Eastern College Athletic Conference, a sports federation of colleges and universities in the eastern United States
college football | Eton College | University College London | Dartmouth College | King's College London | Harvard College | Trinity College | National Collegiate Athletic Association | college | Oberlin College | Boston College | University College Dublin | Eastern Europe | Williams College | Vassar College | college basketball | Winchester College | Imperial College London | Collège de France | Eastern Orthodox Church | United Nations Conference on Trade and Development | Middlebury College | Berklee College of Music | Royal College of Art | Smith College | Royal College of Music | Big Ten Conference | Yale College | New College, Oxford | City College of New York |
Bushnell won the James Lynah Distinguished Achievement Award from the ECAC in 1959 as an outstanding athletic administrator.
He was named to the NCAA First All-American Team in goal in 1970 and 1971 (succeeding Hall of Famer Ken Dryden, who took the honour from 1967–69), and was named ECAC Player of the Year in 1971.
After a single season in the Ontario Hockey Association's Junior A league, Lumley decided to pursue the game by going to the University of New Hampshire, which competed in the ECAC.
The Yale course has been the site of every significant state championship, two USGA Junior National events, the 1991 and 2004 NCAA Eastern Regional championships, the 1991 ECAC Men's Championship, and the 1992 ECAC Women's Championship, as well as the Nike Connecticut Open.