1929–30 Amherst Lord Jeffs men's ice hockey season

The 1929–30 Amherst Lord Jeffs men's ice hockey season was the 17th season of play for the program. The Lord Jeffs were coached by Ellsworth Richardson in his 1st season.

1929–30 Amherst Lord Jeffs
men's ice hockey season
ConferenceIndependent
Home icePratt Field
Record
Overall2–7–0
Home0–1–0
Road2–6–0
Coaches and captains
Head coachEllsworth Richardson
Captain(s)Albert Nichols
Amherst Lord Jeffs men's ice hockey seasons
« 1928–29 1930–31 »

Season

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Amherst began its first season under Richardson with a four-game exhibition against the Speculator Hockey Club during the winter break. The team was hoping to build on the experience and produce a good season, however, poor weather reared its head once more and the team found it difficult to get practice time during the season. The lack of ice caused the Lord Jeffs to cancel several scheduled games during the year but they still managed to play nine matches over the course of the season.

The club opened on the road with a trip south to play Pennsylvania at the new Philadelphia Ice Palace. The Jeffmen continued their recent brand of rough and tumble hockey, receiving several penalties in the game, but they swiftly built a lead with goals from Nichols and Turner in the first. Penn fought back in the second but was never quite able to catch the purple squad, who left with a 3–2 victory.[1] The next night the team was in New Jersey to take on Princeton and nearly caught the mighty Tigers off guard. Hanson was under attack from the drop of the puck but kept everything out in the first period, finishing the game with 41 saves. Princeton finally beat the purple netminder at the start of the second but Nichols was quick to reply and tied the game 30 seconds later. At the end of the period, Williams gave Amherst the lead but, replying in kind, the Tigers scored their second goal just 25 seconds afterwards. The game was a slough in the third with neither side providing much in the way of organized hockey. Unfortunately, with just 2 minutes left, Princeton got into the lead for good and managed to hold of a last-gasp attempt by Amherst to banish the Sabrinas.[2]

Back at home for the following weekend, Amherst hosted Williams for the only home game of the season. Nichols and Turner were again the leaders on offense, with the latter getting the opening goal. After the Ephs tied the match, Arthur Williams scored on an individual effort to put his team on top for a second time. The visitors knotted the score in the back half of the second and then put the pressure on Hanson in the third. For the second straight contest the Amherst netminder made more than 40 saves and kept the final frame scoreless to force overtime. Williams turned up the heat in the extra session and were finally able to beat Hanson after a scramble in front of the goal.[3] Around tis time, the team began to suffer the effects of poor weather and saw their home rink rendered unusable for most of the rest of the season. The lack of ice time hamstrung the team and rendered them unable to score in each of their next three matches.

Despite the continued poor weather, Amherst and Massachusetts Agricultural were able to play their annual match on one of the local ponds in early February.[4] That loss with followed by another three days later in Durham, New Hampshire. Despite the defeat, Amherst began to show signs of life against the Wildcats and had many more scoring opportunities than they had in the previous two matches.[5] Those embers burst back into flame in the rematch with Williams that saw Amhest defeat their Little Three rival for the first time in over two years. Arthur Williams, who had scored the last Amherst goal in mid-January, ended the Lord Jeffs' drought late in the first period. Less than a minute later, Nichols flopped a puck towards the Ephs' cage that caught their netminder off guard for a second tally. The home team replied with a furious effort in the second that resulted in one goal but Hanson kept everything else out of the net. Knutson added an insurance marker in the third and enabled the Lord Jeffs to earn their second win of the season.[6]

Any celebrations for the team was short-lived as they headed back to New Hampshire the next day for a tilt with Dartmouth. Though in the midst of a poor season overall, the Indians proved to be far superior to the Sabrinas by clobbering the Jeffmen 1–11. The team tried to recover after being humbles by the ivy-leaguers but ended their season with a loss to Hamilton on the road.

Robert W. Griffith served as team manager with John M. Miller as his assistant.[7]

Roster

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[7]

No. S/P/C Player Class Pos Height Weight DoB Hometown Previous team
  Robert S. Bowditch Senior C 1909-06-18 Hillsdale, Michigan
  Emmons Bryant Jr. Sophomore D 1910-01-01 Yonkers, New York
  G. Burton Cumming Sophomore LW 1909-10-12 Concord, New Hampshire
  Donald P. Felt Senior 1908-10-30 Melrose, Massachusetts
  S. Charles Hanson Senior G Easthampton, Massachusetts
  Finley R. Greene Freshman 1911-11-14 Buffalo, New York
  Willard M. Kellogg Senior 1907-11-20 West Hartford, Connecticut
  Frederick W. Knutson Sophomore D 1910-09-09 Boston, Massachusetts
  Albert J. Nichols (C) Senior C West Hartford, Connecticut
  Hubert L. Perry Senior D 1908-05-20 Buffalo, New York
  Norman W. Turner Sophomore RW Waltham, Massachusetts
  Arthur S. Williams Jr. Junior LW 1907-07-23 Montclair, New Jersey

Standings

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Intercollegiate Overall
GP W L T Pct. GF GA GP W L T GF GA
Amherst 9 2 7 0 .222 12 30 9 2 7 0 12 30
Army 10 6 2 2 .700 28 18 11 6 3 2 31 23
Bates 11 6 4 1 .591 27 21 11 6 4 1 27 21
Boston University 10 4 5 1 .450 34 31 13 4 8 1 40 48
Bowdoin 7 2 5 0 .286 10 23 7 2 5 0 10 23
Brown 12 8 3 1
Clarkson 6 4 2 0 .667 50 11 10 8 2 0 70 18
Colgate 6 1 4 1 .250 9 19 6 1 4 1 9 19
Connecticut Agricultural
Cornell 6 4 2 0 .667 29 18 6 4 2 0 29 18
Dartmouth 13 5 8 0 44 54
Hamilton 8 4 4 0
Harvard 10 7 2 1 .750 44 14 12 7 4 1 48 23
Massachusetts Agricultural 11 7 4 0 .636 25 25 11 7 4 0 25 25
Middlebury 8 6 2 0 .750 26 13 8 6 2 0 26 13
MIT 8 4 4 0 .500 16 27 8 4 4 0 16 27
New Hampshire 13 3 8 2 22 42
Northeastern 7 2 5 0
Norwich 6 0 4 2
Pennsylvania 10 4 6 0 .400 36 39 11 4 7 0 40 49
Princeton 18 9 8 1
Rensselaer 3 1 2 0
St. John's
St. Lawrence 4 0 4 0
St. Stephen's
Union 5 2 2 1 .500 8 18 5 2 2 1 8 18
Vermont
Villanova 1 0 1 0 .000 3 7 4 0 3 1 13 22
Williams 9 4 4 1 .500 28 32 9 4 4 1 28 32
Yale 14 12 1 1 .893 80 21 19 17 1 1 110 28

Schedule and results

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Date Opponent Site Result Record
Regular Season
January 10 at Pennsylvania* Philadelphia Ice PalacePhiladelphia, Pennsylvania W 3–2  1–0–0
January 11 at Princeton* Hobey Baker Memorial RinkPrinceton, New Jersey L 2–3  1–1–0
January 18 Williams* Alumni Field RinkAmherst, Massachusetts L 2–3 OT 1–2–0
January ? at Union* Central Park Rink • Schenectady, New York L 0–2  1–3–0
February 5 at Massachusetts Agricultural* Campus Pond • Amherst, Massachusetts L 0–2  1–4–0
February 8 at New Hampshire* UNH Ice RinkDurham, New Hampshire L 0–2  1–5–0
February 11 at Williams* Sage Hall Rink • Williamstown, Massachusetts W 3–1  2–5–0
February 12 at Dartmouth* Davis RinkHanover, New Hampshire L 1–11  2–6–0
February ? at Hamilton* Russell Sage RinkClinton, New York L 1–4  2–7–0
*Non-conference game.

† Union records do not include a game with Amherst this season.
[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Varsity Skaters Lose Close Tilt to Amherst". The Daily Pennsylvanian. January 11, 1930. Retrieved July 2, 2021.
  2. ^ "PRINCETON RINKMEN OVERTURN AMHERST IN CLUMSY STRUGGLE". The Daily Princetonian. January 13, 1930. Retrieved November 28, 2024.
  3. ^ "Overtime Score Downs Amherst". The Williams Record. January 21, 1930. Retrieved July 7, 2023.
  4. ^ "Amherst Falls to Bay Staters". The Massachusetts Collegian. February 12, 1930. Retrieved August 3, 2023.
  5. ^ "Hockey Sextet Defeats Amherst". The New Hampshire. February 13, 1930. Retrieved November 28, 2024.
  6. ^ "Sabrina Wins, M.A.C. Loses in Hockey Here". The Williams Record. February 15, 1930. Retrieved July 7, 2023.
  7. ^ a b c "1931 Olio". Amherst College. Retrieved November 28, 2024.