princeton new jersey — The goaltender after leading Cornell University to its fifth Ivy League championship in the past six seasons. Ian Shane Selected as Ivy League Player of the Year for 2023-24. mike shafer He was named Ivy League Coach of the Year for the 2023-24 season.Dartmouth standout defenseman CJ Foley He was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year.
Shane was unanimously selected for the league's highest honor after helping the Big Red to a 5-2-3 record in the Ivy League, leading Cornell to postseason play at 17-6-6 overall. became. With a record of 17 wins, 4 losses, and 6 draws, Shane led the nation in points per game (1.66), ranked ninth in the nation, and led the Ivy League in save percentage (0.921). The junior only allowed more than two goals to an Ivy League opponent once all season and had two shutouts in conference play.
Foley totaled five goals and 15 assists in his first season at Dartmouth, ranking tied for third in the Big Green in scoring and posting a team-high +7 rating. The freshman blueliner has scored in eight of Dartmouth's past 10 games, leading Dartmouth this season during a period in which the Big Green went 6-1-3 overall and 3-0-2 overall. , was the key to success, especially in the second half. against an Ivy League opponent.
Schaefer was named Ivy League Coach of the Year for the fourth time in his career and for the first time since 2020 after leading the Big Red team to the top of the Ivy League. Schaefer orchestrated a masterful defensive plan with Schoen backstopping him, which was a key factor in the Big Red winning the Ivy League Championship as Cornell led the nation in points allowed with 1.86 points per game. .
Shane and Foley were two of three unanimous selections to the All-Ivy First Team, the other being Dartmouth's other All-Ivy First Team representative. . Luke Haymes. Haymes led the Big Green team in scoring with 17 goals and 18 assists and finished the season with a nine-game scoring streak.Cornell also had two of his All-Ivy first team members, Shane and Forward. gabriel seager. Seager led the Big Red with 12 goals and 23 assists this season.Harvard University placed two players on the All-Ivy First Team Joe MillerHe had 11 goals and 14 assists for the Crimson. ryan healyalmost tripled his performance from a year ago, with nine goals, 12 assists, and 29 blocked shots.The final member of the expanded All-Ivy first team is Princeton defenseman Nick Karabin This year, he recorded 17 points and 20 blocks.
The All-Ivy Second Team was also expanded due to a tie in the voting, with four Ivy League member institutions represented.Cornell, Brown, and Princeton each had two varsity players, and Yale had a goalie. jack stark As its only winner.Cornell University's representative player was a forward. John Castagna and defenseman ben robertsonPlace brown in front ryan st louis and defenseman alex pinaultAnd Princeton had two forwards. Ian Murphy and Nick Seitz Named to the All-Ivy Second Team.
Player of the Year: Ian Shane, Cornell University*
Rookie of the Year: CJ Foley, Dartmouth*
Coach of the Year: Mike Shafer, Cornell University
First Team All Ivy^
Luke Haymes, Dartmouth, F*
Gabriel Seager, Cornell, F
Joe Miller, Harvard University, F
CJ Foley, Dartmouth, D*
Ryan Healey, Harvard University, Democrat
Nick Carabin, Princeton, Democrat
Ian Shane, Cornell, G*
Second Team All Ivy^
Ryan St. Louis, Brown, F
John Castagna, Cornell, F
Ian Murphy, Princeton, F
Nick Seitz, Princeton, F
Alex Pineau, Brown, Democrat
Ben Robertson, Democrat of Cornell
Jack Stark, Yale University, G
Honorable mention
Arthur Smith, Princeton, G.
academic all ivy
Jordan Tonelli, Brown
Gabriel Seager, Cornell University
Stephen Townley, Dartmouth
Christian Jimenez, Harvard University
Nick Seitz, Princeton
Connor Sullivan, Yale University
* indicates unanimous selection
^ Expand the team due to a tie in the number of votes.