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Troy Jutting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biographical details
BornRichfield, Minnesota, USA
Alma materMinnesota State University, Mankato
Playing career
1982–1986Minnesota State
Position(s)Center
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1987–1989Minnesota State (graduate assistant)
1989–2000Minnesota State (assistant)
2000–2012Minnesota State
2012–2016Omaha (assistant)
Head coaching record
Overall184–224–55 (.457)
Tournaments0–1 (.000)
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
2003 WCHA Coach of the Year
2008 WCHA Coach of the Year

Troy Jutting is a former American ice hockey player and coach who was the head coach for Minnesota State for twelve seasons.[1]

Career

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Jutting arrived at Mankato State in 1982 and played for years for the program. The Mavericks were one of the better Division III teams during that time, making the NCAA tournament in three seasons and reached the frozen four in his senior year. Jutting graduated a year after his eligibility ended and began attending graduate school at his alma mater, serving concurrently as a graduate assistant for the program for two years.[2] In 1989 Jutting became a full-time assistant for the Mavericks and remained in that position while the team moved up to Division II and finally Division I in 1996. When long-time head coach Don Brose retired after the 1999–00 season Jutting was named as his successor.[3]

In the early years the team played well under Jutting. His teams posted two winning campaigns in the first three seasons and made the 2003 NCAA tournament but after that the results turned bad. In twelve seasons behind the bench Jutting recorded only three winning records and was among the worst programs in the WCHA for his last four years. Minnesota State reassigned him to an administrative position with a year left on his contract in the summer of 2012[4] but a few months later he was hired by Omaha as an assistant coach.[5] Jutting worked for the Omaha Mavericks for four years before being fired along with the other Omaha assistant coach Alex Todd in the spring of 2016.[6]

Head coaching record

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Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Minnesota State Mavericks (WCHA) (2000–2012)
2000–01 Minnesota State 19–18–1 13–14–1 7th WCHA first round
2001–02 Minnesota State 16–20–2 11–15–2 t-6th WCHA first round
2002–03 Minnesota State 20–11–10 15–6–7 t-2nd NCAA East Regional semifinals
2003–04 Minnesota State 10–24–5 6–18–4 9th WCHA first round
2004–05 Minnesota State 13–19–6 8–13–4 8th WCHA first round
2005–06 Minnesota State 17–18–4 12–13–3 7th WCHA first round
2006–07 Minnesota State 13–19–6 10–13–5 8th WCHA first round
2007–08 Minnesota State 19–16–4 12–12–4 t-4th WCHA first round
2008–09 Minnesota State 15–17–6 11–13–4 8th WCHA first round
2009–10 Minnesota State 16–20–3 9–17–2 t-8th WCHA first round
2010–11 Minnesota State 14–18–6 8–16–4 11th WCHA first round
2011–12 Minnesota State 12–24–2 8–18–2 11th WCHA first round
Minnesota State: 184–224–55 123–168–42
Total: 184–224–55

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

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  1. ^ "Minnesota State Men's Hockey Team History". USCHO.com. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  2. ^ "2010-11 Men's Hockey Coaching Staff: Troy Jutting". Minnesota State Mavericks. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  3. ^ "Assistant Jutting Named Head Coach In Mankato". USCHO.com. 2000-03-27. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  4. ^ "Jutting out after 12 seasons as head coach at Minnesota State". USCHO.com. 2012-04-01. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  5. ^ "Troy Jutting Bio". Omaha Mavericks. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  6. ^ "Omaha Fires Both Assistant Coaches". SB Nation. 2016-03-30. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
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Awards and achievements
Preceded by WCHA Coach of the Year
2002–03
2007–08
Succeeded by