On December 9, 1975, the puck dropped on a new era for Yale Athletics. Yale's game against Choate-Rosemary Hall that day, which ended with a 5-3 victory, marked the school's first women's hockey game. Molly Baldridge '76 had gathered a group of Yale women, most of whom had no previous experience playing hockey, to practice and learn basic skills. The club team played its first games in the 1975-76, following a schedule that mixed prep schools and colleges, and competed for the first time in the Ivy League tournament. The core of dedicated trailblazers then provided the nucleus for the team's elevation to varsity status in 1977-78. Guided by head coach Tyler Benson and captain Debbie Weaver '78, the Bulldogs achieved quick success in their new sport. Yale went a combined 23-16-2 in its first three varsity seasons, registering its first win Dec. 10, 1977 at Princeton (2-1). That season also marked the awarding of the team's first Wendy Blanning Award for most improved player, which went to Alice Warner '81. The award was named in honor of Wendy Blanning '78, who died unexpectedly as she was about to enter her junior year.
The 1978-79 season included Yale's first game against archrival Harvard, a 2-1 win for the Bulldogs. The 1979-80 campaign marked the final one for captain June Mendoza '80, who earned her third straight team MVP award while posting a .920 save percentage in 13 games. Mendoza's run of three straight MVPs was matched by Lukey MacMullen '84 from 1981-82 through 1983-84. MacMullen led the team in scoring (10-12-22) while serving as captain her senior season.
After two seasons as an assistant, Kathy Lenahan took over as head coach in 1984-85, Yale's first season in the ECAC. The Bulldogs got the season started off right with a 3-2 win over Harvard. Yale also won the Bowdoin Tournament that year, topping the host school 7-3 in the opener and then beating Colby 4-3 in double-overtime. The next game after that was one of Yale's most memorable performances - a 14-0 win at Wesleyan in which Maria Dennis '88 scored five goals and added three assists. Dennis would finish the season with 32 goals (including 10 game-winners) and 28 assists, earning recognition as the conference rookie of the year. Combined with Anne Bingham '86 (22-20-42), she gave Yale its best 1-2 scoring punch ever.
The 1984-85 season presaged a breakthrough campaign for Yale in 1985-86, with the Bulldogs establishing a new school record with 12 wins - a mark that would stand for 18 years. The Bulldogs' record stood at just 4-7 at the end of January, but Yale reeled off seven wins in its final eight games to finish at 12-8. Dennis scored 22 goals that year and would finish her career with a school-record 96. She would go on to a stint with the U.S. National Team in 1990, the first Bulldog to earn that distinction.
Goaltender Maureen Magauran '92 was the first Bulldog ever to earn first team All-Ivy status, receiving the recognition for both the 1990-91 and 1991-92 seasons. Magauran also won team MVP honors for three seasons in a row.
1992-93 saw Yale register its 100th win, topping Wesleyan 12-0 on Jan. 19, 1993, for the historic victory. 1994-95 marked the debut of Laurie Belliveau '98, who would go on to become a Yale legend. She made a school-record 927 saves that year, then broke that record three more times in her career. Her 1,321 saves in 1996-97 are a Yale best. Belliveau was a three-time first team All-ECAC honoree, four-time team MVP and Yale's first Kazmaier Award finalist (1998). She spent time with the U.S. National Team in 1999, and was named to the ECAC's All-Decade Team for the 1990s. Also a standout lacrosse player, she won the Nellie Pratt Elliot Award in 1997-98 as the top senior female athlete at Yale.
The Bulldogs made their first ECAC playoff appearance in 2001-02, falling to Brown in two games in the opening round. Following the season assistant coach Hilary Witt was promoted to head coach, and she would go on to earn ECAC Coach of the Year honors in leading the team to what was then a school-record five conference wins.
Yale took another step forward in 2003-04, tying the school record for wins with 12 and setting the conference record with eight. The Bulldogs also hosted a highly successful NCAA Frozen Four that year at the Dunkin Donuts Center in Providence, R.I.
The school records for overall wins and conference wins fell again the next year, with 16 overall victories and 12 ECACHL wins establishing new Yale standards. The Bulldogs made history with a 3-2 win over Harvard Nov. 12, their first over their rivals in 20 years, and at one point during the season were nationally ranked. They capped their run with two wins over Princeton in the ECACHL quarterfinals - Yale's first postseason wins. Individually, Erin Duggan '05 became the first Bulldog since Belliveau to earn first team All-ECACHL honors. She and classmate Nicole Symington '05 finished second and third on Yale's career assists list with 61 and 49 respectively.
The celebration of the 30th anniversary of women's hockey at Yale brought many alums back during the 2005-06 season. Goalkeeper Sarah Love '06 concluded her remarkable career with the school career records for both save percentage (.915, besting Belliveau's .911) and goals-against average (2.68, besting Tiff Bingham's 3.25). Love was honored with selection to the first NCAA Frozen Four Skills Challenge, where she competed with some of the other top seniors in the country and helped the East squad to victory.
The 2006 Olympics marked another milestone. Helen Resor '09 was named to the U.S. roster, becoming the first Yale women's hockey player to make an Olympic team roster. Denise Soesilo '10, a Yale recruit, competed for Team Germany. Resor earned a bronze medal.
With Resor back after a year with the Olympic team, 2006-07 was another record-breaking season for the Bulldogs. Among the highlights on the ice was the team's first Nutmeg Classic championship, as Yale beat in-state rivals UConn and Quinnipiac at Ingalls Rink to claim the title. Among those helping the team set a new school mark with 96 goals were three players who finished their careers in the school's top 10 lists for goals, assists and points -- Kristin Savard '07, Jenna Spring '07 and Sheila Zingler '07. Savard added another honor when she won the Hockey Humanitarian Award, presented annually to college hockey's finest citizen. Zingler was selected to participate in the NCAA Frozen Four Skills Challenge, and Resor and Witt (as an assistant coach) both earned silver medals with Team USA at the IIHF World Championship.
With a strong foundation in place, the Bulldogs look to continue adding to their history as the team plays its fourth decade.





