Sneha Girap (Editor)

Aleca Hughes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Shoots
  
Right

Education
  
Yale University

ECAC team
  
Yale

Positions
  
Forward

Name
  
Aleca Hughes

Playing career
  
2008

Height
  
1.78 m


Aleca Hughes Yales Aleca Hughes Named Winner of Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup Yale

Born
  
April 5, 1990 (age 33) Westwood, MA, USA (
1990-04-05
)

Aleca hughes interview 01 09 2016


Aleca Hughes (born April 5, 1990) was the captain of the Yale Bulldogs during the 2011–12 Yale Bulldogs women's ice hockey season. For her work in trying to help find a donor for Mandi Schwartz, she was a finalist for the 2011 Hockey Humanitarian Award. In 2012, she would win the Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup, Hockey Humanitarian Award, and the Sarah Devens Award. She would be the first member of the Ivy League to win the Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup.

Contents

Aleca Hughes From Yale hockey to corporate sales Westwoods Aleca Hughes is all

Aleca hughes 2012 bny mellon wealth management hockey humanitarian award winner


Yale

Her freshman season with the Yale Bulldogs was in 2008-09 and she was recognized as a member of the ECAC All-Academic team. She skated on the same line with Mandi Schwartz to begin her freshman season. Her seven goals ranked third on the team, while her sixteen points ranked fourth. For the season, she only incurred four penalties. The following season (2009–10), Hughes nine goals and seventeen points ranked second on the team, while she was named to the ECAC All-Academic team for the second consecutive season. In the 2010-11 season, Hughes led the Yale Bulldogs with 10 goals.

On April 22, 2011, Hughes was elected captain of the Bulldogs team for the 2011-12 season. She became the 31st different person to captain the Yale women's ice hockey team during its 35-year varsity history. On November 5, 2011, she assisted on Stephanie Mock's first career NCAA goal in a 7-1 loss to Princeton. In her final season, she led the team in assists (11) and points (15). In addition, Hughes was her team's representative for Yale Athletics' Thomas W. Ford '42 Community Outreach Program.

Hughes did not miss a game in her career with Yale. Statistically, she finished with 30 goals and 31 assists (61 points) in 116 games played. She was the Bulldogs leader in goals scored (a career-high 10) during the 2010-11 campaign. She is in Yale's career top 20 for goals (20th), assists (tied, 19th) and points (20th). She won Yale's Mandi Schwartz Award for courage, grit and determination on two separate occasions.

USA Hockey

Hughes attended USA Hockey's open tryouts for the 2010 Olympic team in the summer of 2009.

Awards and honors

  • 2005-06 All-Founder's League
  • 2006-07 All-Founder's League
  • 2007-08 All-New England Division I team (with Hotchkiss)
  • ECAC Hockey All-Academic 2008-09, 2009–10
  • 2010 Yale Bulldog Award (for team spirit)
  • Finalist, 2011 Hockey Humanitarian Award
  • 2011 Mandi Schwartz Award (inaugural winner)
  • 2012 ECAC Hockey All-Academic honor
  • Winner, 2012 Hockey Humanitarian Award
  • 2012 Sarah Devens Award
  • Nominee, 2012 National Consortium for Academics and Sports Giant Steps Award
  • Winner, Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup (presented for character and leadership on and off the field, and to their contributions in sport and society)
  • 2012 Bingham Cup (Yale Bulldogs women's ice hockey award for leadership)
  • Personal

    George Hughes, her father, played hockey for the Harvard Crimson and ranked seventh on the Harvard career scoring list with 161 points. Her uncle, Jack, played for Harvard and the Colorado Rockies of the National Hockey League. Her mother, Allison competed athletically for Boston University. In addition, Hughes has two brothers, George and Gunnar, who play hockey at St. Lawrence.

    Hughes was involved in charity work while at Yale. She organized a bone marrow donor drive and the Goals for Mandi fundraiser for teammate Mandi Schwartz. She also organized the Nov. 12, 2010 White Out for Mandi fundraiser at Ingalls Rink, which raised more than $15,500. In addition, she served as the Yale women's ice hockey team's representative for the Yale Athletic Department's Thomas W. Ford '42 Community Outreach Program. She is also a member of Athletes in Action, a group of Christian athletes that performs community service initiatives.

    References

    Aleca Hughes Wikipedia