2012–13 University of North Dakota women's ice hockey season

Last updated

2012–13 University of North Dakota
women's ice hockey season
Conference WCHA
Home ice Ralph Engelstad Arena
Record
Overall26–12–1
Coaches and captains
Head coach Brian Idalski
Assistant coachesPeter Elander
Erik Fabian
Eli Rosendahl
Captain(s)Jocelyne Lamoureux

The University of North Dakota women's ice hockey team represents the University of North Dakota in the WCHA women's ice hockey conference. The team will attempt to qualify for the NCAA Frozen Four for the second time.

Contents

Offseason

Recruiting

PlayerPositionNationalityNotes
Sam LaShombDefenseFlag of the United States.svg  United States Attended South St. Paul High School
Johanna Fallman DefenseFlag of Sweden.svg  Sweden Member of Swedish National Team
Samantha HansonDefenseFlag of the United States.svg  United States
Marissa SaloForwardFlag of the United States.svg  United States Attended North American Hockey Academy
Meghan DufaultDefenseFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Competed with Canadian Under-18 National Team
Tanja Eisenschmid DefenseFlag of Germany.svg  Germany Competed with ESV Kaufbeuren in Germany
Amanda KoepGoaltenderFlag of the United States.svg  United States Attended North Wright County High School
Rebecca KohlerForwardFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Competed in Provincial Women's Hockey League

Regular season

Current record

Overall Record WCHA Record Home, Away, Neutral, Exhibition
26–12–118–9–1–0 (55 pts.)15–5–0, 10–5–1, 1–2–0, 0–0–0

Current rankings

PollAffiliationRank
WCHA RankConference#NA
USCHO.com Coaches PollNational#NA
USA Today PollNational#NA
NCAA Pairwise RankPost-Season#NA
USCHO KRACH RankPost-Season#NA
NCAA Ratings Percentage IndexPost-Season#NA

North Dakota statistics

NameStatNational Rank
Scoring Offense0.00 G/GM (0GF)#NA
Scoring Defense0.00 G/GM (0GA)#NA
Scoring Margin0.00#NA
Penalty Minutes00.0 PIM/GM (0 PM)#NA
Power Play00.0% (00/00, 0SHA)#NA
Penalty Kill00.0% (00/00, 0SHF)#NA
Winning Percentage0–0–0 00.0%#NA
Unbeaten Streak0g 0–0–0#NA

2012-13 schedule and results

#DateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceWCHAOverallNotes
1October 5Minnesota State3–2#5 North DakotaButters1,5930–1–0–00–1–0
2October 6Minnesota State1–4#5 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,0791–1–0–01–1–0
3October 12#6 North Dakota3–5#10 Ohio StateKnapp3431–2–0–01–2–0
4October 13#6 North Dakota2–0#10 Ohio StateDagfinrud2952–2–0–02–2–0
5October 19St. Cloud State1–3#10 North DakotaDaginfurd1,3553–2–0–03–2–0
6October 20St. Cloud State0–1#10 North DakotaDaginfurd1,4044–2–0–04–2–0
7October 27#1 Minnesota5–1#8 North DakotaRäty3,5914–3–0–04–3–0
8October 28#1 Minnesota4–2#8 North DakotaRäty1,2894–4–0–04–4–0
9†November 2#4 Clarkson3–1#9 North DakotaHowe7654–4–0–04–5–0
10†November 3#4 Clarkson2–3#9 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie8334–4–0–05–5–0
11November 17#10 North Dakota3–1Bemidji StateDagfinrud4505–4–0–06–5–0
12November 18#10 North Dakota7–3Bemidji StateAmsley-Benzie3216–4–0–07–5–0
13November 23Minnesota-Duluth3–4North DakotaOTDagfinrud1,1717–4–0–08–5–0
14November 24Minnesota-Duluth2–5North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,3548–4–0–09–5–0
15†November 30RIT2–3#8 North DakotaDagfinrud9418–4–0–010–5–0
16†December 1RIT2–8#8 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,0738–4–0–011–5–0
17December 8#8 North Dakota2–3#9 WisconsinRigsby1,7718–5–0–011–6–0
18December 9#8 North Dakota1–3#9 WisconsinRigsby1,5398–6–0–011–7–0
19†January 4#10 North Dakota7–3LindenwoodDagfinrud1038–6–0–012–7–0
20†January 5#10 North Dakota8–4LindenwoodAmsley-Benzie1038–6–0–013–7–0
21January 11North Dakota3–6#1 MinnesotaRäty2,0148–7–0–013–8–0
22January 12North Dakota3–6#1 MinnesotaRäty2,7038–8–0–013–9–0
23January 18#7 Wisconsin0–3North DakotaAmsley-Benzie9209–8–0–014–9–0
24January 19#7 Wisconsin2–1North DakotaRigsby1,0519–9–0–014–10–0
25January 25#9/10 North Dakota6–2St. Cloud StateAmsley-Benzie21810–9–0–015–10–0
26January 26#9/10 North Dakota3–0St. Cloud StateAmsley-Benzie23011–9–0–016–10–0
27February 1#9 North Dakota4–2Minnesota StateAmsley-Benzie35312–9–0–017–10–0
28February 2#9 North Dakota8–2Minnesota StateAmsley-Benzie27313–9–0–018–10–0
29February 8Bemidji State3–4#8/9 North DakotaOTAmsley-Benzie1,03814–9–0–019–10–0
30February 9Bemidji State0–7#8/9 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,16015–9–0–020–10–0
31February 15Ohio State2–5#7/8 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,15616–9–0–021–10–0
32February 16Ohio State2–3#7/8 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,26417–9–0–022–10–0
33February 22#7/8 North Dakota4–1Minnesota-DuluthAmsley-Benzie1,19618–9–0–023–10-0
34February 23#7/8 North Dakota2–2Minnesota-DuluthSO2,09818–9–1–023–10–1
35March 1Minnesota State6–1#7/8 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie56918–9–1–024–10–1WCHA First Round
36March 2Minnesota State8–1#7/8 North DakotaAmsley-Benzie1,25918–9–1–025–10–1WCHA First Round
37March 8North Dakota2–1WisconsinAmsley-Benzie68818–9–1–026–10–1WCHA Final Face-off (Ridder Arena, Minneapolis, MN)
37March 8North Dakota0–2MinnesotaRäty2,28618–9–1–026–11–1WCHA Final Face-off (Ridder Arena, Minneapolis, MN)
38March 16North Dakota2–3Minnesota3OTRäty2,75018–9–1–026–12–1NCAA Regionals (Ridder Arena, Minneapolis, MN)

Notes:

(EX) Denotes an exhibition game

† Denotes a non-conference game

Awards and honors

Meghan Dufault, WCHA Rookie of the Week (Week of January 9, 2013) [1]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey</span> Ice hockey team in North Dakota

The North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's ice hockey team is the college ice hockey team at the Grand Forks campus of the University of North Dakota. They are members of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference (NCHC) and compete in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I ice hockey. North Dakota is widely regarded as a premier college hockey school and has one of the most storied programs in NCAA history. UND has made over 30 appearances in the NCAA tournament, appeared in the Frozen Four 22 times, and has won 8 NCAA Division I Championships. The program has also achieved 15 WCHA Regular season Championships, 5 NCHC Regular season Championships, and 12 Conference Tournament championships. The school's former nickname was the Fighting Sioux, which had a lengthy and controversial tenure before ultimately being retired by the university in 2012 due to pressure from the NCAA. The official school nickname is now the Fighting Hawks, a name that was chosen by the university on November 18, 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey</span> American college ice hockey program of Mercyhurst University

The Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey team is a college ice hockey program representing Mercyhurst University in NCAA Division I competition as a member of the College Hockey America (CHA) conference. They play in Erie, Pennsylvania at the Mercyhurst Ice Center, located on the Mercyhurst campus.

The Badgers were led by Mark Johnson, who was in his fifth season with the Badgers. The club had a 31–1–4 overall record, and a 23–1–4 conference record. The Badgers won their second straight WCHA regular season title and NCAA title.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Noora Räty</span> Finnish ice hockey goaltender and coach

Noora Helena Räty is a Finnish ice hockey goaltender and the goaltending coach of Shenzhen KRS in the Chinese Women's Ice Hockey League. She was a founding board member of the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA) and was a member of the board affiliated with the Minnesota chapter of the organization until signing a Premier Hockey Federation (PHF) contract with the Metropolitan Riveters in May 2023.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jocelyne Lamoureux</span> American ice hockey forward (born 1989)

Jocelyne Nicole Lamoureux-Davidson is a former American ice hockey player, author, gender equity advocate, and co-founder of the Lamoureux Foundation. She scored the game-winning shootout goal to win the gold medal for Team USA at the 2018 Winter Olympics against Canada after her twin sister Monique tied the game near the end of regulation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hilary Knight (ice hockey)</span> American ice hockey player

Hilary Atwood Knight is an American ice hockey forward with PWHL Boston and the United States women's national team. She previously played for the Les Canadiennes de Montréal of the CWHL and the Boston Pride of the NWHL, with whom she won the inaugural Isobel Cup.

The 2008-09 WCHA hockey season was the tenth season of WCHA women's play. Since its inception, WCHA teams have won the national championship every season. The defending NCAA champions were the WCHA's Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2006–07 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season</span>

The 2006–07 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey team were a women's ice hockey team from Minnesota, in the 2006-07 season.

The North Dakota Fighting Sioux women's ice hockey team was the college ice hockey team at the Grand Forks campus of the University of North Dakota. They were members of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) and competed in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women ice hockey.

The Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey team represented the University of Wisconsin. The team finished the season by winning the school's fourth NCAA Women's Ice Hockey Championship. Senior captain, Meghan Duggan, was awarded the 2011 Patty Kazmaier Award.

The 2010–11 WCHA women's ice hockey season marked the continuation of the annual tradition of competitive ice hockey among Western Collegiate Hockey Association members.

The 2011 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 11 and March 19, 2011 at six conference arenas and the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota. North Dakota received the Broadmoor Trophy as the tournament's champions, and was awarded the Western Collegiate Hockey Association's automatic bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.

The Wisconsin Badgers women's hockey team will represent the University of Wisconsin in the 2011–12 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Badgers failed to repeat as NCAA women's Frozen Four champions.

The North Dakota Fighting Sioux women's ice hockey team represents the University of North Dakota in the WCHA women's ice hockey conference. The team will attempt to qualify for the NCAA Frozen Four for the first time.

The 2011–12 WCHA women's ice hockey season marked the continuation of the annual tradition of competitive ice hockey among Western Collegiate Hockey Association members.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2011–12 Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey season</span> American college ice hockey season

The 2012–12 Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey season is the team's 59th season and their 53rd season as a member of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. They represent the University of Wisconsin–Madison in the 2011–12 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The team is coached by Mike Eaves, and they play their home games at Kohl Center.

The University of North Dakota men's ice hockey team competed in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association.

The 1965 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 6th conference playoff in league history. The tournament was played between March 5 and March 13, 1965. All games were played at home team campus sites. By reaching the title game both Michigan Tech and North Dakota were invited to participate in the 1965 NCAA University Division Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1996–97 North Dakota Fighting Sioux men's ice hockey season</span>

The 1996–97 North Dakota Fighting Sioux men's ice hockey team represented the University of North Dakota in college ice hockey during the 1996–97 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. In its 3rd year under head coach Dean Blais the team compiled a 31–10–2 record and reached the NCAA tournament for the thirteenth time. The Fighting Sioux defeated Boston University 6–4 to win the championship game at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2004–05 Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey season</span>

The 2004–05 Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey season was the 56th season of play for the program and 46th in the WCHA. The Pioneers represented the University of Denver in the 2004–05 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, played their home games at Magness Arena and were coached by George Gwozdecky, in his 11th season. The team won the 2005 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament, the 7th title in program history.

References