Ohio State Buckeyes women's ice hockey


The Ohio State Buckeyes women’s ice hockey team represents Ohio State University in NCAA Division I competition in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association. The team plays homegames at OSU Ice Rink, located on the Ohio State campus in Columbus, Ohio.

History

The Buckeyes competed in the WCHA championship tournament in March 2001, defeating the St. Cloud State Huskies in the first round and No. 1 Minnesota Golden Gophers in the second round to advance to the championship game. The Buckeyes were defeated by eventual national champion Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs. The Buckeyes had an 18-16-3 overall record, including 11-10-3 in the WCHA, and finished No. 8 in the national polls. During the regular season, they were 12-5-1 in their last 18 contests and finished 7-1-0.
The 2001-02 season saw the Buckeyes defeat several nationally ranked teams, including the No. 3 University of New Hampshire Wildcats and the No. 4 St. Lawrence Saints, and tie the No. 6 Dartmouth Big Green. Five players received postseason honors, including Jeni Creary, who was named the WCHA Rookie of the Year and All-WCHA First Team selection after leading the nation in scoring for the first half of the season, and Emma Laaksonen, who earned JOFA/AHCA Second Team All-America accolades and All-WCHA Second Team honors despite missing ten games while representing her native Finland at the 2002 Winter Olympics.
In the 2006-07 season, the Buckeyes reached the 20-win mark for the first time in program history, finishing the season with a 20-13-4 record. They set a program record for the longest unbeaten streak at ten games, posted a team-best 30 points in the WCHA with a 13-11-4 conference record and had a 12-5-3 home record while finishing fourth in the league standings. They swept the Minnesota State Mavericks in the best-of-three league playoff tournament and advanced to the WCHA semifinals against eventual national champion Wisconsin. The Buckeyes completed the season as the 10th-ranked team in both the USCHO.com and USA Hockey national polls.
Head coach Jackie Barto recorded her 200th career win November 24, 2007 with a 4-1 victory against St. Cloud State at the OSU Ice Rink.
In 2008, Tessa Bonhomme was Ohio State's first two-time Top 10 finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award, given to the top Division I women's hockey student-athlete in the nation. She was also the team captain of the 2007-08 Buckeyes. Bonhomme was also named WCHA Player of the Year and WCHA Defensive Player of the Year, the first Buckeye to receive either award.
Jody Heywood was a two-time finalist for the Hockey Humanitarian Award in 2007 and 2008, the first Buckeye on either men's or women's teams to be a finalist for the award.
In 2009, Liana Bonanno became the program's first ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America at-large selection, earning a place on the third team.
Natalie Spooner scored 21 goals in 2009, leading the team and earning the program's No. 7 spot for single-season goals. She had a six-game point streak from Nov. 15 to Jan. 9 that included a five-game goal streak to tie for the second-longest in program history. On December 12, 2008, she set the program record for goals in a game with four in a 6-5 win at Minnesota State, including a natural hat trick in the second period in a span of 1:56.
The opening game of the 2009-10 season was Barto's 500th career game as coach.
Laura McIntosh was recognized as the WCHA offensive player of the week for October 19, 2011. She had a record-breaking weekend in the Buckeyes’ conference series sweep of St. Cloud State, during which she was credited with four points, seven shots on goal and a +5 plus/minus rating. On October 14, she scored her first goal of the season and assisted on a Hokey Langan goal. The assist made McIntosh Ohio State’s all-time leader in career points against WCHA opponents, surpassing Jana Harrigan’s 110 league points in 2006. The following day, McIntosh scored two points, assisting on Ally Tarr’s shorthanded game-winning goal and scoring the Buckeyes' third goal of the game.
Three players reached milestones in a January 27, 2012 defeat of the North Dakota Fighting Sioux. Spooner scored two goals, McIntosh had three assists and Langan had two assists. McIntosh’s assists moved her into a tie at the top of the program's all-time career points list. Her 160 career points are now tied with Harrigan's. Spooner's goals were both on the power-play, bringing her season total to seven. With the goals, Spooner reached the 150 career point mark, good for third all-time in program history. Langan's assists helped her reached the 100-point milestone, only the eighth Buckeyes player to reach the mark.
On March 8, 2020, the Buckeyes defeated the Wisconsin Badgers 1-0 in overtime to earn the program's first WCHA championship.

Season by season results

Coaches

Barto served as the program's first head coach, leading the team from 1999-2011 and finishing with a record of 178-209-42. During her first ten years as head coach, the program received 14 All-WCHA honors. She served on the NCAA Women's Ice Hockey Championship Committee from 2000-06 and is a member of the American Women's Hockey Coaches Association. She retired in April 2011 after 12 seasons at Ohio State.
In May 2011, Nate Handrahan became the program's second head coach. He coached the team for four seasons, finishing with a record of 67-64-15. He resigned on March 9, 2015 amid a sexual harassment investigation.
On April 12, 2015, Jenny Schmidgall-Potter was named the program's third head coach.
In September 2016, Nadine Muzerall was named the program's fourth head coach.

Buckeyes in professional hockey

International

On the international level, Barto was an assistant coach in 1998 at the USA Hockey Women's Festival in Lake Placid, N.Y., where she was one of four head coaches in 1999. She was an assistant coach for the 2003 U.S. Women's Under-22 Select Team. She was a member of the selection committee for the 2006 Winter Olympic U.S. National Women's Hockey team. She was head coach of the U.S. Women's National and Select teams in 2007-08 and coached the U.S. Women's Select Team to a silver medal at the Four Nations Cup in November 2007. She was named head coach of the U.S. Women's Under-22 Team for 2008-09. She led the U.S. Women's National Team to the gold medal at the 2008 IIHF World Women's Championship in Harbin, China.
Spooner was a member of the Canadian National Women’s Team for the 2008 4 Nations Cup. She competed for the 2009-10 Canada Under 22 Hockey team. On January 8, 2010, she scored 4:59 in overtime to give Canada’s National Women’s Under-22 Team a 4-3 victory over Sweden and send Canada to the gold medal game at the 2010 MLP Cup., where Canada won the gold medal.

Olympians

Individual awards and honors