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词条 1955–56 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season
释义

  1. Standings

  2. Schedule[2]

  3. Regular season

     McGill: Dec. 3, 1955  at North Dakota: December 9–10, 1955  Denver: December 13 and 14, 1955  Ineligible Players 

  4. 1956 NCAA championship

     Semifinal vs. St. Lawrence  Championship vs. Michigan Tech.  (W1) Michigan vs. (W2) Michigan Tech  All-Tournament Team 

  5. Roster and scoring statistics[15]

  6. See also

  7. References

{{NCAAIceHockeyTeamSeason
|Image = Michigan Wolverines logo.svg
|ImageSize =
|Season = 1955–56
|Team = Michigan Wolverines
|Sex = men
|Conference =
|ShortConference = WIHL
|ConferenceRank = 1st
|Poll#1 =
|Poll#1Rank =
|Poll#2 =
|Poll#2Rank =
|Record = 20–2–1
|HomeRecord = 11–1–1
|RoadRecord = 7–1
|NeutralRecord = 2–0
|HeadCoach = Vic Heyliger
|Captain = Bill MacFarland
|AltCaptain =
|Arena = Weinberg Coliseum
|Champion =National Champion
WIHL Champion
|NCAATourney = 1956 NCAA Tournament
|NCAATourneyResult =Champion
|prevseason = 1954–55
|nextseason = 1956–57
|headerstyle = {{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=#FFFFFF}}
|labelstyle = background:#eeeeee;
}}

The 1955–56 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team represented the University of Michigan in college ice hockey. In its 12th year under head coach Vic Heyliger, the team compiled a 20–2–1 record, outscored opponents 109 to 49, and won the 1956 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. The Wolverines defeated St. Lawrence 2–1 in overtime in the first round of the Frozen Four. They then defeated Michigan Tech by a 7–5 score in the championship game at Broadmoor Arena in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The 1956 championship was Michigan's sixth NCAA hockey championship in nine years.

Goalie Lorne Howes was selected as the team's Most Valuable Player and was also named Most Valuable Player in the 1956 NCAA Tournament. Team captain Bill MacFarland was the team's leading scorer with 19 goals, 28 assists, and 47 total points in 23 games. Howes, MacFarland, and defenseman Bob Schiller were all named to the All-American college hockey team.[1]

Standings

{{1955–56 WIHL standings (men)|team=UM}}

Schedule[2]

Conference games against Michigan State, Michigan Tech and Minnesota were only worth 1 point in the standings.

{{CIH schedule start|time=|tv=|decision=|attend=}}
|-
Regular Season{{CIH schedule entry |date=December 3 |w/l=w |nonconf=yes |away= |neutral=no |opponent=McGill |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–3 |overtime= |record=1–0–0 |conference= |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=December 9 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=North Dakota Fighting Sioux|title=North Dakota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Winter Sports Building |site_cityst=Grand Forks, North Dakota |gamename= |score=5–1 |overtime= |record=2–0–0 |conference=1–0–0 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=December 10 |w/l=l |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=North Dakota Fighting Sioux|title=North Dakota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Winter Sports Building |site_cityst=Grand Forks, North Dakota |gamename= |score=2–4 |overtime= |record=2–1–0 |conference=1–1–0 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=December 13 |w/l=t |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Denver Pioneers|title=Denver}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=3–3 |overtime=OT |record=2–1–1 |conference=1–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=December 14 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Denver Pioneers|title=Denver}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=6–2 |overtime= |record=3–1–1 |conference=2–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 6 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan State Spartans|title=Michigan State}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Demonstration Hall |site_cityst=East Lansing, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–2 |overtime= |record=4–1–1 |conference=3–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 7 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan State Spartans|title=Michigan State}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=3–1 |overtime= |record=5–1–1 |conference=4–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 13 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Minnesota Golden Gophers|title=Minnesota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=2–0 |overtime= |record=6–1–1 |conference=5–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 14 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Minnesota Golden Gophers|title=Minnesota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=2–1 |overtime= |record=7–1–1 |conference=6–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 20 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan State Spartans|title=Michigan State}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Demonstration Hall |site_cityst=East Lansing, Michigan |gamename= |score=3–2 |overtime=OT |record=8–1–1 |conference=7–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=January 21 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan State Spartans|title=Michigan State}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=7–1 |overtime= |record=9–1–1 |conference=8–1–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 7 |w/l=l |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Colorado College Tigers|title=Colorado College}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=3–6 |overtime= |record=9–2–1 |conference=8–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 8 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Colorado College Tigers|title=Colorado College}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=7–2 |overtime= |record=10–2–1 |conference=9–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 17 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Minnesota Golden Gophers|title=Minnesota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Williams Arena |site_cityst=Minneapolis, Minnesota |gamename= |score=5–3 |overtime= |record=11–2–1 |conference=10–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 18 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Minnesota Golden Gophers|title=Minnesota}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Williams Arena |site_cityst=Minneapolis, Minnesota |gamename= |score=6–2 |overtime= |record=12–2–1 |conference=11–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 24 |w/l=w |nonconf=yes |away= |neutral=no |opponent=Montreal |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–2 |overtime= |record=13–2–1 |conference=11–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=February 25 |w/l=w |nonconf=yes |away= |neutral=no |opponent=Montreal |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=10–1 |overtime= |record=14–2–1 |conference=11–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 2 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan Tech Huskies|title=Michigan Tech}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Dee Stadium |site_cityst=Houghton, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–2 |overtime= |record=15–2–1 |conference=12–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 3 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away=yes |neutral= |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan Tech Huskies|title=Michigan Tech}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Dee Stadium |site_cityst=Houghton, Michigan |gamename= |score=6–3 |overtime= |record=16–2–1 |conference=13–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 9 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan Tech Huskies|title=Michigan Tech}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–1 |overtime= |record=17–2–1 |conference=14–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 10 |w/l=w |nonconf= |away= |neutral=no |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan Tech Huskies|title=Michigan Tech}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Weinberg Coliseum |site_cityst=Ann Arbor, Michigan |gamename= |score=5–1 |overtime= |record=18–2–1 |conference=15–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}
|-
{{color|#FFFFFF|NCAA Tournament{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 16 |w/l=w |nonconf=yes |away= |neutral=yes |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=St. Lawrence Saints|title=St. Lawrence}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Broadmoor World Arena |site_cityst=Colorado Springs, Colorado |gamename=National Semifinal |score=2–1 |overtime=OT |record=19–2–1 |conference=15–2–1 |rank= |time=|tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule entry |date=March 17 |w/l=w |nonconf=yes |away= |neutral=yes |opponent={{cih link|1955–56|sex=men|team=Michigan Tech Huskies|title=Michigan Tech}} |opprank= |site_stadium=Broadmoor World Arena |site_cityst=Colorado Springs, Colorado |gamename=National Championship |score=7–5 |overtime= |record=20–2–1 |conference=15–2–1 |rank= |time= |tv= |decision= |attend= }}{{CIH schedule end |timezone= |rankyear= |notes=Source: }}

Regular season

McGill: Dec. 3, 1955

On December 3, 1955, the Wolverines opened their season with a 5-3 victory over McGill in front of a sellout crowd of 3,700 at the Coliseum in Ann Arbor. Dick Dunnigan scored two goals for Michigan. Bill MacFarland, Ed Switzer, and Wally Maxwell scored one each. Team captain MacFarland sustained "a severe ankle sprain" after colliding with the boards in the third period. The Michigan Daily praised the play of the newest Wolverine, Wally Maxwell: "His scoring punch and sharp passing should make him one of Michigan's leading offense threats."[3]

at North Dakota: December 9–10, 1955

The Wolverines next played a Friday/Saturday series against the North Dakota Fighting Sioux on December 9 and 10, 1955, at Grand Forks, North Dakota. Michigan won the first game, 5-1, before a "violently partisan" crowd of 3,800 at Grand Forks. Michigan's goals were scored by Dick Dunnigan, Ed Switzer, Tom Rendall, Jay Goold, and Wally Maxwell. Goalie Lorne Howes made 23 saves.[4]

The Wolverines lost the second game to North Dakota by a 4-2 score. Michigan goalie Lorne Howes was struck by the puck above his left eye at the start of the third period and sustained a gash. The game was delayed while Howes had the wound stitched. Ed Switzer and Bernie Hanna scored Michigan's goals. South Dakota's final goal came late in the third period after Michigan coach Vic Heyliger pulled the goalie for an extra skater.[5]

Denver: December 13 and 14, 1955

The Wolverines returned home for a Tuesday/Wednesday series against the Denver Pioneers on December 13 and 14, 1955. In the Tuesday night game, the teams played to a 3-3 tie before a crowd of 2,500 at the Coliseum in Ann Arbor. Michigan held a 3-1 lead with five minutes left in the game, but the Pioneers scored twice, including a tying goal with 49 second remaining. Neither team scored in the 10-minute overtime period, and the game ended in a tie. Wally Maxwell scored two goals in the game, and Ed Switzer scored one. With the tie, Michigan fell to 1-1-1 in three WIHL games.[6]

Michigan won the Wednesday night game by a 6-2 score in front of a crowd of 2,700 at the Coliseum. Defenseman Bob Pitts was the star of the game with two goals and a strong defensive performance. Team captain Bill MacFarland also scored twice. Michigan's remaining goals were scored by Ed Switzer and Tom Rendall. Denver's second goal came on an errant effort by Michigan to clear the zone. A Michigan defender inadvertently passed the puck backward into the net. After the game, Michigan coach Vic Heyliger said, "When these boys want to play hockey, they can really get out there and play. This is what we've been waiting for."[7]

Ineligible Players

On February 7th the Big Ten ruled that Mike Buchanan and Wally Maxwell were ineligible to play due to having accepted expense money from outside sources while playing in high school.[8] While the ruling ended the college careers of both players, no action was taken against Michigan as the violations occurred prior to either player entering college. Furthermore, Michigan was not required to forfeit any games in which either player had participated (including the 1955 national championship in which Buchanan had played).

1956 NCAA championship

After compiling an 18–2–1 record and winning the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League (WIHL) championship, Michigan was invited to participate in the Frozen Four for the ninth consecutive year. The 1956 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was held at Broadmoor Arena at The Broadmoor, a luxury hotel located in Colorado Springs, Colorado. St. Lawrence University (from Canton, New York) and Boston College were invited from the East and Michigan and Michigan Technological University (from Houghton, Michigan) were invited from the West.[9][10]

Semifinal vs. St. Lawrence

On March 16, 1956, the Wolverines faced the St. Lawrence Saints in the opening round. Neither team scored in the first period, as Michigan goalie Lorne Howes made 11 saves and the Wolverines were held to five shots on goal. St. Lawrence took a 1–0 lead with an unassisted goal by McKinnon with less than a minute remaining in the second period. St. Lawrence goalie Whittier had 15 saves in the second period. At the 3:59 mark in the third period, Michigan tied the score at 1–1 as Ed Switzer scored a goal with assists by Neil McDonald and Bob Pitts. Howes made 13 saves in the third period (30 saves in the game), and the third period ended in a tie. In the overtime period, Tom Rendall scored the winning goal at the 1:21 mark with an assist from Don McIntosh.[9]

Championship vs. Michigan Tech.

On March 17, 1956, the Wolverines faced the Michigan Tech Huskies in the championship game. The Wolverines and Huskies had played four times in the regular season with Michigan winning all four games by a combined score of 21–7. In the championship game, Michigan struck first with a goal by Ed Switzer, assisted by Neil McDonald, only 23 seconds into the game. The period ended with Michigan ahead 4–3. Michigan's remaining goals in the first period were scored by Neil McDonald (assist by Bob Schiller at 9:22), Aubrey (unassisted at 11:04), and Schiller (assist by McDonald at 13:11). Michigan goalie Lorne Howes made 19 saves in the first period. In the second period, Michigan Tech took a 5–4 lead, scoring two goals in the opening 7:15. The Wolverines tied the score at 5–5 on a goal by Ed Switzer, assisted by Bernie Hanna at 7:58. Michigan then took the lead, scoring two goals within 11 seconds of the other. Switzer scored at the 14:38 mark (assist by Dick Dunnigan), and Neil McDonald followed with an unassisted goal at 14:49. The third period was scoreless as Howes tallied 19 more saves. Switzer's third goal of the game gave him a hat trick.[10]

(W1) Michigan vs. (W2) Michigan Tech

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1 = Michigan
|team2 = Michigan Tech
|stadium1 = Broadmoor Ice Palace
|date1 = March 17[11]
|score1 = 7 – 5
|recap1 =
|won1 = 1
|1-1-1 =
|1-1-2 =
|1-2-1 =
|1-2-2 =
|1-3-1 =
|1-3-2 =
|goalie1-1 =
|goalie1-2 =
}}
Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stUMEd SwitzerMcDonald00:231–0 UM
MTUDick WilsonJ. McManus02:421–1
UMNeil McDonaldSchiller09:222–1 UM
UMDon McIntoshRendall10:143–1 UM
MTUPete Aubryunassisted11:043–2 UM
UMBob SchillerMcDonald13:114–2 UM
MTUDick Wilsonunassisted19:454–3 UM
2ndMTUTom KennedyWilson24:474–4
MTUPete Aubry – PPWilson27:255–4 MTU
UMEd SwitzerHanna27:585–5
UMEd Switzer – GW PPDunnigan34:286–5 UM
UMNeil McDonaldunassisted34:497–5 UM
3rdNone
{{col-start}}{{col-2}}
Shots by period
Team123T
Michigan Tech22101042
Michigan14141139
{{col-2}}
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
MTUBob McManus327
UMLorne Howes375
{{col-end}}

All-Tournament Team

Michigan goalie Lorne Howes, who totaled 46 saves in the championship game, was named the Most Outstanding Player of the Tournament. Michigan players also took five of six first-team spots on the Associated Press All-Tournament Team. The Michigan players so honored were Howes, defensemen Bob Pitts and Bob Schiller, center Tom Rendall, and wing Ed Switzer.[12][13] Shortly after winning the championship, the members of the Michigan hockey team selected Bob Pitts as captain of the 1956–57 Michigan hockey team.[14]

Roster and scoring statistics[15]

Fourteen players received varsity letters for the 1955–56 Michigan hockey team. Those 14 players are listed in bold below. Richard T. Brown received the Manager's "M".[16]

No.NameYearPositionHometownS/P/CGamesGoalsAssistsPts{{color|#FFFFFF|PIM
1 {{sortname>Lorne|Howes}} Senior G Kirkland Lake, ON Ontario}}
2 Mike|Buchanan}} Junior D Ottawa, ON Ontario}}
3 {{sortname>Bob|Shiller|Bob Shiller (ice hockey)}} Junior D Riverside, ON Ontario}}
4 {{sortname>Bernie|Hanna}} Junior D Calgary, AB Alberta}}
5 {{sortname>Bob|Pitts}} Junior D Castlegar, BC British Columbia}}
6 {{sortname>Dick|Dunnigan}} Junior RW Edmonton, AB Alberta}}
7 {{sortname>Bill|MacFarland}} Senior LW Toronto, ON Ontario}}23 19 28 47 45
8 {{sortname>Jerry|Karpinka}} Junior LW Edmonton, AB Alberta}}
9 {{sortname>Jay|Goold}} Senior RW Kirkland Lake, ON Ontario}}
10 Wally|Maxwell}} Sophomore F Toronto, ON Ontario}}7 4 11 8
11 {{sortname>Neil|Buchanan|Neil Buchanan (ice hockey)}} Junior D Ottawa, ON Ontario}}
12 {{sortname>Tom|Rendall}} Junior C Winnipeg, MB Manitoba}}
14 {{sortname>Don|McIntosh}} Sophomore C Toronto, ON Ontario}}
15 {{sortname>Neil|McDonald|Neil McDonald (ice hockey)}} Sophomore C Preston, ON Ontario}}
16 Morley|Chin}} Sophomore F Toronto, ON Ontario}}
17 {{sortname>Ed|Switzer}} Sophomore LW Preston, ON Ontario}}
{{sortname>Baden|Cosby}} Junior F Gravenhurst, ON Ontario}}
Total

See also

  • 1956 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
  • List of NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament champions

References

1. ^{{cite news|title=Another NCAA Championship: Hockey Team Wins Sixth National Crown In The Last Nine Years|newspaper=The Michigan Alumnus|date=April 14, 1956|page=304|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XRhYAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false}}
2. ^{{cite news|title=Through the Years: Season-By-Season Results |url=https://s3.amazonaws.com/mgoblue.com/documents/2016/9/20/ihm-throughtheyears.pdf |publisher=Michigan Wolverines |accessdate=December 6, 2018}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=Wolverines Stun McGill, 5-3, With Second Period Strength; MacFarland Injured In Game|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=December 4, 1955|pages=1, 3|url=}}
4. ^{{cite news|title='M' Puck Squad Beats Sioux, 5-1: Wolverines Notch First WIHL Win; Five Players Share Scoring Honors|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=December 10, 1955|page=1|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=aGxtzYPGyQEC&dat=19551210&printsec=frontpage&hl=en}}
5. ^{{cite news|title=Nodaks Stun Icers, 4-2: Howes Gets Minor Injury, Needs Stitches, But Finishes|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=December 11, 1955|page=3|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=aGxtzYPGyQEC&dat=19551211&printsec=frontpage&hl=en}}
6. ^{{cite news|title=Denver Icers Rally To Tie Wolverines: 'M' Blows 3-1 Lead As Pioneers Score Twice in Last Five Minutes|author=Dave Grey|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=December 14, 1955|page=1|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=aGxtzYPGyQEC&dat=19551214&printsec=frontpage&hl=en}}
7. ^{{cite news|title=Icers Trounce Denver Sextet, 6-2; Pitts Stars|author=Dave Rorabacher|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=December 15, 1955|page=1|url=}}
8. ^{{cite news|title=Big Ten Bars Buchanan, Maxwell |url=https://digital.bentley.umich.edu/midaily/mdp.39015071756386/8 |publisher=The Michigan Daily |date=February 21, 1956 |accessdate=February 10, 2018}}
9. ^{{cite news|title=Michigan Skaters Gain: Wolverines Beat St. Lawrence in Overtime Game, 2–1|newspaper=The New York Times|date=March 17, 1956|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1956/03/17/archives/michigan-skaters-gain-wolverines-beat-st-lawrence-in-overtime-game.html}}
10. ^{{cite news|title=Michigan Topples Michigan Tech, 7–5: Takes Second Straight Title in College Hockey as Switzer Excels|newspaper=The New York Times|date=March 18, 1956|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1956/03/18/archives/michigan-topples-michigan-tech75-takes-second-straight-title-in.html}}
11. ^{{cite news|title=Team History |url=https://mgoblue.com/documents/2016/9/20/ihm-team-history.pdf |publisher=Michigan Wolverines |accessdate=December 9, 2018}}
12. ^{{cite web|title=Michigan Hockey Record Book|publisher=University of Michigan|page=17|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/mich/sports/m-hockey/auto_pdf/2012-13/misc_non_event/ihm-recordbook-pre-2012-13.pdf}}
13. ^{{cite news|title=Michigan Captures NCAA Hockey Title|newspaper=Hopkinsville Kentucky New Era|date=March 19, 1956|page=14|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=S-IrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5mUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1097,5226545&dq=lorne-howes&hl=en}}
14. ^{{cite news|title=Pitts Selected As Ice Captain|newspaper=St. Joseph, Mo., Gazette|date=March 20, 1956|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=rrdiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=UHgNAAAAIBAJ&pg=5326,4441449&dq=bob-pitts+hockey&hl=en}}
15. ^{{cite news|title=Univ. of Michigan 1955-56 roster and statistics|url=https://www.eliteprospects.com/team/803/univ.-of-michigan/1955-1956?tab=stats |publisher=EliteProspects |accessdate=2018-10-24}}
16. ^{{cite news|title=Athletic Awards for 1955–56 Winter Sports|newspaper=The Michigan Alumnus|date=April 14, 1956|page=305|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XRhYAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false}}
{{NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Champion navbox}}{{Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey}}{{DEFAULTSORT:1955-56 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season}}

6 : Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey seasons|NCAA men's ice hockey Frozen Four seasons|NCAA men's ice hockey championship seasons|1955–56 in American ice hockey by team|1956 NCAA championship seasons|1956 in sports

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