Members of the Cornell men's hockey team celebrate scoring a goal against Michigan State on March 27, 2025, at the Huntington Center in Toledo, Ohio.
Adam Sheehan/Cornell Athletics

#16 Men's Hockey Readies to Battle #8 Boston University With Frozen Four Bid On Line

Cornell Big Red (19-10-6, 10-8-4 ECAC)

Jay R. Bloom ‘77 Head Coach of Men’s Hockey: Mike Schafer '86
Record at Cornell: 561-299-117 (30th season)
Career Record: Same
Last Game: defeated #1 Michigan State, 4-3 (3/27/25)

#8 Boston University Terriers (22-13-2, 14-8-2 HEA)

Head Coach: Jay Pandolfo
Record at Boston University: 79-34-4 (3rd season)
Career Record: Same
Last Game: defeated Ohio State, 8-3 (3/27/25)

Mike Schafer '86
The Jay R. Bloom ‘77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Ice Hockey

Mike Schafer, 2008 headshot
Mike Schafer '86

Mike Schafer ‘86, the longest-tenured head coach in Cornell men’s hockey history, is currently in his 30th and final season at the helm of the Cornell men’s hockey program after announcing on June 13, 2024, that he will retire following the conclusion of the 2024-25 season.

Former Cornell standout centerman and assistant coach, and current associate head coach, Casey Jones ‘90 will replace Schafer beginning with the 2025-26 season.

When Schafer returned to his alma mater in the summer of 1995 to become the 12th head coach in Cornell men’s hockey history, Schafer’s goal was to bring the Big Red to a position of national prominence.

Schafer has accomplished that objective with his career coaching record of 561-299-117. His 561 victories are the second-most by any Cornell coach with a single team, trailing former softball head coach Dick Blood (623).

Cornell has consistently been ranked among the nation’s elite under Schafer, which includes the Big Red being ranked in the top 20 of the USCHO.com poll 443 times since its inception in 1997-98.

Along with being one of Cornell’s legendary head coaches, Schafer’s 561 career victories and .634 win percentage rank fourth among active Division I men's coaches with at least 200 victories.

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The 2024-25 Cornell Men's Hockey Coaching Staff
Headshots taken on Coaches & Staff headshot day on July 31, 2024 at Schoellkopf House in Ithaca, N.Y.
Casey Jones '90
Sean Flanagan 2023 Headshot
Sean Flanagan
Corey Leivermann 2024-25 Headshot
Corey Leivermann

Casey Jones ’90, was appointed as Cornell’s associate head coach on June 13, 2024, marking Jones’ third instance of being on the Big Red’s coaching staff, and his second under Mike Schafer ’86, the Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Ice Hockey.

Jones will assume the position of the Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Hockey, becoming the 13th head coach in Cornell program history following Mike Schafer ’86's retirement upon the conclusion of the 2024-25 season.

Returning to East Hill following a 13-year tenure at fellow ECAC Hockey rival Clarkson, Jones amassed a record of 234-185-56 (.552) with the Golden Knights. He received the Tim Taylor Award, ECAC Hockey’s Coach of the Year, in 2019, bookended by two of Schafer’s five times being honored with the yearly award.

During his time in Potsdam, Clarkson registered six 20-win seasons, four of which came during a five-year stretch between 2015 and 2020. Clarkson, who finished within the top 16 in the pairwise rankings for five consecutive years from 2017-22, made a pair of NCAA Tournament appearances in 2018 and 2019, and was poised for a third consecutive trip in 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic halted those aspirations. The Golden Knights made the ECAC Hockey semifinal on three occasions (2018, 2019, 2022) under Jones, which included winning the 2019 ECAC Hockey Tournament championship.

Prior to his first head coaching appointment, Jones returned to his alma mater for a three-year stint from 2008-11, serving as the associate head coach under Schafer. During Jones’ second stint on the Big Red’s coaching staff, Cornell appeared in two NCAA Tournaments and won the 2010 ECAC Hockey Championship title. With Jones on staff, the Big Red registered a 59-34-11 (.620) record and a 38-20-8 (.636) mark in ECAC Hockey contests.

Jones returned to East Hill after coaching at Ohio State for 13 seasons from 1995-2008 on John Markell’s staff. He served as an assistant coach for nine years (1995-2004) before being elevated to associate head coach for his remaining four years with the Buckeyes.

While at Ohio State, Jones served as the program’s recruiting coordinator, aiding in the recruitment of 20 NHL draft picks — including a trio of first-round picks in R.J. Umberger (16th overall in 2001), Dave Steckel (30th overall in 2001), and Ryan Kesler (23rd overall in 2003).

Known for being a staunch recruiter, the Buckeyes earned five NCAA Tournament appearances, highlighted by a trip to the 1998 Frozen Four where they fell to Boston College in the national semifinal. Ohio State won one Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) Super Six title in 2004, defeating Michigan for the program’s first CCHA championship in 32 seasons.

One year following his graduation from Cornell in 1990 with a degree in business management, Jones found his spot behind Cornell’s bench, serving as an assistant coach under Brian McCutcheon, the head coach whom he played for. Jones spent two seasons on McCutcheon’s staff from 1991-93 before making the move north to Clarkson for a two-year stint as an assistant coach on Mark Morris’ staff from 1993-95. While with the Golden Knights, Clarkson generated a 43-19-9 (.669) record, winning the 1995 ECAC Hockey Championship and earning a berth into the NCAA Tournament.

Sean Flanagan is entering his ninth season as an assistant coach on the men's hockey team for the 2024-25 season. During Flanagan's time on East Hill, the Big Red has posted a 170-66-33 (.693) overall record and a 110-40-26 (.699) mark in ECAC Hockey play.

Flanagan oversees Cornell's power play unit, which has converted at a 20 percent clip or better in four of the last six seasons. In 2022-23, Cornell posted a 24.6 power-play percentage that led all ECAC Hockey programs and ranked seventh nationally. During the 2019-20 season, Cornell posted a 26.4 conversion rate that ranked second in ECAC Hockey and fifth among Division I programs.

In addition to overseeing Cornell's power play, Flanagan has played a pivotal role in working with the team's centers on faceoffs. The Big Red has ranked in the top 10 nationally in faceoff win percentage each of the last three years and five of the last six seasons. Cornell had the fifth-highest faceoff win percentage in 2022-23 behind its 54.4 conversion rate. During the 2023-24 campaign, Cornell won 54.2 percent of its draws, highlighted by Gabriel Seger '24 winning 488 faceoffs, ranking fifth nationally. Seger's .588 faceoff win percentage was seventh among Division I players with 600-plus faceoffs taken.

Flanagan helped Cornell post the nation's highest winning percentage in 2017-18 (.788) and 2019-20 (.862). The Big Red has won three Cleary Cups, awarded annually to the team that wins the circuit's regular-season championship, and a 2024 ECAC Hockey Championship title with Flanagan behind Cornell's bench.

Cornell was a stellar 23-2-4 in the 2019-20 regular season before the remainder of the campaign was canceled nationwide due to COVID-19 concerns.

Flanagan joined the Big Red after serving as the director of hockey operations at UMass Lowell during the 2015-16 season. Prior to his time there, Flanagan was an assistant coach at Hobart — a Division III school in Geneva, N.Y. — for three seasons (2012-15), working under former Cornell assistant coach Mark Taylor.

While with the Statesmen, Flanagan helped build a team that won ECAC West titles in 2015 and 2016 and reached the NCAA Tournament, where it was the No. 1 seed in the East Region in 2016.

Corey Leivermann is in his first season as a member of the Cornell men's hockey staff, joining the program on Aug. 26 as an assistant coach.

Leivermann joined the Big Red after spending the 2023-24 season as an associate head coach under Brett Skinner with the Fargo Force of the United States Hockey League (USHL). Fargo had a successful 2023-24 campaign, highlighted by its USHL-record 50 regular-season wins (50-10-2) and concluding their year by winning its second-ever Clark Cup title.

Before his time in Fargo, Leivermann was an associate head coach with the Madison Capitols for two years before being elevated to general manager and head coach of the Capitols for the 2022-23 campaign.

While with Madison, Leivermann coached Cornell forward Nick DeSantis during the 2021-22 season, where DeSantis posted 45 points (15 goals, 30 assists) in 60 games played.

Following his one season of playing professional hockey with the Mississippi RiverKings in the SPHL in 2014-15, Leivermann joined the Wichita Falls Wildcats of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) as a scout for the 2015-16 season. He spent the next season as the general manager and head coach of the Jersey Shore Wildcats, a NA3HL team, before returning to Wichita Falls to serve as an assistant coach for the remainder of the season upon the conclusion of the NA3HL season.

He remained in the NAHL for the next three seasons, working with the Janesville Jets, where he assumed the role of assistant coach for the entire 2017-18 season and the first half of the 2018-19 campaign before being elevated to head coach on Jan. 2, 2019, a role he held for a year and a half. He also served as the Jets' director of scouting for two years (2018-20).

Game Notes

PUCK DROP

Looking to increase its seven-game win streak and clinch its first Frozen Four appearance since 2003, the No. 16-ranked Cornell men’s hockey team (19-10-6) will battle one of its storied rivals, second-seeded and No. 8-ranked Boston University (22-13-2), in the Toledo Regional final at the Huntington Center this afternoon.

Puck drop is set for 4 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPNU and ESPN+ with Kevin Gehl calling the play-by-play and Sean Ritchlin providing analysis. Jason Weinstein (play-by-play) and Tony Eisenhut ‘88 (analysis) will also have the call over the airwaves on WHCU (870 AM, 97.7 FM, cortacatoday.com).

ROAD TO ST. LOUIS

Cornell is participating in its 25th NCAA Division I Men’s Hockey Championship this weekend. It is the 10th-most appearances by any program and the second-most by the 12 members of ECAC Hockey, trailing fellow Ivy League program and bitter rival Harvard (27).

Joining the Big Red in the Toledo Regional this weekend are second-overall seed Michigan State (29th appearance), Boston University (40th appearance), and Ohio State (11th appearance).

Last season, Cornell defeated Maine, 3-1, in the semifinal of the Springfield Regional powered by a two-goal outing from then-junior forward Sullivan Mack and a 31-save performance from then-junior goaltender Ian Shane. The Big Red lost in the final of the Springfield Regional to Denver, the eventual national champions, 2-1.

NOT HIS FIRST RODEO

Mike Schafer ‘86, the Jay R. Bloom ‘77 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Ice Hockey, is coaching in his 15th and final NCAA Tournament this weekend, as Schafer announced on this past June 13 that he would be retiring at the conclusion of the 2024-25 season.

Schafer is one of three head coaches in this year’s tournament to have coached in at least 10 NCAA Tournaments, joined by Minnesota’s Bob Motzko (13) and Quinnipiac’s Rand Pecknold (11). The first eight of Motzko’s trips to the tournament came while at St. Cloud State.

Schafer, who coached his first NCAA Tournament game in his first year at the helm of the Big Red program during the 1995-96 season, has an overall record of 12-14 (.462) in NCAA Tournament contests, and has won at least one tournament game in each of his last three trips.

Schafer, a 1986 graduate of Cornell, is one of six head coaches in this year’s tournament to be coaching their alma mater. He is joined by Boston College’s Greg Brown, Denver’s David Carle, Western Michigan’s Pat Ferschweiler, Michigan State’s Adam Nightingale, and Boston University’s Jan Pandolfo.

IT'S NOT OVER ‘TIL IT’S OVER

Senior forward Sullivan Mack’s power-play goal at the 59:50 mark of regulation serves as the program’s fifth-latest game-winning goal scored in regulation.

It was the latest game-winning goal since Ben Berard ‘23 tallied his third goal of a Nov. 6, 2021, contest against Dartmouth at Thompson Arena in Hanover, N.H., which came with six seconds left.

Along with Berard, Roy Kerling (Feb. 26, 1982 — 59:59; Jan. 25, 1978 — 59:52) and Alec McCrae (Nov. 11, 2017 — 59:58) were the others to have scored with less seconds on the clock.

McCrae and Mack are the only two Big Red players in program history to have scored game-winning goals while on the power play with 10 seconds or less remaining in regulation.

STREAK EXTENDED

With its win over RPI on March 1, Cornell registered its eighth consecutive season with at least 10 victories in ECAC Hockey play.

The streak is the third-longest in program history, trailing behind a 19-year span from 1964-65 to 1982-83, and the most recent streak of 13 consecutive seasons from 1999-00 to 2011-12. Under Mike Schafer ‘86, the Big Red has achieved at least 10 conference victories in 24 out of the 29 seasons.

Entering this afternoon with 19 victories, the Big Red is seeking to register its third consecutive season with at least 20 victories. A win on Saturday would be 15th time in Schafer’s tenure as head coach that the Big Red has amassed 20 wins in a season.

RED-HOT RED

All three facets of Cornell’s game have been clicking on all cylinders recently, as the Big Red enters this weekend as one of two Division I programs (Quinnipiac) that has averaged at least 3.75 goals scored per game while allowing under 2.00 goals against per game, dating back to Feb. 14.

Cornell’s 3.92 goals per game average since Feb. 14 (47 goals in 12 games) ranks third nationally, trailing Western Michigan (4.77 — 62 goals in 13 games) and Quinnipiac (4.22 — 38 goals in 9 games). Boston University (3.90 — 39 goals in 10 games) is the closest program during the timeframe to average four goals per game.

Cornell’s 47 goals scored rank as the third-most by a Division I program since Feb. 14, behind NCHC foes Western Michigan (62) and Denver (50), and is ahead of Boston University (39) and ECAC Hockey rivals Quinnipiac (38) and Clarkson (37). 

While Cornell’s offense has been on a roll recently, so has the Big Red’s defense, which ranks fourth in goals allowed per game (1.58). Only Minnesota State (1.11 — 10 goals in 9 games), LIU (1.33 — 8 goals in 6 games), and Quinnipiac (1.44 — 13 goals in 9 games) have better averages. The Big Red also owns the fifth-best penalty kill (88.6 percent — 31-of-35), trailing Stonehill (11-of-11), Lindenwood (93.3 percent — 14-of-15), Holy Cross (90.6 percent — 29-of-32), and Boston College (89.3 percent — 25-of-28). 

With an average margin of victory of +2.33 since Feb. 14, Cornell is only behind Quinnipiac (+2.78) for the best scoring margin during the period while serving as one of five teams (Minnesota State — +2.22; LIU — +2.00; Western Michigan — +2.00) to have an average win margin of two goals.

Cornell is tied with Western Michigan (seven games) for the longest active win streak heading into Saturday's contests.

FINDING HIS SCORING TOUCH

Junior forward Dalton Bancroft (15-11—26) has scored at least 20 points in each of his first three seasons with the Big Red, making him the 49th player in program history to reach the milestone.

Under Mike Schafer ‘86, Bancroft is the 10th player to reach the milestone, joining Kyle Knopp (1995-98), Ryan Moynihan (1996-99), Ryan Vesce (2000-03), Matt Moulson (2002-05), Topher Scott (2004-07), Riley Nash (2007-10), Brian Ferlin (2011-14), Joel Lowry (2011-14), and Anthony Angello (2015-18).

Fueled by his 36 goals, Bancroft is tied with Angello and Vesce for the fourth-most goals scored by a player in their first three seasons with the Big Red during Schafer’s 30-year coaching career.

If Bancroft scores a goal on Saturday, he will tie Nash for the third-most goals, while a two-goal game would match Colin Greening for the second-most goals in a player’s first three seasons under Schafer’s tutelage.

In addition to his 42 assists, Bancroft is one of five players to tally at least 35 goals and assists over his first three seasons with Cornell, joining Vesce (36-66—102), Nash (37-64—101), Moulson (53-47—100), and Greening (38-42—80).

With his awarded short-handed, empty-net goal against Colgate in the series-clinching win on March 15, Bancroft became the first Cornell player to have a 15-goal season since Morgan Barron (15) in 2018-19.

KILL, RED, KILL

Cornell went 7-for-7 on its short-handed opportunities in its series-clinching win over Colgate on March 15, marking the first time the Big Red did not allow a power-play goal on at least seven opposing power play chances since Oct. 28, 2017, when it went 7-for-7 against Alabama-Huntsville.

The last time Cornell had a perfect penalty kill on at least seven opposing power plays in a postseason contest was against Michigan on March 23, 2012, in the Midwest Regional semifinal of the NCAA Tournament, where it killed all seven Wolverine power plays.

During the 2025 portion of the season, Cornell’s penalty kill has ranked among the best in Division I hockey, successfully killing 61 of its opponents’ last 70 power-play opportunities (87.1 percent), placing the Big Red fourth nationally and third among ECAC Hockey programs. The programs ahead of the Big Red are Holy Cross (90.5 percent — 67-of-74), Quinnipiac (90.0 percent — 54-of-60), and Dartmouth (87.5 percent — 42-of-48).

Since Jan. 18, the Big Red has given up six power-play goals over its last 57 penalty kills, leading to its 89.5 percent success rate. Cornell is one of three Division I hockey programs that has at least a 90 percent penalty kill during the period, joining Dartmouth (90.2 percent — 37-of-41) and Holy Cross (90.0 percent — 54-of-60).

HOCKEY HUMANITARIAN AWARD

After being selected as one of 14 nominees for the 2025 Hockey Humanitarian Award, senior defenseman Hank Kempf was named one of five finalists by the Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation on Feb. 12.

Joining Kempf as finalists are Bemidji State’s Kendra Fortin, Boston College’s Keri Clougherty, Merrimack’s Raice Szott, and St. Lawrence’s Sarah Thompson.

Kempf is the fourth consecutive nominee from either Big Red hockey program and the sixth finalist from Cornell for the award, joining former women’s hockey players Erin Schmalz ’99, Alyssa Gagliardi ’14, and Morgan Richardson ’16. Sam Paolini ’03 is the only other men’s player to be a finalist, winning the award in 2003. Since the award was introduced in 1997, Kempf’s nomination marks the 10th time a Big Red player has been nominated and is the only Big Red student-athlete to be nominated multiple times. The nomination is the fifth time a member of the Cornell men’s program has been considered for the prestigious award, joining Paolini, Topher Scott ‘08, and Andy Iles ‘10.

IT'S AWARD SEASON!

Award season is in full swing, with numerous Cornell players receiving honors from both ECAC Hockey and the Ivy League over the past couple of weeks.

Senior defenseman Tim Rego and junior forward Dalton Bancroft were the only Big Red players honored by both leagues. Rego earned First Team All-Ivy honors on March 12 after receiving Third Team All-ECAC Hockey recognition the day prior. Bancroft was chosen for the second team in both the ECAC Hockey and Ivy League awards.

Sophomore forward Ryan Walsh joined Rego and Bancroft in earning All-Ivy awards, being one of two unanimous First Team All-Ivy selections alongside Dartmouth’s CJ Foley. Senior goaltender Ian Shane received Honorable Mention All-Ivy distinctions, while senior forward Sullivan Mack earned Academic All-Ivy honors.

Last Thursday, at the ECAC Hockey’s annual awards banquet in Lake Placid, N.Y., senior defenseman Hank Kempf was named the recipient of the inaugural ECAC Hockey Project Rousseau Men’s Community Service Award.

Kempf has been active within the Cornell and Ithaca communities, aiding several not-for-profit organizations that help various community members. His efforts have included supporting elementary school children and children with disabilities, organizing local fundraisers for charities, and raising funds for cancer research.

LOOKING TO MAKE HISTORY

With a win over Boston University this afternoon, Cornell would become just the sixth school to send both of its hockey teams teams to the Frozen Four in the same season and would become the first ECAC Hockey program to accomplish the feat.

Minnesota was the first school to do so in 2002, the first year of the women’s championship, and has done it six times (2002, 2003, 2005, 2012, 2014, 2023). Boston College has accomplished the feat three times (2007, 2012, 2016), and Wisconsin (2006), Ohio State (2018), and Minnesota Duluth (2021)have done so once apiece.

SHANE'S WORLD, IT'S PARTY TIME, EXCELLENT!

Senior goaltender Ian Shane has excelled in the crease during his time on East Hill. Throughout his 117 career appearances for the Big Red, Shane boasts a 66-31-16 record with a 1.84 goals-against average and a .917 save percentage.

With his victory on Thursday against Michigan State, Shane broke his tie with David McKee and Ben Scrivens ‘10 for second place on the Big Red’s all-time wins chart. Shane only trails Cornell Athletics and Hockey Hall of Fame goaltender Ken Dryden ‘69 (76) for the all-time lead.

Shane is tied with Wisconsin’s Tommy Scarfone (66) for the second-most wins by an active Division I goaltenders, only trailing Western Michigan’s Cameron Rowe (69). Denver’s Matt Davis (61) is the only other player with 60-plus wins.

He is also one of 10 goaltenders that has registered at least 50 victories, accompanied by Boston College’s Jacob Fowler (56), Boston University’s Mathieu Caron and Clarkson’s Ethan Langenegger (54), North Dakota’s TJ Semptimphelter (53), Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl and Minnesota’s Liam Souliere (52).

After making 21 saves in Cornell’s 3-0 shutout over Colgate on March 14, Shane notched his 14th career shutout, breaking his tie with Dryden for the fourth-highest total in program history.

Shane’s 14 shutouts are tied with Bentley’s Connor Hasley for the most blankings by a Division I goaltender, while serving as one of four netminders with 10-plus shutouts, joined by Wisconsin’s Tommy Scarfone (12) and Boston College’s Jacob Fowler (10).

2K SHANE

With his first save against St. Lawrence on Jan. 31, senior goaltender Ian Shane recorded his 2,000th save, becoming Cornell’s 10th goaltender to reach the milestone, joining Andy Iles ‘14, Ben Scrivens ‘10, Jason Elliott ‘98, Mitch Gillam ‘17, Corrie D’Alessio ‘91, Brian Hayward ‘82, David McKee ‘06, Darren Eliot ‘83, and Matt Underhill ‘02.

Shane surpassed both Hayward and D’Alessio for the fifth-most stops by a Cornell goaltender in program history following his 22-save outing last Friday against Quinnipiac in the semifinals of the 2025 ECAC Hockey Championship in Lake Placid, N.Y. He enters Saturday’s game trailing Mitch Gillam ‘17 by 98 saves for the fourth-most saves in program history.

Shane’s 2,305 career stops rank 14th among active Division I goaltenders and is one of 10 players to have made at least 2,000 saves all with the same program: Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl (2,775), Colorado College’s Kaidan Mbereko (2,499), Bowling Green’s Christian Stoever (2,412), Omaha’s Simon Latkoczy (2,395), Air Force’s Guy Blessing (2,272), RPI’s Jack Watson (2,141), Holy Cross’ Thomas Gale (2,109), Providence’s Philip Svedebäck (2,082), and St. Thomas’ Aaron Trotter (2,059).

JOINING RAREFIED COMPANY

With his appearance against Quinnipiac on Jan. 18, senior goaltender Ian Shane became the fourth Big Red goaltender in program history to appear in 100 career games with Cornell, joining Andy Iles ‘14, Ben Scrivens ‘10, and David McKee.

Shane’s 117 career appearances are tied with Scrivens for second in Cornell program history. With an appearance on Saturday, he would match Iles (118 from 2010-14) for the most games played by a Cornell goaltender.

Entering Saturday, Shane is one of eight active Division I goaltenders to have played in at least 100 career games, joining the likes of Western Michigan’s Cameron Rowe (123), Wisconsin’s Tommy Scarfone (122), Clarkson’s Ethan Langenegger (120), Bemidji State’s Mattias Sholl (117), Boston University’s Mathieu Caron (111), Minnesota’s Liam Souliere (109), and North Dakota’s T.J. Semptimphelter (101). Of the eight goaltenders with 100 career appearances, Shane and Sholl are the only players who have registered all of their games played within the same program.

MAKING A NAME FOR HIMSELF

Senior goaltender Ian Shane has an impressive career goals-against average of 1.84, ranking as the 14th-best in Division I hockey history. Shane is one of 40 goalies to have played at least 1,500 minutes in net while maintaining a sub-2.00 goals-against average.

Cornell boasts four of the top 10 career goals-against averages in NCAA history, making it one of only two programs, along with Michigan State, to have multiple representatives in the top 10.

Shane and Ben Scrivens ‘10 (1.93) account for six of the 40 sub-2.00 career goals-against averages in NCAA history, the most for any Division I program. Other Division I programs with multiple sub-2.00 goals-against averages include Quinnipiac (four), Maine (three), and Denver, Miami, Michigan State, Michigan Tech, Minnesota State, and Notre Dame (two each).

Among active Division I goaltenders with at least 1,500 minutes, Shane is one of five netminders boasting a career goals-against average below 2.00, alongside Boija (1.84), Sacred Heart’s Ajeet Gundarah (1.90), Boston College’s Jacob Fowler (1.91), and Minnesota State’s Alex Tracy (1.92).

Shane’s .917 save percentage enters this weekend ranked as the 12th-highest figure among all active Division I goaltenders that have played at least 1,500 minutes played. He trails Omaha’s Simon Latkoczy (.918) by seven ten-thousandths of a point.

JONNY-ON-THE-DOT

Since the calendar year turned to 2025, sophomore forward Jonathan Castagna has been one of Cornell’s most reliable players at the faceoff dot, winning 60.7 percent of the draws he has taken (193 of 318), trailing Western Michigan’s Tim Washe (65.9 percent — 284 of 431) and Dartmouth’s Luke Haymes (63.1 percent — 229 of 363) for the best faceoff percentage.

This season, Castagna has achieved a team-leading 58.1 percent success rate in faceoffs (276 out of 475), ranking 11th nationally and second among ECAC Hockey players with at least 200 faceoff wins, behind Haymes (63.1 percent — 243 of 385).

LUCK OF THE DRAW

The success that sophomore forwards Ryan Walsh (411 faceoff wins, 56.2 percent) and Jonathan Castagna (276 faceoff wins, 58.1 percent) have had on faceoffs has allowed Cornell to become one of eight Division I programs (Bentley — three; Colorado College, LIU, Maine, Penn State, RIT, and Wisconsin) with multiple players having at least a 56 percent success rate on at least 200 faceoff wins.

Walsh’s team-leading 411 faceoff wins rank as the 12th-highest total in Division I hockey while placing himself third among ECAC Hockey players, only behind Brown’s Max Scott (463) and Clarkson’s Ellis Rickwood (430).

Averaging 11.74 faceoff wins per game this season, which ranks ninth nationally, Walsh is among 11 Division I hockey players that average at least 11.50 faceoff wins per game.

Entering Saturday’s game, Walsh has recorded at least 10 faceoff wins in 23 games this season and has secured at least 13 draws on 17 occasions, which included going 19-for-29 (.655) at the dot in Thursday’s win over Michigan State.

Walsh is tied with Bentley’s Ethan Leyh and Western Michigan’s Tim Washe for the seventh-most games featuring 13 or more faceoff wins this season. Only Air Force’s Clayton Cosentino (26), Brown’s Max Scott and Niagara’s Tyler Wallace (21), Denver’s Carter King and Notre Dame’s Danny Nelson (20), and Bemidji State’s Jackson Jutting (18) are those with higher totals.

ON THE PLUS SIDE…

Prior to Friday’s contests, senior forwards Ondrej Psenicka (plus-58) and Kyle Penney (plus-51) and senior defenseman Tim Rego (plus-57) all have career plus-minus ratings of plus-50, joining Boston College as the only Division I programs with three players who have career plus-minus ratings of plus-50.

With Psenicka and Rego’s figures being above plus-55, Cornell is one of three programs (Boston College and Denver) with multiple players having plus-55 ratings.

In addition to the ratings of Psenicka, Rego, and Penney, senior forward Jack O’Leary (plus-42) and senior defenseman Hank Kempf (plus-40) makes Cornell one of three Division I programs (Boston College and Denver) that boast at least five players with career plus-minus ratings of plus-40.

Psenicka and Rego’s plus-minus ratings, which rank seventh and eighth nationally, respectively, represent the top two career plus-minus ratings in program history, dating back to 2002-03, when plus-minus was first tracked for a full year. Greg Miller ’13 (plus-52), Travis Mitchell ‘23 (plus-51), and Penney are the other players with career ratings of plus-50.

WHAT CAN BLUE(LINERS) DO FOR YOU?

Of the Big Red’s 294 points this season, 88 (16 goals, 72 assists) have been contributed by its defense corps, accounting for 29.9 percent of the team’s scoring production.

The Big Red’s 29.9 percent of points from defensemen enters Saturday’s game as the seventh-best average nationally, trailing Merrimack (32.2 percent), Colgate (31.83 percent), Robert Morris (31.78 percent), Princeton (31.0 percent), Colorado College (30.9 percent), and Air Force (30.8 percent).

Cornell’s 72 assists from defensemen represent 39.1 percent of its total assist count, marking the third-highest average in the nation for Division I hockey, only trailing Merrimack (41.4 percent) and Robert Morris (39.9 percent). 

SHARING THE WEALTH

Cornell has received scoring contributions from almost every player who has participated in a game this season, as 23 of the 26 players who have played have registered at least one point.

The senior class (46-78—124) has contributed 42.2 percent of the team’s scoring, ranking behind St. Lawrence (46.6 percent — 88 of 308) for the Division I lead. Cornell is one of three programs with at least a 40-percent scoring rate from its senior class this season, alongside Colgate (40.6 percent — 125 of 308).

Cornell has 15 players with at least 11 points, tying Michigan State for the second-highest total in Division I hockey. Only Western Michigan (16) has more players with 11-plus points. It is the sixth time in Cornell’s modern era (since 1957-58) its had at least 15 players with 11 points in a season, and is the first instance since 1995-96, Mike Schafer’s first season as the Big Red’s head coach. The other instances: 1968-69 (15), 1970-71 (16), 1971-72 (16), and 1976-77 (16).

ALL HE DOES IS WIN, WIN, WIN

Mike Schafer ‘86 is one of four active Division I men’s hockey head coaches with 550 career victories, joining Quinnipiac’s Rand Pecknold (666), Mercyhurst’s Rick Gotkin (611), and Notre Dame’s Jeff Jackson (601).

Schafer’s 561 wins — which rank 18th in college hockey history — make him one of six active Division I hockey head coaches with at least 500 career wins. He is joined by Air Force’s Frank Serratore (521) and Ferris State’s Bob Daniels (510), who, like Schafer, is retiring after the season.

With his victory over Harvard on Jan. 24, Schafer became the 10th Division I men’s hockey head coach to achieve 550 wins with a single program, joining Jack Parker (Boston University), Red Berenson (Michigan), Bob Peters (Bemidji State), Pecknold, and Jerry York (Boston College), Ron Mason (Michigan State), Gotkin, Richard Umile (New Hampshire), and John MacInnes (Michigan Tech).

STOUT DEFENSE

Cornell has established itself as one of the nation’s top defensive units, ranking in the top 10 for scoring defense in each of the last seven seasons and nine of the past 10 seasons it has competed.

The Big Red has ranked within the top 10 in scoring defense seven times over the last eight seasons, the most by any Division I program. Minnesota State (six) and ECAC Hockey rival Quinnipiac (five) are the closest programs to Cornell.

Over the last eight-plus seasons, Cornell has averaged 1.98 goals allowed per game, making it one of only two programs, alongside Minnesota State (1.88), to allow fewer than two goals per game during the period.

Cornell is allowing an average of 2.26 goals per game, ranking 11th in Division I hockey. Its average is third among ECAC Hockey programs, trailing Quinnipiac (2.14 — 7th) and Clarkson (2.23 — 10th). Minnesota State leads the nation with 1.49 goals allowed per game, conceding 58 goals over 39 games.

Cornell is tied with Quinnipiac for the seventh-fewest goals conceded this season (79), trailing Minnesota State (58), Boston College (61), Maine (70), Augustana (75), LIU and Michigan State (77).

Getting to Know Boston University

SCOUTING BOSTON UNIVERSITY

Boston University enters the Toledo Regional final with an overall record of 22-13-2, while the Terriers concluded Hockey East play with a 14-8-2 mark.

Coming off a resounding 8-3 victory over No. 9-ranked Ohio State on Thursday, where it scored six unanswered goals over the final 21 minutes of the contest, Boston University has won five of its last seven games (5-1-1).

The Terriers offense is led by the Hutson brothers, with sophomore forward Quinn Hutson leading the team in points (22-26—48) while freshman defenseman Cole Hutson (13-31—44) owns the team lead in assists. Freshman phenom Cole Eiserman (23-11—34) has talied a team-high 23 goals on the year, two of which came in Thursday’s win over the Buckeyes.

Goaltending duties have favored freshman Mikhail Yegorov since he arrived as a mid-season addition from the USHL’s Omaha Lancers. Yegorov has started the last 15 games for the Terriers, posting a 9-5-1 record with a 2.06 goals-against average and .929 save percentage. Mathieu Caron handled the bulk of the goaltending duties in the first half of the season, posting a 12-6-1 record with a 3.16 goals-against average and .899 save percentage.

100 YEARS, 330 MILES, 52 MEETINGS

Cornell and Boston University are meeting for the 53rd time in program history this afternoon. The Big Red has a 27-22-3 advantage in the series, and is 13-10-3 in contests played on neutral ice.

Eight of the last 11 meetings have been decided by one goal, and all 11 contests have been determined by two scores or less.

Saturday will be the 12th time the last 13 meetings that the Big Red and Terriers will be playing at a neutral site (nine at Madison Square Garden, once at DCU Arena, once at SNHU Arena). Cornell is 3-4-2 in its previous nine neutral site games against BU.

POSTSEASON HISTORY WITH BOSTON UNIVERSITY

This is the fifth time Cornell and Boston University are meeting in the NCAA Tournament. Cornell won the first meeting, 4-1, to garner its national title in 1967, but the Terriers have won the last three, coming in the 1972 national title game in Boston, the 2018 regional semifinal in Worcester, Mass., and the 2023 Manchester Regional final.

Saturday will be the 13th all-time playoff meeting between Cornell and Boston University as the Big Red played the Terriers in the ECAC Hockey Championship eight times between 1966 and 1979 (four times in the semifinals and twice in the third-place game and championship game).

Last Time Against Boston University

SHANE SHINES IN AIDING #16 MEN'S HOCKEY TO RETAIN KELLEY-HARKNESS CUP

BOX SCORE I RECAP | HIGHLIGHTS | POSTGAME PRESS CONFERENCE | GALLERY #1 | GALLERY #2

NEW YORK (NOV. 25, 2023)Junior goaltender Ian Shane made a season-high 35 saves to guide the No. 16-ranked Cornell men's hockey team to a 2-1 victory over No. 5-ranked Boston University before 15,289 at Madison Square Garden on Saturday night, retaining the Kelley-Harkness Cup as the Big Red posted its fourth consecutive victory over the Terriers in the biennial Red Hot Hockey contest.

Junior Ondrej Psenicka — who netted the game-winning goal — and freshman forward Ryan Walsh found the back of the net for Cornell (5-3-1, 2-3-0 ECAC Hockey), who snapped its four-game winless streak.

Doug Grimes netted his first collegiate goal for the Terriers, while Mathieu Caron made 17 saves in the setback for Boston University (9-4-1, 5-1-1 Hockey East), who saw its five-game win streak come to a close.

The Terriers' top two leading scorers, freshman forward Macklin Celebrini and sophomore defenseman Lane Hutson, were both held scoreless on Saturday. It marked the second time this season in which they were both held off the scoreboard in the same game, also having been done on Oct. 20 by Notre Dame.

Both teams were held off the scoreboard in the opening 20 minutes, highlighted by Shane making 10 first-period stops. The best save came on a short-handed breakaway attempt by Sam Stevens with under a minute to play.

Cornell and Boston University swapped scoring chances in the second period before Grimes potted his first collegiate tally on a failed clearing attempt by the Big Red in its defensive zone. Shane LaChance intercepted the clearing attempt on the left half-wall.

Grimes' goal snapped Shane's shutout streak at Madison Square Garden at 94:13, as Shane saved the first 44 shots he faced at the venue, dating back to last season's 6-0 victory over then-No. 6-ranked UConn.

Walsh snapped Cornell's streak of unsuccessful power plays at 18 when he lasered a wrist shot from the middle of the slot past Caron to even the game just shy of four minutes into the third period. Freshman defenseman Ben Robertson and junior blueliner Tim Rego were credited with helpers on the goal.

Psenicka gave the Big Red its first lead of the night four and a half minutes later, capitalizing on a fantastic spinning pass from freshman forward Jonathan Castagna. Sophomore forward Nick DeSantis recorded the secondary assist on the goal, which snapped his six-game streak without a point.

Early on Boston University's third power play of the night, Shane spun clockwise to bat a loose puck out of his crease and prevent another Terriers scoring chance.

Shane would stop the next seven shots to preserve the victory for the Big Red.

Last Time Out

CARDIAC CORNELL: PAIR OF THIRD-PERIOD TALLIES LIFT #16 MEN'S HOCKEY PAST #1 MICHIGAN STATE

BOX SCORE | RECAP

TOLEDO, OHIO (MARCH 27, 2025)Senior forward Sullivan Mack's power-play goal with just 10 seconds left in regulation broke a 3-3 tie, leading the No. 16-ranked Cornell men's hockey team (19-10-6) to a 4-3 victory in a dramatic back-and-forth contest against the No. 2 overall seed and top-ranked Michigan State (26-7-4) in the second semifinal of the Toledo Regional at the Huntington Center on Thursday evening.
 
Sophomore forward Ryan Walsh sparked the Big Red's third-period comeback by netting his second goal of the game with 7:22 left in regulation. Walsh's first goal happened in the first period and was succeeded by freshman Charlie Major's second-period tally.
 
Senior goaltender Ian Shane backstopped Cornell to victory, stopping 34 of 37 shots to secure his 66th career win and surpass David McKee and Ben Scrivens for the second-most victories by a Big Red netminder in program history.
 
The win for Cornell was its seventh consecutive win, the program's longest win streak since posting seven straight wins between Nov. 6, 2021, and Dec. 3, 2021.
 
Karsen Dorwart and Gavin O'Connell each scored a goal and recorded an assist in Michigan State's loss. Daniel Russell also netted a goal for the Spartans, who benefited from a 17-save performance by Trey Augustine.
 
O'Connell gave Michigan State a 1-0 lead 7:20 into the contest, benefiting from a fortunate bounce off the corner boards during an attempted clear by Cornell deep in its defensive zone. Joey Larson gained control of the puck at the far half-wall and set up O'Connell for his snapshot from the low slot that beat Shane on his high-glove side.
 
An aggressive forecheck by Walsh resulted in him stealing the puck from Matt Basgall and wristing a shot from the right faceoff circle past Augustine, evening the contest at 1-1 with under five minutes left in the first period.

Michigan State regained its lead with 29.1 seconds remaining in the period, scoring a power-play goal by Russell. He one-timed a spinning behind-the-back pass from Charlie Stramel at the right post, allowing the Spartans to take the lead once more.
 
Another aggressive forecheck by Cornell resulted in an offensive zone takeaway by the Big Red, allowing sophomore defenseman Hoyt Stanley to set up Major for a one-timer from the left hash mark in the right faceoff circle, tying the game at 2-2 with 3:30 remaining in the period.

Michigan State regained its lead 17 seconds later when Shane went to play the puck behind his net. The puck was taken off his stick by Dorwart, leading to a wrap-around goal that put the Spartans ahead for the third time on the day.
 
Walsh scored his second goal of the night with 7:22 left in regulation, converting a rebound from a shot by sophomore defenseman Ben Robertson taken from below the faceoff circle. Cornell emerged from the media timeout a minute before Walsh's goal, dominating possession in its offensive zone and ultimately led to the game-tying marker.

A tripping penalty with 1:40 to go in regulation led to Cornell going on its first power play of the night and with 10 seconds left, Mack finished a backdoor, cross-ice pass by Major to give the Big Red its first lead of the night.

Michigan State elected to pull Augustine for an extra attacker for the final 10 seconds of the game but were unable to gain possession to tie the contest.

Meet The Big Red

2024-25 Roster

Jack O'Brien 2024-25 Headshot
Hank Kempf 2024-25 Headshot
Hoyt Stanley 2024-25 Headshot
George Fegaras 2024-25 Headshot
Jimmy Rayhill 2023-24 Headshot
Luke Devlin 2024-25 Headshot
Jack O'Leary 2024-25 Headshot
Jake Kraft 2024-25 Headshot
Sean Donaldson 2024-25 Headshot
Tim Rego 2024-25 Headshot
Marian Mosko 2024-25 Headshot
Ryan Walsh 2024-25 Headshot
Tyler Catalano 2024-25 Headshot
Charlie Major 2024-25 Headshot
Dalton Bancroft 2024-25 Headshot
Kyler Kovich 2024-25 Headshot
Sullivan Mack 2024-25 Headshot
Ben Robertson 2024-25 Headshot
Kyle Penney 2024-25 Headshot
Winter Wallace 2024-25 Headshot
Nicholas Wolfenberg 2024-25 Headshot
Ondrej Psenicka 2024-25 Headshot
Michael Suda 2024-25 Headshot
Nick DeSantis 2024-25 Headshot
Parker Murray 2024-25 Headshot
Ian Shane 2024-25 Headshot
Remington Keopple 2024-25 Headshot
Justin Katz 2024-25 Headshot
Jonathan Castagna 2024-25 Headshot
Lynah Rink
The Cornell Big Red men’s ice hockey team competes against Harvard on Friday, Dec. 2, 2022 in Lynah Rink in Ithaca, NY.

If you’ve never been to a Big Red hockey game at Cornell’s Lynah Rink, there are quite a few things you’ve never experienced. You’ve never camped in line 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 experienced all the best that college hockey offers.

Lynah Rink, which enters its 68th year serving as the home of Big Red hockey this season, was formally dedicated on April 6, 1957, a month after its opening to the public on March 4, 1957. The facility, which was built following a $500,000 anonymous donation (approximately $5.59 million in 2024), honors the late James Lynah '05, who served as the director of athletics at Cornell from 1935-43.

The donation to build Lynah Rink reresurrected the Cornell hockey  program following a 10-year hiatus, ensuring hockey returned as a varsity sport for the 1957-58 season.

Cornell began sponsoring hockey as a varsity sport with the 1900-01 season, which featured all Big Red home games played on the university’s outdoor rink on Beebe Lake. Due to a series of abnormally mild winters, the program was left — literally — on thin ice, causing Cornell to drop the program entirely after the 1947-48 campaign.

Since its opening in March of 1957, Lynah Rink has received numerous face-lifts since hosting its inaugural event on March 21, 1957, a 7-3 victory for the NHL’s New York Rangers in an exhibiton against the Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League (AHL). Hockey Hall of Fame goaltender Gump Worsley stopped 44 shots in the victory for the Rangers.

Among the renovations, Cornell spent nearly $1 million in the summer of 2000, to replace the rink floor, drainage system, frost protection and refrigeration piping, and adding new boards and seamless glass.

During the summer of 2006, a 16,700-square-foot expansion added new locker rooms, coaches offices, study lounges, new athletic training space, and approximately 450 new seats in the seating bowl.

Over last season’s winter break, updated Cornell branding on the façade and south concourse brought a more modern look to the facility.

Though many physical aspects of Lynah Rink have changed over time, the crowd remains constant. Lynah Rink can hold 4,267 boisterous Cornell hockey fans, who provide unwavering support for the Big Red while creating an unparalleled atmosphere in college hockey.

Although many rinks in the nation are bigger in capacity, few are known to be louder. The Cornell fans, aptly named the "Lynah Faithful," stream into every home contest, making 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 reaffirms the old saying, "There’s no place like home."

Since the doors opened on Lynah Rink, the Cornell men's hockey program has won a pair of NCAA Division I men’s hockey championships in 1967 and 1970, garnering an ECAC Hockey-record 13 tournament championships (1967-70, 1973, 1980, 1986, 1996-97, 2003, 2005, 2010, 2024) and 26 Ivy League titles, 22 of which have been won outright.

Cornell Men's Hockey Record Book
Members of the 1969-70 Cornell men's hockey team flank head coach Ned Harkness after winning the 1970 national championship.
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