Early years Colgate's ice hockey team began as a four-game experiment in 1916 and 1917. The program was put on ice during
World War I but returned in 1920 with a coach leading the Red Raiders.
James Ballantine stayed with Colgate for eight years despite the program being mothballed in 1923 and remaining fallow until 1928. After ensuring the team returned he handed the coaching duties over to
Ray Watkins who stayed for four uneventful seasons before
assistant professor of
Physical Education John Howard Starr took over. Starr spent the first four seasons toiling with losing records before both he and the team started to turn the Red Raiders' fortunes. In the late 1930s Colgate started posting lofty records of 8–1 and 9–4 and continued doing so into the early-40s. In 1942 Starr left the program to volunteer for service in
World War II. The team continued on for two seasons, posting an undefeated record in 1943 of 11–0, before being suspended for the final year of the war. Once peace had been achieved Starr and the team returned. After a down season in 1946 the Red Raiders earned their second undefeated record, going 14–0 in 1946–47. The team kept up its winning ways until
1950 when Starr resigned as head coach. The new bench boss,
Tom Dockrell got off to a slow start with the Red Raiders who became a founding member of the first ice hockey conference, the
Tri-State League, but didn't get an opportunity to improve his record due to unseasonably warm weather that caused the program to cease operations for the next six years.
Indoor ice and the ECAC Colgate finally returned to the ice in
1958 and continued with new head coach
Olav Kollevoll for two seasons before their first indoor ice rink was finished. The building was dedicated to the former coach as the
J. Howard Starr Rink at the first game played on its surface in December 1959. With the stability of the program ensured the team was able to build itself into a respectable unit, producing increasing win totals into the early 1960s and founding its second conference,
ECAC Hockey along with 27 other schools. Colgate finished their first year of conference play with an 18–6 mark, setting a new school record for wins and finishing tied for 6th but it wasn't enough to earn them a selection as one of the top 8 teams in the conference so they missed the playoffs. The following year saw the team slip to 7th in the ECAC but this time they received an entry into the postseason, losing to eventual champion
Harvard in the quarterfinals. The next year brought the team record up to 19 wins and a second playoff berth where they once again lost to the eventual ECAC champion in their first game, this time to
Providence. After a down year in
1965 Kollevoll was replaced by
Ron Ryan who held the reins for seven seasons but could only lead the team to middling results most years. After two poor showings in the early '70s the team passed through three coaches over five years, eventually landing with former
St. Lawrence player
Terry Slater.
Rise to prominence and tragedy Slater's first season was an unmitigated disaster, with the team posting its worst record since tournament play began (as of 2018) but that was wiped away in his second season when the Red Raiders posted their first winning season since
1970. The following season brought Colgate its first ECAC playoff in over a decade and in
1981 Colgate notched its first 20+ win season, its first ECAC playoff win and its first appearance in the
NCAA tournament. Slater would keep Colgate in good standing for the duration of the 1980s, posing winning records in all but one season, however, the Red Raiders couldn't get out of the ECAC quarterfinals in any of their succeeding appearances. All of that changed in
1989–90 when Colgate jumped out with a tremendous start and never looked back. The team won its first ECAC regular season championship by a huge margin and swept its way through the ECAC tournament to take its first conference title. The Red Raiders received the second eastern seed and a bye into the Quarterfinals where they defeated
Lake Superior State in two close games. After downing
Boston University in the semifinal Colgate only had
Wisconsin left in their way but were unable to overcome the Badgers and had to settle for Runner-Up. Colgate predictably declined from its team-record 31 wins the next season but still posted a decent record. In December 1991 Terry Slater suffered a severe stroke and was hospitalized, dying four days later at the age of 54. His death gutted the team, but they still managed a respectable year in his absence.
Continued success Don Vaughan arrived in 1992 to help heal the program and while the team struggled through sub-par seasons early on there were some encouraging signs with scattered postseason wins. By the mid-1990s the Red Raiders were posing winning records once more and by the end of the millennium Colgate found itself back in the NCAA tournament. Vaughan was so respected by the administration that he was tasked with serving as the interim
Athletic Director for the 2003–04 school year, allowing his assistant
Stan Moore to lead the team to an ECAC title and earn an
ECAC Coach of the Year Award in the process. Not to be outdone, Vaughan returned to the bench the next year and got a second trip to the NCAA tournament followed by his own ECAC title the season after. Vaughan holds the school record for wins, losses and ties while having produced several
NHL players along with many more professional alumni across
Europe and
North America.
The Harder Era Begins After winning his first conference championship in 2023, Vaughan retired after 30 years as the Raiders' head coach. On June 2nd, 2023,
Mike Harder was named head coach. Harder, Colgate's all-time leading scorer, served as an assistant coach under Vaughan from 2013-2019. Harder began with a solid foundation as most of the team's roster returned, however, he would have to find a way to replace some missing offense. Three of the Raiders' top four scorers (Alex Young, Colton Young, Matt Verboon) had departed, however, as Colgate was already one of the better offensive teams in the conference, they were well-positioned to handle that loss. In Harder's first season,
2023-2024, the Raiders finished third in the ECAC, though they had a record of 16-16-4 overall. In the ECAC tournament that season, the Raiders lost in the quarterfinals to St. Lawrence.
Carter Gylander, the Raiders' standout goalie, graduated and signed with the Detroit Red Wings after the season. The
following season mirrored Harder's first, as the team finished third in the ECAC and were swept in the quarterfinals, this time to rival Cornell. Harder is now in his
third season. The Raiders sit in the middle of the ECAC standings, struggling to find scoring after their two leading scorers, Brett Chorske and Alex DiPaolo, left the program in 2025. ==Current roster==