Derek Schooley

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Derek Schooley
Sport(s)
Ice hockey
Current position
Title
Head coach
Team
Robert Morris
Conference
Atlantic Hockey
Record
231–225–61
Biographical details
Born
(1970-10-04) October 4, 1970 (age 47)
St. Louis, Missouri
Alma mater
Western Michigan
Playing career
1989–1990
Omaha Lancers
1990–1994
Western Michigan
1994–1996
Huntington Blizzard
1995–1996
Quad City Mallards
1995–1996
Flint Generals
1995–1996
Roanoke Express
1996–1997
Pensacola Ice Pilots
1996–1997
Peoria Rivermen

Position(s)
Defenseman
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1996–1997
Chicago Freeze (assistant)
1997–1998
Cornell (assistant)
1998–2004
Air Force (assistant)
2002
USA U-18 (assistant)
2004–Present
Robert Morris

Head coaching record
Overall
231–225–61
Tournaments
0–1
Accomplishments and honors
Championships

1996 Colonial League Champion (player)
1996 Colonial Cup Champion (player)
2014 Atlantic Hockey tournament champion
2015 Atlantic Hockey champion
2016 Atlantic Hockey champion
Awards

2015 Atlantic Hockey Coach of the Year

Derek Schooley (born November 27, 1972) is an American ice hockey head coach and former player. He is currently the head coach for Robert Morris, a position he has held since 2004.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Career


  • 2 Head coaching record


  • 3 References


  • 4 External links




Career


Hailing from St. Louis, Schooley was unheralded coming out of high school and spent a year with the Omaha Lancers under Frank Serratore. Schooley led the USHL in scoring by a defenseman for his lone season in the league, helping Omaha capture both the regular season and Championship titles, a first for Lancers.[2] After being named to the USHL All-Star second team[3] Schooley joined the program at Western Michigan.


Schooley played for the Broncos for four seasons, improving his point total each season, but remained a relatively unknown player outside of Kalamazoo. The Broncos had a fair amount of success while schooley was there, making two conference semifinals as well as only their second tournament appearance in 1994. After graduating with a degree in Communications Schooley embarked on a brief professional career, spending the 1994–95 season with the Huntington Blizzard before bouncing between four teams the following year. Schooley retires after four games in 1996-97 and joined the Chicago Freeze as both an assistant coach and scouting director.


Schooley returned to the college ranks in 1997 as an assistant for Cornell but left after a season to join his former junior coach Serratore at Air Force in a similar role. Schooley was assigned to coach the team's defense and twice set the program record for lowest goals against per game during his time there. After serving as an assistant on the USA under-18 team at the junior world cup and a year later found himself promoted to associate head coach of the Falcons.


In the summer of 2004 Robert Morris University announced that they were adding several new sports as fully funded programs, including men's ice hockey. Two days after the press conference Schooley was signed on as the team's new head coach.[4] Robert Morris joined the CHA straight away due to the conference having just lost Findlay after their program was demoted to club status.[5] The Colonials finished in last place their first season, but only one point behind Air Force in the conference standings. Over the next four seasons Schooley led to the team to an increasing win total, topping out at 15 in 2007–08 with his first graduating class of seniors. The Colonials dipped a bit in the two years following but while Schooley was building his program, his conference was collapsing.


The CHA had lost Air Force to Atlantic Hockey in 2006 while Wayne State shuttered their program two years later.[6] With only four teams left the conference was on its last legs (NCAA bylaws stipulated that conferences needed to have a minimum of six teams to qualify for an automatic tournament bid). When Bemidji State left for the WCHA in 2010 two of the remaining three schools joined Atlantic Hockey and the CHA was disbanded.[7]


The Colonials found a new level of success in their new home, posting their first winning season in 2010–11 and continued the upwards swing by taking their first conference tournament title in 2014. Robert Morris' first appearance in the NCAA tournament saw them pitted against #1 seed Minnesota where they predictable lost. Schooley's team followed up their surprising season by capturing the Atlantic Hockey regular season crown in 2015, going 24-8-5 and a second the following year. Unfortunately Robert Morris was unable to win the conference tournament in either of those years and was left out of the NCAA championship. Schooley's teams have finished as conference runner-ups in each of the last three seasons (as of 2018).



Head coaching record







































































































Season
Team
Overall
Conference
Standing
Postseason

Robert Morris Colonials (CHA) (2004–2010)

2004–05
Robert Morris
8–21–44–14–26th
CHA Quarterfinals

2005–06
Robert Morris
12–20–37–11–2T–4th
CHA Semifinals

2006–07
Robert Morris
14–19–29–10–13rd
CHA Runner-Up

2007–08
Robert Morris
15–15–410–7–33rd
CHA Semifinals

2008–09
Robert Morris
10–19–75–8–53rd
CHA Runner-Up

2009–10
Robert Morris
10–19–66–9–32nd
CHA Third Place Game (Tie)

Robert Morris:
69–113–26 (.394)41–59–16

Robert Morris Colonials (Atlantic Hockey) (2011–present)

2010–11
Robert Morris
18–12–513–9–55th
Atlantic Hockey First Round

2011–12
Robert Morris
17–17–513–9–57th
Atlantic Hockey Quarterfinals

2012–13
Robert Morris
20–14–413–11–35th
Atlantic Hockey Quarterfinals

2013–14
Robert Morris
19–18–513–9–55th
NCAA West Regional Semifinals

2014–15
Robert Morris
24–8–519–5–41st
Atlantic Hockey Semifinals

2015–16
Robert Morris
24–11–418–6–41st
Atlantic Hockey Runner-Up

2016–17
Robert Morris
22–12–415–10–3T–3rd
Atlantic Hockey Runner-Up

2017–18
Robert Morris
18–20–312–13–37th
Atlantic Hockey Runner-Up

Robert Morris:
162–112–35 (.581)103–72–32
Total:231–225–61 (.506)

      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. ^ "Derek Schooley". Robert Morris Colonials. Retrieved 2018-04-29. 


  2. ^ "UNITED STATES HOCKEY LEAGUE 1989". Elite Prospects. Retrieved 2018-04-29. 


  3. ^ "Derek Schooley". Air Force Falcons. Retrieved 2018-04-29. 


  4. ^ Staff (August 22, 2004). "RMU to name hockey coach". Beaver Country Times. Retrieved November 10, 2010. 


  5. ^ "Findlay To Drop Hockey". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2013-06-11. 


  6. ^ Wodon, Adam (March 11, 2008). "Wayne State Bids Farewell". College Hockey News. Retrieved September 19, 2011. 


  7. ^ "Niagara, RMU complete new Atlantic alignment". NHL.com. 2010-10-14. Retrieved 2018-04-29. 



External links


  • Biographical information and career statistics from Eliteprospects.com, or The Internet Hockey Database


  • Derek Schooley career statistics at EliteProspects.com




Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Rick Gotkin

Atlantic Hockey Coach of the Year
2014–15
Succeeded by
Frank Serratore





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