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Niagara Purple Eagles men's ice hockey


FieldValue
team_nameNiagara Purple Eagles
team_link[](niagara-purple-eagles)
current2025–26 Niagara Purple Eagles men's ice hockey season
universityNiagara University
sexmen's
imageInitials niagara univ.svg
image_size250
conferenceAtlantic Hockey America
conference_shortAHA
locationLewiston (town), New YorkLewiston, New York
coachJason Lammers
coach_year9th
coach_wins113
coach_losses145
coach_ties27 ()
assistant_coaches
arenaDwyer Arena
NCAAtourneys2000, 2004, 2008, 2013
conference_tournamentECAC West: 1998
CHA: 2000, 2004, 2008
conference_seasonECAC West: 1998
CHA: 2000, 2006, 2007
AHA: 2013

CHA: 2000, 2004, 2008 CHA: 2000, 2006, 2007 AHA: 2013

The Niagara Purple Eagles men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Niagara University. The Purple Eagles are members of Atlantic Hockey America. They play at the Dwyer Arena in Lewiston, New York.

History

After several years of playing at the club level, the team turned varsity in the 1996–97 season, which they played as independent.

In 1999 they became charter members of College Hockey America (CHA), joining two other independent teams (Air Force and Army) and three former Division II teams (Alabama–Huntsville, Bemidji State and Findlay).

Niagara went undefeated in conference play that season, 1999–00, winning the conference tournament and gaining an at-large invitation to the NCAA tournament, as the conference did not gain an automatic bid until the 2003 tournament. Starting goaltender Greg Gardner set a single-season NCAA record for shutouts with 12 as Niagara posted its first (and only as of 2019) 30-win campaign. The Purple Eagles upset the University of New Hampshire to advance to the Elite Eight, where they lost to North Dakota. North Dakota went on to win that national championship.

Niagara also won the College Hockey America Championship in 2004 and 2008, appearing in the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship again those years. In 2004 they lost against Boston College and in 2008 against Michigan.

On January 29, 2009, Niagara University announced that the team was moving to the Atlantic Hockey Association beginning in the 2010-11 season, following the closure of CHA's men's division. CHA would continue to operate as a women-only conference for the next 14 years.

On October 14, 2010, it was announced that Jay McKee would serve as a volunteer assistant coach for Niagara Purple Eagles men's ice hockey, while not ruling out a return to the NHL.

On December 14, 2013 the Purple Eagles faced off against the RIT Tigers in an outdoor hockey game known as Frozen Frontier tying 2-2.

Shortly after the 2023–24 season, the Atlantic Hockey Association and CHA, which had shared a commissioner and conference staff since 2010, merged under the banner of Atlantic Hockey America.

Season-by-season results

Main article: List of Niagara Purple Eagles men's ice hockey seasons

Source:

Head coaches

As of the completion of 2024–25 season

Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"TenureNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"CoachNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"YearsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"RecordNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"Pct.Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"TotalsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"3 coachesNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"29 seasonsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"451–482–112Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"
1996–2001Blaise MacDonald591–58–17
2001–2017Dave Burkholder16247–279–68
2017–PresentJason Lammers8113–145–27

NCAA tournament appearances

YearLocationOpponentResult
2000Target CenterNew HampshireW 4-1
North DakotaL 1-4
2004Verizon Wireless ArenaBoston CollegeL 2-5
2008Times Union CenterMichiganL 1-5
2013Van Andel ArenaNorth DakotaL 1-2

Statistical leaders

Source:

Career points leaders

Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"PlayerNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"YearsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"GPNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"GNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"ANiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"PtsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"PIM
2001–20051417195166142
1996–2000126657714280
1996–20001265587142112
2006–201014638103141103
2005–20091397859137226
1996–2000126676613346
2003–20071454389132142
1996–2000124606912958
2004–20081465178129108
2000–20041446064124111

Career goaltending leaders

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

minimum 30 games played

Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"PlayerNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"YearsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"GPNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"MinNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"WNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"LNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"TNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"GANiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"SONiagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"SV%Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=white}};"GAA
2010–201345258827116936.9302.16
2009–2012613262291881323.9222.43
1996–2000113663864331227016.9072.44
2005–20099853114732112318.9212.61
2019–2023985691414692536.9102.67

Statistics current through the end of the 2023–24 season.

Roster

As of August 30, 2025.

Awards and honors

[[NCAA]]

All-Americans

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

  • 2010–11: Paul Zanette, F

[[College Hockey America|CHA]]

Individual awards

Player of the Year

  • Greg Gardner: 1999
  • Joe Tallari: 2003
  • Barret Ehgoetz: 2004
  • Jeff Van Nynatten: 2006
  • Sean Bentivoglio: 2007
  • Juliano Pagliero: 2009

Rookie of the Year

  • Ted Cook: 2006
  • Les Reaney: 2006
  • Chris Moran: 2007

Most Valuable Player in Tournament

  • Kyle Martin: 2000
  • Jeff Van Nynatten: 2004
  • Ted Cook: 2008

Coach of the Year

  • Blaise MacDonald: 2000
  • Dave Burkholder: 2006, 2007

Three-Star Player of the Year

  • Ted Cook: 2007

Student-Athlete of the Year

  • Vince Rocco: 2009

All-Conference teams

First Team All-CHA

  • 1999–00: Greg Gardner, G; Chris MacKenzie, D; Kyle Martin, F; Mike Isherwood, F
  • 2002–03: Joe Tallari, F
  • 2003–04: Jeff Van Nynatten, G; Barret Ehgoetz, F
  • 2004–05: Barret Ehgoetz, F
  • 2005–06: Sean Bentivoglio, F
  • 2006–07: Pat Oliveto, D; Sean Bentivoglio, F; Ted Cook, F
  • 2007–08: Juliano Pagliero, G; Ryan Annesley, D; Vince Rocco, F
  • 2008–09: Juliano Pagliero, G
  • 2009–10: Chris Moran, F

Second Team All-CHA

  • 1999–00: Mikko Sivonen, F
  • 2000–01: Bernie Sigrist, F
  • 2001–02: Scott Crawford, D
  • 2002–03: Barret Ehgoetz, F
  • 2003–04: Andrew Lackner, D; Joe Tallari, F
  • 2004–05: Ryan Gale, F
  • 2005–06: Jeff Van Nynatten, G; Ted Cook, F; Les Reaney, F
  • 2006–07: Juliano Pagliero, G; Les Reaney, F
  • 2007–08: Tyler Gotto, D; Matt Caruana, F
  • 2008–09: Tyler Gotto, D; Vince Rocco, F; Egor Mironov, F
  • 2009–10: Tyler Gotto, D; Ryan Olidis, F

All-CHA Rookie Team

  • 2002–03: Brian Hartman, D; Jason Williamson, F
  • 2003–04: Pat Oliveto, F
  • 2005–06: Ted Cook, F; Les Reaney, F
  • 2006–07: Tyler Gotto, D; Chris Moran, F
  • 2007–08: Adam Avramenko, G
  • 2008–09: Dan Baco, D
  • 2009–10: Jason Beattie, F

[[Atlantic Hockey]]

Individual awards

Player of the Year

  • Paul Zanette: 2011
  • Carsen Chubak: 2013

Rookie of the Year

  • Ludwig Stenlund: 2019
  • Trevor Hoskin: 2025 Regular Season Goaltending Award
  • Chris Noonan: 2012

Regular Season Scoring Trophy

  • Paul Zanette: 2011

Coach of the Year

  • Dave Burkholder: 2013

Most Valuable Player in Tournament

  • Scott Champagne: 2005

All-Conference teams

First Team All-Atlantic Hockey

  • 2010–11: Bryan Haczyk, F; Paul Zanette, F
  • 2012–13: Carsen Chubak, G; Giancarlo Iuorio, F

Second Team All-Atlantic Hockey

  • 2011–12: Chris Noonan, G
  • 2012–13: Dan Weiss, D

Third Team All-Atlantic Hockey

  • 2010–11: Ryan Annesley, D
  • 2012–13: Kevin Ryan, D
  • 2013–14: Kevin Ryan, D
  • 2017–18: Derian Plouffe, F
  • 2018–19: Noah Delmas, D; Ludwig Stenlund, F
  • 2019–20: Jack Billings, F

Atlantic Hockey All-Rookie Team

  • 2010–11: Ryan Rashid, F
  • 2013–14: Vinny Muto, D
  • 2014–15: Keegan Harper, D
  • 2018–19: Ludwig Stenlund, F
  • 2019–20: Chad Veltri, G
  • 2020–21: Josef Mysak, D
  • 2021–22: Shane Ott, F

Niagara Purple Eagles Hall of Fame

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

  • Greg Gardner (2006)
  • Peter DeSantis (2007)
  • Mile Isherwood (2007)
  • Joe Tallari (2012)
  • Barret Ehgoetz (2013)
  • 1999-2000 Men's Team (2016)

Purple Eagles in the NHL

As of July 1, 2025.

= NHL All-Star TeamNHL All-Star]]NHL All-Star]] and NHL All-Star TeamHall of Famers]]
Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"PlayerNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"PositionNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"Team(s)Niagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"YearsNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"GamesNiagara Purple Eaglescolor=#FFFFFF}};"[](stanley-cup)
Sean BentivoglioLeft WingNYI2008–200910
Matt RyanCenterLAK2005–2006120

References

References

  1. "Niagara Purple Eagles Men's Ice Hockey". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  2. (April 30, 2024). "Atlantic Hockey and College Hockey America Join to Form Atlantic Hockey America". Atlantic Hockey America.
  3. "Niagara Men's Hockey Team History". USCHO.com.
  4. "Niagara Statistics". Elite Prospects.
  5. "2025-26 Men's Ice Hockey Roster". Niagara Purple Eagles.
  6. "Purple Eagles Hall of Fame". Niagara Purple Eagles.
  7. "Alumni report for Niagara University". Hockey DB.
  8. 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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