Marsh Ryman
Marshall W. "Marsh" Ryman (June 26, 1910 – January 31, 1992) was a collegiate hockey coach and athletic director at the University of Minnesota. Ryman played baseball and hockey for Minnesota and was the hockey team captain for the 1931–32 season.[1] Ryman coached the Minnesota Golden Gophers men's hockey team in the 1955–56 season to a 16–12–1 record while John Mariucci coached the United States national men's ice hockey team at the 1956 Winter Olympics.[2] Subsequently, Ryman served as the national team coach himself, from 1958–59.[3] in 1960, Ryman was a referee at the 1960 Winter Olympics.[4] Later, Ryman became the Gophers' athletic director from 1963 to 1972, when the University forced Ryman to resign.[5] He won the 1972 George Eldridge Distinguished Service Award for his work in that position.[6] In 1978, he was elected to the National Association of College Athletic Directors Hall of Fame.[7] Ryman died of pneumonia in St. Louis Park, Minnesota in 1992. He is interred in Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis.[8]
Head coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minnesota Golden Gophers (WIHL) (1955–1956) | |||||||||
1955–56 | Minnesota | 16–12–1 | 11–10–1 | 4th | |||||
Minnesota: | 16–12–1 | 11–10–1 | |||||||
Total: | 16–12–1 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
References
- ^ "All-Time Golden Gopher Team Captains"[permanent dead link]. Access Date August 8, 2008.
- ^ "Marsh Ryman Career Record". Access Date August 8, 2008.
- ^ Pheifer, Pat. "Former Gophers AD Marsh Ryman dies." Minneapolis Star-Tribune, January 31, 1992.
- ^ Associated Press. "Ex-Gophers A.D. Ryman Dies of Pneumonia at 81." St. Paul Pioneer Press, February 1, 1992.
- ^ "Warmath, Ryman Said Out." Washington Post, November 27, 1971.
- ^ "George Eldridge Distinguished Service Award" Archived 2006-10-29 at the Wayback Machine. Access Date August 8, 2008.
- ^ Associated Press. "Ex-Gophers A.D. Ryman Dies of Pneumonia at 81." St. Paul Pioneer Press, February 1, 1992.
- ^ Pheifer, Pat. "Former Gophers AD Marsh Ryman dies." Minneapolis Star-Tribune, January 31, 1992.
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- St. Paul Hippodrome (1923–1934)
- St. Paul Auditorium (1932–1950) (occasionally)
- Minneapolis Arena (1925–1950) (primary arena)
- Williams Arena (1950–93)
- 3M Arena at Mariucci (1993–present)
- I. D. MacDonald (1921–23)
- Emil Iverson (1923–30)
- Frank Pond (1930–35)
- Larry Armstrong (1935–47)
- Doc Romnes (1947–52)
- John Mariucci (1952–55, 1956–66)
- Marsh Ryman (1955–56)
- Glen Sonmor (1966–71)
- Ken Yackel (1971–72)
- Herb Brooks (1972–79)
- Brad Buetow (1979–85)
- Doug Woog (1985–99)
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- Bob Motzko (2018–present)
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- Minnesota Duluth
- North Dakota
- St. Cloud State
- Wisconsin
- Mariucci-Bessone Trophy with Michigan State
- Mariucci-Renfrew Trophy with Michigan
- Statistical leaders
- John Mayasich (298 Points)
- John Mayasich (144 Goals)
- Kellen Briggs (84 Wins)
- Neal Broten (1981)
- Robb Stauber (1988)
- Brian Bonin (1996)
- Jordan Leopold (2002)
- University of Minnesota
- Minneapolis, MN
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