1947–48 Dartmouth Indians men's ice hockey season

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1947–48 Dartmouth Indians
men's ice hockey season
Pentagonal League, Champion
NCAA Tournament, Runner-Up
Conference1st Pentagonal League
Record
Overall21–3–0
Conference7–0–0
Home10–0–0
Road7–2–0
Neutral4–1–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachEddie Jeremiah
Captain(s)Bill Riley
Dartmouth Indians men's ice hockey seasons
« 1946–47 1948–49 »

The 1947–48 Dartmouth Indians men's ice hockey season was the 42nd season of play for the program but first under the oversight of the NCAA. The Indians represented Dartmouth College and were coached by Eddie Jeremiah, in his 8th season.

Season[edit]

With the NCAA instituting a national tournament for the first time for this season, Dartmouth was expected to be one of the two teams selected from the east for the competition. The Indians had won the last four eastern intercollegiate titles contested (one tied) and still boasted many of the players that had helped earn those championships. While the did lose scoring star Jack Riley to graduation, his place in the lineup was filled ably by brother Joe Riley, a transfer from the defunct program at Illinois. Joe was teamed with middle brother and team captain Bill Riley and Bob Merriam to form one of the top scoring lines in the nation and keep Dartmouth atop the college hockey landscape. The defense was also a strength of the team, led by Crawford Campbell and Bob Thayer, while Dick Desmond took on the role as the starter in goal.

After narrowly escaping Boston University in the season opener, Dartmouth settled in and reeled off several dominating victories. During the winter break the club headed to Buffalo and ran roughshod over the other three teams assembled. The Indians ran their hot start to a 7–0 mark before Boston College dented their record.[1] The narrow defeat seemed to spur the team and they responded with several overpowering performances. The greens were, however, able to get their revenge against the Eagles in the rematch and continued their winning ways for the rest of the regular season.

Dartmouth reeled off 13 consecutive wins to finish their slate of game with a 20–1 record and were the obvious choice as the top eastern representative. However, before the beginning of the tournament, Dartmouth still had a few game to play. After the annual alumni game, the Indians headed up to Toronto to take on the eastern Canadian champions, the Toronto Varsity Blues. The northerners handed Dartmouth its worst defeat in eight years and shut out the Indians for the first time since February 1941.[2] Just three days later, the team was in Colorado Springs and having to fight through both fatigue and a mile-high altitude as well as a strong Colorado College outfit. Dartmouth's scorers were not deterred and the team doubled up the nation's top offense to advance to the first national championship game in history.

The final game of the season pitted the top teams from each region and Dartmouth would have its hands full against Michigan. While the Wolverines weren't quite as productive on the offensive side as the Indians, their defense was possibly the best in the nation. The title tilt was kicked off by Michigan gaining a lead just 50 seconds into the game. Bill Riley tied the game shortly thereafter and the two then traded goals before the end of the first period to leave the score at 2-all. Dartmouth scored twice in the second period to take a 2-goal lead just past the midway point of the game. With everything appearing to break in the Indians' favor, the second half of the game turned into a tragedy for the greens.

Michigan cut the lead in half with five minutes remaining in the second. Just over a minute later, Gordon McMillan tied the score but the play was whistled down. Just prior to the goal, Al Renfrew had finished serving a penalty and had returned to the ice rather than his team's bench, as was required by some rules at the time. The referees decided to nullify the goal and the period ended 4–3 in Dartmouth's favor, however, Michigan's coach, Vic Heyliger protested during the intermission. The NCAA rules committee conferred and decided to reverse the decision, officially awarding Michigan the goal and leaving the two tied going into the third. While its unknown how this turn of events affected the team, it was the Wolverines' offense that provided the biggest turning point in the match. Michigan went on a tear in the final frame, scoring three times in the first seven minutes. Dartmouth was unable to respond and all of the shots they fired on goal were turned aside. Michigan finished the game on a 6-goal run and captured the inaugural national championship, much to the chagrin of the Dartmouth faithful.[3]

Roster[edit]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
Robert J. Amirault Junior F 1924-01-21
New Hampshire Crawford Campbell Senior D Manchester, New Hampshire
Massachusetts Walter H. Crowley Junior F 1925-04-23 Hingham, Massachusetts
Massachusetts Richard J. Desmond Junior G 1927-03-02 Medford, Massachusetts
Robert Gray D
Massachusetts Alan R. Kerivan Freshman F 1927-03-30 Wellesley, Massachusetts
Rhode Island John D. Kilmartin Jr. Junior D 1925-08-07 Providence, Rhode Island
Massachusetts Bruce A. Magoon Sophomore G 1927-08-23 Haverhill, Massachusetts
Massachusetts James B. Malone Senior F 1926-05-06 Cambridge, Massachusetts
Massachusetts Robert L. Merriam Senior F 1924-06-04 Greenfield, Massachusetts
Minnesota Arnold C. Oss Jr. Sophomore F 1928-04-19 Minneapolis, Minnesota
Rhode Island George Pulliam Graduate D Cranston, Rhode Island
Howard L. Richmond Sophomore F
Massachusetts Joseph A. Riley Junior F 1923-12-14 Medford, Massachusetts Illinois
Massachusetts William J. Riley (C) Graduate F 1921-10-06 Medford, Massachusetts
New York (state) William H. Taylor Jr. Sophomore F 1926-08-28 Buffalo, New York
Massachusetts Robert N. Thayer Junior D 1923-03-13 Melrose, Massachusetts
Thomas Warner Junior

[4]

Standings[edit]

Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T Pct. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Army 16 11 4 1 .719 78 39 16 11 4 1 78 39
Bemidji State 5 0 5 0 .000 13 36 10 2 8 0 37 63
Boston College 19 14 5 0 .737 126 60 19 14 5 0 126 60
Boston University 24 20 4 0 .833 179 86 24 20 4 0 179 86
Bowdoin 9 4 5 0 .444 45 68 11 6 5 0 56 73
Brown 14 5 9 0 .357 61 91 14 5 9 0 61 91
California 10 2 8 0 .200 45 62 17 5 12 0 87 89
Clarkson 12 5 6 1 .458 67 39 17 10 6 1 96 54
Colby 8 2 6 0 .250 28 41 8 2 6 0 28 41
Colgate 10 7 3 0 .700 54 34 13 10 3 0 83 45
Colorado College 14 9 5 0 .643 84 73 27 19 8 0 207 120
Cornell 4 0 4 0 .000 3 43 4 0 4 0 3 43
Dartmouth 23 21 2 0 .913 156 76 24 21 3 0 156 81
Fort Devens State 13 3 10 0 .231 33 74
Georgetown 3 2 1 0 .667 12 11 7 5 2 0 37 21
Hamilton 14 7 7 0
Harvard 22 9 13 0 .409 131 131 23 9 14 0 135 140
Lehigh 8 0 8 0 .000 8 95 10 0 10 0 12 108
Massachusetts 2 0 2 0 .000 1 23 3 0 3 0 3 30
Michigan 18 16 2 0 .889 105 53 23 20 2 1 141 63
Michigan Tech 19 7 12 0 .368 87 96 20 8 12 0 91 97
Middlebury 14 8 5 1 .607 111 68 16 10 5 1 127 74
Minnesota 16 9 7 0 .563 78 73 21 9 12 0 100 105
Minnesota–Duluth 6 3 3 0 .500 21 24 9 6 3 0 36 28
MIT 19 8 11 0 .421 93 114 19 8 11 0 93 114
New Hampshire 13 4 9 0 .308 58 67 13 4 9 0 58 67
North Dakota 10 6 4 0 .600 51 46 16 11 5 0 103 68
North Dakota Agricultural 5 3 2 0 .600 27 28 6 4 2 0 37 29
Northeastern 19 10 9 0 .526 135 119 19 10 9 0 135 119
Norwich 9 3 6 0 .333 38 58 13 6 7 0 56 70
Princeton 18 8 10 0 .444 65 72 21 10 11 0 79 79
St. Cloud State 12 10 2 0 .833 55 35 16 12 4 0 73 55
St. Lawrence 9 6 3 0 .667 65 27 13 8 4 1 95 50
Suffolk
Tufts 4 3 1 0 .750 17 15 4 3 1 0 17 15
Union 9 1 8 0 .111 7 86 9 1 8 0 7 86
Williams 11 3 6 2 .364 37 47 13 4 7 2
Yale 16 5 10 1 .344 60 69 20 8 11 1 89 85
Conference Overall
GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Dartmouth 7 7 0 0 1.000 49 20 24 21 3 0 156 81
Army 4 2 2 0 .500 12 17 16 11 4 1 78 39
Harvard 7 3 4 0 .429 31 33 23 9 14 0 135 140
Princeton 7 2 5 0 .286 23 31 21 10 11 0 79 79
Yale 7 2 5 0 .286 20 32 20 8 11 1 89 85
indicates conference champion

Schedule and results[edit]

Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
December 18 Boston University* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 6–5 OT 1–0–0
December 19 Devens State* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 10–3  2–0–0
December 29 vs. Williams* Buffalo Memorial AuditoriumBuffalo, New York W 7–1  3–0–0
December 31 vs. Colgate* Buffalo Memorial AuditoriumBuffalo, New York W 6–2  4–0–0
January 1 vs. Princeton* Buffalo Memorial AuditoriumBuffalo, New York W 5–1  5–0–0
January 4 vs. Clarkson* Watertown, New York W 2–1  6–0–0
January 10 Princeton Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 6–2  7–0–0 (1–0–0)
January 12 at Boston College* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 3–4  7–1–0
January 17 Northeastern* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 13–3  8–1–0
January 21 Brown* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 7–1  9–1–0
January 24 Yale New Haven ArenaNew Haven, Connecticut W 6–0  10–1–0 (2–0–0)
January 26 at Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 6–5  11–1–0
January 28 Clarkson* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 2–1  12–1–0
January 29 Boston College* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 6–4  13–1–0
February 12 California* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 13–4  14–1–0
February 14 Yale Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 9–4  15–1–0 (3–0–0)
February 18 at Harvard Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 10–5  16–1–0 (4–0–0)
February 21 at Army Smith RinkWest Point, New York W 5–2  17–1–0 (5–0–0)
February 23 at Williams* Cole Field House Rink • Williamstown, Massachusetts W 9–1  18–1–0
February 28 Harvard Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire W 8–5  19–1–0 (6–0–0)
March 6 at Princeton Hobey Baker Memorial RinkPrinceton, New Jersey W 5–2  20–1–0 (7–0–0)
March 12 Dartmouth Alumni* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire (Exhibition) L 4–8 
March 15 Toronto* Varsity ArenaToronto, Ontario L 0–5  20–2–0
NCAA Tournament
March 18 at Colorado College* Broadmoor Ice PalaceColorado Springs, Colorado (NCAA Semifinal) W 8–4  21–2–0
March 20 vs. Michigan* Broadmoor Ice PalaceColorado Springs, Colorado (NCAA Championship) L 4–8  21–3–0
*Non-conference game.

[2]

National championship game[edit]

Michigan vs. Dartmouth[edit]

March 20 Michigan 8 – 4 Dartmouth Broadmoor Ice Palace


Scoring summary
Period Team Goal Assist(s) Time Score
1st UM Wally Gacek Grant 0:50 1–0 UM
DC Bill Riley Merriam 4:25 1–1
UM Wally Gacek Grant 10:55 2–1 UM
DC Crawford CampbellPP unasisted 17:25 2–2
2nd DC Walt Crowley B. Riley 26:55 3–2 DC
DC Arnold Oss Malone 31:05 4–2 DC
UM Wally Grant Gacek 35:20 4–3 DC
UM Gordon McMillan Greer 36:40 4–4
3rd UM Wally GrantGW Gacek and Greer 41:30 5–4 UM
UM Gordon McMillan Renfrew 46:15 6–4 UM
UM Wally Gacek Grant and Greer 46:20 7–4 UM
UM Ted Greer Gacek 55:14 8–4 UM

Scoring statistics[edit]

Name Position Games Goals Assists Points PIM
Bob Amirault F - - - - -
Crawford Campbell D - - - - -
Walt Crowley F - - - - -
Dick Desmond G - - - - -
Bob Gray D - - - - -
Alan Kerivan F - - - - -
John Kilmartin D - - - - -
Bruce Magoon G - - - - -
Jim Malone F - - - - -
Bob Merriam C/LW - - - - -
Arnie Oss F - - - - -
George Pulliam D - - - - -
Howard Richmond F - - - - -
Bill Riley C/LW - 30 23 53 -
Joe Riley RW - 22 - - -
Bill Taylor F - - - - -
Bob Thayer D - - - - -
Tom Warner - - - - -
Total 154

[5]
Note: Only sparse goaltending statistics are available.

Awards and honors[edit]

Player Award Ref
Joe Riley NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player [6]
Bill Riley AHCA First Team All-American [7]
George Pulliam AHCA Second Team All-American [7]
Bill Riley NCAA All-Tournament First Team [8]
Joe Riley
Dick Desmond NCAA All-Tournament Second Team [8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Eagle Pucksters Hand Dartmouth Second Loss in 3 Years at Arena". The Heights. January 15, 1948. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Year-By-Year results" (PDF). Dartmouth Big Green. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  3. ^ "Wolverines Capture National Hockey Title". The Michigan Daily. March 21, 1948. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  4. ^ "1947-1948 Roster". Elite Prospects. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  5. ^ "Dartmouth College 1947-48 roster and statistics". EliteProspects. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  6. ^ "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  7. ^ a b "Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  8. ^ a b "NCAA Division I Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. Retrieved July 17, 2013.