Westcott Moulton
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | (1906-06-01)June 1, 1906 Boston, Massachusetts, United States |
Died | November 23, 1983(1983-11-23) (aged 77) |
Playing career | |
1928–1931 | Brown |
Position(s) | Center |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1947–1952 | Brown |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 54-38-1 (.586) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Awards | |
1971 Brown Athletic Hall of Fame | |
Westcott E. S. Moulton (1906–1983) was an American ice hockey player and coach who was the driving force behind Brown's hockey program revival after World War II.[1] An exciting player in his youth, the class of '31 graduate returned to his alma mater after serving in the Navy, working in various capacities until 1962 which included being the head coach of the ice hockey team after convincing then-President Henry Wriston to restart the program. Moulton was an inaugural member of Brown's Athletic Hall of Fame in 1971.
Head coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brown Bears Independent (1947–1952) | |||||||||
1947–48 | Brown | 5-9-0 | |||||||
1948–49 | Brown | 7-7-0 | |||||||
1949–50 | Brown | 11-9-0 | |||||||
1950–51 | Brown | 18-6-0 | NCAA Runner-Up | ||||||
1951–52 | Brown | 13-7-1 | |||||||
Brown: | 54-38-1 | ||||||||
Total: | 54-38-1 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
[2]
References
External links
- Biographical information and career statistics from Eliteprospects.com, or The Internet Hockey Database
- v
- t
- e
- Aldrich Field Rink (1898–1906)
- Rhode Island Auditorium (1926–1961)
- Meehan Auditorium (1961–present)
- No Coach (1897–1906)
- James Gardner (1926–1927)
- Jean Dubuc (1927–1929)
- Thomas Taylor (1929–1931, 1933–1938)
- Robert Taylor (1931–1933)
- Arthur Lesieur (1938–1939)
- Westcott Moulton (1947–1952)
- Donald Whiston (1952–1955)
- James Fullerton (1955–1970)
- J. Allan Soares (1970–1974)
- Richard Toomey (1974–1978)
- Paul Schilling (1978–1982)
- Herb Hammond (1982–1988)
- Bob Gaudet (1988–1997)
- Roger Grillo (1997–2009)
- Brendan Whittet (2009–present)
- 1897–98
- 1898–99
- 1899–00
- 1900–01
- 1901–02
- 1902–03
- 1903–04
- 1904–05
- 1905–06
- 1926–27
- 1927–28
- 1928–29
- 1929–30
- 1930–31
- 1931–32
- 1932–33
- 1933–34
- 1934–35
- 1935–36
- 1936–37
- 1937–38
- 1938–39
- 1947–48
- 1948–49
- 1949–50
- 1950–51
- 1951–52
- 1952–53
- 1953–54
- 1954–55
- 1955–56
- 1956–57
- 1957–58
- 1958–59
- 1959–60
- 1960–61
- 1961–62
- 1962–63
- 1963–64
- 1964–65
- 1965–66
- 1966–67
- 1967–68
- 1968–69
- 1969–70
- 1970–71
- 1971–72
- 1972–73
- 1973–74
- 1974–75
- 1975–76
- 1976–77
- 1977–78
- 1978–79
- 1979–80
- 1980–81
- 1981–82
- 1982–83
- 1983–84
- 1984–85
- 1985–86
- 1986–87
- 1987–88
- 1988–89
- 1989–90
- 1990–91
- 1991–92
- 1992–93
- 1993–94
- 1994–95
- 1995–96
- 1996–97
- 1997–98
- 1998–99
- 1999–00
- 2000–01
- 2001–02
- 2002–03
- 2003–04
- 2004–05
- 2005–06
- 2006–07
- 2007–08
- 2008–09
- 2009–10
- 2010–11
- 2011–12
- 2012–13
- 2013–14
- 2014–15
- 2015–16
- 2016–17
- 2017–18
- 2018–19
- 2019–20
- 2020–21
- 2021–22
- 2022–23
- 2023–24
- Intercollegiate Hockey Association (1898–1906)
- Pentagonal League (1948–1955)
- ECAC Hockey (1961–present)
- Mayor's Cup
- Bill Gilligan (180 Points)
- Bob Wheeler (86 Goals)
- Kevin McCabe / Yann Danis (43 Wins)
- Brown University
- Providence, RI