With the completion of the 2012 championship, ten different teams have played in the national championship final.
National Hockey League | Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Canadian Pacific Railway | Royal Canadian Navy | Royal Canadian Air Force | Canadian Football League | American Hockey League | World Rally Championship | field hockey | Canadian Forces | Bulgarian Hockey League | Canadian National Railway | World Championship | NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship | Ultimate Fighting Championship | Royal Canadian Mounted Police | Canadian dollar | World Championship Wrestling | Coach (sport) | Ice-T | Swimming (sport) | Canadian federal election, 2004 | Ice Cube | Canadian Army | 2013 ITF Women's Circuit | swimming (sport) | Little Women | Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission | Sport Club Corinthians Paulista | World Hockey Association |
He attended Providence College from 1982–1986, and was the MVP of the 1985 Hockey East postseason tournament following a 2–1 double overtime victory over top-seeded Boston College at the Providence Civic Center, and the MVP of the 1985 NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship, despite a 2–1 loss in the championship game to RPI at Joe Louis Arena.
Maley was a part of the University of Wisconsin–Madison team that won the NCAA Division I hockey championship in 1983, and a member of the Montreal Canadiens when they won the Stanley Cup in 1986.
In 1978, American universities became subject to the law often known as Title IX, approved by the United States Congress in 1972.
•
The National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Championship is one of the major women's ice hockey tournaments in the United States (another is American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA)).
•
In 1992, the Supreme Court of the United States status cut and when the plaintiffs can ask for compensatory damage to universities and colleges by virtue of the Title IX if the discrimination is deliberate.
Flatley attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he played for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team for two seasons, helping the team capture the 1983 NCAA Men's ice hockey championship, and was himself named a tournament all-star, a WCHA first team all-star, and a 1983 All-American.