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Head Coach Heather Linstad
Head coach Heather Linstad enters her eighth season at the helm of the
University of Connecticut women’s ice hockey program. Recruited to build the
women’s ice hockey program at UConn from scratch, Linstad has laid a solid
foundation to the development of a highly competitive team. Not only has the
women’s ice hockey team improved continuously over her tenure, Linstad has also
guided the Huskies into a superior level of competition as a charter member of
the Hockey East Conference. As a head coach, Linstad has collected 240 career
victories, the fourth-highest in NCAA Division I women’s ice hockey history
among active coaches. The 2007-08 season was her most successful campaign in
Storrs as the Huskies set school records for most wins overall (22) and most
Hockey East victories (13). The Huskies also set a new milestone for the program
with a nine-game winning streak as well as an 11-game unbeaten run. Linstad's
team was ranked second in the league going into the Hockey East Tournament and
were ranked in the top 10 in the nation for all but two weeks of the season.
Last year was highlighted by Dominique Thibault being named the Huskies' first
ever Hockey East Player of the Year and Jaclyn Hawkins earning the league's
Sportsmanship Award. During the 2006-07 season, Linstad's program had a prior
record for most wins (17), Hockey East wins (12) and most ranked wins (four).
The Huskies beat or tied five of the eight teams selected for the NCAA
Tournament, in the process handing eventual Frozen Four participant Boston
College its only two home losses all season. The season saw Hawkins break the
school's career records for goals, assists and points as she was one of four
different Huskies to pick up awards at the annual Hockey East banquet. In the
2004-05 season, the Huskies earned a record of 16-12-8, including going 11-5-4
against Hockey East opponents for a third-place league finish. UConn closed out
the season with a No. 10 ranking by USCHO.com and No. 9 in the USA
Today/American Hockey Magazine poll. The 2004-05 year marked the first season
that the Huskies made an appearance in the Hockey East Championship game and set
numerous program records, both individually and as a team. Linstad’s players
were honored by both the Hockey East Conference and USCHO for their play
throughout the season, culminating in Hawkins being named both Hockey East and
USCHO Rookie of the Year.
Linstad’s players have also excelled in the classroom, collecting 51 conference
academic awards over the past seven years. Eight members of the 2004-05 team
were named to the Hockey East All-Academic team and senior Lisa Beck followed up
her 2003-04 Hockey East Top Scholar Athlete Award by earning the highest GPA
among any league defender and tying for the Top Scholar Athlete with a 4.0
average. Fifteen Huskies from the 2003-04 squad were named to the Hockey East
All-Academic team, with nine earning the honor in 2002-03, five in both the
2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons. Last year, nine Huskies earned a spot on the team,
led by 2008 graduate Liz Gallinaro, who was a two-time honoree.
During the 2007-08 season Linstad earned her 100th UConn victory with a 7-2 win
over Maine. In 2007, Linstad was honored for her 15 Years of Service in USA
hockey. She has made a huge impact on USA hockey during this time, as a speaker
and a coach. Linstad has presented at the USA Hockey Master’s Symposium and the
Level 4 Coach's Certification program. As a coach, she has been on the bench
five times in her career to coach at the USA National Hockey Festival in Lake
Placid, including the 1997 festival, which was an Olympic selection year. She
has also coached at the USA Hockey Junior Development Camp for athletes ranging
from 14-18 years-old. In addition, she was a part of the USA Rocky Mountain
District Camp during 1996-2002 and 2004. In July of 1996, Linstad was the head
coach for the Australian National Team in Sydney, directing the first women’s
ice hockey Australian national camp. During the 2005-06 season, she was the head
coach of the Hockey East All-Star team which competed against the US Olympic
team.
While under Linstad's tutelage, the women's ice hockey program has made a
positive impact on the community, raising money for Breast Cancer Awareness. In
2007, the Huskies, in association with the Hockey East Conference, raised $4,300
for the cause. In addition, in 2005 the Huskies adopted a Hartford family for
Christmas as they helped provide the family with everyday essentials and toys
for their children. In 2006, Linstad's program created a Christmas evening for a
YMCA girls' home. The team supplied a tree, ornaments, lights and gifts while
sharing pizza and memories with the girls. Along with these programs, the
Huskies have also spent time in the Hartford community reading to a variety of
youth groups in the area.
Linstad, a native of Chelmsford, Mass., compiled a 161-71-27 overall record in
eight years as head coach of the Northeastern University women’s ice hockey
program. While at NU, Linstad’s teams won four Beanpot titles and earned one of
the four berths in the first-ever collegiate women’s hockey national
championship tournament (AWCHA) in 1998. In 1997, Linstad led NU to the ECAC
Championship while boasting a school-record 27-win season. In 2000, she was
inducted into the Chelmsford High School Hall of Fame.
A 1989 graduate of Providence College with a degree in business administration,
Linstad was a three-sport performer for the Friars, playing ice hockey for four
seasons, women’s soccer for three and adding softball as a third sport for one
season. A three-year PC ice hockey captain, Linstad scored 76 goals and added 72
assists as a collegian, placing her ninth on the PC all-time points list, fifth
in goals and seventh in assists. She was awarded the 1989 ECAC Player of the
Year Award and holds the distinction of being the only person to win both ECAC
Player of the Year and Coach of the Year honors.
Linstad currently resides in Vernon, Conn. with her black lab, Sydney. HEAD COACH HEATHER LINSTAD
Alma Mater: Providence '89
At UConn: Eight Years
Record at UConn: 101-126-30
At Northeastern:
Eight Years
Record at NU:
161-71-27 Year Record
2007-2008 22-8-5
2006-2007 17-15-3
2005-2006 12-21-1
2004-200 5 16-12-8
2003-2004 6-19-6
2002-2003 11-20-4
2001-2002 11-21-3
2000-2001 3-10-0
1999-2000 22-9-3
1998-1999 25-7-3
1997-1998 26-6-5
1996-1997 27-9-0*
1995-1996 14-15-5
1994-1995 14-12-5
1993-1994 19-6-3
1992-1993 14-7-3
*ECAC Champions
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