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College Hockey South (CHS), formerly known as the South Eastern Collegiate Hockey Conference (SECHC), is a non-varsity ice hockey conference in the Southern United States. The conference plays in Division 1, Division 2, and Division 3 and Women's Division of Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) College Hockey .
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.
College Hockey America: Division I: 1999: 2024: Founded as a men's-only league; added a women's division in 2002. The men's division disbanded in 2010 after steady losses of membership. The women's division merged with the Atlantic Hockey Association to form the current Atlantic Hockey America Colonial Hockey Conference: Division III: 2015: 2020
For programs that ended prior to the delineation of college hockey in 1961, all will be listed under Division I classification. ... ECAC North/South: Gordon College ...
1.1.5.4 ACHA and AAU College Hockey hockey (United States and Canada) 1.2 Women. ... College Hockey South (CHS) Southern Collegiate Hockey Conference (SCHC) Women.
The Pepsi Center, now known as Ball Arena, hosted the 2008 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament. The NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament is a college ice hockey tournament held in the United States by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
The school dropped varsity hockey in 2010, competing at the ACHA Division I club level until 2016 when it re-elevated its men's team and added women's hockey. ^D Westfield State dropped its program from 1989 to 2008.
As a result many colleges suspended some or all of their athletic programs for the duration of the war. A few ice hockey programs continued to operate for the 1917–18 season but those were perishingly few. Because the war was over by November 1918, many prospective students were able to attend college for the spring semester in 1919.