Wide shot of a Big Red hockey game in Lynah Rink, 1963

Fascinating Facts About Lynah Rink, Big Red Hockey’s Chilly Abode

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For the Lynah Faithful, Ice Hockey Is a Matter of Tradition

You may be a devoted fan of the on-ice action—but how much do you know about the iconic facility itself?

By Joe Wilensky

It’s the home of Big Red hockey and the Lynah Faithful—a refrigerated sanctuary that nonetheless hosts barn burners amid the heat of devoted fandom.

Though hockey has been played on Cornell ice since the first official rink was laid out on Beebe Lake in 1900, it was the construction of Lynah in 1957 that ushered in a new era of winter sports on the Hill.

You may be a devotee of Big Red hockey (and know when it’s time to pull out a newspaper or a cowbell)—but how much do you know about Lynah itself?

Read on for 14 fascinating facts!

It unshackled hockey from the whims of winter weather!

While the Big Red had notched its first intercollegiate win—against the University of Rochester—on Beebe’s frozen surface back in 1907, the outdoor venue had a spotty record for being solid enough to host games.

An early hockey game on Beebe Lake, with spectators standing behind the low wooden rink wallsRare and Manuscript Collections
An early game on Beebe Lake.

In the 1940s, there were even unsuccessful attempts to flood Lower Alumni Field for use as a rink; the University dropped intercollegiate hockey in 1947, and the sport entered a 10-year hiatus until Lynah was constructed.


It was named for a former A.D.!

Lynah was built thanks to a then-anonymous $500,000 gift (approximately $5.59 million in 2024 dollars).

Its benefactor was later revealed to be Walter Carpenter Jr. 1910, chairman and former president of DuPont, who had funded construction of his eponymous hall and the Engineering Library.

The rink was named in honor of James Lynah 1905, who’d served as director of athletics from 1935–43.

Its first formal name? The James Lynah Skating Hall.

James Lynah 1905, pictured as a student in his football uniform
Rare and Manuscript Collections
Lynah as a student-athlete.

Pros played the rink’s first game!

the inaugural game on Lynah's ice in March 1957Rare and Manuscript Collections
Rangers vs. Americans, 1957.

Lynah’s inaugural contest, held on March 21, 1957, was an exhibition between the NHL’s New York Rangers and the AHL’s Rochester Americans.

The rink was officially dedicated the following month, and it hosted its first Big Red hockey game on December 14, 1957—with Cornell defeating Lehigh 16-3.


A new century saw improvements—and more seats!

Following renovations in 2000 that replaced the rink floor and drainage system, a 2006 expansion enlarged the facility by 16,700 square feet. That added new locker rooms, offices, lounges, training spaces, and about 450 seats, bringing the total capacity to 4,267.

wide angle shot of an empty Lynah Rink in 2011Jason Koski / Cornell University
An expanded Lynah in 2011, ready to hold thousands of the Faithful.

More recently, the rink gained an amenity appreciated by many: railings to help navigate its stairs.


It knows how to keep its cool!

The temperature inside Lynah is kept at a steady 41 °F, and the ice surface is maintained at 16 °F.

It takes an average of 11,000 gallons of water to create an inch of ice on Lynah’s 85-foot-by-200-foot surface.


Its rafters bear championship kudos!

Banners hung just below the ceiling celebrate the Big Red’s many league titles and championships.

Since Lynah opened, the men’s team has won two NCAA championships, an ECAC record 13 tournament championships, and 26 Ivy titles.

banners marking the dates of winning hockey championship seasons hang in the rafters at Lynah RinkCornell Athletics
A parade of past seasons’ successes hang overhead.

Big Red women’s hockey advanced to the NCAA title game in 2010 and won the ECAC regular-season title six times, with four ECAC tournament titles. The women’s team has claimed 16 Ivy titles and qualified for the NCAA Tournament nine times with four Frozen Four appearances, most recently in 2019.


Senior skate night at Lynah in December 2022
Noël Heaney / Cornell University
Senior skate night, 2022.

It’s not just for hockey!

Lynah also hosts community skates, PE classes, and events such as senior skate night and more.

(If you’re coming to campus, check the rink’s Facebook page for details.)


Two legendary players are honored—far above the ice!

In 2010, Cornell retired the numbers of Ken Dryden ’69 (who’d worn number 1) and Joe Nieuwendyk ’88 (25) and hosted a ceremony in which their jerseys were lifted to the rafters.

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Dryden led the Big Red to the 1967 NCAA championship; he became an NHL superstar—winning six Stanley Cups in an eight-season career with the Montreal Canadiens—and later joined the Canadian Parliament.

Cornell Hockey Hall of Fame members Ken Dryden and Joe Nieuwendyk watch their jerseys rise to the Lynah Rink rafters as their numbers are officially retired at a ceremony during the 2009-10 seasonCornell Athletics
Dryden (left) and Nieuwendyk watch their jerseys rise.

Nieuwendyk, who scored 73 career goals with the Big Red, spent 20 years in the NHL, playing for the Calgary Flames, Dallas Stars, New Jersey Devils, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Florida Panthers, winning three Stanley Cups. He also won gold with Team Canada at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.


It once hosted hundreds of reporters from around the world!

In 1995, Lynah briefly became a media center—a hub for the massive coverage of an official (and in some quarters, politically controversial) visit by the then-president of Taiwan, Lee Teng-hui, PhD ’68.

It was stocked with the era’s tools of the trade—fax machines and desktop computers—with interpreters on hand.

Tawian President Lee Teng-hui is pictured with Cornell President Frank H.T. Rhodes during a campus visit in 1995
Cornell University
Lee (left) with then-President Frank H.T. Rhodes.

Its ‘Zamboni’ … isn’t actually a Zamboni!

Like Kleenex, Zamboni is a brand name that has become synonymous with an entire category of products. In fact, Lynah long used an Olympia ice resurfacer.

Beginning in 2015, its sides were wrapped to look like a mini version of the Campus-to-Campus bus (which connects the Hill with Weill Cornell Medicine and Cornell Tech in NYC).

new ice resurfacer on the job at Lynah RinkNed Dykes / Cornell Hockey Association
The new Mammoth can resurface the rink in about eight minutes.

In 2024, the Olympia was replaced with an electric model, dubbed a Mammoth (which was also recently outfitted with a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap).

It's much quieter than the old model and features an eco-friendly lithium battery, all-wheel drive, LED daytime running lights, a side-mounted passenger seat, and front and rear safety cameras.


An Olympic gold medalist—not in hockey—trained there!

U.S. figure skater Karen Chen ’23 ultimately earned gold in the team competition at the 2022 Olympics in Beijing—though she and her teammates belatedly received their medals at the 2024 Summer Games in Paris, following the disqualification of Russia’s initial first-place finish.

A portrait of Karen Chen ’23 on the ice at Lynah RinkNoël Heaney / Cornell University
Chen (in Olympic garb) in Lynah.

Chen not only did some training in Lynah, but also performed an exhibition program there in 2020 between game periods.

Of course, numerous alums of the men’s and women’s hockey teams have gone on to earn Olympic medals, gold included.


The ice was long resurfaced by a Big Red legend!

For decades—even after he officially retired in 2009—one of Lynah’s most cherished characters was Dave Nulle, who helmed the resurfacer with a steady hand and sartorial flair. The son of two alums, Nulle worked over the years as the rink manager, a skating instructor, and even a ballroom dance teacher.

Dave Nulle helms Lynah’s ice resurfacer, decked out in a colorful clown costume, during a game against ColgateCornell Athletics
Clowning around: Nulle in one of his many guises.

While piloting his icy chariot, “Zamboni Dave” would famously wear elaborate costumes—everything from an Egyptian pharaoh to a London bobby to a medieval knight.


The rink produces ‘snow’ … in July!

Two visitors to campus in July 2013 have an impromptu snowball fight using the Lynah ice shavings in its parking lotJoe Wilensky / Cornell University
A winter wonderland?

Lynah’s resurfacer periodically dumps ice shavings onto an adjacent parking lot. Those piles, which look and feel like snow, have delighted passersby in the summer months—and sparked impromptu snowball fights.


And … it houses the (official) most iconic Cornell tradition!

In the 2024 edition of his annual March Madness poll, Cornell history expert Corey Earle ’07 asked alums to vote on the most iconic Big Red tradition.

Laurianne Rougeau falls to the ice as she scores the game-winning goal in an 8-7 triple overtime victory over Boston University in an NCAA Quarterfinal game at Lynah Rink on March 14, 2012Cornell Athletics
In a triple overtime, the Big Red women's team scores the winning goal over Boston in a 2012 NCAA Quarterfinal game.

Out of a field of 32—ranging from eating at the Hot Truck to watching sunsets on the Slope—a winner emerged from the nearly 6,000 ballots cast: watching Big Red hockey in Lynah!

Top: A 1963 game in Lynah. (Rare and Manuscript Collections)

Published December 4, 2024


Comments

  1. Larry, Class of 1978

    Cornell is hockey. And the home of
    Cornell Big Red hockey is Lynah Rink.
    Thank you Schafer
    Beat Colgate this weekend!

    • Richard “Rick” Box, Class of 1978

      Agree Larry. Best fans in hockey

      • Nancy MacIntyre, Class of 1980

        Great years to watch Big Red Hockey! And, as I recall, a favorite chant among many was, “Box!!! He’s AMERICAN!!!” I was one who camped out in Teagle Hall for four years to acquire season tickets and had seats right above the penalty boxes each year. What a blast!

  2. Stella Mayhew Ardire, Class of 1971

    I was the class of ’71 and my freshman year 1966-67 the Cornell hockey team won the NCAA championshipp!I think they played Denver. The most impressive event I saw while attending a game was Danny Ladboa(sp?)scoring a goal from the opposite end of the rink! What a slapstick site!

    • Jeff Schwartz., Class of 1973

      Lodboa. He also scored a hat trick in the 1970 finals against Clarkson. Great player.

      • Pete Saunders, Class of 1971

        I was a’71er…went to Lake Placid for the NCAA Championship game against Clarkson (who Cornell had defeated just a week or so earlier in the ECAC Championship game in the old Boston Garden – which I also attended) after both Eastern teams defeated their Western counterparts in the semi final games. Not only did Danny Lodboa score a hat trick (all of them in the 3rd period !!!) to break the game wide open, he was a DEFENSEMAN – not a Forward… After the game when the fans rushed the ice, I picked up a discarded Cornell hockey stick but it was a right handed stick and I was a lefty. I saw a younger boy with a left handed Cornell stick and asked him if he would trade. He said “Whose stick do you have?” Without knowing or looking I said “Lodboa’s” and so we traded and that’s how I ended up playing intramural hockey with Ron Simpson’s (Jersey #2) stick for the rest of my time on the Hill.. True story…

        • Charlie Pearlman, Class of 1973

          Ronnie Simpson was a great defenseman!!! I’m class of ‘73.
          We had some great players who were too small to go pro, but man, were they fast and fun to watch.

          • Charlie Pearlman, Class of 1973

            E.g. the magician, Carlo Ugolini 😀

  3. Patricia baumann, Class of 1987

    I am proud to say I played for Cornell and so proud of how well the women’s team has done since I graduated. Go big red. Congrats to Shafer on retirement!

  4. Jim Fullerton, Class of 1963

    First big win in modern era of men’s hockey occurred during a matinee game vs Harvard, Feb ’62. Cornell 2, Harvard 1.
    First turn away crowd due to overcrowding was against St Lawrence on Dec 7, 1962. Cornell 5, St Lawrence 4

  5. Bill Wilso, Class of 1966

    A unique use of Lynah was as a dormitory for preseason football practice in the 60s. Around sixty cots were brought in but they were so uncomfortable that the mattresses were quickly on the cement floor. It was our home for four weeks!

  6. Thomas Swanson, Class of 1977

    Back when Cornell lured Ned Harkness away from RPI as coach. When asked why, he said, “it’s 90 miles closer to Canada”.

  7. Diane Bishop Hanson, Class of 1959

    Broomstick hockey! Competition between sororities. 1958, 1959 probably. Wild and crazy and a good break from studying.

  8. John C. Parmelee, Class of 1980

    Fond memories of playing Pee Wee hockey on the Lynah ice!

  9. Judy Harvey, V.M.D., Class of 1966

    As a PA farmgirl, hockey meant field hockey, which meant ‘club hockey’ at Cornell when there were no sports teams for women. By my senior year, I was not only a Lynah Faithful, but was part of a group of women who were invited to play an exhibition game between periods on Lynah with hockey sticks and a beach ball.

  10. Paul DuBowy, Class of 1975

    Attended five years of CU hockey (including sleeping in Barton Hall for season tix) in the early 70s. Lynah was like the top photo–dank.

    Then moved to Univ North Dakota for grad school. UND had a new Winter Sports Arena, later replaced by Ralph Englestad Arena. The difference between Lynah and UND was/is like The Wizard of Oz when Dorothy opens the house door, and the picture goes from sepia to color.

    Attended the CU-UND series last fall at Lynah. The lightning has improved, but the “seats” (benches) and ingress/egress are still poor. As much as I fondly remember Lynah it should be replaced, perhaps out at the new sports complex on Game Farm Road.

  11. Roe (Rusty} McBurnett, Class of 1974

    Plotting the best place to start “Waiting in line” for season tickets in Barton was a lot of fun. And 3 nights of overnight fun in Barton was a blast. Sleeping bags and early morning frisbee games were the best! And then to have season tickets!!! Saw every game!

  12. Alan Chimacoff, Class of 1963

    Can someone confirm that Cornell had a Zamboni before Madison Square Garden? I believe that is true.

  13. Robert Treadway, Jr., Class of 1960

    Though its not a fact of history, I tried out for the 1958 hockey team when Lynah reopened in 1957-58. I missed the cut and wasn’t remembered after that. But I remembered.

  14. Dottie Hjelstrom Leelike, Class of 1966

    I remember dating someone who lived in an apartment at one goal end of the ice rink. We could look out the window and see the players rushing toward us. Very exciting!

  15. Eric Hansen, Class of 1992

    Great memories here, thanks to the players, coaching staff, trainers, equipment managers, Lynah staff and fellow fans……Let’s Go Red!!!

  16. Webb Nichols, Class of 1963

    Lynah Rink is sacred space. A place were people can express their collective humanity, shared joy and association with
    a team and its success.

    It is a church of communal love and devotion and aspiration in
    a world whose success is always a possibility and is always an escape from the other worlds inhabited outside its confines.

    Lynah Rink and its related activities is ritual marrying the past with the present and an expectant future.

    Like many powerful rituals, it demands of the participants, whether a player or a fan, the full commitment to the shared moment , nothing less , nothing more.

    Go Big Red!!!

  17. Bob Myers, Class of 1963

    Beating Harvard for the first time ever was great but beating Yale in the following game was even better since I was from New Haven and turned down admission to Yale in favor of Cornell. The Yale hockey coach was a close family friend. The fans at Lynah got so rowdy that we sometimes had to hunker down on the bench to protect ourselves from the fans. Great memories of Lynah rink.

  18. Andrew Weber, Class of 1977

    My memory of Lynah Rink was Cornell Harvard game. The Harvard goalee after being called a sieve constantly became so upset that when a chicken was placed in his net between periods hit the bird with his stick. He was removed from the game!

  19. Rolf Frantz, Class of 1966

    Having season tickets was the “ticket” to getting a first date with Nancy Nystrom ’68. Glad it worked – we’ve been married 56 years!

  20. Ed Goldman, Class of 1961

    Starting shortly after entering CU in the fall of ’57, I began a long tradition of a Sunday night free-skate treat. I wasn’t an expert, but loved the escape and the music. it was also a great date opportunity, if the young woman was also willing to give up study time!

  21. Harvey Rothschild, Class of 1963

    I remember many hockey games at Lynah. The tickets were part of the subscription book of tickets your got when you purchased the season’s football tickets. I also remember the Minto Skating Club of Ottawa and the Minto Ice Follies they brought down to campus. Mostly I remember our classmate Laing Kennedy, the goalkeeper, and the “demonstration” speech he gave in our public speaking class. The subject was the ice hockey goalkeeper’s equipment and his tale of how the lacings of his glove broke and allowed a goal during a game.

  22. Rick Zimmerman, Class of 1978

    Getting season tickets, through the on campus scramble and overnight in Barton Hall, was as much of the excitement as attending every home game. The first date with my future wife, Kathleen Kelly ’78, was a Nov. ’75 game in Lynah Rink. Great memories!

  23. Mark Cunha, Class of 1977

    I was a player and head referee for the three Cornell intramural leagues played at Lynah, dorm, fraternity and independent. The playoffs felt as fierce as Cornell v Harvard, and the players and refs marveled when the opposing fans tussled more in the stands than the players did on the ice. Can’t remember anyone getting hurt, and no rink is more fun than Lynah.

  24. John David Evans, Class of 1973

    Rusty!! Greetings from ’73 D-Chi bros: RaVT, JHC, CRM and JDE!

  25. Amy Dumas Wadman

    I have few regrets about my time at Cornell, but my biggest is having season tickets only during my senior year. What fun it was! Why didn’t I do that my first three years? Shortly after graduating, I had the opportunity to see my first NHL game. We had great seats 8 rows up on center ice but the crowd was boooorrrrrrring compared to the Lynah Faithful. Thanks for those memories!

    And many thanks to all the Lynah Faithful who have posted videos. My hockey-loving husband did not believe me when I told him of the crowd’s antics.

  26. Scott Robinson, Class of 1984

    Raised in Florida, I had never attended a hockey game before attending Cornell in the early ‘80’s. I still remember getting season tickets (2) for only $3 a game all 4 years, and learning the game at Lynah! Traditions like tossing fish on the ice and tying a live chicken to Harvard’s goal before the 3rd period were classic!
    Go Big Red from Section B

  27. J. Klein, Class of 1990

    I remember being at Lynah when Joe Nieuwendyk was given an award before the game (All-American, maybe?) then took the opening faceoff from center ice straight on goal and scored less than five seconds into the game. It was a breathtaking display of skill and power and left no doubt of his greatness.

  28. Eric Bliss, Class of 1982

    Attending hockey games was indeed a top memory. A top hockey game memory was smuggling the chicken into the rink to tie to the Harvard goal during the 2nd intermission.

  29. Jim Brandt, Class of 1950

    My wife and I attended the lecture by the Taiwan President while attending our 45th reunion in 1995. It was quite an affair. Driving thru Syracuse from the airport, there were many Chinese banners in support of the President and just getting to Lynah rink was a challenge because of those protesting the Taiwan President as well as his many supporters. It was quite a celebration, his return to the University where he got his advanced degree.

  30. Richard van Tienhoven, Class of 1973

    My fondest memories of Lynah were at the home games in 1970-71 and 1971-72, when I was one of the team’s managers. At the start of each game,I was tasked to carry the back up sticks to the bench. Then the locker rooms and Zamboni were where it is now a closed end behind one of the goals. I would put out my arms; the sticks were loaded on them; the door was opened; and I had to walk across the ice, from behind the goal to the bench in front of the Lynah Faithful. I truly think they were hoping I would lose my footing…it was always a “cliffhanger.”

  31. Ken Fields, Class of 1967

    I believe the 64-65 season was the first time you could get season tickets as the buzz around Harkness’s first recruiting class was boosting attendance after their freshman year. When they became available, my fraternity sent a number of members (no lines, no rush, just go the office and turn in your CUAA coupons) and got around fifteen (I think you could get two or three per person) all in a row right above the glass behind the visiting bench. We had matching sweatshirts made up that said the “Happy Puckers of ***”. After about the third or fourth home game the Athletic department called the fraternity president and asked that we tone it down as opposing coaches were complaining about the “colorful” language being used to taunt their players. There at the beginning of Cornell’s winning hockey tradition.

  32. Charles Roby, Class of 1967

    Lynah holds many of my favorite memories of Cornell. I arrrived in 1963 not knowing what ice hockey was. That changed quickly as my roommate was a hockey playing townie. I loved the game from the first time I saw one in Lynah. We actually camped out for season tickets in the cold outside of Teagle Hall. I remember leaving an afternoon lab early with a fellow classmate to drive up to see the Big Red beat Clarkson. Of course, we had the great pleasure of watching Ken Dryden lead us to the NCAA title in 1967 in Syracuse. Then, years later, enjoyed watching Cornell beat Harvard with my son, class of ’99. Long live Lynah!

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