Brian McColgan

{{Short description|American ice hockey player (born 1966)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox ice hockey player

| name = Brian McColgan

| halloffame =

| image =

| image_size =

| alt =

| caption =

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1966|06|23}}

| birth_place = Norwood, Massachusetts, USA

| death_date =

| death_place =

| height_ft = 5

| height_in = 7

| weight_lb = 150

| position = Defenseman

| shoots = Left

| catches =

| league =

| team =

| prospect_league =

| prospect_team =

| former_teams =

| played_for = St. Lawrence
KooKoo
Tyringe SoSS
Ritten Sport
HC Milano Saima
HC Merano

| ntl_team = United States

| career_start = 1984

| career_end = 1999

| draft =

| draft_year =

| draft_team =

}}

Brian McColgan is an American retired ice hockey defenseman who was an All-American for St. Lawrence.

Career

After high school, McColgan was planning on attending West Point, however, during the summer camp prior to entry, he decided that he belonged on a different career path.{{cite news|title=Brian McColgan '88 |url=https://www.sluhockey.org/profiles/alumni/brian-mccolgan |work=St. Lawrence Saints |accessdate=June 21, 2021}} He returned home and was discovered by St. Lawrence assistant Joe Marsh in a rec league. McColgan was brought to Canton part way through the 1985 season and finished out the final 19 games of the Saints' campaign.

When Marsh took over as head coach the following year, McColgan saw his production jump significantly and led the defense with 10 goals. The team's fortunes began to change in McColgan's junior season and the Larries produced their best finish in 19 years. The team got hot in the playoffs and ended up making their first conference championship game in 23 seasons.{{cite news|title=Saint Hockey Record Book 2015-16 |url=https://static.saintsathletics.com/custompages/2015-16%20Hockey%20Record%20Book.pdf |publisher=St. Lawrence Saints |accessdate=November 4, 2019}} Though they lost, St. Lawrence made the NCAA Tournament and looked to be on the upswing.

In McColgan's senior season, everything seemed to be going right for the Saints. McColgan more than doubled his previous career best for points and led the nation in points per game from the blueline (1.36).{{cite news|title=NCAA - 1987-1988 |url=https://www.eliteprospects.com/league/ncaa/stats/1987-1988?position=d |work=Elite Prospects |accessdate=June 21, 2021}} He was named an All-American and led the Saints to their first regular season ECAC Hockey title (tied). The Saints then went charging through the conference tournament and won just the second conference championship in team history (the first since the inaugural ECAC tournament in 1962). St. Lawrence received the second eastern seed and, due to the new NCAA Tournament arrangement, received a bye into the quarterfinal round. They thoroughly dominated Wisconsin in the first game, winning 7–0, and enabled the team to take it easy in the second match. SLU returned to the Frozen Four for the first time since 1962 and met top western seed Minnesota. The two fought a hard battle but the Saints came out on top with a narrow 3–2 win.

The Larries went to just their second championship game and performed much better than they had in their first. While the team got behind 0–2 after the first, McColgan assisted on SLU's first goal and then scored to tie the game 3–3 in the second. With time waning and the Larries threatening, Lake Superior's Pete Stauber pushed the net off of its moorings and stopped play.{{cite news|title=SLU-LSSU national championship controversy |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HowMoUOhQSs |work=YouTube |access-date=October 27, 2019}} While most thought he should have received a penalty for the maneuver, no infraction was assessed and the teams would need overtime to decide the victor. Unfortunately for St. Lawrence, the Lakers scored first and skated away with the championship.

After graduating, McColgan headed to Finland to start his professional career. His first year with KooKoo turned out poorly for both him and the team and he moved on to Division 1 (the Swedish second league at the time) for two years. He performed much better with Tyringe SoSS but the team narrowly missed out on the postseason in the second year. During this time he was a member of two US Teams at the Spengler Cup, helping the club win the title in 1988.

In 1991 he headed south and joined SV Ritten, spending most of the next 4 years with the club. He ended up with HC Merano in 1996 and helped the club receive a promotion to Serie A in his first year with the club. He played at the top level of Italian hockey for three years, retiring after helping Merano win the championship in 1999. In 2009 McColgan became an assistant coach for Dexter Southfield School, a position he still holds as of 2021.

McColgan was inducted into the St. Lawrence Athletic Hall of Fame in 2015.{{cite news|title=Brian McColgan |url=https://saintsathletics.com/honors/hall-of-fame/brian-mccolgan/654 |work=St. Lawrence Saints |access-date=June 21, 2021}}

Statistics

=Regular season and playoffs=

border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:70em"
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" bgcolor="#ffffff" |  

! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" |  

! colspan="5" | Regular Season

! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" |  

! colspan="5" | Playoffs

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! Season

! Team

! League

! GP

! G

! A

! Pts

! PIM

! GP

! G

! A

! Pts

! PIM

1984–85

| St. Lawrence

| ECAC Hockey

| 19

13410
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1985–86

| St. Lawrence

| ECAC Hockey

| 24

10132326
1986–87

| St. Lawrence

| ECAC Hockey

| 34

3212426
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1987–88

| St. Lawrence

| ECAC Hockey

| 36

17324937
1988–89

| KooKoo

| SM-liiga

| 24

20222
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1989–90

| Tyringe SoSS

| Division 1

| 32

8243242411218
1990–91

| Tyringe SoSS

| Division 1

| 26

3141737
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1991–92

| SV Ritten

| Serie B

| 24

18123028
1992–93

| SV Ritten

| Serie B

| —

bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1993–94

| SV Ritten

| Serie B

| —

1994–95

| HC Milano Saima

| Serie A

| 8

2576
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1994–95

| SV Ritten

| Serie B

| 20

20244416109152420
1995–96

| HC Merano

| Serie B

| 34

31417263114192314
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1996–97

| HC Merano

| Serie A

| —

1997–98

| HC Merano

| Serie A

| 34

22305273
bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1998–99

| HC Merano

| Serie A

| 15

613191910281010
bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" | NCAA totals

! 113 !! 31 !! 69 !! 100 !! 99 !! — !! — !! — !! — !! —

bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! colspan="3" | Division 1 totals

! 58 !! 11 !! 38 !! 49 !! 79 !! 4 !! 1 !! 1 !! 2 !! 18

=International=

border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:40%"
ALIGN="centre" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"

! Year

! Team

! Event

! Result

! rowspan="99" bgcolor="#ffffff" |  

! GP

! G

! A

! Pts

! PIM

1988

| USA Selects

| Spengler Cup

| {{gold medal}}

| 5

| 0

| 0

| 0

| —

bgcolor="f0f0f0"

| 1989

| USA Selects

| Spengler Cup

| 4th

| —

| —

| —

| —

| —

Awards and honors

class="wikitable"

! Award

! Year

!

All-ECAC Hockey First Team

| 1987–88

| {{cite news|title=ECAC All-Teams|url=http://www.augenblick.org/chha/ecac_all.html|publisher=College Hockey Historical Archives|accessdate=May 19, 2013}}

AHCA East First-Team All-American

| 1987–88

| {{cite news|title=Men's Ice Hockey Award Winners|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_icehockey_rb/2013/MIH%20awards%20for%202013.pdf|publisher=NCAA.org|accessdate=June 11, 2013}}

All-NCAA All-Tournament Team

| 1988

| {{cite news|title=NCAA Frozen Four Records|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/frozen_4/2009/f4recs.pdf|publisher=NCAA.org|accessdate=2013-06-19}}

References

{{Reflist|50em}}