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In 2022, Johnson & Wales University announced that they would join Commonwealth Coast Conference as a full-member starting in 2024-25 and sponsor both men's ice hockey and women's ice hockey. [2] In the summer of 2023, Keene State announced that they would begin sponsoring men's and women's ice hockey starting with the 2024–25 season. [ 3 ]
Two polls make up the 2021–22 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey rankings, the USCHO.com poll and the USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine poll. As the 2021–22 season progresses, rankings are updated weekly.
The women's ice hockey program was given the green light to jump directly to the Division I level in July 2020. [3] The women's hockey team joined the WCHA for the 2021–22 season. [4] [5] On May 26, 2021, Robert Morris announced that it was dropping both men's and women's hockey effective immediately. [6]
The 2022–23 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season began in September 2022 and ended with the 2023 NCAA National Collegiate women's ice hockey tournament's championship game at AMSOIL Arena in Duluth, Minnesota on March 19, 2023.
Pages in category "2022–23 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The conference honors women's ice hockey players from its member institutions with annual selection of the Ivy League player of the year, rookie of the year, and All-Ivy teams. [8] Brown Bears women's ice hockey; Cornell Big Red women's ice hockey; Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey; Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey; Princeton Tigers ...
The following is a list of the 64 schools that fielded men's ice hockey teams in NCAA Division I in the most recent 2023–24 season, plus the 44 schools that fielded women's teams in the de facto equivalent of Division I, the NCAA's National Collegiate division. [a] Conference affiliations reflect those in place for the current 2024–25 season.
Prior to 2017, the women's ice hockey program at Sacred Heart University was a longstanding independent team, part of no conference. In that year, three NCAA Division II colleges and one Division I college (College of the Holy Cross) were removed from their NCAA Division III hockey conference (the New England Hockey Conference, formerly the ECAC East).