Cornell women's ice hockey huddles at the net before action at Lynah Rink.
Ned Dykes/Cornell Athletics

Union, RPI Up Next For #4 Big Red

By Aaron Kelly, Assistant Director of Athletic Communications
Friday, Nov. 21, 2025 • 6 p.m. • Schenectady, N.Y. • M&T Bank Center | Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025 • 3 p.m. • Troy, N.Y. • Houston Field House

Cornell Big Red (8-1-0, 5-1-0 ECACH)

Head Coach: Doug Derraugh
Record at Cornell: 383-194-55 (19th year)
Career Record: 383-194-55 (19th year)

Union Garnet Chargers (5-7-2, 1-5-0 ECACH)

Head Coach: Tony Maci
Record at Union: 18-30-3 (2nd year)
Career Record: 18-30-3 (2nd year)

Cornell Big Red (8-1-0, 5-1-0 ECACH)

Head Coach: Doug Derraugh
Record at Cornell: 383-194-55 (19th year)
Career Record: 383-194-55 (19th year)

 

 

 

RPI Engineers (4-11-0, 1-5-0 ECACH)

Head Coach: Bryan Vines
Record at RPI: 72-164-20 (8th year)
Career Record: 72-164-20 (8th year)

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Cornell women's ice hockey during the national anthem at Lynah Rink.
Cornell women's ice hockey celebrates a goal in front of the student section at Lynah Rink.

Doug Derraugh '91
The Everett Family Head Coach of Cornell Women's Ice Hockey

Doug Derraugh Cropped Headshot
Doug Derraugh

Having now spent 19 seasons directing the Cornell women's hockey program, Doug Derraugh has brought the Big Red to their place among the nation’s elite. Taking a program that won just four games in the season prior to his arrival, Derraugh guided the Big Red to the national title game in his fifth season and back-to-back-to-back NCAA Frozen Four appearances in 2010, 2011 and 2012, completely turning around the culture of the women’s hockey program at Cornell. Derraugh once again guided the Big Red to Frozen Four in 2019. He became the first Everett Family Head Coach of Women’s Ice Hockey when the position was endowed in December 2020.

Derraugh has a 375-193-55 record in 19 seasons as the head coach of the Big Red. He led the team to five consecutive 20-win seasons for the first time in program history in 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13 and 2013-2014. Cornell has won the ECAC Hockey tournament five times and has advanced to the NCAA Tournament 10 times.

The Big Red's success from 2010-13 was the culmination of the groundwork laid during the first four seasons under Derraugh's direction. In 2008-09, he guided the Big Red to its second straight ECAC Hockey tournament appearance and a 12-14-5 overall record. In 2007-08, the Big Red claimed its first spot in the ECAC Hockey playoffs since the 2003-04 season, finishing the year with a 12-17-1 mark and an eighth-place finish in the league race.

Cornell could attribute its early-Derraugh tenure success to the its focus on both sides of the ice, leading the nation in penalty-killing percentage in both 2010 and 2011, and recording the nation's top scoring defense in 2011 and the second-best scoring defense in 2013. The 2011-12 team had the nation’s best scoring offense and winning percentage.

In 2010, Derraugh led the Big Red to its first Ivy League title since 1996 and the program's first-ever ECAC Hockey regular-season and tournament titles. The Big Red also won an ECAC Hockey playoff game and series for the first time in school history, then remained unbeaten with two more wins in the playoffs to advance to the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history….
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The Cornell Women's Ice Hockey Coaching Staff
Edith Racine, 2013 headshot
Edith Racine
Tim Crowley 2022-23 Headshot
Tim Crowley
Louise Derraugh
Louise Derraugh
Katy Harris, 2023 headshot
Katy Harris
Dane Schreiner, 2017
Dane Schreiner
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Game Notes

PUCK DROP

• The no. 4-ranked Cornell women's ice hockey team will travel to face ECAC Hockey foes Union and RPI.

• Puck drop is set for 6 p.m on Friday afternoon at M&T Bank Arena, and 3:00 p.m. on Saturday afternoon at Houston Field House. Game action will be broadcast on ESPN+.

THE SERIES

• Friday night will mark the 45th meeting all-time between Cornell and Union, with the Big Red leading the all-time series 39-2-3.

• Saturday afternoon will mark the 43rd meeting all-time between Cornell and RPI, with the Big Red leading the all-time series 34-8-0.

SCOUTING THE OPPOSITION

• Union enters the weekend with a 5-7-2 record after splitting the weekend with RPI. The Garnet Chargers dropped the first game of that series 1-2 in overtime, but bounced back in the second game with a 7-4 win.

•  Maddie Leaney leads the Bulldogs in points with 11 on six goals and five assists. Quinn Dunkle (5 goals. 5 assists) and Karianne Engelbert (4 goals, six assists) are next in line with 10.

• Monja Wagner has led time between the pipes for Union, making 207 saves (.900) with a 3-3-2 record. Wagner earned a shutout victory over Franklin Pierce.

• RPI enters the weekend with a 4-11-0 record after splitting the weekend with Union. The Engineers won the first game of that series 2-1 in overtime, but fell in the second game with a 7-4 setback.

• Charlotte Wensley leads the Engineers in points with 9 on seven goals and two assist.

• Reese Keating has led time between the pipes for RPI, making 309 saves (.904) with a 3-8 record.

Cornell hoists the ECAC Hockey Championship trophy at Lynah Rink

ECAC HOCKEY PRESEASON POLL

The Cornell women's ice hockey team was chosen to repeat at ECAC Hockey Champions in the preseason poll. The Big Red claimed eight of the 12 first place votes. 

Poll Results 
1. Cornell - 8 first place votes
2. Colgate - 2 first place votes
3. Clarkson - 2 first place votes
T4. St. Lawrence
T4. Quinnipiac
6. Princeton
7. Yale
8. Brown
9. Union
10. Harvard
11. Dartmouth
12. RPI

PRESEASON ALL-ECAC HOCKEY

• Reigning ECAC Hockey Goaltender of The Year Annelies Bergmann was named unanimous first-team.

• Newly appointed captain and defender Grace Dwyer was also distinguished with preseason All-ECAC honors.

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Lynah Rink

If you’ve never been to a Big Red hockey game at Cornell’s James Lynah Rink, there are quite a few things you’ve never experienced. You’ve never camped out in line just to get season tickets and ensure your spot as one of the raucous and devoted "Lynah Faithful." But most importantly, if you’ve never been to Lynah, you’ve never really experienced all the best that college hockey has to offer.

Lynah Rink, which turned 50 years old in 2007, is the home of Big Red hockey. The rink, which was dedicated April 6, 1957, was named in honor of the late James Lynah (class of 1905), director of athletics at Cornell from 1935-43.

Cornell began sponsoring a hockey team in 1900-01. All the Big Red’s home games were played on the university’s outdoor rink at Beebe Lake until the 1947-48 season when a series of abnormally mild winters left the team on "thin ice" at Beebe, causing Cornell to drop its hockey program entirely. Fortunately, the construction of Lynah Rink gave the team a new home, enabling Cornell to resume ice hockey as a varsity sport for the 1957-58 season.

Lynah has received a facelift or two since its inaugural game on March 21, 1957, between the N.Y. Rangers of the NHL and the Rochester Americans of the AHL. During the summer of 2006, the rink underwent a 16,700 square foot expansion that added new locker rooms, coaches offices, study lounges, new athletic training space and the addition of approximately 450 new seats. Prior to the expansion of the support space, the university spent nearly $1 million in renovations to Lynah in the summer of 2000, replacing the rink floor, drainage system, frost protection and refrigeration piping, as well as adding new boards and seamless glass.

Though many physical aspects of Lynah Rink have changed over the years, one thing remains constant: the crowd. Lynah is capable of holding 4,267 boisterous Cornell hockey fans who provide unwavering support for the Big Red and create an atmosphere that is unparalleled in the sport of college hockey. Although many rinks in the nation are larger in seating capacity, few are known to be louder. The Cornell fans, aptly named the "Lynah Faithful," stream into every home contest and make themselves as much a part of the game as the players do. Whether they’re cheering for the Big Red or joining the pep band in their rendition of "Give My Regards to Davy," the Lynah Faithful reaffirm the old saying, "there’s no place like home." 

Both the men's and women's ice hockey teams always play in front of crowds that rank among the NCAA's largest - and certainly rank as the best.

Since Lynah Rink opened, Cornell has won two NCAA men’s hockey championships (1967 and 1970), an ECAC Hockey record 12 tournament championships (1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1980, 1986, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2005, 2010) and 15 outright Ivy League titles; the Big Red tied for the crown four times. The women advanced to the NCAA title game in 2010 and have won ECAC regular season title in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2019 and 2020, with tournament titles in 2010, 2011, 2013 and 2014. It has claimed 15 Ivy League titles, including 13 outright, and have qualified for the NCAA Tournament eight times with Frozen Four appearances in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2019.

The Cornell Big Red women's ice hockey team competes against Clarkson on Friday, Jan. 31, 2020 in Lynah Rink in Ithaca, NY.
Big Red Women's Ice Hockey History
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