Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Volunteer Assistant |
Team | Bowling Green |
Conference | CCHA |
Playing career | |
1972–1975 | Boston University |
Position(s) | Forward |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1980–1982 | Colgate (assistant) |
1982–1988 | Bowling Green (assistant) |
1988–1989 | RIT |
1989–1994 | RPI |
1994–2002 | Bowling Green |
2002–2009 | USNTDP (assistant) |
2009–2014 | Boston University (assistant) |
2014–2022 | Dallas Stars (scout) |
2023–Present | Bowling Green (assistant) |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 255–220–41 |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
ECAC West Tournament (1989) | |
Awards | |
CCHA Coach of the Year (1995) | |
Francis "Buddy" Powers is an American former ice hockey player, coach and scout. He was the head coach for Bowling Green as well as Ice Arena Director for the Slater Family Ice Arena and color commentator for Bowling Green on The Buckeye Cable Sports Network.
Powers played left wing for three seasons at Boston University (BU) from 1972 to '75. He played 90 games during his time at BU, which placed third in the 1974 and ’75 NCAA Tournaments and compiled a 49-13-1 record over his final two years with the team. [1] After graduating from BU in 1975, Powers went on to play professional hockey in Europe. He played two years (1976–78) as a defenseman for ESV Kaufbeuren and helped the team to a Division II Championship during his first season. He finished his playing career at Krefeld, Germany in 1979-80, assisting the team to the playoff finals. [1]
During his time coaching, Powers has had five players earn First-Team All-America honors, four have been finalists for the Hobey Baker Award, including 1995 Hobey Baker Award winner Brian Holzinger. Nineteen of his former players played professional hockey in North America, with four playing in the NHL.
After finishing his professional hockey career in 1980, Powers joined the Colgate University coaching staff as an assistant coach under head coach Terry Slater. In his first season at Colgate, the team made the NCAA Tournament.
After the conclusion of the 1981-82 season, Powers became an assistant coach on the Bowling Green State University (BGSU) coaching staff under head coach Jerry York. In 1984, his first season as assistant coach, BGSU posted a 34-8-2 record and won Bowling Green's only NCAA National Championship for ice hockey. During his time as BGSU's assistant coach from 1982–1988, BGSU was the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) regular season champions in 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987 and CCHA tournament champions in 1988. The team made the NCAA tournament in 1982, 1984, 1987, and 1988. Powers served as the team’s top assistant, chief recruiter, and on-ice instructor for BGSU. Under York and Powers, the Falcons were 174-74-8 (.695 pct.), including 129-50-8 (.710 pct.) in league play and finished either first or second in the CCHA on five occasions [1] [2]
Following the 1988 season, Powers accepted the head coaching position with the Division III Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). In his first and only season with RIT, he led the Tigers to a 26-8-2 record. The team won the ECAC West Championship. The team made it to the NCAA Championship game but lost to University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point by a score of 3-2. [3]
Powers went on to become the head coach of Division I Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) for the 1989-90 season. The Engineers enjoyed improved seasons during Powers' tenure as head coach. The team qualified for the ECAC Tournament in 1990, 1992, 1993, and 1994. In 1994, the team returned to the ECAC Championship Game and the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1985. In his five seasons at RPI, Powers led the Engineers to a record of 94-63-13 including three 20-or-more-wins seasons. in 1995, Powers returned to Bowling Green, this time as head coach.
Powers was appointed the head coach at Bowling Green on July 12, 1994, becoming the fourth head coach in the program’s history. During the 1994-'95 campaign, Powers led the Falcons to a 25-11-2 record and a second-place finish in the CCHA. It marked their best finish in the league in eight years. He was named the CCHA’s Coach of the Year and was a finalist for the Spencer Penrose Award presented annually to the nation’s top head coach. Also that year, Brian Holzinger was named CCHA player of the Year. Holzinger won the NCAA All-American Award in ice hockey along with BGSU's Kelly Perrault. Holzinger became BGSU's second Hobey Baker Award winner, the other being George McPhee in 1982 during Powers' first season as BGSU's assistant coach.
Although the first half of his time as BGSU's head coach was strong, the lack of top players coming to BGSU affected his overall record; Powers finished sub-.500 in his last 5 seasons as BGSU's bench boss. Over eight seasons as BG's head coach, Powers has compiled a 135-149-26 record at Bowling Green. Powers is 12th all-time among CCHA coaches with 85 league victories with the Falcons and is 10 CCHA victories shy of entering the Top 10.
In August, 2009, Powers joined BU as an assistant coach. [4] He remained with the program until 2014 when he became an amateur scout for the Dallas Stars.
Powers served as an assistant coach at the 1989 United States Olympic Festival and as head coach at the 1993 United States Olympic Festival games. He also coached the United States during the USA Cup Challenge in 1992. Powers joined the USA Hockey National Team Development Program in 2002 and served as an assistant coach in the 2002-2003 season. [5]
Powers served on the Board of Governors of the American Hockey Coaches Association from 1993–1996 and was the director of BGSU’s Summer Hockey School held annually during the last two weeks of July. Powers was a representative of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association and BGSU on the NCAA Division I Ice Hockey Committee. He also served as Ice Arena Director at BGSU and was the color commentator for BGSU ice hockey games on BCSN.
Season | Team | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
League | GP | G | A | Pts | PIM | |||
1972-73 | Boston University | ECAC | 27 | 5 | 7 | 12 | 2 | |
1973-74 | Boston University | ECAC | 31 | 5 | 6 | 11 | 10 | |
1974-75 | Boston University | ECAC | 32 | 4 | 13 | 17 | 14 | |
Total | 90 | 14 | 26 | 40 | 26 |
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RIT Tigers (ECAC West)(1988–1989) | |||||||||
1988-89 | RIT | 26-8-2 | 19-2-1 | 1st | NCAA Runner-Up | ||||
RIT: | 26-8-2 | ||||||||
Rensselaer Engineers (ECAC Hockey)(1989–1994) | |||||||||
1989-90 | Rensselaer | 20-14-0 | 14-8-0 | 2nd | ECAC Runner-Up | ||||
1990-91 | Rensselaer | 19-12-1 | 14-8-0 | t-4th | ECAC Quarterfinals | ||||
1991-92 | Rensselaer | 14-15-4 | 6-12-4 | 10th | ECAC Semifinals | ||||
1992-93 | Rensselaer | 20-11-4 | 15-6-1 | 2nd | ECAC Third Place Game (Loss) | ||||
1993-94 | Rensselaer | 21-11-4 | 12-6-4 | 3rd | NCAA East Regional Quarterfinals | ||||
Rensselaer: | 94-63-13 | 61-40-9 | |||||||
Bowling Green Falcons (CCHA)(1994–2002) | |||||||||
1994-95 | Bowling Green | 25-11-2 | 18-7-2 | 2nd | CCHA Semifinals | ||||
1995-96 | Bowling Green | 26-14-1 | 18-11-1 | 5th | CCHA Semifinals | ||||
1996-97 | Bowling Green | 17-16-5 | 10-12-5 | t-5th | CCHA Semifinals | ||||
1997-98 | Bowling Green | 8-27-3 | 6-21-3 | 11th | |||||
1998-99 | Bowling Green | 17-18-3 | 13-14-3 | 7th | CCHA Quarterfinals | ||||
1999-00 | Bowling Green | 17-19-1 | 12-15-1 | 8th | CCHA Play-In | ||||
2000-01 | Bowling Green | 16-19-5 | 8-15-5 | t-9th | CCHA Semifinals | ||||
2001-02 | Bowling Green | 9-25-6 | 7-18-3 | 11th | CCHA First Round | ||||
Bowling Green: | 135-149-26 | 92-113-23 | |||||||
Total: | 255-220-41 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
The Slater Family Ice Arena is a 5,000-seat hockey arena on the campus of Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. It is home to the university's men's ice hockey team, the Bowling Green Falcons, which plays in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. It was built from 1965 to 1967 for a cost of $1.8 million and opened in February 1967. The arena originally had seating for 2,863 until 1989 when it was expanded to its current size of 5,000. Formerly known as the BGSU Ice Arena, it was renamed in 2016.
Ronald Herbert Mason was a Canadian ice hockey player, head coach, and university executive. A head coach of various American universities, most notably Michigan State University (MSU), he was the most successful coach in NCAA ice hockey history between 1993 and 2012 with 924 wins, until Jerry York became the new winningest coach with his 925th career win on December 29, 2012. Mason was athletic director at MSU from 2002 to 2008. He then served as senior advisor for the USHL Muskegon Lumberjacks. On December 2, 2013, Mason was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.
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The Bowling Green Falcons ice hockey team is the ice hockey team that represents Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. The school's team competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. The Falcons last played in the NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament in 2019. The Falcons have won one NCAA Division I championship, coming in 1984, defeating the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs in the longest championship game in the tournament's history.
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