1926–27 MIT Engineers men's ice hockey season

The 1926–27 MIT Engineers men's ice hockey season was the 26th season of play for the program. The Engineers were coached by Bill Stewart in his 2nd season.

1926–27 MIT Engineers
men's ice hockey season
ConferenceIndependent
Home iceBoston Arena
Record
Overall3–4–1
Home0–1–0
Road2–0–0
Neutral1–3–1
Coaches and captains
Head coachBill Stewart
Captain(s)Bill Berkeley
MIT Engineers men's ice hockey seasons
« 1925–26 1927–28 »

Season edit

Entering the season, MIT had just 2 starters returning from the previous years' squad, however, several others did have some experience with the Engineers. Captain Bill Berkeley teamed up with fellow senior Deke Crandall on the blueline while Bill Richards took over in goal full-time. The forward unit was an entirely new contingent with Fahey, Crosby and Duplin getting first team roles for the opening tilt. Coach Stewart tried to fight fire with fire and match the many alternates that Harvard used, however, they were unable to match the speed of the Crimson. Berkeley snagged the lone MIT goal on a long shot while the forwards were ineffective throughout the match.[1] The second game saw a better effort as MIT tied Boston University 2–2. Two 5-minute overtime periods were unable to settle the score but did allow the forwards to finally show that they were worthy of their positions.

After the winter break the team travelled to Springfield for a match with Yale. MIT gave the Elis all that they could handle and held back the Bulldogs offense. After Richards surrendered an early goal, the Engineer netminder refused entry and turned aside everything that Yale sent in his direction. Despite being outshot through most of the match, MIT found itself down by just a goal in the third and were able to tie the match before the end of regulation. Yale seemed to take the overtime session personally and their captain scored twice in the first few minutes to give them a commanding lead. The Engineers were able to get one into the Bulldog net but could not earn the second and fell to the Elis by a narrow margin.[2] Though winless in their first three games, the Engineers had already shown an improving level of play and were chomping at the bit when they travelled west to face Army. The Cadets were no match for the Garnet and MIT easily won the game 7–0.

The team returned home for a rematch with BU and found themselves in another close battle. When the dust settled, however, MIT came out on top. A match at Dartmouth was postponed due to a lack of ice and left just the game against Boston College left before the exam break. MIT's defense was nigh-impenetrable with Berkeley and Crandall playing a masterful game on the blueline. Only one shot got past Richards but, due to the stellar defensive play from the Eagles, that was enough to sink the Engineers.[3]

A month later, the team was ready to play the match with Dartmouth, having moved the cite of the game to Boston. While MIT had been idle in the interim, the Indians were carrying a 5-game winning streak and flattened the Engineers 7–0. Afterwards, the team had nearly two weeks off before their final match with Brown. The Engineers practiced as much as they could before heading down to Rhode Island and facing the Bears. With White now in goal and Cullinan starting in place of Fahey, the team was enen more reliant on the defense and elder statesmen came through in the clutch. Brown was hardly able to get a shot on goal while MIT made the most of its scant opportunities. Cullinan, Duplin and Crandall each scored to give the team a 3–0 win and end the season on a high note.[4]

Herbert B. Whiting served as team manager with.[5]

Roster edit

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
  William P. Berkeley (C) Senior D 1905-07-13 Cambridge, Massachusetts
  Montague S. Burgess Junior D 1906-03-29 Brookline, Massachusetts
  Frank J. Crandall Senior D 1904-01-01 Everett, Massachusetts
  Ralph H. Crosby Sophomore C 1906-11-05 Somerville, Massachusetts
  William E. Cullinan Jr. Sophomore RW 1907-08-17 Cambridge, Massachusetts
  Victor J. Duplin Jr. Sophomore LW 1904-12-03 Stoneham, Massachusetts
  John J. Fahey Junior RW 1906-08-14 Derby, Connecticut
  Francis M. Mead Junior C 1906-10-23 Belmont, Massachusetts
  Walter J. Nock Junior RW 1906-10-13 Mexico City, Mexico
  William H. Richards Senior G 1906-06-16 Boston, Massachusetts
  George E. White Sophomore G/F 1906-11-13 Quincy, Massachusetts

[5]

Standings edit

Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T Pct. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Amherst 8 4 2 3
Army 3 0 2 1 .167 5 13 4 0 3 1 7 20
Bates 7 3 3 1 .500 11 13 9 5 3 1 16 14
Boston College 6 3 3 0 15 18
Boston University 7 2 4 1 .357 25 18 8 2 5 1 25 23
Bowdoin 7 3 4 0 .429 12 17 8 4 4 0 21 18
Brown 8 4 4 0
Clarkson 9 8 1 0 .889 42 11 9 8 1 0 42 11
Cornell 7 1 6 0 .143 10 23 7 1 6 0 10 23
Dartmouth 15 11 2 2 68 20
Hamilton 10 6 4 0
Harvard 8 7 0 1 .938 32 9 12 9 1 2 44 18
Massachusetts Agricultural 7 2 4 1 .357 5 10 7 2 4 1 5 10
Middlebury 6 6 0 0
MIT 8 3 4 1 .438 19 21 8 3 4 1 19 21
New Hampshire 6 6 0 0 22 7
NYU
Princeton 13 5 7 1
Providence 8 1 7 0 13 39
Rensselaer 3 0 2 1
St. Lawrence 7 3 4 0
Syracuse
Union 5 3 2 0 .600 18 14 5 3 2 0 18 14
Vermont
Williams 12 6 6 0 .500 38 40 12 6 6 0 38 40
Yale 12 8 3 1 .708 72 26 16 8 7 1 80 45
YMCA College 7 3 4 0 .429 16 19 7 3 4 0 16 19

Schedule and results edit

Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
December 10 vs. Harvard* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 1–5  0–1–0
December 17 vs. Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts T 2–2 2OT 0–1–1
January 3 vs. Yale* Eastern States ColiseumSpringfield, Massachusetts L 2–3 OT 0–2–1
January 8 at Army* Stuart RinkWest Point, New York W 7–0  1–2–1
January 13 vs. Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 4–3  2–2–1
January 21 vs. Boston College* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 0–1  2–3–1
February 21 Dartmouth* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 0–7  2–4–1
March 5 at Brown* Rhode Island AuditoriumProvidence, Rhode Island W 3–0  3–4–1
*Non-conference game.

[5]

References edit

  1. ^ "CRIMSON CAPTURES INITIAL ICE TILT". The Harvard Crimson. December 11, 1926. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  2. ^ "UNIVERSITY PUCK CHASERS SPLIT HOLIDAY CONTESTS". Yale Daily News. January 4, 1927. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  3. ^ "Teamwork of Cronin and Gibson Give Eagie Sextet 1-0 Win Over M. I. T." The Heights. January 25, 1927. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  4. ^ "M.I.T. Six Wins 3-0 Victory Over Brown". Brown Daily Herald. March 7, 1927. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "1927 Technique" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved November 14, 2023.