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・ Harold Page Smith
・ Harold Palin
・ Harold Papworth
・ Harold Parfitt
・ Harold Parfitt (Panama Canal)
・ Harold Park
・ Harold Park Paceway
・ Harold Park, Bradford
・ Harold Parker
・ Harold Parker (disambiguation)
・ Harold Parker (footballer)
・ Harold Parker State Forest
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・ Harold Patten
Harold Paulsen
・ Harold Payne
・ Harold Payson
・ Harold Pearson
・ Harold Pearson (footballer, born 1901)
・ Harold Pearson (footballer, born 1908)
・ Harold Pearson, 2nd Viscount Cowdray
・ Harold Peary
・ Harold Peiris
・ Harold Pender
・ Harold Pender Award
・ Harold Pendleton
・ Harold Percival Himsworth
・ Harold Percival Norton
・ Harold Percy Waller Barrow


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Harold Paulsen : ウィキペディア英語版
Harold Paulsen
Harold W. "Babe" Paulsen (born March 3, 1919 in Virginia, Minnesota, died May 11, 2010 in Mankato, Minnesota) was a former collegiate ice hockey player and head coach.
Paulsen played hockey at the University of Minnesota from 1938–41 and was an All-American in 1940 at left wing alongside teammate John Mariucci. He was team captain as a senior in 1940-41 finishing his career as Gopher hockey's all-time leading scorer, a record that would hold for the next 25 years. He was selected for the 1940 U.S. Olympic Hockey team, but due to WWII those games were cancelled.
With boyish looks, and a small stature, Paulsen earned the nickname "Babe" during his playing days in high school and college.
Following college, Paulsen signed a professional contract with the Chicago Black Hawks, but never made it to Chicago. He coached the Roseau High School Rams varsity hockey team before joining the Navy during World War II. Paulsen returned to Minnesota after the war and completed a master's degree in education. He coached the varsity ice hockey program at Thief River Falls High School.
Paulsen was hired as the first varsity ice hockey coach at Michigan State University on August 1, 1948. Before recruiting or coaching, Paulsen oversaw the renovation of Demonstration Hall into an indoor rink with artificial ice-making capabilities. Paulsen struggled through his first two years at Michigan State with a 6-25 record. MSU athletic director Ralph H. Young felt the hockey program's progress was inadequate and Paulsen resigned after the 1951 season.
Following his coaching career, Paulsen earned a doctorate in physical education from the University of Michigan. He continued teaching health education courses at Michigan State. In 1956 he left Michigan State to become athletic director at Slippery Rock State Teachers College in Pennsylvania, now Slippery Rock University. Paulsen moved on to teach physical education at Mankato State College, now Minnesota State University, Mankato, until his retirement in 1988.
In 2001, Paulsen was among 50 former Gopher hockey players honored by the University of Minnesota as "Legends on Ice."
Paulsen's last name is commonly misspelled Paulson in many hockey publications.
== Head coaching record ==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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