First, a giant caveat that college sports take a distant backseat to the real-world issues facing universities. That said, the state of UNH’s program saddens me. Forty years ago, I was the student reporter during the first very brief nadir, from 1985-1987, which was fixed by new coach Bob Kullen’s energy and success in recruiting, one he unfortunately was not there to see completed. The next cross-roads occurred ten years ago, in 2015, when Coach Umile chose his successor. Since then, UNH has finished above 8th place only once, and only once finished with an above-.500 record:
15-16 10th place 11-20-6
16-17 10th place 15-20-5
17-18 11th place 10-20-6
18-19 8th place 12-15-9
19-20 9th place 15-15-4
20-21 10th place 6-14-3
21-22 9th place 14-19-1
22-23 10th place 11-21-3
23-24 6th place 20-15-1
24-25 10th place 13-16-6
If Hockey East still followed the “top-eight” format, UNH would have managed only two playoff appearances. Even with a “play-in” format:
- UNH won the “play in” Opening Round only three times (2017, 2021, 2024).
- never made it to the HE Quarterfinals.
No other Hockey East program has consistently endured a decade near the conference bottom. In most cases the programs achieved some positive results at least on occasion (e.g., Merrimack’s 4th and 5th place finishes in ’11 and ’12, Vermont’s 3rd and 4th place in ’08 and ‘09, U.Mass’s 3rd place ’04 and 4th place ’07, Maine’s early Whitehead years).
With its lack of resources, I will be interested to see if, or how, UNH addresses its commitment to the program;
whether by acknowledging the limitations by moving to a less-competitive conference, or taking any steps to regain a viable competitive program in Hockey East.
Chris Heisenberg, UNH '87