
Bobcats Name Seeley Head Coach
HAMDEN, Conn. -- Quinnipiac University Athletics today named
Rick Seeley (Toronto, Ontario) as the third head coach in the
history of its women's ice hockey program. Seeley joins Quinnipiac
while continuing a stellar coaching career in women's collegiate
ice hockey, most recently as head coach of fellow ECAC Hockey
member Clarkson University. Last season Clarkson advanced to the
ECAC Hockey Tournament Semifinals and finished the year ranked No.
8 in the USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine Poll and
No. 9 in the U.S. College Hockey Online Poll. Clarkson owned a
24-9-5 overall record and placed fourth during the regular season
in arguably the nation's most competitive women's college hockey
conference.
"Rick Seeley brings a wealth of successful experience as a head
coach to Quinnipiac," said Jack McDonald, Quinnipiac University
director of athletics and recreation. "Along the way he has built
two programs to national prominence and postseason success. Our
women's ice hockey team and the entire Quinnipiac community welcome
Rick and his wife, Chapel."
Named as the Clarkson head coach in the fall of 2002 Seeley ushered
in women's hockey as a varsity athletic program and, in the Golden
Knights' first five seasons, compiled a 93-67-18 (.573)
overall record. The Green and Gold earned ECAC Hockey Playoff
berths in their first four seasons in the conference.
"I'd like to thank Quinnipiac University, particularly President John Lahey, Val Belmonte and Jack McDonald, for extending this tremendous opportunity to me," said Seeley. "I feel very fortunate to be guiding the next phase of the Quinnipiac women's hockey program and I am looking forward to what the future holds."
Seeley first established Clarkson as one of the nation's premier
teams during the 2005-06 campaign. Ranked among the top-10 squads
in the country throughout the majority of the regular season,
Clarkson skated to a 22-14-1 overall record and finished in a
three-way tie for third place in ECAC Hockey with a 12-8 conference
mark. The Knights tested eventual ECAC Hockey Tournament Champion
Harvard University in the Quarterfinal Round in Cambridge, Mass.,
falling to the Crimson in double overtime of the deciding third
game.
The 2006-07 season saw the end of an era come when Seeley's first
recruiting class completed its four-year run at Clarkson. An
18-15-3 mark and another trip to the ECAC Hockey Playoffs capped a
remarkable run for the Class of 2007, as Seeley and his senior
class nearly upset Frozen Four participant St. Lawrence University
in the ECAC Hockey Quarterfinals. That season Seeley coached an
ECAC Hockey All-Rookie Team Forward and an All-Rookie Team
Defenseman.
In 2005-06 Clarkson boasted the ECAC Hockey Goaltender of the Year,
who was also a Second-Team All-American, in addition to an
All-Rookie Team Defenseman. Last season Clarkson's roster included
several ECAC Hockey honorees, including an All-Rookie Team Forward,
an All-Rookie Team Goaltender, a Third-Team All-Conference Forward
and a Third Team All-Conference Defenseman.
Seeley also saw 21 student-athletes named to ECAC Hockey All-Academic Teams, and six players recognized as American Women's College Hockey Alliance (AWCHA) All-Academic Team members. He successfully nominated an eventual two-time finalist in both 2006 and 2007 for The Hockey Humanitarian Award, presented annually to "college hockey's finest citizen."
Prior to coming to Clarkson Seeley similarly built the
Manhattanville College women's hockey program from the ground up
while assembling four outstanding recruiting classes and guiding
the program to national prominence at the Division III level.
During his three seasons at Manhattanville (1999-2000 through
2001-02) Seeley guided the Valiants to a 54-16-4 overall record. In
2001-02 he led Manhattanville to a 23-2-2 mark - including an
undefeated run in conference play - and advanced to the NCAA
Division III National Championship Game. That year Manhattanville
was ranked as high as No. 2 in the national polls following its win
over then-No. 1 Middlebury College. In the process, the Valiants
ended Middlebury's 136-game, seven-year winning streak versus
Division III opponents. Seeley was named ECAC East Coach of the
Year and runner-up for National Coach of the Year in 2002.
During his career Seeley has crafted an extensive background in the sport at numerous levels, including as an assistant coach at two NCAA Division III men's ice hockey programs: Hobart College (1987-93) and Rochester Institute of Technology (1997-98). He helped Hobart advance to the program's first-ever two postseason appearances, and recruited two future All-Americans at RIT while advancing to the 1998 NCAA Division III Quarterfinals.
Between his stints as a men's assistant coach Seeley helped establish an American Hockey League franchise in Syracuse, N.Y. With the Syracuse Crunch, Seeley served as the director of community relations and was also the assistant to the general manager.
In addition to his duties as the women's ice hockey coach at Manhattanville, Seeley served as the assistant athletic director for marketing and promotions. As a student-athlete at Elmira College (1983-87) the forward averaged more than a point per game with the men's ice hockey team before earning a bachelor's degree in business marketing.
Seeley was selected by Quinnipiac following an exhaustive
nationwide search coordinated by DHR International, a leading,
privately held provider of executive search solutions with more
than 40 wholly-owned offices spanning the globe. Glenn Sugiyama,
DHR executive vice president and global sector leader of sports;
and Pat Richter, executive vice president, education and sports
practice; oversaw the process in conjunction with Quinnipiac
University Vice President for Athletic Marketing and External
Relations Val Belmonte and McDonald.
"We experienced a significant amount of interest in this position
from a highly qualified pool of candidates, and we are excited to
announce Rick as our new head coach," said Belmonte. "DHR played an
important role, not only in the identification process of potential
candidates, but also by helping ensure that this decision was an
excellent fit for both Quinnipiac University and Rick Seeley."














