Vic Heyliger
American ice hockey player

Vic Heyliger

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American ice hockey player
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
26 September 1912(Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, U.S.A.)
Death:
4 October 2006(Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado, U.S.A.)
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The details
Biography

Introduction

Victor Heyliger (September 26, 1912 – October 4, 2006) was a National Hockey League center and the head coach of the University of Michigan ice hockey team.

Career

Born in Concord, Massachusetts, he attended the Lawrence Academy in Groton, Massachusetts and as an All-American at Michigan set a school record of 116 goals. He played for the Chicago Black Hawks in 1938 and 1944, bookending his tenure as coach at the University of Illinois from 1939–43, posting a record of 59–29–4.

Returning to Michigan as coach of the Wolverines, he led the team to six NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championships in his thirteen years from 1944 to 1957: 1948 (the first NCAA title), 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956. His teams reached the Frozen Four in each of the first ten seasons it was held.

In 1954 he received the Spencer Penrose Award from the American Hockey Coaches Association as the University Division Coach of the Year. Heyliger had an overall Michigan record of 228–61–13. After coaching the U.S. national team in 1966, he coached at the United States Air Force Academy from 1966–74, where he was 85–77–3.

He was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in its second class of inductees in 1974. In 1988 he was awarded the John MacInnes Award by the AHCA, an honor which recognizes those individuals who have displayed an interest in amateur hockey and youth programs, as well as fostering high graduation rates among their players.

He died at his home in Colorado Springs, Colorado, aged 94.

College Head Coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Illinois Fighting Illini (Division I Independent) (1939–1943)
1939-40 Illinois 3-11-0
1940-41 Illinois 17-3-1
1941-42 Illinois 10-4-2
1942-43 Illinois 9-1-0
Illinois: 39-19-3
Michigan Wolverines (Division I Independent) (1944–1951)
1944-45 Michigan 3-6-0
1945-46 Michigan 17-7-1
1946-47 Michigan 13-7-1
1947-48 Michigan 20-2-1 NCAA National Champion
1948-49 Michigan 20-2-3 NCAA Consolation Game (Win)
1949-50 Michigan 23-4-0 NCAA Consolation Game (Win)
1950-51 Michigan 22-4-1 NCAA National Champion
Michigan: 118-32-7
Michigan Wolverines (MCHL) (1951–1953)
1951-52 Michigan 22-4-0 9-3-0 t-2nd NCAA National Champion
1952-53 Michigan 17-7-0 12-4-0 t-1st NCAA National Champion
Michigan: 39-11-0 21-7-0
Michigan Wolverines (WIHL) (1953–1957)
1953-54 Michigan 15-6-2 12-3-1 2nd NCAA Consolation Game (Win)
1954-55 Michigan 18-5-1 13-5-0 2nd NCAA National Champion
1955-56 Michigan 20-2-1 15-2-1 1st NCAA National Champion
1956-57 Michigan 18-5-2 13-4-1 2nd NCAA Runner-Up
Michigan: 71-18-6 53-14-3
Air Force Falcons (Division I Independent) (1968–1974)
1968–69 Air Force 6-12-0
1969-70 Air Force 11-17-1
1970–71 Air Force 15-11-2
1971–72 Air Force 25-6-0
1972–73 Air Force 16-16-0
1973–74 Air Force 12-15-0
Air Force: 85-77-3
Total: 352-157-21

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion