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As of 2023–24, no women's ice hockey programs operate at the Division II level. Five of the six D-II men's ice hockey schools (Assumption, Franklin Pierce, Post, Saint Anselm, Saint Michael's) field women's varsity teams; all compete in the New England Women's Hockey Alliance , a fully recognized league at the National Collegiate level (the ...
Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W Akron Zips: University of Akron: Akron: Mid-American: FBS [a] Bowling Green Falcons: Bowling Green State University: Bowling Green: Mid-American: FBS [b] [c] Cincinnati Bearcats: University of Cincinnati: Cincinnati: Big 12: FBS: Cleveland State Vikings: Cleveland State University: Cleveland: Horizon [d] Dayton ...
ECAC 2: Raised to Division I in 1983. Became University of Massachusetts Lowell in 1993. Currently plays in Hockey East. Mankato State University: Mavericks [7] Mankato, Minnesota: 1969–1980 1992–1996: NCHA Division I: Left NCHA in 1992 to compete fully at the Division II level.
Because the NE-10 is the sole Division II hockey league, its postseason champion cannot compete for the NCAA national hockey championship. The Post University men's team competes as D-II as a single-sport NE-10 member, while its women's team is a member of the NEWHA.
The giant league remained in place for three seasons before being split in two. 15 teams that were willing to invest greater amounts of time, effort and money to their ice hockey programs remained in ECAC Hockey while the remaining 14 schools joined in a new league, ECAC 2. ECAC 2 was the first ice hockey conference formed for the NCAA College ...
No women's ice hockey programs currently play under Division II regulations. The NCAA allows D-II members to play under Division I regulations in any sport that does not have a D-II national championship, and all D-II members that sponsor varsity women's hockey choose to play as D-I.
Division II schools tend to be public universities with less than 15,000 students and many private institutions. A large minority of Division II institutions (91 schools / 30%) have fewer than 2,499 students. Only 18 institutions have more than 15,000 undergraduates, and only five have more than 25,000, led by Simon Fraser University. Eighty ...
Less than a decade after splitting from ECAC Hockey, ECAC 2 had swollen to more than 30 teams and a further, lower division was made ().ECAC 3 began its conference tournament immediately, however, as they were lower-tier than their parent conference, the ECAC 2 champion was still the de facto College Division champion.