Richard Vaughan (ice hockey)

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BornSeptember 27, 1906
Rock, Wisconsin, US
DiedJune 14, 1987
Albuquerque, New Mexico, US
1925–1928Yale
Position(s)Center/Right Wing
Richard Vaughan
Biographical details
BornSeptember 27, 1906
Rock, Wisconsin, US
DiedJune 14, 1987
Albuquerque, New Mexico, US
Playing career
1925–1928Yale
Position(s)Center/Right Wing
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1929–1935Yale (asst.)
1935–1943Princeton
1946–1959Princeton
Head coaching record
Overall159–211–14

Richard Farries Vaughan (September 27, 1906 – June 14, 1987) was an American ice hockey player and head coach, best known for his long tenure at Princeton Tigers.[1]

Vaughan played with the Yale Bulldogs university team for three seasons, serving as captain during his senior year. From 1929–1935 he was an assistant coach with the Yale Bulldogs.

Vaughan began coaching Princeton Tigers ice hockey team in 1935 and promptly raised the level of completion from a poor outing the previous year.[2] The Tigers could not sustain the success and oscillated around the .500 mark for the next seven years. While the program was closed for two years during World War II, Vaughan was retained as head coach and resumed his work once the team returned to action in January 1946 (some sources list no coach for that abbreviated year). The post-war Tigers were not quite as good as their earlier iterations: Vaughan's squads hovered just below an even record for much of the time. He left in 1959 and was replaced by R. Norman Wood.

During the early part of his career, Vaughan published a book entitled Hockey which has since gone out of print.[3]

Personal life

Head coaching record

References

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