Poulin gone

R

Rip Rap

Guest
sort of: http://und.collegesports.com/sports/m-hockey/spec-rel/041505aaa.html

Seems like a good thing, since this was the worst season ever and we're not not going to get much better with him as coach.

:clover:

Dave Poulin Steps Down As Head Hockey Coach
After 10 years with the Irish program, Poulin will take a position in the athletic administration.

April 15, 2005

University of Notre Dame hockey coach Dave Poulin will be stepping down after 10 seasons as Irish head coach to take on a position in athletic administration at the University as special assistant to the senior associate athletic director for athletic development.

Notre Dame athletic director Kevin White made the announcement today, after Poulin informed his team of the change earlier this morning.

Poulin will work in the area of athletic development, assisting senior associate athletics director Bill Scholl with a variety of projects. In particular, he will be involved as the University works to identify prospective donors with the goal of renovating Notre Dame's existing home hockey facility in the Joyce Center Fieldhouse.

"First and foremost, we are all very much appreciative of Dave's devotion to Irish hockey," said White.

"I could not be more excited about his transition to a very significant development role - most immediately as it relates to our plans to renovate the north dome of the Joyce Center and all that that will mean for our hockey program."

A former National Hockey League star, Poulin finished his 10th season behind the Notre Dame bench in 2004-05. In 10 seasons, the 1982 Notre Dame graduate owns a 139-197-50 (.425) record and a 99-145-41 (.419) mark in Central Collegiate Hockey Association play.

"I've had a wonderful 10 years coaching hockey at Notre Dame," said Poulin.

"Coaching hockey brought me to Notre Dame - and it has been tremendous both for me and my family. What stand out for me are the players I've coached and the relationships I've had.

"I'm very excited about the challenge ahead of me. I'm looking forward to being a big part of Notre Dame's future."

During Poulin's tenure, the Irish advanced to Joe Louis Arena and the CCHA finals and Super Six in four of the last six seasons (2000, 2002, 2003, 2004). In 2003-04, Poulin's squad turned in its best record (20-15-4) since the 1987-88 campaign and advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time in the program's 37-year history.





Two of Poulin's former players -- Mark Eaton (Nashville Predators) and Ben Simon (Atlanta Thrashers) -- advanced to the NHL while 36 saw time playing professional hockey in North America or Europe.

Off the ice, 10 of Poulin's players were members of the CCHA All-Academic team with Cory McLean ('05) receiving the league's first Scholar Athlete of the Year honor in March. Five of those players went on to receive CoSIDA Academic All-America honors.

A three-time NHL all-star, Poulin returned to his alma mater in 1995 after 13 combined seasons with the Philadelphia Flyers, the Boston Bruins and the Washington Capitals. The winner of the 1987 Selke Trophy (as the league's top defensive forward) and the 1993 King Clancy Trophy (for leadership on and off the ice), Poulin played in 724 NHL games with 205 goals, 325 assists for 530 career points.

In his four seasons at Notre Dame (1978-82), Poulin scored 89 goals with 107 assists for 196 points in 135 games. He remains tied for first in game-winning goals (13) and hat tricks (eight) with the Irish. His 89 goals rank him fifth on the all-time list, his assists rank him seventh and he is sixth on the all-time points list.

As coach of the Irish, Poulin recorded his 100th career win in Notre Dame's 8-5 win at Western Michigan on Oct. 19, 2002. On March 15, 2003, at Miami (Ohio), he moved into second on Notre Dame's all-time win list. He has 139 career wins with the Irish and trails only Charles "Lefty" Smith (his coach at Notre Dame), who is the all-time leader with 307.

Poulin and his wife Kim, a Saint Mary's College graduate, are the parents of three daughters, 18-year-old twins, Lindsay and Taylor (freshmen at Notre Dame) and 14-year old Kylie.
 
R

Rip Rap

Guest
For the record, I knew an architect working in the office of a (likely the leading) sports facilities firm, and saw a schematic proposal for the renovations to the hockey rink. This was about five years ago, but it looked impressive. At the time it was a 'secret.'
 
T

the_voidoid

Guest
i think poulin did a decent job, but the inconsistency was his demise.

anybody else on the radar?
 

Domer95

New member
Messages
624
Reaction score
35
For the record, I may be a wee bit biased, as an ND'95 alum, frequent ND hockey game attendee and Philadelphia native who followed (and loved) the former Flyer captain's career, I think if he was given the facilities, there'd be no reason why ND couldn't/wouldn't be a top 10-20 hockey school year in, year out. Think of C-Dub trying to recruit 5-star players if the football team still played on Cartier Field.....
 
R

Rip Rap

Guest
http://und.collegesports.com/sports/m-hockey/spec-rel/050605aac.html

Our new coach has been to the national championship game three times, and won two of them. Thank you Poulin for stepping-down.

Jeff Jackson Named Fourth Notre Dame Hockey Coach In The Modern Era
Jackson brings more than 20 years of coaching experience to the Irish bench.

May 6, 2005

Jeff Jackson, who led Lake Superior State to NCAA hockey championships in 1992 and 1994 (and three consecutive trips to the title game), has been named the fourth head coach in the modern era of the Notre Dame hockey program. He is the first Notre Dame head coach in any sport to have won an NCAA Division I championship with another program before being hired as an Irish head coach.

Press Conference Quotes

What They're Saying About Jeff Jackson

In making the announcement, Notre Dame director of athletics Kevin White said, "Jeff Jackson has a first-hand appreciation of exactly what it takes to be successful at the very highest level of the collegiate hockey world. His accomplishments at Lake Superior State in winning multiple NCAA titles -- combined with his work and connections from the United States national developmental program and from the professional level - provide him a solid foundation from which to lead the Notre Dame hockey program.

"We're excited he's coming to Notre Dame, and I think it's fair to say he's excited about the opportunities ahead of him with our program."

The highly-regarded Jackson brings more than 20 years of coaching experience to the Irish as an assistant and a head coach at the NCAA Division I level, on the international level with the U.S. national program, in major junior hockey and at the National Hockey League level.

A 1978 graduate of Michigan State University with a degree in communications, Jackson followed with a degree in education in 1979 from Michigan State. He got his start in college hockey in 1986 as an assistant coach at Lake Superior State where he served four years under head coach Frank Anzalone, helping guide the Lakers to one Central Collegiate Hockey Association championship and the 1988 NCAA title. When Anzalone moved to the professional ranks following the 1989-90 season, Jackson took over as the head coach of the Lakers and in a six-year span (1990-91 to 1995-96), guided them to six consecutive NCAA appearances, including three straight trips to the title game from 1992 through 1994.

Jeff Jackson, winner of two national titles at Lake Superior State, has been named the head coach of the Fighting Irish.

In 1992 the Lakers defeated Wisconsin in the NCAA championship game, in 1993 they lost to the University of Maine -- and in 1994 Lake Superior took the title versus Boston University. Jackson's six-year record at Lake Superior State was 182-52-25 for a .751 winning percentage, the best among active Division I coaches with at least 200 games. In CCHA play, the Lakers were 120-38-23, winning two regular-season championships (1991 and 1996) and four tournament championships (1991, 1992, 1993 and 1995).

During his six years guiding the Lakers, Jackson produced 12 All-Americans (five first-team picks and seven second-team selections) and one Academic All-American. In 1991, he was recognized as the CCHA coach of the year. He is just one of 12 coaches to win multiple NCAA championships. From 1993-96, he also served as the director of athletics at Lake Superior State.

Several of Jackson's players advanced to play in the NHL: Doug Weight (New York Rangers/Edmonton/St. Louis), Brian Rolston (New Jersey/Colorado/Boston), Keith Aldridge (New York Islanders), Blaine Lacher (Boston Bruins), John Grahame (Boston Bruins/Tampa Bay Lightning), Bates Battaglia (Carolina/Colorado/Washington) and Jim Dowd (New Jersey/Vancouver/New York Islanders/Minnesota Wild).

Following the 1995-96 season, Jackson moved on to take over as national coach and senior director of the newly-founded United States National Team Development program based in Ann Arbor, Mich. In his first season while putting the program in place, he served as the head coach for the U.S. Junior National Team that captured the silver medal at the 1997 World Junior Championships, at the time representing the best finish ever for the U.S. team. Former Irish captain and current Atlanta Thrasher Ben Simon was a member of that squad. The following year, he was an assistant coach for Team USA at the 1998 Winter Olympic Games in Nagano, Japan. In his four years directing the national program, eight former Notre Dame players came from the developmental program: Brett Henning, Michael Chin, Connor Dunlop, Paul Harris, John Wroblewski, Brett Lebda, Neil Komadoski and Rob Globke.

In 2000, Jackson took over as coach of the Ontario Hockey League's (OHL) Guelph Storm where he turned a losing franchise around, finishing in second place in his first season with a 34-23-9-2 record. In the 2001-02 season, the Storm went 37-23-7-1 and hosted the Memorial Cup, advancing to the tiebreaker game where they lost to Victoriaville. In two and a half seasons in Guelph, Jackson had an 87-67-24-4 record.

He then moved on to the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League where he has served as an assistant on Steve Stirling's staff the past two seasons. In 2003-04, the Islanders finished third in the NHL's Atlantic Division with a 38-29-11-4 record, good for 91 points. The Islanders lost in the first round of the playoffs to eventual Stanley Cup-winner Tampa, four games to one.

In May of 2003, Inside College Hockey ranked Jackson 12th on its list of the 16 greatest college coaches of all-time -- with only five of the 16 still active in coaching.

Born June 22, 1955, Jackson is a member of the USA Hockey Coaches Achievement Program, the American Hockey Coaches Association and the National Hockey League Coaches Association.
 

Aerosmith777

New member
Messages
1,298
Reaction score
57
well, as a Devils fan I gotta like anyone who coached up Brian Rolston and Jim Dowd. Dowd was from my area of New Jersey, so he kinda became a bit of a legend w/ that amazing Stanley Cup Championship he played in '95.

This guy sounds like he's a great coach, getting a little school to multiple Frozen Four titles, so you gotta think coming to a prominent University like Notre Dame would certainly help him improve the program. I always like Notre Dame hockey, hope he can get them back to where they at least make the tournament most years.
 
Top