翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ LEON
・ Leon
・ Leon "Ndugu" Chancler
・ Leon "Pee Wee" Whittaker
・ Leon (community), Wisconsin
・ Leon (given name)
・ Leon (Japanese wrestler)
・ Leon (mathematician)
・ Leon (singer)
・ Leon (Souda Bay)
・ Leon (surname)
・ Leon (TV series)
・ Leon A. Edney
・ Leon Abbett
・ Leon Abbey
Leon Abbott
・ Leon Abrams
・ Leon Abramson
・ Leon Abravanel
・ Leon Adams
・ Leon Airport
・ Leon Airport (West Virginia)
・ Leon Aleksander Sapieha
・ Leon Ames
・ Leon and the Forklifts
・ Leon and the Peoples
・ Leon Anderson
・ Leon Andreasen
・ Leon Ashley
・ Leon Askin


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Leon Abbott : ウィキペディア英語版
Leon Abbott

Leon Abbott is a former college ice hockey coach who is most remembered for being fired by Boston University six games into the 1973–74 season for violating NCAA eligibility rules.
==Career==
Abbott began his coaching career after graduating from McGill in 1964. He coached briefly for a small college in Alberta before moving to take an assistant coaching position at St. Lawrence. In 1969 Abbott was offered the top job at Rensselaer, taking over from Garry Kearns, and after a poor first season, returned the Engineers to winning ways with 16- and 17-win seasons, making the ECAC tournament in consecutive seasons.
Abbott received his big break in 1972 when Jack Kelley stepped away from Boston University to pursue a professional coaching career and Abbott was given the job to replace him. The Terriers were coming off back-to-back National Championships and didn't take much of a step backwards with their new bench boss, finishing the season at a 22-6-1 mark, but after the season the NCAA ruled that because Boston University has used ineligible players in some of their games the school would have to forfeit 11 wins. While that decision meant little in and of itself as the Terriers had already finished their season, the team and Abbott himself were placed under heightened scrutiny by the NCAA. Early in the following season, two players (Peter Marzo and Bill Buckton) were ruled to be professional athletes by having accepted money to play amateur hockey, a violation of NCAA regulations.〔 While federal court judge Joseph L. Tauro later reinstated the players, the damage had been done. After a 4-2 start, Abbott was fired by BU and replaced by his assistant, Jack Parker.
After the season Abbott returned to his undergraduate alma mater, Alberta, and assumed head coaching duties until he was offered a third NCAA job, this time by St. Lawrence.〔 The Saints had been slipping in the standings and were looking for someone to return them to their earlier glory but bringing Abbott back to Canton didn't work out as expected. In three seasons Abbott posted a record of 28-59-2, finishing well out of the conference playoffs each year. Thing began to look up at the beginning of his fourth campaign as the Saints won their first three contests, but everything went south after as they dropped eight straight contests. The final straw was a 12-3 trouncing by Clarkson on December 1 after which Abbott stepped down as head coach.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Leon Abbott」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.