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Friendship Four

Men's Ice Hockey

Men's hockey to play in 2018 Friendship Four in Belfast

BOSTON, MA – The Union College men's hockey team has been selected to participate in the 2018 Northern Irish Connections Friendship Four Tournament to be held in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Joining the Dutchmen will be Yale, Boston University and University of Connecticut. The announcement was made today from Boston's historic Fenway Park. The 2018 tournament will be held November 23-24.
 
The Dutchmen will first face Yale in a league contest on November 23 for the right to compete for the 2018 Belpot Trophy the next night in the Northern Irish Connections Friendship Four Tournament.
 
"The Friendship Four tournament has been a phenomenal event for ECAC Hockey and its member institutions. All aspects of the tournament during the first two years have been first class, and created life-long memories," said ECAC Hockey commissioner Steve Hagwell. "I know the teams participating in the 2017 and 2018 tournaments are eager to visit the great city of Belfast and to experience everything the Friendship Four has to offer."
 
"Having been part of the first two Friendship Four events, I am thrilled with this news and what it means to the athletes and c oaches who will be the primary beneficiaries," said Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna. "Our hosts have done a tremendous job launching this event and the schools who have played to date have delivered the best of NCAA ice hockey to the people of Belfast."
 
The squads will square off at The SSE Arena, home of the Belfast Giants, a professional team that competes within the Elite Ice Hockey League. The arena has hosted the Friendship Four Tournament since 2015, when the inaugural tournament provided a four-game set that featured the ECAC's Brown University and Colgate University and Hockey East's UMass Lowell River Hawks and Northeastern Huskies.
 
Additionally, the teams will take part in cultural experiences, including visiting with youth groups and exploring the deep history of Northern Ireland.
 
Last year's iteration of the tournament was an international success, seen on television across North America and Europe, and attended by over 20,000 spectators. The 2015 event, part of Boston and Belfast's sister cities project, marked the first time that NCAA college hockey was played outside of North America.
 
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