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Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey


FieldValue
team_namePenn State Nittany Lions
current2025–26 Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey season
imagePenn State Nittany Lions hockey logo.svg
universityPennsylvania State University
sexmen's
conferenceBig Ten Conference
conference_shortBig Ten
governing_bodyNCAA
first_year1909–10
athletic_directorPat Kraft
coachGuy Gadowsky
coach_year13th
coach_wins218
coach_losses186
coach_ties31
assistant_coaches
arenaPegula Ice Arena
locationUniversity Park, Pennsylvania
studentsectionRoar Zone
fight_songFight On, State
mascotNittany Lion
NCAAfrozenfour2025
NCAAtourneys2017, 2018, 2023, 2025
conference_tournamentBig Ten: 2017
ACHAchampion1984, 1990, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
conference_seasonBig Ten: 2020

Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey, formerly known as the Penn State Icers (the name for the former ACHA team), is a college ice hockey program that represents the Pennsylvania State University. Prior to the 2012–13 season the program was designated a club sport and competed at the ACHA Division I level. PSU was previously a member of the Eastern States Collegiate Hockey League (ESCHL, although the team competed as an independent ACHA D-I member for the 2011–12 season before moving to the NCAA D-I level. They play at the Pegula Ice Arena in University Park, Pennsylvania.

History

Penn State ice hockey was inaugurated in 1938, aside from two games in 1909–10. Penn State fielded a varsity hockey team for five seasons in the 1940s (1940–44, 1946–47) before the sport was dropped due to limited facilities.

ACHA years

The current program traces its roots back to 1971 when the program was restarted at the non-NCAA level. Consensus in the ice hockey community considered Penn State to play on a level comparable to NCAA Division III teams, with whom Penn State routinely scheduled games prior to the move to Division I. The Icers also played Division I, in-state opponent Robert Morris.

When the program was resumed in 1971, it began playing a mix of non-NCAA club teams, NAIA teams and DIII teams. In the 1975–76 season Penn State became the first college ice hockey team to play in Europe. The team moved to the on-campus Greenberg Ice Pavilion, now known as the Penn State Ice Pavilion, in 1980. The 1,350-seat facility was the home of PSU hockey until 2013. From 1971 to 2012, Penn State teams won 7 ACHA National Championships, were runners-up 9 times, appeared in 29 ACHA postseason tournaments (including 10 consecutive championship games), won 9 conference playoff titles and recorded 8 conference regular season championships.

In the program's final season as a member of the ACHA, the team was led by Guy Gadowsky, who stayed on to coach as the team began play in the NCAA. Gadowsky brought a number of transfers and recruits for the NCAA DI team to prepare for a transition from club to varsity status. The team finished the regular season with a record of 27–4 and received a bid to the 2012 ACHA DI National tournament as the number one seed and ranked first in the ACHA. In the tournament, the Icers defeated West Virginia 4–1, followed by Oklahoma 6–3. In the semifinal round, Penn State faced Oakland (MI), who were ranked as the thirteenth seed. The game was a rematch of 2007 ACHA championship when the Golden Grizzlies upset the Icers. In a repeat of 2007, Oakland ended Penn State's season and era in the ACHA by a score of 5–3. The Icers finished the season with an overall record of 29–5, 29–4 in ACHA competition and a 6–3 loss to NCAA Division III Neumann at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia as part of the 2012 NHL Winter Classic events in front of a crowd of 6,800.

Move to NCAA

Over the summer of 2010 it was reported that Penn State athletic director Tim Curley and Terrence Pegula, a PSU alumnus, billionaire hockey fan, and possible large donor visited Minnesota's hockey facilities and the new on-campus Notre Dame Ice Arena currently under construction at Notre Dame and other Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) schools. Pegula, who would eventually go on to purchase the Buffalo Sabres, donated US$88 million (later upgraded to US$102 million) to the Penn State hockey programs for the purpose of building an arena. In August 2010 Tom Anastos, CCHA commissioner said the CCHA was interested in adding Penn State as a 12th member after Nebraska-Omaha left the league to join the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA). Without a women's league the women's team would not join the CCHA, speculation had the women's team joining College Hockey America (CHA), currently a 5-team league with teams in Michigan, Pennsylvania and New York.

On September 17, 2010, after years of speculation, it was officially announced the program would move to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I level along with the PSU women's ice hockey team starting in the 2012–13 season and the program would initially compete as an independent team until the new arena was completed in 2013. The university also announced the construction of a new 6,000-seat ice arena to replace the undersized and aging 1,350-seat Penn State Ice Pavilion.

Following the announcement by Penn State, the Big Ten Conference announced that the conference planned to begin sponsoring men's ice hockey in the 2013–14 season combining Penn State with Michigan State University, University of Michigan, and Ohio State University from the CCHA as well as the University of Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin from the WCHA to form the six-member Big Ten Hockey Conference.

On March 26, 2015, Casey Bailey became the first Penn State player to play in the National Hockey League, debuting for the Toronto Maple Leafs in a 4–1 loss to the Florida Panthers.

In 2017, Penn State defeated Wisconsin to capture their first Big Ten Tournament championship. Freshman goaltender Peyton Jones earned the tournament's 2017 Most Outstanding Player Award. Four Nittany Lions made the All-Tournament Team: Jones, forward Liam Folkes, and defensemen Vince Pedrie and Erik Autio. In their first NCAA tournament game, Penn State notched 10 goals en route to a 10–3 victory. This marked the first time in team history that Penn State scored more than 8 goals in a varsity game. It also marked the most goals scored by a team in an NCAA tournament game since 1990.

Program record

Prior to NCAA D1 status

:First year: 1909–10 :Varsity seasons: 5 (1940–44, 1946–47) :Varsity record: 13–15–1 :Non-varsity seasons: 45 (1909–10, 1937–40, 1971–2012) :Non-varsity record: 962–307–44–11 :ACHA National Championships: 7 (1984, 1990, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003) :ACHA National Runners-Up: 9 (1983, 1985, 1993, 1995, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007)

The Roar Zone

The Roar Zone is the official student section for Penn State Men's Ice Hockey. Founded in 2013, the Roar Zone was created when Penn State Hockey became a Division I team and moved play from the Greenburg Ice Pavilion to the newly built Pegula Ice Arena. The Roar Zone became an official Penn State University club in early 2015 and is frequently featured on ESPN and Big Ten Network game coverages.

The Roar Zone holds more than 1,000 students on bleachers built to be the steepest allowed by code. All Penn State Hockey student season ticket holders are members of this organization.

The Roar Zone frequently works with Penn State Athletics to plan away game bus trips to watch conference and non-conference games. Notable trips include a bus trip to watch Penn State play in Madison Square Garden for the first time on January 30, 2016 and Penn State win an overtime win at the Munn Ice Arena on February 13, 2015.

Season-by-season results

Main article: List of Penn State Nittany Lions men's ice hockey seasons

Source:

Records vs. Big Ten teams

As of the completion of 2021–22 season

SchoolTeamAway ArenaOverall recordWin %HomeAwayLast Result
[](university-of-michigan)[](michigan-wolverines-men-s-ice-hockey)[](yost-ice-arena) 14–22–1****8–8–13–12–03-4 L
[](michigan-state-university)[](michigan-state-spartans-men-s-ice-hockey)[](munn-ice-arena) 20–14–4****11–4–39–10–11-2 L
[](university-of-minnesota)[](minnesota-golden-gophers-men-s-ice-hockey)[](3m-arena-at-mariucci) 16–21–1****9–8–16–13–02-3 L
[](university-of-notre-dame)[](notre-dame-fighting-irish-men-s-ice-hockey)[](compton-family-ice-arena) 7–17–3****3–7–24–10–10-3 L
[](ohio-state-university)[](ohio-state-buckeyes-men-s-ice-hockey)[](value-city-arena)15–21–4****5–9–29–11–22-1 W
[](university-of-wisconsin-madison)[](wisconsin-badgers-men-s-ice-hockey)[](kohl-center)24–18–3****14–6–18–10–27-2 W

Cumulative record against opponents

Prior to NCAA D1 Status

(1909–10, 1937–44, 1946–47, 1971–2012)

Oakland230

:❋ Beginning with the 2006–07 season, ties were abolished in favor of deciding overtime ties by the shootout. Overtime losses before the 2006–07 season are reported in the loss column. :† In 1972, 1980, and 1983–85, Penn State won 4 and lost 1 against opponents whose identities have not been retrieved.

Coaches

On April 25, 2011, Penn State named Guy Gadowsky as the program's first NCAA Division I men's hockey coach. Gadowsky was previously the head coach of the Princeton Tigers from 2004 to 2011 and also served as head coach of the Alaska Nanooks from 1999 to 2004. He replaces Scott Balboni, who coached the Icers for five seasons from 2006 to 2011 and compiled a 150–35–8 record.

NCAA all-time coaching records

As of completion of 2024–25 season

Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"TenurePenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"CoachPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"YearsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"RecordPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"Pct.Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"TotalsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"3 coachesPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"18 SeasonsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"244–215–33Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"
1909–1910No Coach10–2–0
1940–1944Arthur Davis413–10–1
1946–1947James O'Hora10–3–0
2012–presentGuy Gadowsky12231–200–31

ACHA All-time coaching records

As of completion of 2011–12 season

Statistical leaders

Source:

Career points leaders

Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"PlayerPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"YearsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"GPPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"GPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"APenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"PtsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"PIM
2016–2020147617914068
2013–2017147448412870
2017–2021128517412536
2015–2019154516711834
2016–2020138417511649
2016–2020138506511536
2015–20181115450104105
2016–2020137485510318
2017–202098395695117
2019–202312543438660

Career goaltending leaders

GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

minimum 30 games

Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"PlayerPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"YearsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"GPPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"MinPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"WPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"LPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"TPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"GAPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"SOPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"SV%Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=white}};"GAA
2016–202013378667644113784.9072.88
2012–2016774420323272123.9092.88
2020–2024844824393932373.8972.95
2018–2022492819212511424.8973.02
2013–2016442420182121321.9053.27

Statistics current through the end of the 2023–24 season.

Players

Current roster

As of October 30, 2025.

Awards and honors

NCAA

Individual awards

Derek Hines Unsung Hero Award

  • P. J. Musico: 2015

NCAA Scoring Champion

  • Alex Limoges: 2019

All-Americans

AHCA First Team All-Americans

AHCA Second Team All-Americans

  • 2019–20: Cole Hults, D; Nate Sucese, F
  • 2024–25: Aiden Fink, F

Big Ten

Individual awards

Defensive Player of the Year

  • Trevor Hamilton: 2018

Coach of the Year

  • Guy Gadowsky: 2015

Tournament Most Outstanding Player

  • Peyton Jones: 2016

All-Conference Teams

First Team All-Big Ten

  • 2014–15: Casey Bailey, F
  • 2016–17: Vince Pedrie, D
  • 2017–18: Trevor Hamilton, D
  • 2018–19: Evan Barratt, F
  • 2024–25: Aiden Fink, F

Second Team All-Big Ten

  • 2015–16: Eamon McAdam, G; Vince Pedrie, D
  • 2024–25: Arsenii Sergeev, G; Simon Mack, D

Big Ten All-Rookie Team

  • 2014–15: Scott Conway, F
  • 2015–16: Vince Pedrie, D
  • 2016–17: Peyton Jones, G; Kris Myllari, D; Denis Smirnov, D
  • 2023–24: Aiden Fink, F
  • 2024–25: Charlie Cerrato, F; Cade Christenson, D

Nittany Lions in the NHL

As of June 1, 2025

= NHL All-Star teamNHL All-Star]]NHL All-Star]] and NHL All-Star teamHall of Famers]]

--

Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PlayerPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"PositionPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"Team(s)Penn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"YearsPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"GamesPenn State Nittany Lionscolor=#FFFFFF}};"[](stanley-cup)
Casey BaileyRight WingTOR, OTT2014–2017130
Brandon BiroLeft WingBUF2021–202460
Brett MurrayLeft WingBUF2020–Present260

References

References

  1. "2015–16 Penn State Men's Hockey Yearbook".
  2. . (September 17, 2010). ["Penn State to Add Men's and Women's Varsity Ice Hockey"](http://www.gopsusports.com/sports/m-hockey/spec-rel/091710aab.html). *[[Penn State University]]*.
  3. (2010). "(M1) Penn State University Records". [[American Collegiate Hockey Association.
  4. . (July 19, 2010). ["State College man to coach in ECHL"](http://www.centredaily.com/2010/07/19/2100286/state-college-man-to-coach-in.html). *[[Centre Daily Times]]*.
  5. (2007). "Welcome to the official site of Penn State Team Sports". [[Penn State University]].
  6. (2006–2007). "Welcome to the Official Site of the Penn State Ice Pavilion". [[Penn State University]].
  7. Rossi, Kyle. "M Results/Season, 1909 –".
  8. "Penn State Icers: History and Facts". [[Penn State University]].
  9. . (September 17, 2010). ["Penn State Graduates To NCAA Division I"](http://achahockey.org/news2.php?news_id=296866&lang=). *[[American Collegiate Hockey Association*.
  10. (December 27, 2008). "Salem State 2, Penn State 1". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  11. (December 28, 2008). "Penn State 8, Salve Regina 0". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  12. (October 8, 2005). "Penn State 3, Robert Morris 2". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  13. (October 8, 2006). "Penn State 6, Robert Morris 0". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  14. "Icers Records by Season". [[Penn State University]].
  15. . (March 27, 2006). ["Nittany Lion Club Taps Ice Hockey Coach Joe Battista as Executive Director"](http://www.gopsusports.com/genrel/032706aaa.html). *[[Penn State University]]*.
  16. Pickel, Greg. (March 6, 2012). "Penn State Hockey: Icers Upset in ACHA Semifinals, Ending Era at Club Level". State College News.
  17. (February 15, 2012). "2011–2012 ACHA Men's Division 1 Ranking #9". [[American Collegiate Hockey Association.
  18. (January 4, 2012). "Neumann 6, Penn State 3". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  19. Hradek, E.J.. (September 17, 2010). "Penn State hockey moves to D-I". [[ESPN]].
  20. Gholston, Sandy. (August 10, 2010). "Anastos to the Detroit News: Penn State 'very attractive' to the CCHA". [[Mlive.com]].
  21. Wodon, Adam. (September 13, 2010). "Penn State Ready to Play". College Hockey News.
  22. Giger, Cory. (August 6, 2010). "Penn State 'close' to adding arena, Division I hockey". [[Altoona Mirror]].
  23. Starman, Dave. (September 13, 2010). "Which Way Will Dominos Fall After Penn State's Introduction?". U.S. College Hockey Online.
  24. . (September 17, 2010). ["Pegulas Commit Historic Gift To PenI State For New Arena And Hockey Program"](http://www.gopsusports.com/sports/m-hockey/spec-rel/091710aaa.html). *[[Penn State University]]*.
  25. Ciskie, Bruce. (September 13, 2010). "Penn State Reportedly Set to Add Hockey". [[FanHouse]].
  26. Wodon, Adam. (September 16, 2010). "Penn State Announcement Expected Friday". College Hockey News.
  27. . (March 21, 2011). ["Big Ten confirms plan to sponsor hockey starting in 2013–14 season"](http://www.uscho.com/2011/03/21/big-ten-confirms-plan-to-sponsor-hockey-starting-in-2013-14-season/). *USCHO*.
  28. Woody, Doyle. (March 26, 2010). "The dream is real: Casey Bailey made his NHL debut". Alaska Dispatch News.
  29. Rossi, Kyle. (28 August 2012). "The Whitewashing of PSU's Club History".
  30. (6 September 2013). "View from atop the #RoarZone....".
  31. (13 October 2012). "Photo from where I'm sitting. That's...".
  32. (31 October 2014). "The Roar Zone: An Opponent's Nightmare – Onward State".
  33. "Michigan rallies past Penn State hockey at Madison Square Garden".
  34. "FINAL: MSU hockey falls again in nail-biting fashion to Penn State, 4-2".
  35. "Penn State 2018-19 Men's ice hockey Yearbook". Penn State Nittany Lions.
  36. "Penn State 2022-23 Men's ice hockey Media Guide". Penn State Nittany Lions.
  37. . (April 24, 2011). ["Penn State names Gadowsky its first varsity men's coach"](http://www.uscho.com/2011/04/24/penn-state-names-gadowsky-its-first-varsity-mens-coach/). *U.S. College Hockey Online*.
  38. . (April 24, 2011). ["Penn State Hires Guy Gadowsky as Head Coach"](http://insidecollegehockey.com/inch/2011/04/24/gadowsky_pennstate_0929/). *[[ESPN*.
  39. . (November 12, 2009). ["Penn State University's Scott Balboni Hits Milestone With Win #100"](http://achahockey.org/news2.php?news_id=213963&league_id=1059). *[[American Collegiate Hockey Association*.
  40. "Penn State 2018-19 Men's ice hockey Yearbook". Penn State University.
  41. "Icers 2011–12 Schedule/Results".
  42. "Ohio State Men's Hockey Team Guide 2018-19". Ohio State Buckeyes.
  43. "2025–26 Men's Ice Hockey Roster". [[Penn State Nittany Lions]].
  44. "Alumni report for Pennsylvania State U". Hockey DB.
  45. Players are identified as an All-Star if they were selected for the All-Star game at any time in their career.
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