Sneha Girap (Editor)

Paul Patten (ice hockey)

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Sport(s)
  
Football, ice hockey

1947–1950
  
St. Lawrence

Positions
  
Quarterback

1948–1955
  
St. Lawrence

Role
  
Ice hockey

1940–1941
  
Notre Dame

Name
  
Paul Patten

Died
  
1992 (aged 71–72)

1957–1963
  
Cornell


Paul Edward Patten (1920–1992) was an American ice hockey coach who helped revive the program at Cornell. The ex-Notre Dame quarterback returned to his hometown as a coach in 1947, taking over for both the football and ice hockey teams at St. Lawrence. While he stepped away from the hockey program after 1950 in favor of Olav Kollevoll he continued on with the football squad until 1955 when he left to accept the responsibility of leading the Cornell hockey team after its nearly decade-long abandonment.

The Big Red officially restarted in 1957 after the opening of the Lynah Rink, the school's first indoor facility, and as might be expected the team struggled through the first few years, going 16–54–2 in his first four years before Patten led them to a winning season in 1961–62, Cornell's first as a member of ECAC Hockey. Patten spent one more season behind the bench before resigning and turning over the program to Ned Harkness.

References

Paul Patten (ice hockey) Wikipedia