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2000–01 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season

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2000–01 Boston College Eagles
men's ice hockey season
NCAA Division I National Champion
Maverick Stampede, champion
Beanpot, champion
Hockey East, champion
Hockey East Tournament, champion
NCAA Tournament, champion
Conference1st Hockey East
Home iceConte Forum
Rankings
USCHO2
USA Today1
Record
Overall33–8–2
Conference17–5–2
Home12–3–1
Road12–4–1
Neutral9–1–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachJerry York
Assistant coachesJim Logue
Scott Paluch
Mike Cavanaugh
Captain(s)Brian Gionta
Alternate captain(s)Bobby Allen
Mike Lephart
Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey seasons
« 1999–00 2001–02 »

The 2000–01 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season was the 79th season of play for the program. They represent Boston College in the 2000–01 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season and for the 17th season in Hockey East. The Eagles were coached by Jerry York, in his 7th season, and played their home games at the Conte Forum.

Season

[edit]

Milestone

[edit]

Entering the season, head coach Jerry York needed just seven wins to reach 600 for his career. Early on, the team lived up to their pre-season ranking, winning four road games before heading into a showdown with Wisconsin. In a battle between the top two ranked programs, BC entered the third period with a lead, only to see the Badgers score twice to take the match.[1] After a poor start from backup netminder Tim Kelleher, Scott Clemmensen finished the following game, allowing BC to get back on track. The next week, the Eagles returned to type, winning both games, and gave York his milestone.[2]

Settling in

[edit]

After a second consecutive poor showing from their backup, on November 7, BC turned over the net to Clemmenson for most of the rest of the season and got stellar play from the senior. In the team's 7–2 win over Merrimack, captain Brian Gionta set the program record for the fastest two goals when he scored 10 seconds apart in the third period. In the same game he recorded his 8th-career hat-trick, tying the program record, and hit 100 goals for his career, becoming the 4th player in program history to reach that mark.[3] BC ended the first half of their season by taking down #11 Maine and establishing themselves as the #2 team in the nation, just behind Michigan State.

Missed opportunity

[edit]

BC began the second half of the regular season with its second 2-vs-1 matchup. Just like the first time, the Eagles were unable to overcome the higher-seeded team and fell to MSU in the Great Lakes Invitational semifinal. Boston College retained its ranking after recovering with a win over #4 Michigan in the consolation game. A further loss to arch-rival Boston University dropped the team one spot but four consecutive wins over ranked teams had them back in the #2 spot before long. In the last game in January, Gionta again set new program records. By scoring 5 goals in the first, he set a Hockey East record for the most goals in one period. He tied the program record of 112 career goals while setting a new benchmark of 9 career hat-tricks. The game also marked the first season sweep of Maine since 1990.[4]

Beanpot champions

[edit]

After completing the season sweep of Massachusetts–Lowell, BC rode into the Beanpot tied in one poll for the #1 seed. The Eagles dropped Harvard in the semifinal, setting up a showdown with BU a week later. In the interim, however, BC saw its 6-game winning streak ended by Providence.[5] Having lost yet another shot at being the top team in the nation, Boston College took out their frustrations out on the Terriers and won the Beanpot for the first time in seven years.[6] Clemmenson was named tournament MVP.

Down the stretch

[edit]

The Eagles split the following weekend against #8 New Hampshire and then were not quite up to par a week later versus Massachusetts. Despite not losing either match, BC dropped to #3 in the polls but rebounded with two wins to end their regular season. Boston College ended atop the Hockey East standings with a 7-point margin. It was the first conference title for the Eagles in a decade.[7]

Hockey East tournament

[edit]

BC opened their postseason with Scott Clemmensen earning the program record 13th and final shutout of his college career against Merrimack.[8] He continued his strong play, allowing 1 goal in each of the next two games, and sent BC to their 4th-consecutive conference title game. The team got a tougher fight from Providence, but Tony Voce led the way with two goals and BC won the Hockey East Championship.[9] Despite being held off the scoresheet in the final, Chuck Kobasew was named as the Tournament MVP.

NCAA tournament

[edit]

Entering the tournament as the #2 team in the nation, Boston College received the top eastern seed and a bye into the second round. Their first game came against Maine, the team that had knocked them out in 1999, and BC continued their dominance of the Black Bears in '01 with 3–1 victory. Entering their 4th-consecutive Frozen Four, the Eagles were faced with Michigan, the squad that had defeated them for the title in 1998, for the second time on the year. The seniors were able to get their revenge three-years in the making and took the game 4–2.[10]

BC reached the championship game for the second straight season and the third time in four years. The only team left in their path to the title was defending champion, North Dakota. The two teams fought to a scoreless draw after one period and BC took over in the second, beginning with a power play goal from Kobasew. Senior Mike Lephart got a second goal three minutes later and Scott Clemmensen kept UND off the board until late in the game. After BC took a penalty for too many men with less than 5 minutes to play, the Fighting Sioux pulled their goaltender and cut the lead in half. Wes Dorey ted the game with under a minute before the buzzer and sent the championship into overtime. Despite the sudden change in fortune, BC found their nerve in the extra session and sent 4 shots on goal in less than 5 minutes. The final of which, coming from the stick of Krys Kolanos, found the back of the net and game Boston College its first national championship in 52 years. BC also became just the 3rd national champion that played more games on the road than at home (1978 Boston University, 1994 Lake Superior State)

Kobasew was named Tournament MOP while Clemmensen set the NCAA record for most game played by a goaltender in a Frozen Four with seven.

Departures

[edit]
Player Position Nationality Cause
Blake Bellefeuille Forward  United States Graduation (signed with Columbus Blue Jackets)
Kevin Caulfield Forward  United States Graduation (signed with Wheeling Nailers)
Anthony D'Arpino Forward  United States Returned to juniors mid-season
Jeff Farkas Forward  United States Graduation (signed with Toronto Maple Leafs)
Tony Hutchins Forward  United States Graduation (retired)
Paul Kelly Forward  United States Returned to juniors (Tri-City Storm)
Mike Mottau Defenseman  United States Graduation (signed with New York Rangers)
Jeremy Wilson Forward  United States Returned to juniors (Cedar Rapids RoughRiders)

Recruiting

[edit]
Player Position Nationality Age Notes
Justin Dziama Forward  United States 20 Natick, MA; selected 242nd overall in 1999
Ben Eaves Forward  United States 18 Minneapolis, MN
J. D. Forrest Defenseman  United States 19 Auburn, NY; selected 181st overall in 2000
Ty Hennes Forward  United States 20 Kent, WA
Chuck Kobasew Forward  Canada 18 Calgary, AB
Brett Peterson Defenseman  United States 18 Northborough, MA
Joe Schuman Defenseman  United States 18 Bloomington, MN
Tony Voce Forward  United States 19 Philadelphia, PA

Roster

[edit]
No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team NHL rights
1 Massachusetts Tim Kelleher Sophomore G 6' 0" (1.83 m) 170 lb (77 kg) 1980-05-25 Belmont, Massachusetts Saint Sebastian's School (US-Prep)
2 Massachusetts Bobby Allen (A) Senior D 6' 0" (1.83 m) 183 lb (83 kg) 1978-11-14 Weymouth, Massachusetts Cushing Academy (US-Prep) BOS, 52nd overall 1998
4 California Brooks Orpik Junior D 6' 2" (1.88 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1980-09-26 San Francisco, California Thayer Academy (US-Prep) PIT, 18th overall 2000
5 Massachusetts Bill Cass Sophomore D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1980-09-30 Boston, Massachusetts USNTDP (USHL) ANA, 153rd overall 2000
6 New York (state) Marty Hughes Senior D 5' 10" (1.78 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1978-10-06 Hicksville, New York
7 New York (state) Rob Scuderi Senior D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 212 lb (96 kg) 1978-12-30 Hicksville, New York New York Apple Core (EJHL) PIT, 134th overall 1998
8 Alberta Anthony D'Arpino Sophomore D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1979-11-07 Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta Fort Saskatchewan Traders (AJHL) NJD, 42nd overall 1999
10 New Hampshire Jeff Giuliano Junior F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1979-06-20 Nashua, New Hampshire St. Paul's School (US-Prep)
11 Alberta Krys Kolanos Sophomore F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1981-07-27 Calgary, Alberta Calgary Royals (AJHL) PHO, 19th overall 2000
12 New York (state) Brian Gionta (C) Senior F 5' 7" (1.7 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 1979-01-18 Rochester, New York Niagara Scenic (EJHL) NJD, 82nd overall 1998
13 Pennsylvania Tony Voce Freshman F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1980-10-30 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
14 Washington (state) Ty Hennes Freshman F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 176 lb (80 kg) 1979-11-07 Kent, Washington Omaha Lancers (USHL)
15 New York (state) Ales Dolinar Junior F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 181 lb (82 kg) 1979-04-23 East Northport, New York
17 Minnesota A. J. Walker Sophomore F 5' 10" (1.78 m) 187 lb (85 kg) 1980-08-17 Faribault, Minnesota Shattuck-Saint Mary's (MN-HS)
18 Ontario Mark McLennan Senior F 5' 9" (1.75 m) 176 lb (80 kg) 1978-01-07 Kanata, Ontario Kanata Valley Lasers (CJHL)
19 British Columbia Chuck Kobasew Freshman F 6' 0" (1.83 m) 192 lb (87 kg) 1982-04-17 Osoyoos, British Columbia Penticton Panthers (BCHL)
20 Minnesota Joe Schuman Freshman D 6' 1" (1.85 m) 216 lb (98 kg) 1982-05-25 Bloomington, Minnesota Dubuque Fighting Saints (USHL)
22 Minnesota Ben Eaves Freshman F 5' 8" (1.73 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 1982-03-27 Minneapolis, Minnesota Shattuck-Saint Mary's (MN-HS)
23 New York (state) J. D. Forrest Freshman D 5' 9" (1.75 m) 181 lb (82 kg) 1981-04-15 Auburn, New York USNTDP (USHL) CAR, 181st overall 2000
24 Massachusetts Brett Peterson Freshman D 5' 11" (1.8 m) 198 lb (90 kg) 1981-10-21 Northborough, Massachusetts
25 Massachusetts Justin Dziama Freshman F 6' 3" (1.91 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1980-05-22 Natick, Massachusetts Walpole Stars (EJHL) NJD, 242nd overall 1999
27 New York (state) Mike Lephart (A) Senior F 5' 11" (1.8 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1977-04-03 Niskayuna, New York Omaha Lancers (USHL)
28 Connecticut Dan Sullivan Senior D 6' 3" (1.91 m) 194 lb (88 kg) 1979-03-02 South Windsor, Connecticut
29 New York (state) Tom Egan Sophomore G 6' 0" (1.83 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1980-07-30 Rye, New York Canterbury School (US-Prep)
30 Iowa Scott Clemmensen Senior G 6' 2" (1.88 m) 201 lb (91 kg) 1977-07-23 Des Moines, Iowa Des Moines Buccaneers (USHL) NJD, 215th overall 1997

Standings

[edit]
Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#1 Boston College†* 24 17 5 2 36 103 57 43 33 8 2 175 98
#7 Maine 24 12 7 5 29 70 62 39 20 12 7 116 95
#11 Providence 24 13 8 3 29 76 71 40 22 13 5 131 108
#14 New Hampshire 24 11 8 5 27 61 47 39 21 12 6 122 86
Massachusetts–Lowell 24 10 11 3 23 67 66 38 19 16 3 124 104
Boston University 24 9 12 3 21 66 77 37 14 20 3 109 118
Northeastern 24 7 13 4 18 58 73 36 13 19 4 102 122
Merrimack 24 7 14 3 17 60 86 38 14 20 4 92 121
Massachusetts 24 7 15 2 16 53 81 34 8 22 4 78 123
Championship: Boston College
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Final rankings: USA Today/American Hockey Magazine Poll Top 15 Poll

Schedule and results

[edit]
Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Decision Result Record
Exhibition
October 6 7:00 PM vs. Acadia* #4 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Exhibition)     W 6–2 
Maverick Stampede
October 13 6:05 PM vs. #20 Notre Dame* #4 Omaha Civic AuditoriumOmaha, Nebraska (Maverick Stampede semifinal)   Clemmensen W 4–1  1–0–0
October 14 9:05 PM at #13 Nebraska–Omaha* #4 Omaha Civic AuditoriumOmaha, Nebraska (Maverick Stampede championship)   Clemmensen W 5–1  2–0–0
Regular Season
October 20 9:35 PM at Denver* #3 Magness ArenaDenver, Colorado   Kelleher W 3–2  3–0–0
October 21 9:05 PM at Denver* #3 Magness ArenaDenver, Colorado   Clemmensen W 3–2  4–0–0
October 27 7:00 PM vs. #1 Wisconsin* #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen L 2–3  4–1–0
October 29 7:00 PM vs. Massachusetts #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 9–5  5–1–0 (1–0–0)
November 3 7:00 PM vs. #13 Northeastern #3 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 6–3  6–1–0 (2–0–0)
November 4 7:00 PM at Massachusetts–Lowell #3 Tsongas CenterLowell, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 6–1  7–1–0 (3–0–0)
November 7 7:00 PM vs. Yale* #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Kelleher L 3–4  7–2–0
November 10 7:05 PM at Notre Dame* #2 Edmund P. Joyce CenterSouth Bend, Indiana   Clemmensen W 5–3  8–2–0
November 17 7:00 PM at Merrimack #2 J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 6–1  9–2–0 (4–0–0)
November 18 7:00 PM vs. #9 New Hampshire #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen L 1–4  9–3–0 (4–1–0)
November 21 7:00 PM vs. Merrimack #4 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Kelleher W 7–2  10–3–0 (5–1–0)
November 25 1:00 PM at Harvard* #4 Bright-Landry Hockey CenterBoston, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 3–2 OT 11–3–0
December 6 7:00 PM at Northeastern #2 Matthews ArenaBoston, Massachusetts   Clemmensen T 0–0 OT 11–3–1 (5–1–1)
December 10 7:05 PM at #11 Maine #2 Alfond ArenaOrono, Maine   Clemmensen W 7–2  12–3–1 (6–1–1)
Great Lakes Invitational
December 29 4:05 PM vs. #1 Michigan State* #2 Joe Louis ArenaDetroit, Michigan (Great Lakes semifinal)   Clemmensen L 1–4  12–4–1
December 30 8:05 PM vs. #4 Michigan* #2 Joe Louis ArenaDetroit, Michigan (Great Lakes consolation game)   Clemmensen W 8–5  13–4–1
January 6 7:00 PM at Boston University #2 Walter Brown ArenaBoston, Massachusetts   Clemmensen L 2–3  13–5–1 (6–2–1)
January 7 7:00 PM vs. Boston University #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 5–2  14–5–1 (7–2–1)
January 12 7:05 PM at Massachusetts–Lowell #3 Tsongas CenterLowell, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 2–1  15–5–1 (8–2–1)
January 16 7:00 PM at Merrimack #2 J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, Massachusetts   Clemmensen L 3–6  15–6–1 (8–3–1)
January 19 7:00 PM vs. #10 Providence #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 4–0  16–6–1 (9–3–1)
January 20 7:00 PM at #10 Providence #2 Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode Island   Clemmensen W 4–2  17–6–1 (10–3–1)
January 26 7:00 PM vs. #10 Maine #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 4–1  18–6–1 (11–3–1)
January 27 7:00 PM vs. #10 Maine #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 7–2  19–6–1 (12–3–1)
February 2 7:00 PM vs. Massachusetts–Lowell #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 4–3  20–6–1 (13–3–1)
Beanpot
February 5 5:00 PM vs. Harvard* #2 FleetCenterBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot semifinal)   Clemmensen W 4–1  21–6–1
February 9 7:00 PM at #8 Providence #2 Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode Island   Clemmensen L 3–5  21–7–1 (13–4–1)
February 12 8:00 PM vs. Boston University* #2 FleetCenterBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot championship)   Clemmensen W 5–3  22–7–1
February 16 7:00 PM vs. #8 New Hampshire #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 3–2  23–7–1 (14–4–1)
February 18 7:00 PM at #8 New Hampshire #2 Whittemore CenterDurham, New Hampshire   Clemmensen L 0–2  23–8–1 (14–5–1)
February 23 7:00 PM vs. Massachusetts #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen T 3–3 OT 23–8–2 (14–5–2)
February 24 7:00 PM at Massachusetts #2 Mullins CenterAmherst, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 6–3  24–8–2 (15–5–2)
March 1 7:00 PM vs. Northeastern #3 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Clemmensen W 6–3  25–8–2 (16–5–2)
March 4 7:00 PM at Boston University #3 Walter Brown ArenaBoston, Massachusetts   Kelleher W 5–1  26–8–2 (17–5–2)
Hockey East Tournament
March 9 7:00 PM vs. Merrimack* #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Hockey East quarterfinal game 1)   Clemmensen W 1–0  27–8–2
March 10 7:0 PM vs. Merrimack* #2 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Hockey East quarterfinal game 2)   Clemmensen W 5–1  28–8–2
Boston College Won Series 2-0
March 16 5:00 PM vs. Massachusetts–Lowell* #2 FleetCenterBoston, Massachusetts (Hockey East semifinal)   Clemmensen W 5–1  29–8–2
March 17 7:00 PM vs. #9 Providence* #2 FleetCenterBoston, Massachusetts (Hockey East championship)   Clemmensen W 5–1  30–8–2
NCAA Tournament
March 24 8:30 PM vs. #9 Maine* #2 Centrum CentreWorcester, Massachusetts (NCAA East Regional semifinal)   Clemmensen W 3–1  31–8–2
April 5 7:30 PM vs. #5 Michigan* #2 Pepsi ArenaAlbany, New York (NCAA National semifinal)   Clemmensen W 4–2  32–8–2
April 7 7:00 PM vs. #4 North Dakota* #2 Pepsi ArenaAlbany, New York (NCAA National championship) ESPN Clemmensen W 3–2 OT 33–8–2
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.

[7]

April 7[11] Boston College 3 – 2 OT North Dakota Pepsi Arena Recap


Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st None
2nd BC Chuck Kobasew (27) – PP Giuliano 25:26 1–0 BC
BC Mike Lephart (15) Forrest and Allen 28:50 2–0 BC
3rd UND Tim Skarperud (10) – PP EA Roche and B. Lundbohm 56:18 2–1 BC
UND Wes Dorey (17) – EA Schneekloth and B. Lundbohm 59:23 2–2
1st Overtime BC Krys Kolanos (25) – GW Kobasew and Voce 64:43 3–2 BC
Penalty summary
Period Team Player Penalty Time PIM
1st UND David Hale Cross-Checking 2:49 2:00
BC Brett Peterson Interference 8:32 2:00
BC Krys Kolanos Goaltender Interference 12:20 2:00
UND Jason Notermann Hooking 14:02 2:00
2nd UND Aaron Schneekloth Hooking 24:27 2:00
BC Mike Lephart Holding 32:45 2:00
BC Tony Voce Slashing 34:49 2:00
UND Aaron Schneekloth Tripping 36:10 2:00
3rd BC J. D. Forrest Tripping 40:49 2:00
UND Kevin Spiewak Slashing 41:34 2:00
UND David Lundbohm Hooking 42:51 2:00
BC Brooks Orpik Interference 51:06 2:00
UND Tim Skarperud Slashing 53:31 2:00
BC BENCH Too Many Men 55:07 2:00

Scoring statistics

[edit]
Name Position Games Goals Assists Points PIM
Brian Gionta RW 43 33 21 54 47
Krys Kolanos C/LW/RW 41 25 25 50 54
Chuck Kobasew RW 43 27 22 49 38
Ben Eaves C/RW 41 13 26 39 12
Jeff Giuliano LW 43 14 21 35 28
Mike Lephart LW 42 15 19 34 46
Tony Voce LW 42 12 14 26 40
Ales Dolinar F 42 7 16 23 33
J. D. Forrest D 38 6 17 23 42
Marty Hughes D 41 5 18 23 41
Bobby Allen D 42 5 18 23 30
Rob Scuderi D 43 4 19 23 42
Brooks Orpik D 40 0 20 20 124
Brett Peterson D 39 1 6 7 34
Ty Hennes F 40 2 4 6 10
Bill Cass D 38 0 6 6 58
Mike McLennan F 37 3 2 5 4
A. J. Walker F 20 2 0 2 0
Justin Dziama LW/RW 28 1 1 2 36
Joe Schuman D 10 0 1 1 8
Tom Egan G 1 0 0 0 0
Dan Sullivan D 2 0 0 0 0
Anthony D'Arpino D 4 0 0 0 0
Tim Kelleher G 5 0 0 0 0
Scott Clemmensen G 39 0 0 0 0
Bench - - - - - 10
Total 175 276 451 737

[12]

Goaltending statistics

[edit]
Name Games Minutes Wins Losses Ties Goals Against Saves Shut Outs SV % GAA
Jason Endres 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 1.000 0.00
Scott Clemmensen 39 2312 30 7 2 82 876 3 .914 2.13
Tim Kelleher 5 269 3 1 0 13 98 0 .883 2.90
Empty Net - - - - - 3 - - - -
Total 43 33 8 2 98 975 3 .909

Rankings

[edit]
Poll Week
Pre 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 (Final)
USCHO.com 4 3 2 4 2 2 4 3 3 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 N/A
USA Today 5 4 3 2 3 1 2 3 3 3 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 2 1

USCHO did not release a poll in week 23.[13]

Awards and honors

[edit]
Player Award Ref
Chuck Kobasew NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player [14]
Brian Gionta AHCA East First Team All-American [15]
Bobby Allen
Krys Kolanos AHCA East Second Team All-American [16]
Scott Clemmensen NCAA All-Tournament Team [17]
Rob Scuderi
Chuck Kobasew
Krys Kolanos
Brian Gionta Hockey East Player of the Year [18]
Chuck Kobasew Hockey East Rookie of the Year [18]
Mike Lephart Hockey East Best Defensive Forward [18]
Bobby Allen Hockey East Best Defensive Defenseman [18]
Brian Gionta Hockey East Three-Stars Award [18]
Chuck Kobasew William Flynn Tournament Most Valuable Player [18]
Brian Gionta All-Hockey East First Team [19]
Bobby Allen
Chuck Kobasew All-Hockey East Second Team [19]
Krys Kolanos
J. D. Forrest Hockey East All-Rookie Team [20]
Ben Eaves
Chuck Kobasew
Chuck Kobasew Hockey East All-Tournament Team [21]
Tony Voce
Bobby Allen
Scott Clemmensen

Players drafted into the NHL

[edit]
= NHL All-Star team = NHL All-Star[22] = NHL All-Star[22] and NHL All-Star team = Did not play in the NHL
Round Pick Player NHL team
1 14 Chuck Kobasew Calgary Flames
4 111 Matti Kaltiainen Boston Bruins
4 131 Ben Eaves Pittsburgh Penguins
6 179 Andrew Alberts Boston Bruins

† incoming freshman

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hockey Drops 3-2 Decision to Wisconsin". Boston College Eagles. October 27, 2000. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  2. ^ "Hockey Defeats UMass-Lowell, 6-1 as Head Coach Jerry York Reaches 600-Win Milestone". Boston College Eagles. November 4, 2000. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  3. ^ "Gionta Sets Records; Hockey Defeats Merrimack, 7-2". Boston College Eagles. November 21, 2000. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  4. ^ "Gionta Scores Five Goals In First Period, Leading BC Past Maine". Boston College Eagles. January 27, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  5. ^ "No. 1 Hockey Falls To No. 8 Providence, 5-3". Boston College Eagles. February 9, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  6. ^ "Hockey Eagles The Best In Boston". Boston College Eagles. February 12, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  7. ^ a b "Boston College men's Hockey 2017-18 Record Book" (PDF). Boston College Eagles. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
  8. ^ "Hockey Wins First Game In HOCKEY EAST Quarterfinals, 1-0". Boston College Eagles. March 9, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  9. ^ "HOCKEY EAST Champions!". Boston College Eagles. March 17, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  10. ^ "Hockey Advances To NCAA Championship Game". Boston College Eagles. April 5, 2001. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  11. ^ "Boston College 3, North Dakota 2". CollegeHockeyStats.net. April 7, 2001. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  12. ^ "Boston College 2000-2001 Skater Stats". Elite Prospects. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
  13. ^ "USCHO Division I Men's Poll". USCHO.com. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
  14. ^ "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  15. ^ "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  16. ^ "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  17. ^ "NCAA Frozen Four Records" (PDF). NCAA.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 17, 2012. Retrieved June 19, 2013.
  18. ^ a b c d e f "Hockey East Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  19. ^ a b "Hockey East All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  20. ^ "Hockey East All-Rookie Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. May 16, 2013.
  21. ^ "2013-14 Hockey East Media Guide". Hockey East. Retrieved May 19, 2014.
  22. ^ a b Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.