1927–28 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season

The 1927–28 Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey season was the 11th season of play for the program. The Eagles were coached by Sonny Foley in his 1st season.

1927–28 Boston College Eagles
men's ice hockey season
ConferenceIndependent
Home iceBoston Arena
Record
Overall2–4–1
Home2–1–0
Road0–1–0
Neutral0–2–1
Coaches and captains
Head coachSonny Foley
Captain(s)Joe Fitzgerald
Boston College Eagles men's ice hockey seasons
« 1926–27 1928–29 »

Season

edit

After the second departure of Fred Rocque, BC turned to former Eagle Sonny Foley as the new coach. While Foley had only two years of coaching experience, his appointment was brought about due to a new policy by Boston College of hiring alumni.[1] The Eagles also saw some improvement with their scheduling issues with many more intercollegiate games than they had been able to secure over the previous four years, however, five of those games were arranged against Boston University and Holy Cross.[2]

With their limited slate of games, BC wanted to get off to a good start but their first opponent, Yale, was possibly the best college team in the nation. The Bulldogs took no mercy on the Eagles, pressing the visitors all game with an attack led by Ding Palmer. Nick Tedesco scored both goals for BC but it wasn't enough to overcome the speedy Elis.[3]

The team had several weeks to recover from the loss and prepare themselves for the first of three games with BU. Unfortunately, the Eagles were short-handed entering the game as team captain Joe Fitzgerald was suffering from an illness and Larry Gibson had been injured in an off-ice accident. Gibson's understudy, John Kelley played a tremendous game in relief, checking the Terriers hard throughout the match. After Boston University scored twice in the first 10 minutes, Kelley's seemingly held off the dogs by himself for the final 50 minutes, enabling BC to surge ahead in the third. However, BU managed to tie the game late by a low-percentage shot from center ice that somehow eluded Leon Fitzgerald. After 10 minutes of scoreless overtime the game was declared a draw.[4]

At the end of January, BC played host to Holy Cross in what the team hoped would be the first of an enduring rivalry. The game was well played by both sides with each squad attacking the opposing cage repeatedly. Many of the players from both units had previously been teammates at BC High which helped to fuel the intensity of the match. BC opened the game with two goals but those markers were equally before the end of the first. Smokey Kelleher gave BC its second lead in the final minute of the period but just 12 seconds later the Chiefs tied the game once more. Joe Fitzgerald and Gibson combined to put the team ahead for good in the middle of the second and Leon Fitzgerald held Holy Cross scoreless in a raucous final period.[5] The Eagles paused after their first win for the semester break and when they returned the team got ready to face St. Francis Xavier. The visitors from Nova Scotia were a vaunted outfit that was one of the best teams in Canada. BC, however, was undaunted and put forth a brilliant display. The Eagles held the balance of play early but the game soon evened out. Morrissey scored in the second but the Canadians dented the twine twice to take a lead into the third. Several goals were waved off in the match, including a late goal by Gibson for offside, that allowed SFX to head home with a win.[6]

A week later, the second game with BU took place and the rematch was just as close as the first. Gibson opened the scoring on an individual rush up the ice. After BU tied the match, Joe Fitzgerald scored by weaving his way through several Terrier defenders before being the scarlet goalie from a sharp angle. After that flurry in the first, the game sped up in the middle frame, however, a series of great saves prevented all but one BU shot from reaching its mark. Midway through the third, BU got its first lead after a brilliant display of passing and the Eagles could not respond. Teamwork was lacking on the BC side and the team was unable to get any coordination between the forwards. The poor effort overall cost the Eagles and led directly to the loss.[7] The rematch with Holy Cross came next and BC took its frustrations out on the Chiefs. Tedesco led the way with a pair of goals and the defense battered Holy Cross into submission. Boston College was so overwhelming in the match, they caused the opposing netminder to accidentally knock the puck into his own net.[8]

The end of February brought about the final game of the season, however, the team was listless. BC was swept off the ice by the Terriers 0–5 and ended with the worst record in program history.

John A. "Snooks" Kelley served as team manager.[2]

Roster

edit
No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
  Gerald S. Antonia Junior 1906-12-31 Boston, Massachusetts
Joseph W. Fallon Sophomore C
  Joseph F. Fitzgerald (C) Senior D Boston, Massachusetts
  Leon C. Fitzgerald Sophomore G 1908-01-30 Weymouth, Massachusetts
  Lawrence W. Gibson Sophomore C Cambridge, Massachusetts
  John F. Groden Sophomore RW 1908-03-16 Watertown, Massachusetts
  Edmund L. Kelleher Sophomore West Roxbury, Massachusetts
  John F. Kelleher Senior LW Cambridge, Massachusetts
  John A. Kelley Senior C 1907-07-11 Cambridge, Massachusetts
  Arthur M. Morrissey Junior D Medford, Massachusetts
  Perley J. Payson Sophomore LW 1906-09-13 Quincy, Massachusetts
  Edward G. Sliney Sophomore 1905-06-09 Boston, Massachusetts
  Nicholas P. Tedesco Junior RW West Newton, Massachusetts

[9]

Standings

edit
Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T Pct. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Amherst 7 4 2 1 .643 12 7 7 4 2 1 12 7
Army 8 1 7 0 .125 6 36 9 1 8 0 9 44
Bates 10 5 5 0 .500 21 26 12 6 5 1 26 28
Boston College 6 2 3 1 .417 18 23 7 2 4 1 19 25
Boston University 9 6 2 1 .722 42 23 9 6 2 1 42 23
Bowdoin 8 3 5 0 .375 16 27 9 4 5 0 20 28
Brown 12 4 8 0
Clarkson 10 9 1 0 .900 59 13 11 10 1 0 61 14
Colgate 4 0 4 0 .000 4 18 4 0 4 0 4 18
Cornell 5 2 3 0 .400 11 29 5 2 3 0 11 29
Dartmouth 10 6 4 0 64 23
Hamilton 8 5 2 1
Harvard 6 5 1 0 .833 28 8 9 7 2 0 45 13
Holy Cross
Massachusetts Agricultural 6 0 6 0 .000 5 17 6 0 6 0 5 17
Middlebury 8 7 1 0
MIT 4 1 3 0 .250 6 35 4 1 3 0 6 35
New Hampshire 9 7 1 1 33 26
Norwich 4 0 2 2
Princeton 12 5 7 0
Rensselaer 4 2 1 1
St. Lawrence 4 2 2 0
Syracuse
Union 5 0 4 1 .100 10 21 5 0 4 1 10 21
Williams 8 6 2 0 .750 27 12 8 6 2 0 27 12
Yale 13 11 2 0 .846 88 22 18 14 4 0 114 39
YMCA College 6 2 4 0 .333 10 15 6 2 4 0 10 15

Schedule and results

edit
Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
December 31 at Yale* New Haven ArenaNew Haven, Connecticut L 2–5  0–1–0
January 20 vs. Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry) T 3–3 2OT 0–1–1
January 28 Holy Cross* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 5–4  1–1–1
February 8 St. Francis Xavier* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts L 1–2  1–2–1
February 15 vs. Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry) L 2–3  1–3–1
February 23 Holy Cross* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts W 6–3  2–3–1
February 29 vs. Boston University* Boston ArenaBoston, Massachusetts (Rivalry) L 0–5  2–4–1
*Non-conference game.

[10]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Foley Appointed Boston College Hockey Coach". The Boston Daily Globe. December 1, 1927.
  2. ^ a b "Sub Turri 1928". Boston College. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  3. ^ "Yale Icemen Beat Eagles in Opener". The Heights. January 3, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  4. ^ "Eagles Battle B.U. to Tie on Ice 3-3". The Heights. January 24, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  5. ^ "B.C. Hockey Squad Wins 5-4 Victory". The Heights. January 31, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  6. ^ "B.C. Hockey Sextette Defeats Fast St. Francis Xavier Team". The Heights. February 14, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  7. ^ "Terriers Defeat Eagles on Ice 3-2". The Heights. February 21, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  8. ^ "B. C. Hockey Sextette Repeats Victory Over Crusaders; 6-3". The Heights. February 21, 1928. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  9. ^ "1927-1928 Roster". Elite Prospects. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
  10. ^ "Boston College men's Hockey 2023-24 Media Guide" (PDF). Boston College Eagles. Retrieved February 19, 2024.