Hockey East Commissioner
Joe Bertagna is
in his 31st year as a
college hockey administrator,
his 16th year
with Hockey East, after
serving in a similar capacity
with the Eastern
College Athletic Conference
(ECAC) for 15
years. He is already the
longest serving commissioner
in Hockey East's 29-year history. In
June of 2012, Hockey East directors extended
Bertagna's contract through the 2014-15
season, a direct response to a number of triumphs
for the conference, including three new
television contracts, another sold-out event at
Fenway Park, and the addition of the University
of Notre Dame to the conference beginning
with the 2013-14 season and the University of
Connecticut a year after that.
Bertagna, has carved out a unique career in
the sport he first played as a freshman goalie at
Harvard University in 1969. After spending 15
years as the primary ice
hockey administrator the
Eastern College Athletic
Conference (ECAC), Bertagna
became Hockey
East's fourth commissioner
on July 1, 1997.
A native of Arlington,
Massachusetts, Bertagna
began working at
the ECAC in 1982, when
he was named Tournament
Director. He was
later named Executive
Director of Ice Hockey
and then became Ice
Hockey Commissioner
in 1991. In these roles,
he administered regular season and tournament
play for 90 men's and women's varsity
programs. His accomplishments at the ECAC
included the league's first television package,
the first hockey-only corporate sponsorships,
and the establishment of the first U.S. women's
intercollegiate ice hockey leagues.
Bertagna made his mark immediately at
Hockey East, engineering a multi-year television
deal (SportsChannel New England) in
his first month on the job. Shortly thereafter,
league tournament attendance rocketed forward,
leading to the event's first-ever sellout
in 2000. Bertagna was also instrumental in
bringing about the formation of the Hockey East
Women's League, just as he initiated league
play for both Division I and Division III women's
programs while with the ECAC.
Hockey East has enjoyed unparalleled
success on the ice during Bertagna's tenure,
winning six national championships, including
four of the last five, and regularly enjoying postseason
accolades for many of its student-athletes.
Five of the last nine players recognized
as "Hobey Hat Trick" honorees have come from
Hockey East.
Media coverage has soared in this period,
as evidenced by the signing of two national
contracts in 2011, a renewal with CBS Sports
Network and a first-ever deal with NBC Sports
Network. Further, a new four-year contract with
the New England Sports Network (NESN) provides
unprecedented local coverage. Bertagna
also oversaw the signing of the first regional
radio contract for the Hockey East Championships
when the Boston Bruins' flagship station,
"98.5, the Sports Hub," broadcast the 2010
championships from the TD Garden.
In January of 2010, Bertagna and his staff administered
the first outdoor college hockey game
in the East when Boston's fabled Fenway Park
hosted a Hockey East doubleheader. The event,
which sold out on the first day of public sale in
September of 2009, was an unprecedented success
for the conference, both financially and in
terms of exposure. This past summer, Bertagna
negotiated another contract with the Red Sox,
creating a doubleheader for January of 2012,
this event featuring the league's four Division I
state universities, Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire and Vermont. As in 2010, this event
sold out, leading
to the Red Sox
adding a Boston
College vs. Northeastern
game.
Nationally, Bertagna has
served as the Executive
Director
of the American
Hockey Coaches
Association since
1991, the only
person to serve
in that capacity.
In that role, he
has overseen the
growth of AHCA
membership from fewer than 300 members in
1992 to over 1,400 members today. He also
served a four-year term on the NCAA Ice Hockey
Rules Committee, the final two years as chairman.
He also serves on the Board of Directors
of USA Hockey and the Hockey Humanitarian
Award Foundation.
Perhaps his biggest contributions on the
national scene have come in his continuing role
with the Hockey Commissioners Association
(HCA). The commissioners of the five NCAA
Division I men's ice hockey conferences
have launched a number of initiatives
that have helped grow the game on
the national and international levels. In
recent years, Bertagna was instrumental
in securing funds for the formation of
College Hockey, Inc., the marketing
arm of the HCA, which was established
in 2009.
Beyond his college hockey accomplishments,
Bertagna has forged an
international reputation as a student
and coach of goaltending. No one in
North America is respected more for
his contributions to the study of the
position and in 2013, he will celebrate
his 40th year as a goalie coach. As a
player, Bertagna began at Arlington (MA)
High School, and then went on to Harvard
University, playing for three Hall of Fame
coaches: Ed Burns at Arlington and
Ralph "Cooney" Weiland and Bill Cleary
at Harvard. A two-year starter at Harvard
(1971-72 and 1972-73), Bertagna led the
Ivy League with a 2.45 GAA in 1972. After
Harvard, he played professionally for the
Milwaukee Admirals and in Cortina, Italy.
He led his S.G. Cortina d'Ampezzo squad
to the 1975 Italian Championship.
He began his professional coaching
career in 1985 with the Boston Bruins,
staying with the Bruins as the goaltender
coach until 1991 and rejoining the team
for the 1994-95 season. He also has
coached with Team USA (1991 Canada
Cup and 1994 Winter Olympics) and
with the Milwaukee Admirals (1994-96).
Bertagna has operated his own goalie
clinics since 1973, and in that time, has
coached thousands of goalies of all ages
throughout New England. He continues
to speak on the subject for USA Hockey
throughout the United States. Through
his camps, lectures, print materials and
DVDs, he has influenced the teaching of
young goaltenders more than any other
goaltending coach in the United States.
His seventh DVD, "Goaltending Today:
Traditional Values through New Techniques,"
was released by Championship
Productions of Ames, Iowa, in 2011.
Bertagna enjoyed a brief college
coaching career at Harvard University in
the late 1970's, serving as Men's Junior
Varsity Coach in 1976-77 and launching
Harvard's women's ice hockey program
in 1977-78. He served as head coach
of Harvard Women's Hockey for two seasons.
Both programs have established
perpetual awards in his name.
Bertagna and his wife Kathy, a two-sport
athlete at Bates College, reside
in Gloucester with their three children,
Bobby (16), Joey (14) and Grace (12).