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Bruce Marshall (ice hockey)
American ice hockey coach

Bruce Marshall (ice hockey)

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American ice hockey coach
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
West Boylston
Age
54 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Bruce Turner Marshall (July 23, 1962 – October 15, 2016) was an American ice hockey coach who was – at his death – the head coach at Franklin Pierce University. He was previously the head coach of the Connecticut Huskies ice hockey team. Marshall took over for Ben Kirtland prior to the start of the 1988–1989 season. In his 24 years as the coach since then, he has transitioned them to Division I status. Just ten years later, in 1998–1999, the Huskies began Division I play. In their first year at the highest level, Connecticut went 20–10–4. The next year was successful as well, for a new program, with a 19–16–1 record overall. However, that success was short lived, as Marshall and the Huskies have finished with a losing record every year since, consistently rating near the very bottom of the RPI ratings. Marshall's 2010–11 season was his best in recent history, however, when he did manage to reach the 2011 AHA semifinals in Rochester.
On January 7, 2013, Marshall resigned as head coach for health reasons. He had been on a medical leave of absence since November 6, 2012. Assistant coach Dave Berard was named head coach for the remainder of the 2012–13 season. Following a nationwide search, Mike Cavanaugh was named as Marshall's replacement after serving 18 years as an assistant at Boston CollegeHe died on October 15, 2016 at the age of 54.

College Head Coaching record

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Connecticut Huskies (ECAC East) (1988–89–1997–98)
1988–89Connecticut6–21–0
1989–90Connecticut15–11–1
1990–91Connecticut18–7–2
1991–92Connecticut22–4–2
1992–93Connecticut19–6–2
1993–94Connecticut15–8–3
1994–95Connecticut15–7–5
1995–96Connecticut16–9–1
1996–97Connecticut11–12–2
1997–98Connecticut13–13–1
Connecticut:150–98–19
Connecticut Huskies (MAAC) (1998–99–2002–03)
1998–99Connecticut20–10–418–6–43rdMAAC Semifinals
1999-00Connecticut19–16–115–11–14thMAAC Champion
2000–01Connecticut12–19–412–11–3t-5thMAAC Quarterfinals
2001–02Connecticut13–16–711–10–56thMAAC Semifinals
2002–03Connecticut8–23–37–16–310th
Connecticut:72–84–1963–54–16
Connecticut Huskies (Atlantic Hockey) (2003–04–2012–13)
2003–04Connecticut12–16–79–10–55thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
2004–05Connecticut11–23–310–12–26thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
2005–06Connecticut11–23–29–18–16thAtlantic Hockey Semifinals
2006–07Connecticut16–18–215–11–24thAtlantic Hockey Semifinals
2007–08Connecticut13–21–311–14–3t-6thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
2008–09Connecticut9–26–28–18–29thAtlantic Hockey First Round
2009–10Connecticut7–27–36–19–39thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
2010–11Connecticut15–18–413–12–26thAtlantic Hockey Semifinals
2011–12Connecticut16–19–412–12–38thAtlantic Hockey Quarterfinals
2012–13Connecticut19–14–414–10–34thAtlantic Hockey Semifinals
Connecticut:129–205–34107–136–26
Total:351–387–72

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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