Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_I - Ice Hockey Olympic History

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ice Hockey Olympic History:     more detail
  1. Breaking the Ice: My Journey to Olympic Hockey, The Ivy League & Beyond by Angela Ruggiero, 2005-10-17
  2. Canada's Olympic Hockey History, 1920-2010: Officially Licensed by Hockey Canada and Hockey Hall of Fame by Andrew Podnieks, 2009-10-27
  3. Olympic Ice Hockey by Ice Skating Institute of America, 1981-09
  4. Miracle on Ice (American Moments) by Alan Pierce, 2004-09
  5. Winning Gold: Canada's incredible 2002 Olympic victory in women's hockey (Recordbooks) by Lorna Schultz Nicholson, 2010-03-25
  6. Miracle on Ice (Graphic History) by Joe Dunn, 2008-07
  7. The Boys of Winter: The Untold Story of a Coach, a Dream, and the 1980 U.s. Olympic Hockey Team by Wayne Coffey, 2008-10-20
  8. Mark Johnson's Tales from the Miracle on Ice by Mark Johnson, Randy Schultz, 2006-10-30

61. The Winter Olympics
nordic skiing, speed skating, figure skating, ice hockey and bobsledding, wasa huge success and was retroactively called the first olympic Winter Games.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipsa/A0115111.html

Do you have excessive Hair loss? We can help YOU !

Baseball, Football ,Hockey ..all Sports Mags and Books.

Great savings on routine dental care and expensive dental procedures

All Infoplease All Almanacs General Entertainment Sports Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia Infoplease Home Almanacs Atlas Dictionary ...
Fact Monster

Kids' reference
Info:Daily

Fun facts
Homework

Center
Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Sports Olympics Winter Olympics Through The Years
The Winter Olympics
The move toward a winter version of the Olympics began in 1908 when figure skating made an appearance at the Summer Games in London. Ten-time world champion Ulrich Salchow of Sweden, who originated the backwards, one revolution jump that bears his name, and Madge Syers of Britain were the first singles champions. Germans Anna Hubler and Heinrich Berger won the pairs competition. The Games resumed in 1920 at Antwerp, Belgium, where figure skating returned and ice hockey was added as a medal event. Sweden's Gillis Grafstrom and Magda Julin took individual honors, while Ludovika and Walter Jakobsson were the top pair. In hockey, Canada won the gold medal with the United States second and Czechoslovakia third. Seventy years after those first cold weather Games, the 17th edition of the Winter Olympics took place in Lillehammer, Norway, in 1994. The event ended the four-year Olympic cycle of staging both Winter and Summer Games in the same year and began a new schedule that calls for the two Games to alternate every two years.

62. Olympics 2002: Ice Hockey
DID YOU KNOW? ice hockey made its olympic debut at the 1920 Summer olympics inAntwerp, Belgium. The first Winter olympics didn't take place until 1924.
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/02olhockey1.html

Do you have excessive Hair loss? We can help YOU !

Baseball, Football ,Hockey ..all Sports Mags and Books.

Great savings on routine dental care and expensive dental procedures

All Infoplease All Almanacs General Entertainment Sports Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia Infoplease Home Almanacs Atlas Dictionary ...
Fact Monster

Kids' reference
Info:Daily

Fun facts
Homework

Center
Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Ice Hockey A tournament of veterans By Mike Morrison RELATED LINKS Men's Ice Hockey Women's Ice Hockey 2002 Winter Olympics 2002 Ice Hockey Medal Standings ... Encyclopedia: Ice Hockey Men It's hard to believe it's been 22 years since a bunch of college kids from the United States defeated the Russians and ultimately won the gold in 1980's "Miracle on Ice." Since that year, the U.S. men's hockey team has fallen on hard times, failing to medal in each of the last five Olympics. The low point for the program perhaps came in Nagano in 1998, when still-named members of the team trashed their room at the Olympic Village following a loss to the eventual champion Czech Republic In 1998 the face of Olympic hockey underwent a major change when it was ruled that professionals would be allowed to compete. On the bright side, we truly saw each nation's top players competing against each other. On the downside, it virtually eliminated the chance of another "Miracle on Ice."

63. News Archive
and Scott Young To 2002 US olympic Men's ice hockey Team. Dunn hopes to author anotherolympic memory By Women’s hockey pioneers blaze “Utah Trail” toward
http://www.olympic-usa.org/CFDOCS/borg/newsArchive.cfm?spID=21

64. The Salt Lake Tribune - 2002 Winter Olympic Games
US olympic Committee. International olympic Committee. Photo Galleries ParalympicCrossCountry Women. Paralympic ice Sledge hockey. Paralympic Slalom Men.
http://www.sltrib2002.com/gallery/index.asp
RECENT HEADLINES SCHEDULE PHOTO GALLERIES RECENT HEADLINES ... International Olympic Committee document.write(Banner("area=slt.2002_olympics.position0/adsize=banner1",468,60))
Photo Galleries Paralympic Closing Ceremonies Paralympic Cross-Country Men Paralympic Cross-Country Women Paralympic Slalom Men ... Torch Relay
document.write(Banner("area=slt.2002_olympics.position1/adsize=button1",125,125)) document.write(Banner("area=slt.2002_olympics.position1X/adsize=120x600",120,600)) document.write(Banner("area=slt.2002_olympics.position2/adsize=button1",125,125)) document.write(Banner("area=slt.2002_olympics.position3/adsize=banner1",468,60))

65. YORK International : Olympics
teams. For the first time in olympic history, the men's ice hockeyteam comprised professional players instead of amateurs. Though
http://www.york.com/corp/olym/olympic_Dreams.asp
Select A Country Argentina Austria Brazil Germany Mexico Poland Puerto Rico Romania Russian Federation United States Venezuela Home Corporate Profile Investor Relations Employment ... News Dreams Come True For Members of YORK-sponsored Olympic Teams Land of the rising sun? Not according to most Olympians who participated in the 1998 Winter Olympic Games in Nagano, Japan. Bad weather prevailed during most of the two- week international competition. Though the sun didn't shine as much as people had hoped, Nagano produced numerous rising "stars," including members of the U.S. ski and luge teams. Sponsored by York International Corporation, the teams made the event memorable for more than ancient Japanese tradition and unique cuisine. 'Double' Take "No way," said one onlooker. "Impossible," said another. However, it was no dream. Members of the YORK-sponsored U.S. luge team had done it. They nabbed an Olympic medal in a sport that had jinxed the U.S. for 34 years. Make that two medals. It seems fitting that the U.S. won two medals in doubles luge competition. In any other Olympic sport, it wouldn't be as noteworthy. Similar to the women's Super G outcome, it was the closest doubles luge race in Olympic history, with the U.S. winning silver and bronze.

66. 3rd Period -- International Hockey - Olympic Games
and Mario Lemieux in the olympic Games because led Canada to choose not to ice a teamin years Canada withdrew from international hockey altogether, frustrated
http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/Exhibitions/Hockey/English/International/oly.html
Goaltender Sean Burke guards the Canada net during the 1988 games, hosted in Calgary, Alberta. Burke would return to the Canadian net for the 1992 Olympics as well.
Eric Lindros, who captained the '98 Olympic team has many international appearances under his belt. Lindros has appeared in two World Junior championships, a World Senior, a Canada Cup, two Olympics, and the World Cup, all by his 26th birthday.
Olympic Games
Until 1998, Canada had never sent all of its best players to compete at the Olympics, yet no other nation has as many Olympic hockey medals as Canada. This is an amazing accomplishment when you consider that until very recently Canada sent over Amateur club teams and rosters of minor leaguers, university students and Amateurs to face off against elite level European professional players. For years, a major bone of contention has been the interpretation of the word Amateur in the framework of the Olympic Games. The Russians, for example, won several Olympic gold medals icing a team featuring their best of the best; names like Vladislav Tretiak, Valeri Kharlamov, Igor Larionov and Slava Fetisov fill their Olympic history. However, these players did not face off against Phil Esposito, Ken Dryden, Guy Lafleur and Mario Lemieux in the Olympic Games because these Canadians weren't permitted to play due to their "professional" status. Why the Russians weren't considered professionals when, in fact, that is exactly what they were, is totally unclear and the basis for the Canadians' dispute. This ill-will led Canada to choose not to ice a team in the 1972 and 1976 Games. For those years Canada withdrew from international hockey altogether, frustrated by the inability to properly represent the country.

67. Harvard Hockey: Timeline
Harvard Men's hockey A Brief history of Long Traditions Team and inducted into theIce hockey Hall of included induction into the United States olympic Hall of
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~athletic/hockey/timeline.html
Date-by-Date Timeline
Harvard Men's Hockey
A Brief History of Long Traditions

This is the 101st season of Harvard men's ice hockey. It all began with a game against Brown on January 19, 1898 at flooded Franklin Park in Boston that inaugurated the oldest collegiate ice hockey rivalry. Harvard lost that game but went on to win well more than its share of games against Brown and more than 63 percent overall against seventy other opponents. Throughout the past 100 years, Harvard has been synonymous with collegiate hockey.
Although Harvard's hockey program has produced several professional players, the emphasis has been on the amateur aspect. That these have been very talented amateurs is attested by the program's more than 30 Olympians and All-Americans. Since formalization of the Ivy Group in 1954, Harvard has followed the League's need-based financial aid rules in hockey as in all sports. Despite this recruiting handicap, Harvard has retained and actually enhanced its high level of national competition.

68. Harvard Hockey: ECAC
On the ice, legendary players such as Princeton's Hobart Amory Hare book on the gamewas the hockey bible for Jack Riley, who led the 1960 US olympic squad to
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~athletic/hockey/ecac.html
Harvard in the ECAC
Home to 12 of the most prestigious ice hockey programs in the nation, the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) is a conference filled with tradition, legendary players, coaches and administrators and a bright and exciting future. In terms of tradition, no conference can lay claim to the history of the ECAC. The birthplace of collegiate ice hockey, member institutions have been sponsoring the sport for nearly a century. On February 1, 1896 in Baltimore, Maryland, Yale faced Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Maryland, in the first collegiate ice hockey game. Two years later on January 19, 1898, Brown defeated Harvard in Boston in the first college hockey game between schools still sponsoring the sport. From a team standpoint, Cornell (1969-70) stands as the only team in NCAA ice hockey history to produce a perfect unbeaten and untied record en route to the Division I men's title. The Big Red posted a mark of 29-0-0 under coach Ned Harkness, a Hockey Hall of Fame inductee in 1994.

69. Olympics - EnchantedLearning.com
events in the Winter Olympics include ice hockey, figure skating The motto of theOlympic Games is Citius, altius history of the Olympics Flag Pierre de Frédy
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/olympics/
Please help keep
Enchanted Learning online.
Click here for more information on our honor system.

$20.00/year or other amount
(directly by Credit Card
$20.00/year
(transaction via PayPal
Other Amount
(transaction via PayPal
EnchantedLearning.com

The Olympic Games: Winter 2002 in Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, was where the year 2002 Winter Olympics were held. For information on Utah, click here . For a page on Utah's flag, click here The year 2002 Winter Olympic Games are being held in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. The opening ceremonies were on February 8, 2002. The closing ceremonies were on Sunday, February 24, 2002. The events in the Winter Olympics include: ice hockey, figure skating, speed skating, snowboarding, luge, bobsleigh, skeleton (a type of sledding), curling, cross-country skiing, freestyle skiing, slalom, downhill (Alpine) skiing, ski jumping, Nordic combined (skiing plus ski jumping), and biathlon (skiing and shooting). The Flag of the Olympic Games The flag of the Olympic Games has five interlocking rings (blue, yellow, black, green, and red) on a white ground. The rings represent the five parts of the world that were joined together in the Olympic movement: Africa, the Americas, Asia, Australia and Europe. The motto of the Olympic Games is "Citius, altius, fortius" (meaning "Faster, higher, stronger" in Latin). History of the Olympics Flag The flag was first used in the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium. The Olympic flag is paraded during the opening ceremony of each Olympic Games. At the end of an Olympics, the mayor of the host-city presents the flag to the mayor of the next host-city. The flag will remain in the town hall of the next host-city until the next Olympic Games, four years later.

70. Eastern College Athletic Conference
The sport received unmatched worldwide exposure in 1998 as the United Statesbrought home the firstever olympic Gold Medal in women’s ice hockey.
http://easternhockey.ecac.org/site/ECAC_Hockey
Boston College Connecticut Maine New Hampshire Niagara Northeastern Providence Quinnipiac Directions
History
Links
News and Notes
...
All Stars
ECAC Hockey Print Women have been playing competitive college hockey in New England at both the varsity and club level since the mid-1970s but over the past five years, the game has exploded on the national sports scene. Not only has the game grown in the east, the expansion has worked its way west. The ECAC also experienced growth and change in 2001 with the creation of two Division I leagues, the addition of a second Division III playing league and restructuring of the existing Division III league. The ECAC also has ties internationally as three ECAC players helped lead Canada to the 2001 World Championship. The ECAC has also been represented in international competition by skaters from Japan and Switzerland.

71. St. Petersburg Times: Olympic Coverage
2002; A shining moment for Russian star decade later; Gold worth its wait; olympicnotes; A different hockey look; French pair is in lead in ice dancing; olympic
http://www.sptimes.com/News/webspecials/olympics2002/
The games Feb. 8-24, 2002 Photo Galleries
Feb. 9, 2002

Opening night

Feb. 10, 2002
Day one events

Feb. 11, 2002
Day two events

Feb. 12, 2002
Day three events

Feb. 13, 2002
Day four events
Feb. 14, 2002 Day five events Feb. 15, 2002 Day six events Feb. 16, 2002 Day seven events Feb. 17, 2002 Day eight events Feb. 18, 2002 Day nine events Feb. 19, 2002 Day 10 events Feb. 20, 2002 Day 11 events Feb. 21, 2002 Day 12 events Feb. 22, 2002 Day 13 events Feb. 23, 2002 Day 14 events Feb. 24, 2002 Day 15 events Feb. 25, 2002 closing ceremony Special links Salt Lake 2002 U.S. Olympic Committee International Olympic Committee NBC Olympics Interactive Forums: Follow your sport at our message boards Times sites Sports [Times photo: James Borchuck] Fireworks go off a Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City after the parade of athletes during the closing ceremony of 2002 Olympic Winter Games. Photo gallery of Sunday's action Medals standings Olympics results Top Olympic News ... Olympic Multimedia Gallery The sports: Alpine Skiing Bobsled, Luge and Skeleton Curling Freestyle and Snowboarding ... Speedskating Times daily coverage Feb. 26, 2002

72. USA Hockey
official web site of the United States olympic Team weekend (March 2830) with theUSA hockey National Team which features 45 of the best ice hockey players in
http://www.usahockey.com/usa_hockey/main/home/usoc_sweep_rel_0203/
Privacy Statement
Adult Players
Coaches College ... Youth Players Select zone Adult Players Coaches College Girls/Women InLine International Juniors NTDP Officials Olympics Professional Volunteers Youth Players USA HOCKEY HOME Inside USAH News USA Hockey InLine ... Downloads NCAA Poll Who will win the Frozen Four? Cornell Michigan Minnesota New Hampshire View Results Submit Allied Member Olympics Olympics Section FirstUSA Credit Card Apply Today! USA Hockey To Participate In The USOC's Meet The U.S. Olympic Team Online Sweepstakes February 3, 2003
OFFICIAL RULES
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - USA Hockey today announced that it will be participating in an online sweepstakes hosted by the United States Olympic Committee on usolympicteam.com , the official web site of the United States Olympic Committee. The sweepstakes will run Feb. 3-March 3 and will be the largest in the history of usolympicteam.com, featuring participation by 28 National Governing Bodies. Every participating NGB will contribute a First Prize as part of the sweepstakes. The winner of the USA Hockey First Prize will have the opportunity to “Meet Future Olympians” by spending a weekend (March 28-30) with the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, which features 45 of the best ice hockey players in the U.S. under the age of 18, who train and compete in Ann Arbor, Mich. The announcement was made by USA Hockey Executive Director Doug Palazzari (Colorado Springs, Colo.); Director, Online Services Lauren Pasquale (Colorado Springs, Colo.); and National Team Development Program Director of Operations Scott Monoghan (Ann Arbor, Mich.).

73. Guardian Unlimited Sport | Olympics
Canada reclaim gold and lustre ice hockeymad Canadians have left the ice skating. andfederation official at the centre of the February olympic figure skating
http://sport.guardian.co.uk/olympics/0,10308,502614,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs Life MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer
Home
Football Cricket Rugby ... Help
Search this site The Alain Baxter controversy Insider knowledge prompts Baxter appeal
April 12:
Alain Baxter's appeal to win back his bronze medal was prompted by a leading member of the Court of Arbitration for Sport, to which he will take his case.
Baxter to take medal appeal to the top

Baxter stripped of bronze medal

Inhalers: how they compare

Comment: only himself to blame
...
'I'm not giving up when I'm at my peak'

Interview:
Alain Baxter talks about 'bouncing back' after his recent and ongoing travails with the Olympic authourities. Baxter helps Britain scale new peak
February 25:
Scotland's Alain Baxter stunned the skiing world by winning Olympic bronze in the slalom.

74. Women's Ice Hockey - Harvard University Crimson
has coached who competed in the 2002 olympic Games. Stone is the only coach in historyto coach and coached the varsity field hockey, ice hockey, and lacrosse
http://gocrimson.ocsn.com/sports/w-hockey/mtt/stone_katey00.html
Choose a Sport Baseball M Basketball W Basketball M Crew-HWT M Crew-LWT W Crew-HWT W Crew-LWT M Cross Country W Cross Country M Fencing W Fencing Field Hockey Football M Golf W Golf M Ice Hockey W Ice Hockey M Lacrosse W Lacrosse Sailing Skiing M Soccer W Soccer Softball M Squash W Squash M Swimming W Swimming M Tennis W Tennis M Volleyball W Volleyball M Water Polo W Water Polo Wrestling
Athletics Home

Broadcast Info

Camp Information

Compliance/Recruiting
... Season Statistics
Katey Stone Hometown:
Watertown, CT
Last College:
New Hampshire '89
Position:
Head Coach All-Time Record: 141-89-9 (8 seasons) Katey Stone is in her ninth season as the Head Coach of Harvard women’s hockey. Over the past three seasons, she has led the Crimson to a combined 96-27-5 record, including last year’s 18-11-2 record. Two years ago, the Crimson completed a 24-10 campaign which culminated with a third place finish in the inaugural NCAA Championships. Under Stone’s tutelage in 2001-02, the Crimson won its fourth straight Beanpot Championship and reached the semifinals of the ECAC Tournament. Following the 2000-01 season, Stone was awarded the New England Hockey Writers’ Coach of the Year Award for the second time in her career. She also recorded her 100th career victory in the 5-2 win over Niagara on November 11, 2000 and now has posted a record of 141-89-8. In 1998-99, Stone guided Harvard to the greatest season in the history of the program with a 33-1 record that was culminated in a thrilling 6-5 overtime victory over New Hampshire in the AWCHA National Championship. Harvard also captured the Beanpot and Ivy League Championships, as well as the program’s first-ever ECAC Regular Season and Tournament titles.

75. Women's Ice Hockey - Harvard University Crimson
gold medal winning and 2002 silvermedal winning United States olympic hockey Team
http://gocrimson.ocsn.com/sports/w-hockey/mtt/ruggiero_angela00.html
Choose a Sport Baseball M Basketball W Basketball M Crew-HWT M Crew-LWT W Crew-HWT W Crew-LWT M Cross Country W Cross Country M Fencing W Fencing Field Hockey Football M Golf W Golf M Ice Hockey W Ice Hockey M Lacrosse W Lacrosse Sailing Skiing M Soccer W Soccer Softball M Squash W Squash M Swimming W Swimming M Tennis W Tennis M Volleyball W Volleyball M Water Polo W Water Polo Wrestling
Athletics Home

Broadcast Info

Camp Information

Compliance/Recruiting
... Season Statistics
Angela Ruggiero Class:
Junior
Hometown:
Harper Woods, MI
High School:
Choate Rosemary Hall Height: Position: D Birthdate: Sh/C: R One of the best defenders in the world ... Explosive speed with excellent agility ... Tremendous defensive skills with a keen offensive instinct ... Possesses one of the strongest and most accurate shots in all of women’s hockey ... Invaluable player on special teams situations ... Member of the 1998 gold medal winning and 2002 silver-medal winning United States Olympic Hockey Team ... Sophomore (1999-00): Top-scoring defenseman in the nation with 21 goals and 33 assists for 54 points ... Led the team with four short-handed strikes and was second on the squad with five power play goals ... A candidate for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award ... Earned First Team All-Ivy, All-ECAC and All-American honors for the second consecutive year ... Tallied her first career hat trick in a 7-2 ECAC quarterfinal victory over St. Lawrence ... Equalled her career-best with a five point effort (two goals, three assists) in a 10-2 win over Maine ... Notched multiple points in 16 of 29 games ...

76. University Of Massachusetts - Official Athletic Site - Ice Hockey
ice hockey Federation and head coach of the Vienna ice Club where the thenMinnesotaNorth Stars of the National hockey League and the 1984 US olympic Team
http://umassathletics.ocsn.com/sports/m-hockey/mtt/cahoon_don00.html

SCHEDULES
TICKETS MULTIMEDIA ONLINE STORE ...
University Info

Don Cahoon Position:
Head Coach
Experience:
15 years
Years at UMass:
Third year
Don ÒTootÓ Cahoon enters his third season at the helm of the University of Massachusetts hockey program. The 2001-02 edition of the UMass hockey team was a young squad that earned eight wins throughout the season. However, the Minutemen were extremely competitive, appearing in 13 one-goal games. Last yearÕs team also captured Hockey EastÕs prestigious Charles E. Holt Team Sportsmanship Award for the first time in school history. In his first year with the Minutemen, he guided UMass to an 8-22-4 record, including seven Hockey East wins, which was the second most league wins in school history. Perhaps the most impressive statistic in CahoonÕs two years have been the 17 Hockey East Academic All-Conference performers that have played under him, which is tied for the most in the Hockey East with Northeastern over that stretch. Cahoon came to UMass from Princeton, where he rebuilt the Tigers struggling hockey program. He led the Tigers to their first-ever ECAC Tournament title, as well as the schoolÕs first NCAA Tournament appearance in 1998, and produced four seasons of 18-plus wins over the last six years. CahoonÕs career coaching record stands at 196-215-42 (.479), including a mark of 122-129-32 (.488) at Princeton. Cahoon made an immediate impact when he took over the coaching reins at Princeton in 1991. During his first season as the head coach, he led the Tigers to a 12-14-1 overall record and the ECAC quarterfinals. In 1994-95, CahoonÕs Tigers beat then-top-ranked and unbeaten Maine in Orono in the Dexter Classic championship game en route to their first winning season in over a quarter century. It also marked the first time in school history that Princeton advanced to the ECAC finals. Following the season, Cahoon was named a finalist for American Hockey Coaches Association Division I Coach of the Year honors. In 1997-98, Cahoon guided Princeton to its first-ever ECAC title and first-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament. His teams have also enjoyed success in regular season tournaments. While at Princeton, the Tigers won the Dexter Classic (1994), the Capital District Christmas Classic in Ottawa (1995) and the Mariucci Classic (1998).

77. ESPN.com: NCAA - NCAA Tournament History: Men's Ice Hockey
Thursday, January 18 Frozen Four history. DIVISION I NCAA CHAMPIONS. YEAR,CHAMPION (RECORD), SCORE, RUNNERUP. 2002, Minnesota (32-8-4), 4-3 OT, Maine.
http://espn.go.com/ncaa/almanac/mhockey.html
sLgTgRedirStr = ""; document.write( ''); document.write( ''); ESPN Network: ESPN NBA.com NHL.com ABCSports ... Almanac OTHER SPORTS Football M College BB W College BB Other SPORT SECTIONS NBA
Scores
NHL Playoffs ... More Sports Thursday, January 18
Frozen Four history
DIVISION I NCAA CHAMPIONS YEAR CHAMPION (RECORD) SCORE RUNNER-UP Minnesota (32-8-4) 4-3 OT Maine Boston College (33-8-2) 3-2 OT North Dakota North Dakota (31-8-5) Boston College Maine (31-6-4) 3-2 OT New Hampshire Michigan (32-11-1) 3-2 OT Boston College North Dakota (31-10-2) Boston U. Michigan (33-7-2) 3-2 OT Colorado College Boston U. (31-6-3) Maine Lake Superior St. (31-10-4) Boston U. Maine (41-1-2) Lake Superior St. Lake Superior St. (30-9-4) # Wisconsin Northern Mich. (38-5-4) Boston U. Wisconsin (36-9-1) Colgate Harvard (31-3) 4-3 OT Minnesota Lake Superior St. (33-7-6) 4-3 OT St. Lawrence North Dakota (40-8) Michigan St. Michigan St. (34-9-2) Harvard Rensselaer Providence Bowling Green (34-8-2) Minn.- Duluth Wisconsin (30-10-4) Harvard North Dakota (35-12) Wisconsin Wisconsin (27-14-1) Minnesota North Dakota (31-8-1) Northern Mich.

78. ESPN.com: NCAA - NCAA Tournament History: Women's Ice Hockey

http://espn.go.com/ncaa/almanac/whockey.html
sLgTgRedirStr = ""; document.write( ''); document.write( ''); ESPN Network: ESPN NBA.com NHL.com ABCSports ... Fantasy
ESPN Web COLLEGE SPORTS Fall Sports Men's XC Women's XC Field Hockey M. Soccer W. Soccer W. Volleyball M. Water polo Winter Sports M. Gymnastics W. Gymnastics M. Hockey W. Hockey Indoor Track M. Swim/Dive W. Swim/Dive Wrestling Spring Sports Baseball M. Golf W. Golf M. Lacrosse W. Lacrosse Softball M. Tennis W. Tennis Outdoor Track W. Waterpolo M. Volleyball Rankings Transactions Schools Recruiting COLLEGE HOCKEY Schedules Scoreboard OTHER SPORTS Football M College BB W College BB SPORT SECTIONS NBA
Scores
NHL Playoffs ... More Sports Tuesday, April 2
Updated: March 25, 2:24 PM ET
Women's Frozen Four history
DIVISION I NCAA CHAMPIONS YEAR CHAMPION (RECORD) SCORE RUNNER-UP Minnesota-Duluth (31-3-2) Harvard Minnesota-Duluth (24-6-4) Brown Minnesota-Duluth (28-5-4) St. Lawrence
ESPN Tools Email story
Most sent

Print story

Daily email

ESPN.com: Help Advertiser Info Contact Us Tools ... Jobs at ESPN.com
and are applicable to this site. Employment opportunities at ESPN.com. Visit our lite site if you're having problems with this page.

79. World Cup Hockey | 411-world-cup | Surf To The World Cup Of Hockey Sites With Hi
Balbir Singh's Field hockey Triple olympic gold medalist Indoor hockey World Cup2003 - Leipzig, Germany English/German USA Women's ice hockey Team Tribute
http://www.411-world-cup.com/World_Cup_Hockey.html
Home
FREE GAMES SECTION
CATEGORIES World Cup Soccer
World Cup 2002

World Cup Tickets

World Cup History
...
World-cup
» World Cup Hockey
The World Cup of Hockey
- A new book featuring the history of the Canada Cup and World Cup of Hockey.
Balbir Singh's Field Hockey
- Triple Olympic gold medalist Balbir Singh. London Olympics - 1948, Helsinki - 1952 and Melbourne - 1958 (captain). Field Hockey World Cup - Kuala Lumpur (Chief Coach and Manager).
Indoor Hockey World Cup 2003
- Leipzig, Germany plays host to the first world indoor cup for five days February 5-9, 2003. Features news, live ticker, participating national teams for men and women, press, tickets and sponsors. [English/German]
USA Women's Ice Hockey Team Tribute Site
- Fan site dedicated to the USA Women's Ice Hockey Team that features pictures of present and past players, photos of past tournaments including the Olympic Games, Four Nations Cup, World Championships and photos from player families and friends. Also includes web polls, team news, announcements and links. Ice Hockey Results and Tables - Mostly British results, but here you can find Skoda Auto European Hockey League, Continental Cup, NHL and World Championship results too

80. Utah Olympic Oval: The Fastest Ice On Earth!
dropin sessions for ice hockey, sledge hockey and curling. For high-performanceathletes, the Oval is the home training facility for USA olympic gold medalist
http://www.utaholympicoval.com/about/

About Us
Location Staff Directory Mission / Vision ... Contact Us
About Us
The Utah Olympic Oval, which was completed in March 2001, has been recognized as the premier speed skating facility in the world after 10 Olympic records and eight world records were set during the 2002 Games. Because of its altitude at 4,675 feet and the quality of the ice-making, it is truly known as the "Fastest Ice On Earth."
The $30 million facility consists of five acres under a clear span suspension roof and houses a 400-meter speed skating oval, two international size ice sheets, a four-lane 442-meter running track, eight 110-meter sprint lanes, spacious locker facilities and team rooms, World Record Lounge and meeting rooms, concession stands, Oval Gifts and Gear Pro Shop, skate rental and skate sharpening services.
For recreational users, "Learn To" programs are available for adults and children in skating, speed skating, figure skating, hockey and curling. There is open ice for public skating. The cost is $4 for adults, $3 for children and $2 for skate rental. There are also open drop-in sessions for ice hockey, sledge hockey and curling.
For high-performance athletes, the Oval is the home training facility for USA Olympic gold medalist Derek Parra and German silver medalist Monique Garbrecht-Enfeldt. They are part of the FAST (Facilitated Athlete Sport Training) program under the direction of head coach Bart Schouten. For up-and-coming athletes, certified coaches provide guidance through the STEP (Skate, Technique, Endurance and Power) program that matches their development.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter