College ice hockey statistics

When the NCAA began overseeing college ice hockey in 1947, the statistical record keeping for players wasn't a priority.

Teams were allowed to be entirely responsible for their own players' stats and, as a result, some programs have good existing records while others do not.

College hockey shifted to the modern 6-on-6 style shortly after World War I with the final recorded 7-on-7 match being played in 1921 (Harvard was the last holdout).

Despite the NCAA creating the University- and College-tiers in the mid-50's there was only one national tournament and no official separation for college hockey.

While there were informal tiers of play (the WCHA being regarded superior to the MIAC for instance), the delineation of college ice hockey was not formally introduced until ECAC 2 was formed and all lower-tier programs were placed in the College Division.

The NCAA created numerical divisions in 1973 and all university-division records were grandfathered into D-I.

A list of career leaders for current NCAA Division I programs.

Main logo used by the NCAA in Divisions I, II, and III.