2007–08 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season

2007–08 Boston College Eagles
men's ice hockey seasonNCAA Division I National champion
Beanpot, champion
Hockey East Tournament, champion
NCAA tournament, Champion Conference4th Hockey EastHome iceConte ForumRankingsUSA Today#1USCHO.com#7RecordOverall25–11–8Conference11–9–7Home6–7–4Road8–3–4Neutral11–1–0Coaches and captainsHead coachJerry YorkAssistant coachesMike Cavanaugh
Greg Brown
Jim LogueCaptain(s)Michael BrennanAlternate captain(s)Dan Betram, Matt GreeneBoston College Eagles men's ice hockey seasons
« 2006–07 2008–09 »

The 2007–08 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season was the 86th season of play for the program and 24th in the Hockey East. They represented Boston College in the 2007–08 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. They were coached by Jerry York, in his 14th season and played their home games at the Conte Forum. The team won the 2008 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament, the 3rd title in program history.

Season

After losing the national championship in the final minutes a year before, Boston College entered the year with a good deal of hope but also some uncertainty. 3-year starter, Cory Schneider forwent his senior season by signing a professional contract and BC would have to rely on three underclassmen to absorb the minutes. Fortunately, with the entire defensive corps returning, the young netminders would be insulated by a solid contingent. Up front the team lost their leading scorer from the year before, Brian Boyle but still returned most of the principle offense.

Injury and suspensions

With all the elements for a solid season, the Eagles were ranked high in the preseason polls. While they kicked off the year with an overtime loss to Michigan, much worse was to come in the aftermath. Brock Bradford, one of the team's leading point producers from last year, suffered a broken arm and would be out for months.[1] Compounding their problems, Brett Motherwell and Brian O'Hanley, two of the leaders on defense, were given indefinite suspensions by head coach Jerry York.[2] While the team was mum on the entire reason behind the suspensions, other than saying that the two had missed curfew, York indicated in November that neither would be back with the team 'any time soon'.[3] As a result, both players ended up leaving the team and signing professional contracts during the year. The Eagles also lost a 4th player early in the year when freshman Ryan Hayes departed after just 6 games.

In the meantime, BC had to struggle through the early part of the season without three of its expected regulars. York had to shuffle his lineup and throw some of his newer players into the deep end of the pool. Surprisingly, it was the defense that held up best over the next several weeks. The biggest boon came from in goal where freshman John Muse took complete control of the starting role and kept the Eagles in contention for most games. Unfortunately, the offense was lacking without Bradford and by the Thanksgiving break, BC had both more losses and more ties than victories and had dropped out of both polls.

Resurgence and reinjury

A change to the lines just before the break appeared to work well and when the team returned in late November, the unit of Nathan Gerbe, Brian Gibbons and Ben Smith began to take over. The Eagles won their next five matches, averaging more than six goals per game over that stretch. After their winning streak was snapped by Clarkson, the Eagles welcomed Bradford back to the lineup on January 9. He replaced Smith on the top line and earned a point in each of his next four games. In the second period of the game at Boston University on January 19, Bradford broke his left humerus for a second time. While surgery was not required, he was ruled out for the remainder of the season.

Smith rejoined the top line and BC continued to plug along despite the pall cast over the club. BC had a tough fight on its hands when it met for the 56th edition of the Beanpot. The Eagles got behind 2–3 to BU but a pair of goals from Gerbe, the second coming in overtime, sent BC to the championship game. Boston College faced Harvard in front of a raucous crowd and held a 1-goal lead going into the third. The two combined for 5 goals in the final frame, and ended up tied at 5-all at the end of 60 minutes. BC completely dominated the overtime session, outshooting the Crimson 7–0. Freshman Nick Petrecki became an instant hero for BC by scoring twice, including the game-winner, and giving the program its first Beanpot victory in 4 years.

Slumping after the Beanpot

After the tournament victory, the offense for Boston College suddenly went silent. The Eagles went 1–5–1 over their next seven games and scored more than 2 goals in just one contest. The mounting losses put the Eagles in jeopardy of missing out on the postseason if they performed poorly in the Hockey East Tournament. As they began their postseason the Eagles were lumped in with teams with inferior records. Because both the CCHA and WCHA were considered to be stronger conferences, Boston College could not afford to flame out in their conference tournament.

Hockey East Tournament

Due in part to their late-season slump, Boston College opened the postseason against a ranked Providence team. BC got off to tremendous starts in both matches, scoring the first four goals in each contest and easily downing the Friars. While Gerbe scored twice in each contest, it was Muse's 68 saves that were the highlight for the series. The wins sent BC to the semifinal against league champion New Hampshire, who had swept BC in their season series. At the start it appeared that the Wildcats were going to go four for four when they jumped out to a 2–0 lead after one period. Ben Smith cut into the advantage but UNH followed that with two more goals, one on the penalty kill, to take a commanding 4–1 lead past the midway point of the game. BC redoubled its efforts and ended up firing 24 shots on the Wildcat goal in the second, managing to score twice more before the end of the frame to give them a fighting chance. A goal by Dan Bertram tied the score early in the third which is when both goaltenders took over. Both Muse and Kevin Regan stopped every shot for the next 55 minutes and pushed the game into a third overtime. 43 seconds into the 6th period, Benn Ferriero ended the match with his 16th goal of the season.

Despite the potential hangover from the extended game, BC romped over an upstart Vermont squad in the final. BC repeated as tournament champions and earned the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.[4]

NCAA Tournament

Despite winning the conference championship, BC's record only earned them a 2nd seed for the Northeast Regional. Ben Smith kicked off the scoring for the Eagles in their first game in the opening period. After exchanging goals with Minnesota in the second, Boston College built a 4–1 lead in the third with scoring from their depth lines. The Gophers pulled their goaltender with 3:40 left after they got on the power play and cut into BC's lead. Muse held the fort afterwards and an empty-net goal from Gerbe salted the game away.

The biggest test for the Eagles was awaiting them in the regional final. #2 overall seed Miami, who had spent much of the year ranked #1, was a tournament favorite and lived up to their billing early in the game. The RedHawks opened the scoring just 90 seconds into the game but were held in check by BC's defense for the remainder of the period. Miami doubled their advantage midway through the second and appeared to be heading towards a victory. On a delayed penalty, BC pulled Muse and they were able to parlay the impromptu 6-on-5 into their first goal of the night. Just 14 seconds after the ensuing faceoff, Nathan Gerbe scored to tie the game. A minute and a half after that, Ben Smith gave BC their first lead of the game. The stunning turnaround put BC in the driver seat and kept the team's championship drive alive. While Miami tied the game in the third, neither team could get the winner before the buzzer sounded and BC headed to its 14th overtime game of the season. While BC may have been old hands at extra hockey, it was Miami who shelled the BC cage. Muse turned aside 10 shots in 12 minutes of game action and gave his team enough time to capitalize on their chances. A sprawled-out Joe Whitney swiped a rebound past Jeff Zatkoff to send BC to their third consecutive frozen four.[5]

Compared to their quarterfinal game, BC's match against North Dakota was less than thrilling. The Eagles scored four times in the opening frame and added two more in the second to take an almost insurmountable lead over the Fighting Sioux. Gerbe recorded a hat-trick to raise his total on the season to 33 and take over as the national leader in both goals and points. After the rather pedestrian 6–1 win, BC only had Notre Dame remaining in their path.

In the final game of the season, Boston College got off to a slow start but the first period ended up with just 12 shots combined. Notre Dame was only able to get the puck on goal 5 times despite having three separate power plays. While the Irish couldn't capitalize on their opportunities, BC took full advantage in the second, scoring twice on the man-advantage and adding a third at even strength to build a 3–0 lead. Notre Dame managed to score one of their own but BC's defense held and stopped the Fighting Irish from doing any more scoring for the remainder of the game. Smith netted the only marker of the third and the Eagles skated to a fairly comfortable victory, earning the third NCAA championship in program history.[6]

With his hat-trick in the semifinal and contributing on every goal in the championship, Nathan Gerbe was the obvious choice for Tournament MOP.

Recruiting

Boston College added five freshmen for the 2007–2008 season, including one defenseman, two forwards, and two goalies.

Player Position Nationality Notes
Brian Gibbons Forward  United States Braintree, Massachusetts; Earned All-Founder's League first-team honors as senior center at Salisbury in 2006–07.
Ryan Hayes Forward  United States Syracuse, New York; Returned to juniors after 6 games.
Andrew Margolin Goalie  United States Mahwah, NJ; Two-time Founder's League All-Star.
John Muse Goalie  United States East Falmouth, MA; Earned US Hockey Report Goaltender of the Year honors as a senior at Nobles.
Nick Petrecki Defense  United States Clifton Park, NY; Selected 28th overall by SJS in 2007 draft.
Joe Whitney Forward  United States Reading, MA; Gained All-NESPAC East honors as a junior at Lawrence Academy.

2007–2008 Roster

Departures from 2006–2007 Team

  • Brian Boyle, F – Graduation
  • Joe Rooney, F – Graduation
  • Justin Greene, F – Graduation
  • Corey Griffin, F – left team
  • Joseph Ehiorobo, F – left team
  • Brett Motherwell, D – dismissed midseason
  • Brian O'Hanley, D – dismissed midseason
  • Adam Reasoner, G – left team
  • Cory Schneider, G – signed with VAN

2007–2008 Eagles

Managers
# State Player (Draft) Title Year Hometown High School
- New Jersey Justin Murphy Manager Junior Fair Haven, New Jersey Choate
3 Massachusetts Ken Ryan Manager Junior South Boston, Massachusetts BC High
- Massachusetts Mike Feeley Manager Sophomore Dedham, Massachusetts St. Sebastian's
Goaltenders
# State Player (Draft) Catches Year Hometown Previous team
1 Massachusetts John Muse L Freshman East Falmouth, Massachusetts Nobles
29 Connecticut Alex Kremer L Sophomore Darien, Connecticut Taft
30 New Jersey Andrew Margolin L Freshman Mahwah, New Jersey Taft
Defensemen
# State Player (Draft) Shoots Year Hometown Previous team
2 Massachusetts Anthony Aiello (MIN, 129th overall 2005) L Junior Braintree, Massachusetts Thayer Academy
4 New York (state) Michael Brennan – C R Senior Smithtown, New York Westminster School
5 New York (state) Tim Filangieri L Junior Islip Terrace, New York Waterloo (USHL)
6 New York (state) Tim Kunes (CAR, 145th overall 2005) L Junior Huntington, New York New England (EJHL)
7 Minnesota Carl Sneep (PIT, 32nd overall 2006) R Sophomore Nisswa, Minnesota Brainerd
26 New York (state) Nick Petrecki (SJS, 28th overall 2007) L Freshman Clifton Park, New York Omaha (USHL)
Forwards
# State Player (Draft) Shoots Year Hometown Previous team
9 Michigan Nathan Gerbe (BUF, 145th overall 2005) L Junior Oxford, Michigan US NTDP (USHL)
11 Minnesota Joe Adams L Senior Wayzata, Minnesota New Hampshire (EJHL)
12 Connecticut Ben Smith (CHI, 169th overall 2008) R Sophomore Avon, Connecticut Westminster School
13 Massachusetts Pat Gannon R Senior Arlington, Massachusetts Boston (EJHL)
14 Massachusetts Matt Greene – A L Senior Plymouth, Massachusetts Boston College High School
15 Massachusetts Joe Whitney L Freshman Reading, Massachusetts Lawrence Academy
17 Massachusetts Brian Gibbons L Freshman Braintree, Massachusetts Salisbury School
18 Massachusetts Kyle Kucharski L Senior Saugus, Massachusetts Phillips Andover
19 British Columbia Brock Bradford R Junior Burnaby, British Columbia Omaha (USHL)
21 Massachusetts Benn Ferriero (PHX, 196th overall 2006) R Junior Essex, Massachusetts Governor's Academy
22 Alberta Dan Bertram – A (CHI, 54th overall 2005) R Senior Calgary, Alberta Camrose (AJHL)
24 Massachusetts Matt Lombardi R Sophomore Milton, Massachusetts Governor's Academy
25 Ontario Matt Price R Sophomore Milton, Ontario Milton Icehawks (OPJHL)
27 New York (state) Andrew Orpik (BUF, 227th overall 2005) R Junior East Amherst, New York Thayer Academy

Standings

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Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
#6 New Hampshire 27 19 5 3 41 84 54 38 25 10 3 132 94
Boston University 27 15 9 3 33 97 72 40 19 17 4 135 117
Vermont 27 13 9 5 31 67 78 39 17 15 7 88 106
#1 Boston College* 27 11 9 7 29 82 67 44 25 11 8 160 101
Providence 27 11 11 5 27 66 66 36 14 17 5 91 99
Northeastern 27 12 13 2 26 73 80 37 16 18 3 92 105
Massachusetts–Lowell 27 10 13 4 24 70 76 37 16 17 4 100 96
Massachusetts 27 9 13 5 23 73 71 36 14 16 6 98 97
Maine 27 9 15 3 21 59 73 34 13 18 3 77 92
Merrimack 27 6 18 3 15 48 82 34 12 18 4 71 93
Championship: Boston College
indicates conference regular season champion
* indicates conference tournament champion
Final rankings: USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Top 15 Poll

Schedule and results

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Decision Result Attendance Record
Ice Breaker
October 13 5:37 PM vs. #10 Michigan* #2 Xcel Energy CenterSaint Paul, Minnesota (Ice Breaker Semifinal)   Muse L 3–4 OT 14,127 0–1–0
October 14 5:35 PM vs. Rensselaer* #2 Xcel Energy CenterSaint Paul, Minnesota (Ice Breaker Consolation Game)   Muse W 4–1  14,868 1–1–0
Regular Season
October 19 8:05 PM #1 North Dakota* #4 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse T 0–0 ^ 7,884 1–1–1
October 21 4:05 PM at Vermont #4 Gutterson FieldhouseBurlington, Vermont   Muse T 3–3 OT 4,003 1–1–2 (0–0–1)
October 26 7:05 PM Merrimack #5 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse W 7–1  4,308 2–1–2 (1–0–1)
October 28 1:00 PM at Merrimack #5 J. Thom Lawler RinkNorth Andover, Massachusetts   Muse W 4–2  2,200 3–1–2 (2–0–1)
November 2 7:05 PM Maine #5 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse T 1–1 OT 6,017 3–1–3 (2–0–2)
November 9 8:05 PM Merrimack #7 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse T 3–3 OT 4,419 3–1–4 (2–0–3)
November 10 7:00 PM at New Hampshire #7 Whittemore CenterDurham, New Hampshire   Muse L 2–5  6,501 3–2–4 (2–1–3)
November 14 7:00 PM at #14 Massachusetts #11 Mullins CenterAmherst, Massachusetts   Muse T 1–1 OT 7,319 3–2–5 (2–1–4)
November 17 7:05 PM #14 Massachusetts #11 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 2–3  4,877 3–3–5 (2–2–4)
November 23 7:05 PM #20 Northeastern #14 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 3–4 OT 7,289 3–4–5 (2–3–4)
November 30 7:00 PM Boston University #19 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Rivalry)   Muse W 6–2  7,884 4–4–5 (3–3–4)
December 1 7:06 PM at Boston University #19 Agganis ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry)   Muse W 4–3  6,224 5–4–5 (4–3–4)
December 12 7:00 PM at #14 Harvard* #15 Bright-Landry Hockey CenterBoston, Massachusetts   Muse W 7–2  2,469 6–4–5
Dodge Holiday Classic
December 29 5:07 PM vs. Air Force* #14 Mariucci ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota (Dodge Holiday Classic Semifinal)   Muse W 8–2  10,046 7–4–5
December 30 5:07 PM vs. RIT* #14 Mariucci ArenaMinneapolis, Minnesota (Dodge Holiday Classic Championship)   Muse W 6–0  9,862 8–4–5
January 5 6:00 PM at #12 Clarkson* #11 Cheel Arena • Potsdam, New York   Muse L 2–4  3,425 8–5–5
January 9 7:36 PM Vermont #12 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse W 4–1  4,208 9–5–5 (5–3–4)
January 11 7:05 PM Vermont #12 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse W 5–2  6,764 10–5–5 (6–3–4)
January 18 7:31 PM at #15 Massachusetts–Lowell #11 Tsongas CenterLowell, Massachusetts   Muse W 5–4  5,065 11–5–5 (7–3–4)
January 19 7:05 PM at Boston University #11 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Rivalry)   Muse T 2–2 OT 7,884 11–5–6 (7–3–5)
January 25 7:00 PM at Maine #8 Alfond ArenaOrono, Maine   Muse T 3–3 OT 5,365 11–5–7 (7–3–6)
January 26 7:07 PM at Maine #8 Alfond ArenaOrono, Maine   Muse W 4–2  5,328 12–5–7 (8–3–6)
February 1 7:00 PM #14 Providence #9 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 2–3  5,491 12–6–7 (8–4–6)
Beanpot
February 4 8:18 PM vs. Boston University* #9 TD Banknorth GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Semifinal; Rivalry)   Muse W 4–3 OT 17,565 13–6–7
February 8 7:00 PM at #18 Massachusetts #9 Mullins CenterAmherst, Massachusetts   Muse W 4–1  7,485 14–6–7 (9–4–6)
February 11 8:00 PM vs. Harvard* #7 TD Banknorth GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Beanpot Championship)   Muse W 6–5 OT 17,565 15–6–7
February 15 7:00 PM #18 Massachusetts–Lowell #7 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 1–3  4,688 15–7–7 (9–5–6)
February 18 7:00 PM at #18 Massachusetts–Lowell #7 Tsongas CenterLowell, Massachusetts   Muse W 5–2  5,302 16–7–7 (10–5–6)
February 22 7:31 PM #3 New Hampshire #7 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 0–2  5,281 16–8–7 (10–6–6)
February 23 7:00 PM at #3 New Hampshire #7 Whittemore CenterDurham, New Hampshire   Muse L 1–5  6,501 16–9–7 (10–7–6)
February 29 7:05 PM #19 Providence #8 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 2–3  6,208 16–10–7 (10–8–6)
March 1 7:00 PM at #19 Providence #8 Schneider ArenaProvidence, Rhode Island   Muse T 2–2 OT 2,712 16–10–8 (10–8–7)
March 7 7:00 PM Northeastern #10 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts   Muse L 2–3 OT 6,588 16–11–8 (10–9–7)
March 8 7:05 PM at Northeastern #10 Matthews ArenaBoston, Massachusetts   Muse W 4–1  3,842 17–11–8 (11–9–7)
Hockey East Tournament
March 14 7:05 PM #20 Providence* #10 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Hockey East Quarterfinals Game 1)   Muse W 5–1  2,788 18–11–8
March 15 7:00 PM #20 Providence* #10 Conte ForumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts (Hockey East Quarterfinals Game 2)   Muse W 5–1  2,493 19–11–8
March 21 5:05 PM vs. #5 New Hampshire* #8 TD Banknorth GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Hockey East Semifinal)   Muse W 5–4 3OT 12,522 20–11–8
March 22 7:05 PM vs. #18 Vermont* #8 TD Banknorth GardenBoston, Massachusetts (Hockey East Championship)   Muse W 4–0  11,766 21–11–8
NCAA Tournament
March 29 7:51 PM vs. #10 Minnesota* #7 DCU CenterWorcester, Massachusetts (Northeast Regional Semifinal)   Muse W 5–2  7,357 22–11–8
March 30 4:30 PM vs. #2 Miami* #7 DCU CenterWorcester, Massachusetts (Northeast Regional Final)   Muse W 4–3 OT 5,911 23–11–8
April 10 4:05 PM vs. #3 North Dakota* #7 Pepsi CenterDenver, Colorado (National Semifinal)   Muse W 6–1  18,543 24–11–8
April 12 5:05 PM vs. #12 Notre Dame* #7 Pepsi CenterDenver, Colorado (National Championship)   Muse W 4–1  18,632 25–11–8
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from USCHO.com Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.
Source:[7]

^ Game shortened to 2 periods due to poor ice conditions.[8]

2008 national championship

April 12, 2008
8:00 pm
(NE2) Boston College4 – 1
(0–0, 3–1, 1–0)
(W4) Notre DamePepsi CenterDenver, Colorado
Attendance: 18,632
Game reference
Referee:
Todd Anderson
Linesmen:
Tim Swiader
Butch Mousseaux
Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st None
2nd BC Nathan Gerbe (34) Gibbons and Smith 22:23 1–0 BC
BC Nathan Gerbe (35) – GW PP Smith and Bertram 25:37 2–0 BC
BC Joe Whitney (11) – PP Gerbe and Ferriero 28:11 3–0 BC
ND Kevin Deeth (11) Lawson and Cole 29:07 3–1 BC
3rd BC Ben Smith (25) Gerbe and Gibbons 45:31 4–1 BC
Penalty summary
Period Team Player Penalty Time PIM
1st BC Kyle Kucharski Holding the Stick 08:41 2:00
BC Matt Greene Cross-Checking 14:33 2:00
ND Brock Sheahan Roughing 17:02 2:00
BC Anthony Aiello Tripping 18:24 2:00
2nd BC Andrew Orpik Slashing 22:51 2:00
ND Ryan Thang Interference 24:58 2:00
ND Dan VeNard Cross-Checking 26:29 2:00
ND Dan Kissel Hooking 27:27 2:00
BC Kyle Kucharski Holding 27:32 2:00
ND Dan VeNard High-Sticking 36:49 2:00
3rd BC Nick Petrecki Elbowing 40:08 2:00
BC Matt Price Obstruction Tripping 48:05 2:00
BC Matt Greene Hooking 49:54 2:00
Shots by period
Team 1 2 3 T
Notre Dame 5 8 8 21
Boston College 7 11 5 23
Goaltenders
Team Name Saves Goals against Time on ice
ND Jordan Pearce 19 4 58:31
BC John Muse 20 1 60:00

Scoring statistics

Name Position Games Goals Assists Points PIM
Nathan Gerbe C/LW 43 35 33 68 65
Joe Whitney LW/RW 44 11 40 51 50
Ben Smith C/RW 44 25 25 50 12
Benn Ferriero RW 44 17 25 42 71
Dan Bertram RW 43 10 27 37 26
Brian Gibbons C/W 43 13 22 35 32
Pat Gannon F 44 6 17 23 18
Carl Sneep D 44 3 12 15 15
Andrew Orpik F 41 7 6 13 57
Anthony Aiello D 43 3 10 13 57
Matt Greene F 44 8 4 12 32
Nick Petrecki D 42 5 7 12 102
Matt Price F 44 3 8 11 20
Kyle Kucharski F 42 3 6 9 45
Michael Brennan D 44 3 5 8 52
Tim Kunes D 43 1 7 8 6
Tim Filangieri D 43 1 5 6 45
Brock Bradford C 5 3 2 5 2
Matt Lombardi RW 40 1 3 4 6
Ryan Hayes RW 6 2 1 3 0
Brian O'Hanley D 1 0 1 1 0
John Muse G 44 0 1 1 2
Brett Motherwell D 1 0 0 0 0
Joe Adams LW 4 0 0 0 2
Bench - - - - - 8
Total 160 267 427 708

[9]

Goaltending statistics

Name Games Minutes Wins Losses Ties Goals Against Saves Shut Outs SV % GAA
John Muse 44 2725:06 25 11 8 100 1171 3 .921 2.20
Empty Net - 8:34 - - - 1 - - - -
Total 44 2733:40 25 11 8 101 1171 3 .921 2.22

Rankings

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 24 25 26 (Final)
USCHO.com 2 (3) - 4 5 5 7 11 14 19 - 15 14 11 12 11 8 9 9 7 7 8 10 10 8 7 - -
USA Today 3 2 4 5 5 6 9 13 NR NR 15 14 - 12 11 8 9 9 7 7 8 9 9 7 7 3 1 (34)

Note: USCHO did not release a poll in weeks 1, 9, 25, or 26, USA Today did not release a poll in week 12.[10]

Awards and honors

Player Award Ref
Nathan Gerbe USA Hockey National College Player of the Year
Brian Gibbons Beanpot Tournament MVP
Nathan Gerbe NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player [11]
Nathan Gerbe AHCA East First Team All-American [12]
Matt Greene Hockey East Best Defensive Forward [13]
Nathan Gerbe William Flynn Tournament Most Valuable Player [13]
Nathan Gerbe All-Hockey East First Team [14]
Joe Whitney Hockey East All-Rookie Team [15]
Benn Ferriero Hockey East All-Tournament Team [16]
Nathan Gerbe
Michael Brennan
Carl Sneep
John Muse
Nathan Gerbe NCAA All-Tournament Team [17]
Ben Smith
Michael Brennan
John Muse

Players drafted into the NHL

2008 NHL Entry Draft

= NHL All-Star team = NHL All-Star[18] = NHL All-Star[18] and NHL All-Star team = Did not play in the NHL
Round[19] Pick Player NHL team
2 60 Jimmy Hayes Toronto Maple Leafs
6 157 Cam Atkinson Columbus Blue Jackets
6 169 Ben Smith Chicago Blackhawks

† incoming freshman

References

  1. ^ "Brock Bradford Sustains Arm Injury". BC Eagles. January 20, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  2. ^ "Motherwell Leaves BC". College Hockey News. November 15, 2007. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  3. ^ "BC's Motherwell Leaves School For AHL". USCHO.com. November 15, 2007. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  4. ^ "Men's Hockey Wins Record Eighth Hockey East Tournament Title". BC Eagles. March 22, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  5. ^ "Whitney Scores Winner for BC in 4-3 OT Win Over Miami of Ohio". BC Eagles. March 30, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  6. ^ "Boston College wins the 2008 NCAA Division 1 Hockey Championship". YouTube. March 30, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  7. ^ "Boston College Eagles (Men) 2007-2008 Schedule and Results". College Hockey Stats. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
  8. ^ "Fog Halts BC-North Dakota Game". College Hockey News. October 19, 2022. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
  9. ^ "Boston College 2007-2008 Skater Stats". Elite Prospects. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  10. ^ "USCHO Division I Men's Poll". USCHO.com. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
  11. ^ "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  12. ^ "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  13. ^ a b "Hockey East Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 6, 2013.
  14. ^ "Hockey East All-Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 6, 2013.
  15. ^ "Hockey East All-Rookie Teams". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 6, 2013.
  16. ^ "2013-14 Hockey East Media Guide". Hockey East. Retrieved May 19, 2014.
  17. ^ "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  18. ^ a b Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.
  19. ^ "2008 NHL Entry Draft". Hockey DB. Retrieved September 24, 2022.
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NCAA Division I men's ice hockey champions
1948
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1949
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1950
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1951
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1954
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1955
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1964
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1972
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1986
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Denver
2023
Quinnipiac
2024
Denver
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Boston College
Located in: Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Academics
Athletics
Campus
Student life & traditions
People
  • Founded: 1863
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Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey
Playing venues
Head coaches
Conference affiliations
Rivalries
All-time leaders
Retired jerseys
National championships
Frozen Four appearances
Conference Tournament titles
Hobey Baker Award
Mike Richter Award
Tim Taylor Award
Seasons
Bold Italics denotes National Championship season
  • v
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  • e
Hockey East
Men
Men's Seasons
  • 1984–85
  • 1985–86
  • 1986–87
  • 1987–88
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  • 1989–90
  • 1990–91
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  • 2015–16
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  • 2017–18
  • 2018–19
  • 2019–20
  • 2020–21
  • 2021–22
  • 2022–23
Women
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