York and his players celebrating the 2012 NCAA championship.

Photo: Steve Nesius/Reuters/Alamy

A Farewell to Jerry York

After twenty-eight years and four national championships at Ļć½¶Šć, the legendary hockey coach has retired.

Throughout the thousands of practices and games that made up his career, the legendary Ļć½¶Šć Hockey Coach Jerry York ā€™67 was rarely seen without a spiral notebook in hand. Generations of Yorkā€™s players speculated about just what was written inside. They never found out.

York speaking and gesturing to player out of frame

York coaching Ļć½¶Šćā€™s 2004 home opener. Photo: John Quackenbos

And now, the contents of Yorkā€™s notebook will remain a secret forever, as the winningest coach in college hockey history has retired. All told, York coached Division 1 college hockey for fifty years at three different institutionsā€”Clarkson University, Bowling Green State University, and Ļć½¶Šć. Along the way, he won a staggering 1,123 games and five national championships (no other college hockey coach has won 1,000 games). York, who is widely known for his humility, announced his retirement with little fanfare, simply issuing a press release. The end of his 50th season seemed like the right time to step down, he said. ā€œI am so blessed to have been involved with Boston College these past twenty-eight years,ā€ he said during a meeting with his players and coaches, ā€œand to have had the opportunity to coach so many wonderful student-athletes.ā€ An outpouring of praise for York followed his announcement. ā€œJerry York is not just a championship coach,ā€ the renowned sportswriter Mike Lupica ā€™74 tweeted. ā€œHe is one of the greatest figures in the history of our school. And he is one of the great gentlemen any college sport has ever produced.ā€ The former Ļć½¶Šć hockey star Blake Bolden ā€™13, who in 2015 became the first African-American woman to compete in the National Womenā€™s Hockey League, also tweeted her appreciation. ā€œMy goodness, thank you Coach Jerry York,ā€ Bolden wrote. ā€œAn icon that has shaped the lives of so many young men and women, including mine.ā€

Speaking of icons, perhaps no one in the world is better qualified to assess Yorkā€™s career than his fellow coaching legend Jack Parker, who led the Boston University menā€™sĢżhockey program for forty years, won three national championships of his own, and is the third-winningest coach in theĢżhistory of college hockey. Parker and York have spent the majority of their lives as friendsā€”and fierce on-ice rivals. They both grew up in the Boston area, played against each other first in high school and then in college (York at Ļć½¶Šć, of course, and Parker at BU), and eventually spent a few decades battling each other as head coaches. That started in the 1970s, when York was coaching Clarkson University and Parker was already at BU. Whenever Parkerā€™s team would play at Clarkson, Parker recalled, the two head coaches and their assistants would get together at Yorkā€™sĢżhouse to talk hockey over beers. Eventually, their competition would play out on one of the biggest stages in collegeĢżhockey. ā€œBU and Ļć½¶Šć is an unbelievably heated rivalry,ā€ Parker said. ā€œWhen games were over weā€™d shake hands at center ice. It was always hard to lose to BU or to Ļć½¶Šć when you were playing each other. And yet it was always an enjoyable handshake. I donā€™t remember ever having a bad thought about Jerry York as the head coach.ā€ Well maybe just one, Parker admitted when pressed. That time had to do with York successfully recruiting a player Parker also wanted. Parker couldnā€™t remember the playerā€™s name at first, recalling only that he was a small center. Then it came to himā€”Brian Gionta. ā€œI thought ā€˜Boy, that kid is going to make Ļć½¶Šć,ā€™ā€ Parker said.

Gionta ā€™01 did indeed go on to become one of Ļć½¶Šćā€™s greatest athletes ever. As captain, he led the Eagles to the NCAA championship in 2001, Ļć½¶Šćā€™s first since 1949. He then played for sixteen seasons in the NHL. When Gionta heard York was retiring, his first reaction was shock. ā€œThat kind of longevity, that kind of run, that kind of success, itā€™s unsurpassed in hockey,ā€ he said. But the lesson that has stuck with him after playing for York all those years ago has nothing to do with hockey. ā€œHe reinforces how you treat people,ā€ Gionta said. ā€œWhether it is the athletic director,Ģżor itā€™s the security guard when you walk in, or itā€™s the janitor, the trainer, the equipment manager, everyone is on theĢżsame level. No one is above anyone and no one is below anyone, and everyone is to be treated with respect.ā€

Outgoing Ļć½¶Šć Hockey Captain Marc McLaughlin ā€™22 may have joined the program two decades after Gionta,Ģżbut the lessons were the same. Asked for a memory ofĢżplaying under York, the first thing McLaughlin mentioned was the friendship the coach had developed withĢża custodian who cleaned the teamā€™s locker room. ā€œCoachĢżYork went and introduced himself to him, created a relationship with him, and really made him feel like what heĢżwas doing was important to our team and we were all in this together,ā€ recalled McLaughlin, who recently signed with the Boston Bruins. Later in the season, York brought the custodian in again to give the Eagles a motivational speech before the playoffs. ā€œItā€™s just little stuff like that,ā€ McLaughlin said. ā€œHe really went beyond the hockey aspect of being a coach.ā€

Several of Yorkā€™s former players have gone on to hold prominent positions in the NHL. Among them is George McPhee, who won the Hobey Baker Award as the nationā€™s outstanding player while playing for York at Bowling Green and today is president of hockey operations for the Vegas Golden Knights. McPhee said that he always admired Yorkā€™s personality at Bowling Green, so uplifting that he often wondered if the coach had ever had a bad day. So when it came time for his son to choose a hockey program, McPhee knew exactly where he belonged. Graham McPhee ā€™20 played for York at Ļć½¶Šć. ā€œ Heā€™s demonstrated for the rest of college sports that thereā€™s a right way to do it,ā€ McPhee said. ā€œIt wasnā€™t just about hockey for Coach York, it wasnā€™t about this cloistered life. It was about family, education, and faith, and then hockey.ā€

Player photos of Jerry York from 1967

From left: York in 1967 with coach ā€œSnooksā€ Kelley; striking a pose in 1967. Photos: Burns Library

York is one of only three coaches to have won NCAAĢżtitles with two different schoolsā€”Bowling Green in 1984, and Ļć½¶Šć in 2001, 2008, 2010, and 2012. He also led the Eagles to twelve Frozen Four appearances, nine Hockey East Tournament titles, twelve Hockey East regular season championships, and nine Beanpot titles. His forty-one NCAA Tournament victories are the most ever, and he was named Hockey East Coach of the Year five times, most recently in 2021. York coached four Hobey Baker Award winners in his career. Eighteen of his former players were selected in the first round of the NHL draft, and fifty-eight have appeared in at least fifty games in the NHL. In 2019, he was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto. And in 2020 he was named to the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. Of course, York was a celebrated player before he became a coach. He scored 134 points for Boston CollegeĢżduring his collegiate career, and still ranks among Ļć½¶Šćā€™s all-time leaders in points, goals, and assists.

And somewhere along the way, he started carrying that notebook. ā€œFor us, that was the running joke,ā€ Brian Gionta said. ā€œWe wanted to get ahold of his notebook and see whatā€™s in there. His game notes, or whatever it might be.ā€ Unfortunately for the many players who have called him coach, Jerry York has closed the book for the final time.Ģż


How did Jerry York become a coaching legend?

Ģż1,123 victories, a record

5 NCAA titles: 1984 (with Bowling Green), 2001, 2008, 2010, 2012

18 NCAA tournament appearances

12 Hockey East regular-season titles

9 Hockey East Tournament titles

NCAA Division I Coach of the Year in 1977 (with Clarkson)

5-time Hockey East Coach of the Year: 2004, 2011, 2014, 2018, 2021

9 Beanpot titles

Member of both the Hockey Hall of Fame and U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame

4 players who won the Hobey Baker Award

18 former players selected in the 1st round of the NHL draft

58 former players with at least 50 games in the NHL


Image of Greg Brown

Ģż Photo: Ļć½¶Šć Athletics

Meet the New Coach

Greg Brown ā€™90 has been selected as Ļć½¶Šć's next Schiller Family Head Hockey Coach. Itā€™s a homecoming for Brown, an All-American defenseman at Ļć½¶Šć who served as an assistant on Jerry Yorkā€™s staff from 2004 to 2018. ā€œI am truly honored to be named coach,ā€ he said, ā€œand to succeed my coaching mentor and friend Jerry York.ā€


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