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Cal Ingraham
Born June 4, 1970(1970-06-04) (age 53)
Georgetown, Massachusetts, USA

Cal Ingraham is an American retired ice hockey coach and right wing who was an All-American for Maine and helped the program win its first National Championship in 1993.[1]

Career[]

Ingraham began attending the Air Force Academy in the fall of 1989. His career path changed after he was able to score more than a point per game as a freshman and he transferred after the season. He sat out for the required scholastic year and appeared in his first game for Maine in the fall of 1991. He played well for a very strong Black Bears squad but the team faltered once they got into the NCAA Tournament, losing their first game to Michigan State.

Everything changed when the team added Paul Kariya for the following season. Ingraham teamed with the future Hall of famer on the top line along with Jim Montgomery and got Maine to produce one of the most overpowering campaigns in NCAA history. The Black Bears won just about everything in 1993, finishing the year with a NCAA record 42 wins and losing just a single game. Ingraham led the nation with 46 goals, finishing 4th overall in scoring and was one of five All-Americans on the team. After winning the national championship, Ingraham returned for his senior season, serving as team captain after Kariya left to pursue a professional career.[2] Predictably the team was a bit flat but things got worse when Maine was forced to forfeit 14 games for using an ineligible player. Maine finished dead-last in their conference as a result and ended the season by getting swept in the Hockey East quarterfinals.

After graduating, Ingraham took a year off before returning to the game. He instantly became a major point producer for the Tallahassee Tiger Sharks, becoming the all-time leading scorer for the now-defunct franchise. He played three seasons with the team but didn't receive any interest from higher-level teams despite his gaudy scoring totals. He signed on with the Idaho Steelheads in 1998 and went on to become the franchise leading scorer for a second team. For three consecutive seasons he scored 50 goals and 100 points for the Steelheads. Ingraham also helped the team reach the Taylor Cup Finals in his final two seasons, retiring following the 2002 championship.

After hanging up his skates, Ingraham remained in Idaho and became a coach. He eventually worked his way up to becoming the head coach for Boise State University, heading the club team from 2011 to 2017.[3]

Statistics[]

Regular season and playoffs[]

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1987–88 Avon Old Farms US-Prep
1988–89 Avon Old Farms US-Prep
1989–90 Air Force NCAA 26 17 11 28 21
1991–92 Maine Hockey East 37 15 30 45 22
1992–93 Maine Hockey East 45 46 39 85 50
1993–94 Maine Hockey East 24 12 17 29 20
1995–96 Tallahassee Tiger Sharks ECHL 69 32 39 71 57 12 8 8 16 10
1996–97 Tallahassee Tiger Sharks ECHL 70 34 58 92 54 3 1 0 1 2
1997–98 Tallahassee Tiger Sharks ECHL 70 40 53 93 38
1998–99 Idaho Steelheads WCHL 71 50 60 110 47 2 0 1 1 0
1999–00 Idaho Steelheads WCHL 70 52 49 101 46 3 2 0 2 4
2000–01 Idaho Steelheads WCHL 70 50 52 102 79 13 9 14 23 8
2001–02 Idaho Steelheads WCHL 63 23 45 68 22 15 5 4 9 12
NCAA totals 132 90 97 187 113
ECHL totals 209 106 150 256 149 15 9 8 17 12
WCHL totals 274 175 206 381 194 33 16 19 35 24

Awards and honors[]

Award Year
East Second-Team All-American 1992–93 [1]

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Cal Ingraham and the edit history here.
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