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- Ned Harkness - Wikipedia
Harkness and his Cornell team achieved a perfect record, undefeated and untied, in 1970 Cornell capped the 29–0–0 season with victories over Wisconsin and Clarkson University in the NCAA Tournament, bringing Harkness his third and final NCAA championship, and Cornell's second title in four years
- Harkness Brought Winning to Cornell - The Cornell Daily Sun
Overall, Harkness led the Red to a record of 163-27-2, with five Ivy League titles, four ECAC Hockey League titles and the program’s only two national championships
- Cornell Wins Everblades In OT - USCHO. com
For No 15 Cornell (6-2-5), it meant finally getting to see its name on the Ned Harkness Cup, which is awarded to the tournament champion Last-place finishes in 2001 and 2002 and a loss to Maine in the inaugural final left a bitter taste in the Ivy League school’s mouth
- Ned Harkness Cup and Cleary Bedpan?
Ned Harkness Cup is the trophy awarded to the winner of the Everblades tournament The Cleary Bedpan is the Cleary Cup, given to the regular-season ECAC (HL) champs
- Inside College Hockey | Florida College Classic Preview
Semifinal wins by Maine and Boston College will set up an all-Hockey East final BC defeated Maine 3-1 in Orono on Nov 5, and the Eagles should handle the Black Bears again this time around, adding the Ned Harkness Cup to the trophy case next to last year’s GLI title
- Nevin D. (Ned) Harkness (1981) - Hall of Fame
His hockey teams compiled a seven-year record of 163-27-2, with the 1970 team going 29-0, which is unmatched in college hockey history His teams won five Ivy League, four Eastern and two NCAA championships He was named Coach of the Year in 1968
- Florida College Hockey Classic - Wikipedia
The tournament champion was awarded the Ned Harkness Cup, named for the coach that won two NCAA Titles with Cornell and one with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- Ned Harkness - Ice Hockey Wiki
Harkness again won 27 times in the 1968-69 campaign, the only regular season loss coming at the hands of his old team at Rensselaer in a game which later proved to save hockey at his old school a second time
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