Scott Borek

Scott Borek
Sport(s) Ice hockey
Biographical details
Born born 1962
Swampscott, MA, USA
Alma mater Dartmouth
Playing career
1981–1983 Dartmouth
Position(s) Wing
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1983–1985 Dartmouth (Student Assistant)
1985–1989 Providence (assistant)
1989–1991 Brown (assistant)
1991–1995 Colby
1995–1996 Lake Superior State (Associate)
1996–2001 Lake Superior State
2001–2002 New England College
2002–2015 New Hampshire (Associate)
2015–Present Providence (Assocaite)
Head coaching record
Overall 123-150-22 (.454)

Scott Borek is an American ice hockey player and coach who has been involved with college hockey for over 35 years.

Career

Borek started his college career at Dartmouth in 1981 and had nearly tripled his point production in his sophomore season when a neck injury forced him to end his playing days prematurely.[1] He remained a member of the Big Green by becoming a student assistant the following year and after graduating with a degree in English He became a full-time coach with Providence becoming his next stop. After seven years in Rhode Island (3 with the Friars and 4 more with Brown) got his first head coaching gig with Division III Colby. Borek was back at the Division I level three years later as an associate coach for Lake Superior State and then head coach a year later.

Borek was taking over from Jeff Jackson after a brief but historic career that saw the Lakers win two national titles in three years. Predictably the results weren't as great as they had been under his old boss but after five years the team appeared to be mired in mediocrity and was fired following the 2001 season.[2] After a year behind the bench at New England College Borek became an assistant at New Hampshire for Dick Umile. He remained with the Wildcats until 2015 when he returned to his old stomping grounds as an associate coach for Providence.[3][4]

Personal Life

Scott's son Gordon was killed in a single-car accident on May 28, 2016.[5]

College Head Coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Colby Mules (NESCAC) (1992–1995)
1992-93 Colby
1993-94 Colby
1994-95 Colby
Colby: 33-35-5
Lake Superior State Lakers (CCHA) (1996–2001)
1996–97 Lake Superior State 19-14-5 15-8-4 4th CCHA Quarterfinals
1997–98 Lake Superior State 15-18-4 12-18-4 t-6th CCHA Quarterfinals
1998–99 Lake Superior State 11-23-4 10-17-3 8th CCHA Quarterfinals
1999–00 Lake Superior State 18-16-2 17-19-2 t-3rd CCHA First Round
2000–01 Lake Superior State 13-23-0 8-20-0 12th
Lake Superior State: 76-94-15 62-82-13
New England College Pilgrims (NAC) (2001–2002)
2001–02 New England College 14-11-2
New England College: 14-11-2
Total: 123-150-22

      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

  1. "Borek new Colby coach". Bangor Daily News. 1992-07-22. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  2. "LSSU Fires Borek; Rumors Swirl About Replacement". USCHO.com. 2001-03-17. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  3. "Scott Borek Named Men's Hockey Associate Head Coach". Providence College Friars. 2015-06-15. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  4. "Borek Moves From New Hampshire to Providence". College Hockey News. 2015-06-15. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  5. "Former UNH club hockey player mourned after fatal car crash". New Hampshire Union Leader. 2015-05-30. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
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