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Jack Canniff

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biographical details
Born(1931-10-20)October 20, 1931
Cambridge, Massachusetts
DiedAugust 29, 2009(2009-08-29) (aged 77)
Danvers, Massachusetts
Alma materBoston College
Playing career
1952–1954Boston College
Position(s)Forward
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1956–1967Gloucester High
1967–1979Massachusetts
Head coaching record
Overall120–140–8 (college)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1972 ECAC 2 Tournament Champion
Awards
1972 Edward Jeremiah Award

John E. Canniff Jr. was an American ice hockey coach and player who led the program at Massachusetts for a dozen years.[1]

Career

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Canniff was a multi-sport star at Arlington High School. He made enough of a name for himself that he received some attention from the Brooklyn Dodgers.[2] Canniff chose instead to continue with ice hockey and began attending Boston College in 1950. Canniff played two years for the Eagles under head coach John Kelley and helped the team make the NCAA Tournament as a senior. BC had one of the worst performances in tournament history and lost their two games by a combined score of 3–21.[3]

After graduating, Canniff was drafted into the Army. With the Korean War finished by that time, Canniff was assigned to a base in Germany and served as an umpire. He was sent to Colorado Springs for the US trials in the run-up to the 1956 Winter Olympics but was ultimately left off the team. Canniff left the Army in 1956 and he returned to Massachusetts to become the football and ice hockey coach at Gloucester High School as well as teaching algebra. Canniff remained at the school for over a decade before having his name put forward by John Kelley, his old coach, for the open position at Massachusetts.

While one of the oldest programs in the NCAA, Canniff was taking over a team that seen just two winning seasons in the previous 30 years. After a poor first season, The Redmen responded to their new bench boss and UMass began to improve in the standings. The team posted a winning record in his third season and then finished 3rd out of 28 teams in 1970–71. The next year, Canniff led Massachusetts to its best record since the early 1910s and won the ECAC 2 Tournament. Because it was the only postseason event held at the College Division level, it is seen as a de facto National Championship. Canniff also received the Edward Jeremiah Award as the national coach of the year.

Unfortunately, the team was unable to sustain that level of success and quickly reverted back to be a sub-.500 club. The biggest problems for the team were the lack of funding and the lack of an actual home rink. Instead, the team borrowed the Orr Rink, the home for the Amherst Lord Jeffs, or used natural ponds for its playing surface. The cost of upgrading the program was too much for the university at the time and the administration decided the situation was untenable. In 1978 the school chose to end the program after the upcoming year and the resulting team was one of the worst the program had ever fielded. With no recruits and several players transferring away, the Minutemen won just a single game on the year. Still dedicated to the team, Canniff led them through the difficult year and ended his tenure in the college ranks upon the demise of the program.

After his time at UMass, Canniff returned to teaching algebra, this time at South Hadley High School, until his retirement. Hockey did eventually return to UMass after the Mullins Center was built in 1993. Upon the team's return, the program established the 'John Canniff Unsung Hero Award', a team award for a player whose contributions were otherwise going unrecognized. Canniff was inducted into the UMass Athletic Hall of Fame in 2008.[4] About a year later, Canniff died at the age of 77 from cancer.[5]

Statistics

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Regular season and playoffs

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    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1951–52 Boston College Hockey East
1953–54 Boston College Hockey East
NCAA totals 23 26 49

Head coaching record

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Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Massachusetts Redmen (ECAC 2) (1967–1972)
1967–68 Massachusetts 5–15–0 5–11–0 T-16th
1968–69 Massachusetts 9–12–0 8–10–0 16th
1969–70 Massachusetts 10–8–0 10–5–0 10th
1970–71 Massachusetts 14–6–1 12–3–1 3rd ECAC 2 Semifinals
1971–72 Massachusetts 19–7–0 15–3–0 T–2nd ECAC 2 Champion
Massachusetts: 57–48–1 50–32–1
Massachusetts Minutemen (ECAC 2) (1972–1979)
1972–73 Massachusetts 14–11–2 12–4–2 5th ECAC 2 Semifinals
1973–74 Massachusetts 10–12–1 10–6–0 6th ECAC 2 Semifinals
1974–75 Massachusetts 10–14–1 9–9–1 T–11th
1975–76 Massachusetts 12–13–0 12–8–0 9th
1976–77 Massachusetts 8–13–1 8–11–1 T–17th
1977–78 Massachusetts 8–11–1 8–11–1 19th
1978–79 Massachusetts 1–18–1 1–18–1 33rd
Massachusetts: 63–92–7 60–67–6
Total: 120–140–8

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

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  1. ^ "2008-09 UMASS HOCKEY" (PDF). UMass Minutemen. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  2. ^ "John E. Canniff Jr". Legacy.com. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  3. ^ "NCAA Division 1 Tournament". College Hockey Historical Archives. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
  4. ^ "Jack Canniff". UMass Minutemen. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  5. ^ "Longtime UMass coach Jack Canniff remembered as difference-maker". Mass Live. September 12, 2009. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
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Awards and achievements
Preceded by Edward Jeremiah Award
1971–72
Succeeded by