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Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey

College ice hockey program

Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey

College ice hockey program

FieldValue
team_nameColorado College Tigers
team_link[](colorado-college-tigers)
current2025–26 Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey season
imageColorado College Tigers logo.svg
image_size150px
universityColorado College
sexmen's
conferenceNational Collegiate Hockey Conference
conference_shortNCHC
locationColorado Springs, Colorado
coachKris Mayotte
coach_year5th
coach_wins61
coach_losses77
coach_ties10 ()
assistant_coaches
arenaEd Robson Arena
NCAAchampion1950, 1957
NCAArunnerup1952, 1955, 1996
NCAAfrozenfour1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1996, 1997, 2005
NCAAtourneys1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1978, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2011
conference_tournamentWCHA: 1978
conference_seasonWCHA: 1952, 1955, 1957, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2003, 2005, 2008

The Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Colorado College. The Tigers are a member of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference. They began play at Ed Robson Arena on the CC campus in Colorado Springs starting in the 2021 season.

History

Early history

In 1938 Spencer Penrose and Charles Tutt developed plans to convert The Broadmoor's unused equestrian center into an indoor ice arena, known as the Broadmoor Ice Palace. After three weeks at a cost of $200,000 the Ice Palace opened and became the home of the Tigers Hockey program and the Broadmoor Skating Club. Colorado College Tiger Hockey began in 1938 playing in the Pikes Peak Hockey League with various local teams sponsored by Colorado Springs area businesses., The Tigers opened play on January 21, 1938 in a 1-8 loss to a team sponsored by Giddings Department Store. Garrett Livingston took over as head coach fin 1939 from John Atwood, who served as player/coach for the first season. Livingston increased recruiting, bringing players from Canada and New England and transitioned the program from the Pikes Peak Hockey League into an NCAA Division I independent program. The Tigers swept Michigan 4-2 and 4-3 in the program's first-ever intercollegiate series early in the 1939-40 season. That same season Colorado College also played games against Colorado School of Mines, Montana School of Mines, and the University of Southern California.

The program and college was suspended during World War II from 1942 to 1944. Colorado College, with the cooperation of The Broadmoor, sponsored the first National Collegiate Athletic Association Ice Hockey Championship to conclude the 1947-48 season. The tournament was held at the Ice Palace for the next 10 years, during which time CC participating seven times. Cheddy Thompson became the program's third head coach in 1945 after coming to Colorado Springs on assignment by the Air Force during the war. Thompson lead CC to the program's first NCAA championship in 1950 with a 13-4 win over Boston University. Colorado College became one of the founding members of the Mid-West Collegiate Hockey League (MWCHL) in 1951 with University of Denver, Michigan, Michigan State, Michigan Tech, Minnesota, and North Dakota. The league became the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League (WIHL) in 1953 and became the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) in November 1959. The Tigers also finished as runner-up in 1952 and 1955, losing to Michigan in both appearances in the championship game. In addition, he was named national Coach of the Year in 1952 by the United States Hockey Coaches Association. The Tigers returned to the championship game in 1957 with Tom Bedecki behind the bench. CC beat Clarkson 5-3 in the semifinal round and won the school's second hockey championship with a 13-6 win over Michigan. In 1961 the Ice Palace became known as the Broadmoor World Arena. The 1957 championship was the final appearance in the NCAA Tournament until 1978. The Tigers finished the regular season and captured the school's first and only WCHA Tournament Championship and received a bid to the NCAA Tournament, in the first round the Tigers lost to Bowling Green State 3-5.

The lean years

Bedecki abruptly resigned in 1958, and the Tigers went into a decline that would last for almost four decades. From 1958 to 1993, the Tigers would have only three winning seasons. The low point came in 1961-62, when the Tigers finished with a 0-23 record, still the worst in school history.

Recent history

Jaden Schwartz in 2011
Jaden Schwartz during the 2011 NCAA Tournament

In 1993 Don Lucia became the head coach of the Tigers. In his first season, 1993–94, he led the team to win the MacNaughton Cup, given to the WCHA regular season champion. It was Colorado College's first Cup win since 1957. After serving as the Tigers' home ice for 55 years the Broadmoor World Arena closed in March 1994 and later demolished by The Broadmoor to make room for the resort's expansion. Colorado College was then invited by the Air Force Academy to play at their home ice, the Cadet Ice Arena until the new World Arena opened in 1998 on the southern side of Colorado Springs. The Tigers returned to the NCAA post season in 1995 for the first time since 1978. The Tigers lost in the quarterfinal round to Minnesota 2-5. The following season CC made a second straight NCAA tournament appearance, receiving a number one seed in 1996 NCAA Tournament. Colorado College beat UMass Lowell 5-3 in the quarterfinals and Vermont 4-3 in the semifinal round before losing to 2-3 in overtime to Michigan in the championship game. CC returned to the Frozen Four under Lucia for a second straight season in 1997 before losing to North Dakota 6-2. Lucia lead the Tigers to two additional NCAA Tournament appearances in 1998 and 1999 before leaving Colorado College to become head coach at Minnesota.

Scott Owens took over as head coach of the program in 1999 and lead the Tigers to three straight NCAA Tournaments in 2001, 2002, and 2003. In the 2005 Tournament The Tigers returned to the Frozen Four with a 4-3 victory over Michigan in the Midwest Regional Final. In the Semifinal round the Tigers fell to the eventual national champion and rival Denver 2-6. Owens lead CC to the NCAA Tournament again in 2006 Tournament and in 2008 Tournament, ending in first round exits both times. The Tigers returned to the NCAA Tournament in 2011. The Tigers upset the number one ranked team and defending National Champions, Boston College 8-4. The Tigers' win was led by freshman Jaden Schwartz, a first round draft choice of the St. Louis Blues making his St. Louis debut in the West Regional. The Tigers' season ended in the Regional final in a 1-2 loss to Michigan.

New arena in 2021

In 2018, CC announced plans to build a new $38 million arena located on campus. The facility is named Edward J. Robson Arena in honor of 1954 CC alum and former Tigers hockey player Edward Robson. This is the Tigers' new home rink after playing at the World Arena since 1998.

The new arena has a capacity of 3,407, less than half that of World Arena. It features an NHL-sized rink instead of the World Arena's Olympic-size rink. Robson Arena sits around 6,050 feet above sea level, about 200 feet below the World Arena. Colorado College initially hoped for it to be ready for play by 2020. Changes made during the planning process, most notably the addition of a parking garage and a shift in the arena footprint within its city block, led to delays. The arena opened for the 2021–22 season.

Season-by-season results

Main article: List of Colorado College Tigers men's ice hockey seasons

Source:

Coaches

[[Kris Mayotte

As of the end of the 2024–25 season

Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"TenureColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"CoachColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"YearsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"RecordColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"Pct.Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"TotalsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"14 coachesColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"85 seasonsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"1,271–1,384–156Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"
1937–1938John Atwood13–9–0
1938–1942Garrett Livingston431–21–6
1944–1945C. E. Moore11–3–1
1945–1955Cheddy Thompson10149–72–5
1955–1958Tom Bedecki359–28–1
1958–1963Tony Frasca530–85–4
1963–1966Bob Johnson327–49–4
1966–1971John Matchefts554–88–3
1971–1982Jeff Sauer11166–228–11
1982–1988Mike Bertsch665–157–6
1988–1993Brad Buetow568–118–11
1993–1999Don Lucia6166–68–18
1999–2014Scott Owens14324–228–54
2014–2021Mike Haviland767–153–22
2021–PresentKris Mayotte461–77–10

Awards and honors

Hockey Hall of Fame

Source:

  • Bob Johnson (1992)
  • Bill Hay (2015)

United States Hockey Hall of Fame

Source:

  • Art Berglund (2010)
  • John Matchefts (1991)
  • Bob Johnson (1991)
  • Jeff Sauer (2014)

NCAA

Individual awards

Hobey Baker Award

  • Peter Sejna: 2003
  • Marty Sertich: 2005

Spencer Penrose Award

  • Cheddy Thompson: 1952
  • Tony Frasca: 1963
  • Don Lucia: 1994

Tim Taylor Award

  • Richard Bachman: 2008

NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Scoring Champion

  • Bill Hay, C: 1958
  • Peter Sejna, LW: 2003
  • Marty Sertich, C: 2005
  • Rylan Schwartz, C: 2013

NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player

  • Ken Kinsley, G: 1952
  • Phil Hilton, D: 1955
  • Bob McCusker, LW: 1957

All-Americans

AHCA First Team All-Americans

  • 1947-48: Joe Slattery, F
  • 1948-49: Jim Starrak, D; Dick Starrak, D; Dick Rowell, F; Joe Slattery, F
  • 1949-50: Jim Starrak, D
  • 1950-51: Jim Starrak, D; Tony Frasca, F
  • 1951-52: Tony Frasca, F; Ron Hartwell, F
  • 1954-55: Doug Silverberg, D; Clare Smith, F
  • 1955-56: Doug Silverberg, D
  • 1956-57: Don Wishart, D; Bill Hay, F
  • 1957-58: Bill Hay, F; Bob McCusker, F
  • 1963-64: John Simus, F
  • 1965-66: Bob Lindberg, F
  • 1966-67: Bob Lindberg, F
  • 1968-69: Bob Collyard, F
  • 1969-70: Bob Collyard, F
  • 1971-72: Bob Winograd, F; Doug Palazzari, F
  • 1973-74: Doug Palazzari, F
  • 1974-75: Eddie Mio, G
  • 1975-76: Eddie Mio, G
  • 1979-80: Dave Feamster, D
  • 1982-83: Doug Lidster, D
  • 1993-94: Shawn Reid, D
  • 1995-96: Ryan Bach, G; Peter Geronazzo, F
  • 1998-99: Scott Swanson, D; Brian Swanson, F
  • 2002-03: Tom Preissing, D; Noah Clarke, F; Peter Sejna, F
  • 2004-05: Curtis McElhinney, G; Mark Stuart, D; Marty Sertich, F; Brett Sterling, F
  • 2005-06: Brett Sterling, F
  • 2007-08: Richard Bachman, G; Jack Hillen, D
  • 2011-12: Jaden Schwartz, F
  • 2023–24: Kaidan Mbereko, G

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

  • 1949-50: Chris Ray, F
  • 1951-52: Ken Kinsley, G; Omer Brandt, F
  • 1954-55: Phil Hilton, D
  • 1956-57: Bob McCusker, F
  • 1986-87: Rob Doyle, D
  • 1991-92: Chris Hynnes, D
  • 1994-95: Ryan Bach, G; Kent Fearns, D; Jay McNeill, F
  • 1996-97: Calvin Elfring, D; Brian Swanson, F
  • 2000-01: Mark Cullen, F
  • 2001-02: Mark Cullen, F
  • 2002-03: Curtis McElhinney, G
  • 2004-05: Gabe Gauthier, F
  • 2007-08: Chad Rau, F
  • 2008-09: Chad Rau, F
  • 2017-18: Nick Halloran, F
  • 2023–24: Noah Laba, F

WCHA

Individual awards

WCHA Player of the Year

  • Doug Palazzari, F: 1971–72, 1973–74
  • Peter Sejna, LW: 2002–03
  • Marty Sertich, C: 2004–05
  • Richard Bachman, G: 2007–08

WCHA Outstanding Student-Athlete of the Year

  • Tim Budy, G: 1988–89
  • Scott Swanson, D: 1998–99
  • Mark Cullen, C: 2001–02
  • Tom Preissing, D: 2002–03
  • Lee Sweatt, D: 2006–07

WCHA Defensive Player of the Year

  • Chris Hynnes, D: 1992–93
  • Shawn Reid, D: 1993–94
  • Eric Rud, D: 1995–96, 1996–97
  • Joe Cullen, C: 2002–03
  • Mark Stuart, D: 2004–05
  • Jack Hillen, D: 2007–08

WCHA Freshman/Rookie of the Year

  • Jim Warner, RW: 1974–75
  • Dave Delich, C: 1975–76
  • Greg Whyte, C: 1977–78
  • Brian Swanson, C: 1995–96
  • Peter Sejna, LW: 2000–01
  • Richard Bachman, G: 2007–08

WCHA Coach of the Year

  • John Matchefts: 1968–69
  • Jeff Sauer: 1971–72, 1974–75
  • Brad Buetow: 1991–92
  • Don Lucia: 1993–94, 1995–96

MCHA / WIHL / WCHA Scoring Leader

  • Ron Hartwell, F: 1951–52
  • John Andrews, F: 1955–56
  • Bill Hay, C: 1957–58
  • Doug Palazzari, C: 1971–72
  • Dave Delich, C: 1978–79
  • Brian Swanson, C: 1996–97, 1997–98
  • Peter Sejna, LW: 2002–03
  • Marty Sertich, C: 2004–05

MCHA / WIHL / WCHA Goaltending Leader

  • Jeff Simus: 1954–55
  • Judd Lambert: 1995–96
  • Curtis McElhinney: 2002–03, 2004–05

WCHA Most Valuable Player in Tournament

  • Brett Sterling: 2005

All-Conference

First Team All-WCHA

  • 1951–52: Ken Kinsley, G; Tony Frasca, F; Ron Hartwell, F; Omer Brandt, F
  • 1954–55: Phil Hilton, D; Clare Smith, F
  • 1955–56: Doug Silverberg, D
  • 1956–57: Don Wishart, D; Bill Hay, F; Bob McCusker, F
  • 1957–58: Bill Hay, F; Ike Scott, F; Bob McCusker, F
  • 1963–64: John Simus, F
  • 1969–70: Bob Collyard, F
  • 1970–71: Bob Collyard, F
  • 1971-72: Bob Winograd, F; Doug Palazzari, F
  • 1973-74: Doug Palazzari, F
  • 1975-76: Eddie Mio, G
  • 1979-80: Dave Feamster, D
  • 1981-82: Doug Lidster, D
  • 1982-83: Doug Lidster, D
  • 1982-83: Rob Doyle, D
  • 1991-92: Chris Hynnes, D
  • 1993-94: Shawn Reid, D; Jay McNeill, F
  • 1994-95: Ryan Bach, G; Jay McNeill, F
  • 1995-96: Ryan Bach, G; Peter Geronazzo, F
  • 1996-97: Brian Swanson, F
  • 1997-98: Brian Swanson, F
  • 1998-99: Scott Swanson, D; Brian Swanson, F
  • 2000-01: Mark Cullen, F
  • 2001-02: Mark Cullen, F
  • 2002-03: Curtis McElhinney, G; Tom Preissing, D; Peter Sejna, F
  • 2004-05: Curtis McElhinney, G; Marty Sertich, F; Brett Sterling, F
  • 2005-06: Brett Sterling, F
  • 2007-08: Richard Bachman, G; Jack Hillen, D; Chad Rau, F
  • 2008-09: Chad Rau, F

Second team all-wcha

  • 1953–54: Phil Hilton, D
  • 1954–55: Jeff Simus, G; Doug Silverberg, D; Bunt Hubchik, F
  • 1955–56: John Andrews, F; Clare Smith, F
  • 1966–67: Bob Lindberg, F
  • 1968–69: Bob Collyard, F
  • 1974–75: Eddie Mio, G; Jim Warner, F
  • 1977–78: Greg Whyte, F; Dave Delich, F
  • 1978–79: Dave Feamster, D; Dave Delich, F
  • 1979–80: Tom Frame, G
  • 1980–81: Bruce Aikens, F
  • 1984–85: Rob Doyle, D; Doug Clarke, D
  • 1985–86: Rob Doyle, D
  • 1986–87: Rick Boh, F
  • 1993–94: Kent Fearns, D
  • 1994–95: Kent Fearns, D; Peter Geronazzo, F; Colin Schmidt, F
  • 1995–96: Judd Lambert, G; Scott Swanson, D; Brian Swanson, F; Colin Schmidt, F
  • 1996–97: Eric Rud, D
  • 1997–98: Calvin Elfring, D
  • 1998–99: Dan Peters, D; Darren Clark, F
  • 2000–01: Paul Manning, D
  • 2002–03: Noah Clarke, F
  • 2004–05: Mark Stuart, D
  • 2005–06: Brian Salcido, D; Marty Sertich, F
  • 2009–10: Nate Prosser, D
  • 2011–12: Gabe Guentzel, D; Jaden Schwartz, F
  • 2012–13: Mike Boivin, D; Rylan Schwartz, F

Third Team All-WCHA

  • 1995–96: Eric Rud, D; Jay McNeill, F
  • 1996–97: Calvin Elfring, D
  • 1997–98: Scott Swanson, D
  • 1999–00: Paul Manning, D
  • 2000–01: Tom Preissing, D; Peter Sejna, F
  • 2001–02: Tom Preissing, D; Peter Sejna, F
  • 2003–04: Mark Stuart, D
  • 2006–07: Lee Sweatt, D
  • 2010–11: Jaden Schwartz, F
  • 2011–12: Josh Thorimbert, G
  • 2012–13: Mike Boivin, D; Rylan Schwartz, F

WCHA All-Rookie Team

  • 1990–91: Shawn Reid, D
  • 1991–92: Kent Fearns, D
  • 1992–93: Jay McNeill, F
  • 1993–94: Eric Rud, D
  • 1994–95: Calvin Elfring, D
  • 1995–96: Scott Swanson, D; Brian Swanson, F
  • 1996–97: Toby Petersen, F
  • 1997–98: Paul Manning, D
  • 1998–99: Jesse Heerema, F
  • 1999–00: Noah Clarke, F
  • 2000–01: Peter Sejna, F
  • 2002–03: Mark Stuart, D; Brett Sterling, F
  • 2003–04: Matt Zaba, G
  • 2007–08: Richard Bachman, G
  • 2009–10: Joe Howe, G; Rylan Schwartz, F
  • 2010–11: Jaden Schwartz, F
  • 2012–13: Paul Geiger, D

NCHC

Individual awards

NCHC Rookie of the Year

  • Jaccob Slavin, D: 2013–14

NCHC Goaltender of the Year

  • Kaidan Mbereko: 2023–24

NCHC Defensive Forward of the Year

  • Noah Laba: 2023–24

Herb Brooks Coach of the Year

  • Kris Mayotte, 2023–24

NCHC Sportsmanship Award

  • Eamonn McDermott, D: 2013–14

All-Conference

First Team All-NCHC

  • 2014–15: Jaccob Slavin, D
  • 2017–18: Nick Halloran, F
  • 2023–24: Kaidan Mbereko, G; Noah Laba, F

Second team All-NCHC

  • 2013–14: Jaccob Slavin, D
  • 2022–23: Kaidan Mbereko, G
  • 2024–25: Max Burkholder, D

NCHC All-Rookie Team

  • 2013–14: Jaccob Slavin, D
  • 2017–18: Mason Bergh, F
  • 2022–23: Kaidan Mbereko, G

Olympians

This is a list of Colorado College alumni who have played or coached on an Olympic team.

Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"NameColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"PositionColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"CC TenureColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"TeamColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"YearColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"Finish
Andy GambucciCenter1949–1953USA USA1952
Dan GriffinGoaltender1971–1975USA USA19765th
Gary HughesDefenseman1955–1958Poland Poland (Coach)19649th
Roy IkolaGoaltender1946–1950USA USA1948DQ
Doug LidsterDefenseman1979–1983CAN Canada19844th
Vern MottGoaltender1976–1977NOR Norway198812th
Robert RompreForward1950–1951
1953–1956USA USA1952
Steve SertichRight wing1970–1974USA USA19765th

Colorado College Athletic Hall of Fame

The following is a list of people associated with the Colorado College men's ice hockey program who were elected into the Colorado College Athletic Hall of Fame (induction date in parentheses).

Statistical leaders

Source:

Career points leaders

Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"PlayerColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"YearsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"GPColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"GColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"AColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"PtsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"PIM
Dave Delich1975–1979153111174285
Brian Swanson1995–199916788144232
Doug Palazzari1970–197411795133228
Bruce Aikens1978–1982137100117217
Rob Doyle1983–198715351151202
Jim Warner1974–197814289109198
Greg Whyte1977–198114986111197
Peter Sejna2000–20031269199190
Jay McNeill1992–199615810089189
Dave Feamster1976–198015045139184
Brett Sterling2002–200615010876184

Career goaltending leaders

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

Minimum 50 Games

Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"PlayerColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"YearsColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"GPColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"MinColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"WColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"LColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"TColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"GAColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"SOColorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"SV%Colorado College Tigerscolor=white}};"GAA
Richard Bachman2007–20097041763920111567.9222.24
Curtis McElhinney2001–2005915153621581999.9112.32
Matt Zaba2003–2007110634955421025610.9132.42
Jeff Sanger1998–200212774667645430916.9062.48
Colin Zulianello1997–200160312113522.60

Statistics current through the start of the 2024-25 season.

Players

Roster

As of August 11, 2025.

Tigers in the NHL

Over 170 Colorado College alumni have gone on to play professionally, including over 30 current and former NHL players:

As of July 1, 2025.

= NHL All-Star teamNHL All-Star]]NHL All-Star]] and NHL All-Star teamHall of Famers]]
Colorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PlayerColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PositionColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"Team(s)Colorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"YearsColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"GamesColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"[](stanley-cup)
Ryan BachGoaltenderLAK1998–199930
Richard BachmanGoaltenderDAL, EDM, VAN2010–2019480
Rick BohCenterMNS1987–198880
Noah ClarkeLeft wingLAK, NJD2003–2008210
Bob CollyardCenterSTL1973–1974100
Joey CrabbRight wingATL, TOR, WAS, FLA2008–20141790
Mark CullenRight wingCHI, PHI, FLA2005–2012380
Dave FeamsterDefensemanCHI1981–19851690
Kris FredheimDefensemanMIN2011–201230
Trevor FrischmonCenterCBJ2009–201030
Bill HayCenter[](chicago-blackhawks)display=inlinewidth=2pxcolor=#CE1126 }}'''1959–19675061
Jack HillenDefensemanNYI, NSH, WAS, CAR2007–20153040
Doug LidsterDefensemanVAN, **, STL, **1983–19998972
Dean MageeCenterMNS1977–197870
Paul ManningDefensemanCBJ2002–200380
Hunter McKownForwardCBJ2022–2023120
Curtis McElhinneyGoaltenderCGY, ANA, OTT, PHO, CBJ, TOR, CAR, ****2007–20212492
Eddie MioGoaltenderEDM, NYR, DET1979–19861920
Gustav OlofssonDefensemanMIN, MTL, SEA2015–2024630
Doug PalazzariCenterSTL1974–19791080
Colorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PlayerColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PositionColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"Team(s)Colorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"YearsColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"GamesColorado College Tigerscolor=#FFFFFF}};"[](stanley-cup)
Toby PetersenCenterPIT, EDM, DAL2000–20143980
Richard PetiotDefensemanLAK, TBL, EDM2005–2011150
Tom PreissingDefensemanSJS, OTT, LAK, COL2003–20103260
Nate ProsserDefensemanMIN, STL, PHI2009–20213600
Chad RauCenterMIN2011–201290
Brian SalcidoDefensemanANA2008–200920
Jaden SchwartzLeft wing[](st-louis-blues)display=inlinewidth=2pxcolor=#FCB514}}''', SEA2011–Present8111
Peter SejnaLeft wingSTL2002–2007490
Jaccob SlavinDefensemanCAR2015–Present7450
Josiah SlavinLeft WingCHI2021–2022150
Greg SmithDefensemanCAL, CLE, MNS, DET, WAS1975–19888290
Brett SterlingLeft wingATL, PIT, STL2007–2012300
Colin StuartLeft wingATL, BUF2007–2012560
Mark StuartDefensemanBOS, ATL, WPG2005–20176730
Mike StuartDefensemanSTL2003–200630
Brian SwansonCenterEDM, ATL2000–2004700
Bill SweattLeft wingVAN2011–201330
Lee SweattDefensemanVAN2010–201130
Jim WarnerRight wingHFD1979–1980320
Matt ZabaGoaltenderNYR2009–201010

File:Richard Bachman 10-2015.jpg|Richard Bachman File:RedHayChex.jpg|Bill Hay File:JackHillen.jpg|Jack Hillen File:Curtis McElhinney.png|Curtis McElhinney File:Toby Petersen.png|Toby Petersen File:Jaden Schwartz 140109.png|Jaden Schwartz File:Jaccob_slavin.jpg|Jaccob Slavin File:Mark Stuart - Winnipeg Jets.jpg|Mark Stuart File:Brett Sterling 2011-11-23.JPG|Brett Sterling

References

References

  1. (April 7, 2021). "Kris Mayotte Named Head Hockey Coach". CC Athletic Communications.
  2. "Colorado College Tigers Hockey History". [[Colorado College]].
  3. "1930s: Broadmore Ice Palace". [[Colorado Springs School District 11]].
  4. (April 18, 2008). "CC Hockey History". [[Colorado College]].
  5. (2010). "WCHA History Tradition and Success". [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association]].
  6. "1957 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  7. (1996–2011). "Colorado College Tigers Men's Hockey Team History". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  8. "1978 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  9. "MacNaughton Cup Winners". Copper Country Hockey History.
  10. Michaelis, Vicki. (March 23, 2009). "Colorado club a power once again in the skating world". [[USA Today]].
  11. "About Us". [[World Arena]].
  12. "1995 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  13. "1996 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  14. "1997 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  15. Staff. (February 6, 2006). "Owens Gets Contract Extension". College Hockey News.
  16. "2005 NCAA Tournament". [[ESPN.
  17. Milewski, Todd D.. (April 7, 2005). "Denver Cruises Into Second Straight NCAA Title Game". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  18. O'Connor, Brion. (26 March 2011). "BC blown away by Colorado College". [[ESPN]].
  19. Rutherford, Jeremy. (March 26, 2011). "Blues' Schwartz impressive in NCAA win". [[St. Louis Post Dispatch]].
  20. Staff. (March 26, 2011). "Michigan trumps Colo. College to earn spot in Frozen Four". [[USA Today]].
  21. Shefte, Kate. (June 29, 2019). "Colorado College's upcoming Robson Arena gets new renderings, with public feedback highlighted". [[The Gazette (Colorado Springs).
  22. (25 July 2018). "Tribune: College men's hockey: Colorado College building new, smaller rink".
  23. "Colorado College: Ed Robson '54 Gives $8 Million for New Hockey Arena". Colorado College.
  24. Shefte, Kate. "Shefte: Student section, amenities early focuses of new Colorado College hockey arena". The Gazette.
  25. "Colorado College men's Hockey 2017-18 Media Guide". Colorado College Tigers.
  26. "Legends of Hockey". Hockey Hall of Fame.
  27. "United States Hockey Hall of Fame". Hockey Central.co.uk.
  28. "Hall of Fame". Colorado College Athletics.
  29. "2025–2026 Men's Ice Hockey Roster". Colorado College Tigers.
  30. (2011). "Alumni Report". Internet Hockey Database.
  31. "Tiger Hockey Media Guide 2013-2014".
  32. Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.
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