Herb Brooks Coach of the Year

NCHC Herb Brooks Coach of the Year
SportCollege ice hockey
LeagueNCHC
Awarded forThe Coach of the Year in the NCHC
History
First award2014
Most winsBrad Berry (4)
Most recentDane Jackson

The Herb Brooks Coach of the Year is an annual award given out at the conclusion of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference regular season to the best coach in the conference as voted by the coaches of each NCHC team.[1]

The Coach of the Year was first awarded in 2014 and is a successor to the CCHA Coach of the Year which was temporarily discontinued after the first iteration of the conference dissolved due to the 2013–14 NCAA conference realignment.[2]

The award is named in honor of Herb Brooks who, though having died ten years prior to the NCHC beginning play, coached founding member St. Cloud State for one season. He is better known for coaching Minnesota to their first three national championships in the 1970s as well as leading Team USA to victory at the Miracle on Ice en route to the gold medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics.[3][4]

Award winners

Year Winner School
2013–14 Bob Motzko St. Cloud State
2014–15 Dave Hakstol North Dakota
2015–16 Brad Berry North Dakota
2016–17 Andy Murray Western Michigan
2017–18 Bob Motzko St. Cloud State
2018–19 Brett Larson St. Cloud State
2019–20 Brad Berry North Dakota
2020–21 Brad Berry North Dakota
2021–22 Brad Berry North Dakota
2022–23 Pat Ferschweiler Western Michigan
2023–24 Kris Mayotte Colorado College
2024–25 Pat Ferschweiler Western Michigan
2025–26 Dane Jackson North Dakota

Winners by school

School Winners
North Dakota 6
St. Cloud State 3
Western Michigan 3
Colorado College 1

See also

References

  1. ^ "Archibald, Dowd, LaLeggia Headline NCHC Award Winners". NCHC Hockey. March 20, 2014. Archived from the original on April 20, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  2. ^ "The CCHA is going away, but its history will have a final resting place". USCHO.com. March 6, 2013. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  3. ^ "NCHC Awards". College Hockey Historical Archives. March 6, 2013. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
  4. ^ "Prow, Berry Capture NCHC's Top Honors at Awards Celebration". 17 March 2016.