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Holy Cross Names Albie O'Connell Assistant Men's Hockey Coach
HOLY CROSS NAMES ALBIE O'CONNELL ASSISTANT MEN'S HOCKEY
COACH
Former Niagara assistant joins Holy Cross staff
WORCESTER, Mass. - The College of the Holy Cross has named Albie
O'Connell an assistant men's ice hockey coach, as announced by head
coach Paul Pearl and Athletic Director Richard M. Regan, Jr.
O'Connell will serve as the recruiting coordinator.
O'Connell comes to Holy Cross from Niagara University, where he was
as an assistant coach for the last two seasons. He previously
served as an assistant coach at Colby College during the 2003-04
season and during 2002-03, O'Connell was an assistant to the Dean
of Students/Director of Student Activities at the Berkshire School
in Sheffield, Mass. There he coached the boys' varsity hockey team.
O'Connell is also very involved with USA Hockey.
A native of Watertown, Mass., O'Connell was a fifth-round draft
choice by the New York Islanders in the 1994 National Hockey League
Entry Draft. He graduated from Boston University in 1999 and was a
four-year member of the hockey team, earning 108 career points with
42 goals and 66 assists. In his four seasons, the Terriers played
in three NCAA Tournaments and reached the Frozen Four on two
occasions, while he served as team captain his senior year.
O'Connell played professional hockey for three seasons (1999-2002)
with stints in the Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL) in the United
Kingdom and the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL).
The Crusaders are coming off their most successful season ever with
a 27-10-2 record and their first win in the NCAA Tournament. The
4-3 overtime victory over Minnesota on Friday, March 24, in the
West Regional Semifinals in Grand Forks, N.D., marked the first
time that a No. 4 seed defeated a No. 1 seed in NCAA action (since
the tournament expanded to 16 teams). The Crusaders also won the
Atlantic Hockey regular season and tournament titles for the second
time in three years, and was ranked No. 14 in the final USA
Today/American Hockey Magazine Poll.


























