The 1996 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament involved 12 schools playing in single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey. It began on March 22, 1996, and ended with the championship game on March 30. A total of 11 games were played. The top two seeds in each region received a bye into the tournament quarterfinals.
In the regional semifinals, Michigan's Mike Legg scored a high wraparound goal that, in the U.S., is now known as a Michigan goal.[1]
The University of Michigan, coached by Red Berenson, won the national championship with a 3–2 victory over Colorado College in overtime in front of 12,957 fans.[2]
Qualifying teams
The at-large bids and seeding for each team in the tournament were announced after the conference tournaments concluded. The Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) had four teams receive a berth in the tournament, the ECAC and Hockey East each had three teams receive a berth in the tournament, while the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) had two berths.
[3]
Game locations
Tournament bracket
| Regional Quarterfinals March 22–23 | | | Regional semifinals March 23–24 | | | Frozen Four March 28 | | | National championship March 30 | |
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| | | | E1 | Boston University | 3 | | | |
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| | | E5 | Clarkson | 2 | |
| E4 | Western Michigan | 1 | |
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| E5 | Clarkson | 6 | |
| | E1 | Boston University | 0 | |
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| | | W2 | Michigan | 4 | |
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| | W2 | Michigan | 4 | |
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| | | W3 | Minnesota | 3 | |
| W3 | Minnesota | 5 | |
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| W6 | Providence | 1 | |
| | W2 | Michigan | 3* | |
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| | | W1 | Colorado College | 2 | |
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| | E2 | Vermont | 2 | |
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| | | E3 | Lake Superior State | 1 | |
| E3 | Lake Superior State | 5 | |
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| E6 | Cornell | 4 | |
| | E2 | Vermont | 3 | |
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| | | W1 | Colorado College | 4** | |
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| | W1 | Colorado College | 5 | |
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| | | W4 | Massachusetts-Lowell | 3 | |
| W4 | Massachusetts-Lowell | 6 | |
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| W5 | Michigan State | 2 | |
Note: * denotes overtime period(s)
Regional Quarterfinals
East Regional
(3) Lake Superior State vs. (6) Cornell
(4) Western Michigan vs. (5) Clarkson
West Regional
(3) Minnesota vs. (6) Providence
(4) Massachusetts-Lowell vs. (5) Michigan State
| March 23[4] | Massachusetts-Lowell | | 6 – 2 | | Michigan State | Munn Ice Arena | |
(Donovan, Sbrocca) Jeff Daw – 07:12 (Concannon, Donovan) David Barrozino – 16:57 | First period | No scoring |
(Dartsch) Marc Salsman – GW – 06:52 (Sbrocca) Brendan Concannon – 11:30 | Second period | 18:52 – Sean Berens (York, Watt) |
(Concannon) David Barrozino – 00:34 (Mahoney, Sandholm) David Barrozino – 17:42 | Third period | 06:42 – Mark Loeding (Adams, Ford) |
Regional semifinals
East Regional
(1) Boston University vs. (5) Clarkson
(2) Vermont vs. (3) Lake Superior State
West Regional
(1) Colorado College vs. (4) Massachusetts-Lowell
(2) Michigan vs. (3) Minnesota
Frozen Four
National semifinal
(E1) Boston University vs. (W2) Michigan
(E2) Vermont vs. (W1) Colorado College
National Championship
(W2) Michigan vs. (W1) Colorado College
| Shots by period | | Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | OT | T | | Michigan | 3 | 4 | 10 | 2 | 19 | | Colorado College | 5 | 8 | 8 | 1 | 23 | | |
* Most Outstanding Player(s)[6]
[7]
Record by conference
| Conference | # of Bids | Record | Win % | Regional semifinals | Frozen Four | Championship Game | Champions |
| CCHA | 4 | 4-3 | .571 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| ECAC | 3 | 2-3 | .400 | 2 | 1 | - | - |
| Hockey East | 3 | 2-3 | .400 | 2 | 1 | - | - |
| WCHA | 2 | 3-2 | .600 | 2 | 1 | 1 | - |
References
1995–96 NCAA Division I championships |
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- † Not an officially sanctioned NCAA championship
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