Nate Leaman

Nate Leaman (born November 27, 1972) is an American ice hockey coach. He is currently the head coach for Providence. He was previously head coach at Union.

Nate Leaman
Current position
TitleHead Coach
TeamProvidence
ConferenceHockey East
Record241–150–58 (.602)
Biographical details
Born (1972-11-27) November 27, 1972
Centerville, Ohio
Alma materSUNY Cortland
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1998–1999Maine (asst.)
1999–2003Harvard (asst.)
2003–2011Union
2011–Providence
Head coaching record
Overall379–277–93 (.568)
Tournaments8–6 (.571)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
As An Assistant:

NCAA national champions (1999)
As a Head Coach:
NCAA national champions (2015)
NCAA Frozen Four Appearances (2015, 2019)
ECAC Hockey Conference regular season champions (2011)
Hockey East Conference regular season champions (2016)

IIHF World Junior Champions (2021)
Awards
Tim Taylor Award (2010, 2011)

Spencer Penrose Award (2011)

Bob Kullen Award (2016)

Career

Leaman grew up in Centerville, Ohio, not playing hockey until he was a teenager.[1] He attended SUNY Cortland, where he played on the hockey team, and graduated in 1997.[2] He was inducted into the Cortland C-Club Hall of Fame in September 2014.[2]

After Mark Mazzoleni resigned as Harvard head coach in June 2004, Leaman was reported to be considered for the position.[3] However, he announced that he would not pursue the Harvard job and remain at Union.[4]

Leaman was named ECAC Coach of the Year for the 2009–10 season[5] and the 2010–11 season.[6] He also won the Spencer Penrose Award for the 2010–11 season.[7]

In April 2011, Leaman was hired to coach the Providence Friars.[8] In September 2013, Leaman signed a contract extension with Providence through the 2020–21 season.[9][10]

In 2014–15, after leading Providence to winning the national championship, Leaman was named USCHO Coach of the Year.[11]

On January 5, 2021, as the head coach for Team USA's National Junior Team at the 2021 IIHF World Junior Championship in Edmonton, Canada, Leaman guided the team to the gold medal with a 2–0 shutout victory over host country Canada.

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Union Dutchmen (ECAC Hockey) (2003–2011)
2003–04 Union 14–17–58–11–38thECAC First Round
2004–05 Union 13–22–28–13–18thECAC First Round
2005–06 Union 16–16–69–9–4T–6thECAC First Round
2006–07 Union 14–19–37–14–112thECAC First Round
2007–08 Union 15–14–610–7–5T–4thECAC Quarterfinals
2008–09 Union 19–17–39–11–2T–8thECAC Quarterfinals
2009–10 Union 21–12–612–6–43rdECAC Runner-Up
2010–11 Union 26–10–417–3–21stNCAA East Regional Semifinals
Union: 138–127–35 (.518)
Providence Friars (Hockey East) (2011–present)
2011–12 Providence 14–20–410–14–37thHockey East Semifinals
2012–13 Providence 17–14–713–8–6T–3rdHockey East Semifinals
2013–14 Providence 22–11–611–7–23rdNCAA East Regional Finals
2014–15 Providence 26–13–213–8–1T-2ndNCAA National Champion
2015–16 Providence 27–7–416–3–3T-1stNCAA Northeast Regional Semifinals
2016–17 Providence 22–9–512–7–35thNCAA East Regional Semifinals
2017–18 Providence 24–12–413–7–43rdNCAA East Regional Finals
2018–19 Providence 24–12–614–7–32ndNCAA Frozen Four
2019–20 Providence 16–12–610–11–3T–7thTournament Cancelled
2020–21 Providence 11–9–510–8–55thHockey East Semifinals
2021–22 Providence 22–14–212–11–17thHockey East Quarterfinals
2022–23 Providence 16–14–79–9–6T–6thHockey East Semifinals
Providence: 241–150–58 (.602)
Total:379–277–93 (.568)

      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

References

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