR – Ryan McDonagh, Wisconsin SJ – Joe Pavelski, Wisconsin STL – David Backes, Minnesota State More than 200 former college players from 40 schools have their names on the Stanley Cup as players. Schools with the most: Boston College, Wisconsin – 16 North Dakota – 15 Michigan – 13 Michigan State, Minnesota-Duluth – 10 Cornell – 9 Boston University, Denver, Minnesota, Vermont – 8 Bowling Green, New Hampshire, Notre Dame – 7 Clarkson, Providence – 6 Full list: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/stanley-cup-winners More than 30 players who are sons of NHLers are playing college hockey, including: Cody and Trey Bradley, Colorado College (son of Brian) Chris Brown, Boston College (son of Doug) Bobo Carpenter, Boston University (son of Bobby) Ryan Donato, Harvard (son of Ted) Daniel LaFontaine, Canisius (son of Pat) Sean MacTavish, Alaska Anchorage (son of Craig) Tommy Olczyk, Penn State (son of Eddie) Jake Suter, UMass Lowell (son of Gary) John and Nolan Stevens, Northeastern (sons of John) Full list: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/sons-nhlers-college-hockey Players with brothers who have played in the NHL: Marc Biega, Merrimack (Alex) Wade Bennett, Denver (Beau) Jay Camper, New Hampshire (Carter) Alex Carle, Merrimack (Matt) Shane Conacher, Canisius (Cory) Ben Dalpe, Clarkson (Zac) Niklas Folin, UMass Lowell (Christian) Matthew Gaudreau, Boston College (Johnny) Alex Globke, Lake Superior State (Rob) Quentin Shore, Denver (Drew and Nick) Brandon Tanev, Providence (Chris) Daniel Vernace, Lake Superior State (Mike) Johnny Wingels, Miami (Tommy) Nolan Zajac, Denver (Travis)

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT HOCKEY HALL OF FAME Players Angela Ruggiero, Harvard - 2015 Rob Blake, Bowling Green - 2014 Chris Chelios, Wisconsin - 2013 Adam Oates, RPI - 2012 Ed Belfour, North Dakota - 2011 Joe Nieuwendyk, Cornell - 2011 Cammi Granato, Providence - 2010 Brett Hull, Minnesota Duluth - 2009 Brian Leetch, Boston College - 2009 Rod Langway, New Hampshire - 2002 Joe Mullen, Boston College - 2000 Tony Esposito, Michigan Tech - 1988 Ken Dryden, Cornell - 1983 Frank Brimsek, St. Cloud State - 1966 Hobey Baker, Princeton - 1945 Builders Bill “Red” Hay, Colorado College - 2015 Lou Lamoriello, Providence - 2009 Herb Brooks, Minnesota - 2006 Harley Hotchkiss, Michigan State - 2006 Bill Torrey, St. Lawrence - 1995 Bob Johnson, Minnesota (Wisconsin, Colorado College coach) - 1992 John Mariucci, Minnesota - 1985 U.S. HOCKEY HALL OF FAME Former college stars Ron DeGregorio, Chris Drury and Angela Ruggiero will be inducted in the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 2015. Full list of honorees: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/hall-fame-honorees

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT BIG STAGES 10 NHL arenas will host NCAA games in 2015-16: Amalie Arena, Tampa Barclays Center, New York Consol Energy Center, Pittsburgh Gila River Arena, Arizona Joe Louis Arena, Detroit Madison Square Garden, New York Nationwide Arena, Columbus TD Garden, Boston Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul NCAA outdoor games in the modern era: Oct. 6, 2001: Michigan at Michigan State (Spartan Stadium) – Attend.: 74,544 (world record at the time) Feb. 13, 2006: Ohio State vs. Wisconsin (Lambeau Field) – Attend.: 40,890 Jan. 8, 2010: Boston College vs. Boston University (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 38,472 Feb. 6, 2010: Michigan at Wisconsin (Camp Randall Stadium) – Attend.: 55,031 Dec. 11, 2010: Michigan State at Michigan (Michigan Stadium) – Attend.: 113,411 (world record) Feb. 13, 2011: Sacred Heart at Connecticut (Rentschler Field) – Attend.: 1,911 Feb. 19, 2011: AIC vs. Army (Rentschler Field) – Attend.: 1,142 Jan. 7, 2012: Massachusetts vs. Vermont (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 38,456 Jan. 7, 2012: Maine vs. New Hampshire (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 38,456 Jan. 13, 2012: Union vs. Harvard (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 8,981 Jan. 14, 2012: Boston College vs. Northeastern (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 29,601 Jan. 15, 2012: Michigan vs. Ohio State (Progressive Field) – Attend.: 25,864 Feb. 9, 2013: North Dakota at Nebraska Omaha (TD Ameritrade Park, Omaha) – Attend.: 13,650 Feb. 17, 2013: Miami vs. Notre Dame (Soldier Field) – Attend.: 52,051 Feb. 17, 2013: Minnesota vs. Wisconsin (Soldier Field) – Attend.: 52,051 Dec. 27-28, 2013: Great Lakes Invitational (four games; Comerica Park) – Attend.: 25,449 & 26,052 Dec. 28, 2013: Bentley vs. Holy Cross (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 3,898 Jan. 4, 2014: Providence vs. Merrimack (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 31,569 Jan. 4, 2014: Notre Dame vs. Boston College (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 31,569 Jan. 11, 2014: UMass Lowell vs. Northeastern (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 25,580 Jan. 11, 2014: Maine vs. Boston University (Fenway Park) – Attend.: 25,580 Jan. 17, 2014: Ohio State at Minnesota (TCF Bank Stadium) – Attend.: 45,021 Jan. 3, 2015: Bowling Green vs. Robert Morris (Fifth Third Field, Toledo, Ohio) – Attend.: 3,806 Feb. 7, 2015: Miami vs. Western Michigan (Soldier Field, Chicago) – Attend.: 22,751 Feb. 7, 2015: Michigan vs. Michigan State (Soldier Field, Chicago) – Attend.: 22,751 Outdoor game planned for 2015-16: Feb. 20, 2016: Denver vs. Colorado College (Coors Field, Denver)

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT COLLEGE ARENAS New Arenas Since 1998 1998 Kohl Center (Wisconsin) RMU Island Sports Center (Robert Morris) Tsongas Center (UMass Lowell) Value City Arena (Ohio State) Freitas Ice Forum (Connecticut) 1999 Berry Events Center (Northern Michigan) 2001 Ralph Engelstad Arena (North Dakota) 2003 CenturyLink Center (Nebraska-Omaha) 2005 Agganis Arena (Boston University) 2006 Goggin Ice Arena (Miami University) 2007 TD Bank Sports Center (Quinnipiac) 2010 Amsoil Arena (Minnesota Duluth) Sanford Center (Bemidji State) 2011 Compton Family Ice Arena (Notre Dame) 2013 Pegula Ice Arena (Penn State) 2014 Gene Polisseni Center (RIT) HarborCenter (Canisius) 2015 Baxter Arena (Omaha) 2016 (scheduled) Colgate Oldest arenas: Matthews Arena, Northeastern – 1910 Baker Rink, Princeton – 1923 Yost Ice Arena, Michigan – 1923 (did not have ice until 1973) Houston Field House, RPI – 1949 Appleton Arena, St. Lawrence – 1951 Lynah Rink, Cornell – 1957

2015-16 COLLEGE HOCKEY MEDIA KIT OLDEST PROGRAMS Yale – 1896 Brown, Harvard – 1898 Princeton – 1900 Cornell, Rensselaer – 1901 Top rivalries, by games played (entering 2015-16): Michigan vs. Michigan State – 305 games Colorado College vs. Denver – 298 games Minnesota vs. North Dakota – 291 games Michigan vs. Minnesota – 269 games Michigan Tech vs. Minnesota – 267 games NEWEST PROGRAMS 2015 – Arizona State 2012 – Penn State 2004 – Robert Morris 1996 – Nebraska-Omaha, Niagara 1993 – Sacred Heart OTHER RESOURCES Differences between NHL and NCAA rules: http://collegehockeyinc.com/pages/key-differences-ncaa-and-nhl-rules College Hockey, Inc. Media Center: http://collegehockeyinc.com/media-center For additional information: Nate Ewell College Hockey, Inc. [email protected] Cell: 617-780-0295 Office: 617-340-6572