"The top eight teams in the nation compete in the “A” division of the men’s National Team Championships for the national title and the Potter Cup. The Potter Cup is named for Art Potter, the United States Naval Academy’s longtime coach. Potter, who started coaching at Navy in 1950, coached the midshipmen to national team titles in 1957, 1959, and 1967. Until Trinity won its first title in 1998, Navy was the only non-Ivy League school to win a national nine-player team championship. Potter was inducted into the College Squash Hall of Fame in 1990.
The records below list the national nine-player team champions. From 1942 to 1988, the title was based on dual-match records, with the team with the best record becoming the national champion. Since 1989, the title has been based on performance in the National Team Championships, with the team winning the “A” division becoming the national champion." [ the information above is from the CSA and a link provided. The table on the right below is my fabrication.] NATIONAL TEAM CHAMPIONS/POTTER CUP WINNERS (COACH): 1967-1997
College Squash Association (CSA) List Revised List From a Canadian Perspective
1967: United States Naval Academy (Art Potter) 1967: United States Naval Academy (Art Potter)
1968: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1968: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1969: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1969: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1970: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby) 1970: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1971: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1971: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1972: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1972: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1973: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1973: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1974: Princeton University (Bill Summers). 1974: Princeton University (Bill Summers)
1975: Princeton University (David Benjamin). 1975: Princeton University (David Benjamin)
1976: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby). 1976: Harvard University (Jack Barnaby)
1977: Princeton University (David Benjamin). 1977: University of Western Ontario (J. Fairs)
1978: Princeton University (David Benjamin). 1978: Princeton University (David Benjamin)
1979: Princeton University (Norm Peck). 1979: Princeton University (Norm Peck)
1980: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1980: University of Western Ontario (J. Fairs)
1981: Princeton University (Norm Peck). 1981: Princeton University (Norm Peck)
1982: Princeton University (Bob Callahan). 1982: Princeton University (Bob Callahan)
1983: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1983: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1984: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1984: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1985: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1985: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1986: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1986: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1987: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1987: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1988: Harvard University (Dave Fish). 1988: Harvard University (Dave Fish)
1989: Yale University (David Talbott). 1989: Yale University (David Talbott)
1990: Yale University (David Talbott). 1990: Yale University (David Talbott)
1991: Harvard University (Steve Piltch). 1991: Harvard University (Steve Piltch)
1992: Harvard University (Steve Piltch). 1992: Harvard University (Steve Piltch)
1993: Princeton University (Bob Callahan). 1993: Princeton University (Bob Callahan)
1994: Harvard University (Bill Doyle). 1994: Harvard University (Bill Doyle)
1995: Harvard University (Bill Doyle). 1995: Harvard University (Bill Doyle)
1996: Harvard University (Bill Doyle). 1996: Harvard University (Bill Doyle)
1997: Harvard University (Bill Doyle). 1997: Harvard University (Bill Doyle
1977
1977 - UWO Wins U.S. Intercollegiate Squash Championship
"Squash Team Captures U.S. College Title"
A screen shot of the article in Western News about UWO's capture of the U.S. Intercollegiate Squash Racquets Championship in 1977 is provided below. Western News has been digitized and the article can be read by clicking on this link: Western News, March 10, 1977, p.2.

"U.S. Collegiate Squash Champs!"
That is the headline in The Gazette on March 11,1977 (p.16.) A screen shot of the issue is provided below. Unfortunately, The Gazette has not been digitized. The poor picture is from my printed copy of The Gazette.

The article is a long one with considerable detail about all of the matches. I will provide here the first three paragraphs and the concluding two:
"The United States Naval Academy located in historic Annapolis, Maryland was the site of the 1976-77 United States Intercollegiate Squash Racquets Championship.
It was the twenty-eighth holding of this peerless display of intercollegiate squash, with the quality of play consistent with the team rosters, which was headed by top United States ranked, Princeton, perennially tough Harvard, powerful University of Pennsylvania, Pacific Coach [sic] champion University of California (Berkley) [sic] and the No. 1 Canadian team -- the University of Western Ontario Mustangs.
The Intercollegiate team tournament format can be confusing. Essentially there are "A", "B", and "C" classifications, producing, of course, six finalists. Each team is permitted two entries in each of the classifications and scores a point for each victory attained by one of its team members. In addition, all first round losers play in a consolation tournament with each match worth a half-point to victory. The institution winning the most points is declared the Tournament Team Champion and receives the Potter Trophy.
When the dust was settled, Western was in first place with 25 points. Princeton second with 22, Penn third with 20 and Harvard fourth with 18 1/2. It was the first time that a Canadian university won the Potter Trophy since the 1950 inception of the event....
[ the conclusion]
When the hostilities subsided on Sunday, Western had 25 points and the National Intercollegiate Squash Championship. Coach Fairs described the victory as "a total team effort. No one can be singled out for special distinction -- to win everyone had to turn in a creditable performance. It is a victory that all of us will savour forever."
Although highly regarded, Western was only generally regarded as an outsider to win behind Princeton, Penn and Harvard." (The Gazette, March 11, 1977, p.16.)
"Western Ontario Wins Squash Title"
(Special to The Washington Post)
ANNAPOLIS, March 6 - "Western Ontario University of London, Ontario, won the team championship today at the National Intercollegiate Squash Racquets tournament at the U.S. Naval Academy. Mike DeSaulnier [sic] of Harvard won the individual title, defeating defending champion Phil Mohtadi of Western Ontario, 3-0." (The Washington Post, March 7, 1977.)
Desaulniers, from Montreal, was an exceptional player. As the article above indicates, however, Mohtadi was the top player in the U.S. in 1976. Here is a portion of an article about Mohtadi's win. UWO finished in third place in 1976.
"Western Player Wins U.S. College Crown,"
"Phil Mohtadi, 19-year-old University of Western Ontario freshman, won his first U.S. intercollegiate squash-racquets singles title at the Williams College courts yesterday.
Seeded second, Mohtadi defeated third-ranked Tom Page, a 19-year-old Princeton University freshman from Philadelphia, 15-8, 15-6, 15-8....
The six-member-team title went to Princeton with 29 points followed by Penn, 27 and Western 25." (The Globe and Mail, March 9, 1976, p. 34.
1980
1980 - UWO Wins U.S. Intercollegiate Squash Championship
“Western Ontario Wins Six-Man Team Title"
Squash News, April, 1980, p.18. The entire article is reproduced below.
Western Ontario's coach Jack Fairs carried the six-man team trophy for the Intercollegiate Squash Championship north of the border. They ended the host Penn team 30-28. The favored teams, Princeton and Harvard, finished third and fourth with 24 and 22 points respectively. Yale and Navy tied for fifth with 18 ½ points.
Western Ontario also won in 1977. Other than that, the trophy which was started in 1956, has been kept between Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Penn and Williams.
Team totals are compiled by scoring one point for each entrant, one point for each match won, and half a point for each consolation win. If a player draws a bye and wins the next match he gains two points. If he draws a bye and then loses, he gets no points.
Western Ontario’s strength was that all the entrants reached at least the quarterfinals. Number one, John Lennard, lost in the quarterfinals to Jim Huebner;
Number two Gajenera Singh, lost in the quarterfinals to Michael Desaulniers; number three, Murray Shaw, won the B tournament; number four, Fred Reid, lost in the B semifinal; number five Dennis Hisey and number six David Cox, both reached the C semifinal.
The runner-up Penn team had number five, Pat Murray, and number six, Eben Hardie, both in the C final, as well as number one, Ned Edwards in the A final.
A record 32 teams participated, which attests to the growth of squash in colleges.
The intercollegiate association in their annual meeting exclusively endorsed Manta racquets and Manta in return is funding an effort by the intercollegiate association to promote squash in colleges which do not have a team.
1. Western Ontario 30
2. Penn 28
3. Princeton 24
4. Harvard 22
5. Yale 18 1/2
Navy
7. Stony Brook 17 1/2
8. Washington 16
9. Trinity 15 1/2
10. Tufts 15
California
Army
13. Dartmouth 13 1/2
14. Williams 13
15. Fordham 12 1/2
16 Columbia 11
17. Franklin & Marshall. 11
18. Wesleyan 10 1/2
19. Amherst 10 1/2
20. Toronto 9 1/2
21. M.I.T. 9
22. Bowdoin 8 1/2
Vassar
Lehigh
25. Rochester 8
26. Cornell 7 1/2
27. Hobart 7
28. Colgate 6
Stevens
30. George Washington. 3
31. Stanford 2 1/2
32. Michigan 1 1/2
The caption of the poor photograph above reads: " The Victorious Six Man Team from the University of Western Ontario: #6 Dave Cox, #5 Dennis Hisey, #4 Fred Reid, #3 Murray Shawl, #2 Gajenera Singh, #1 John Lennard" (left to right.)
The same issue of Squash News contains, on the cover page, a picture of John Lennard, the winner of the "Skillman Sportsmanship Trophy," Coach Fairs of the winning team and Murray Shaw, the B winner. The title of the article: "Desaulniers Defeats Edward To Take Intercollegiate Crown," (Vol.3, No.1, April, 1980.)
"Western Squash Team Wins U.S. Crown"
As you will see from the picture below, that is the title of an article found in The Gazette on March 11,1980. The piece, a long and thorough one, is unsigned. The first two paragraphs and the last one are provided below.
PHILADELPHIA -- A battalion of 185 aspirants from 32 North American universities hustled into Philadelphia, The City of Brotherly Love, to do battle for the six-man team championship of the United States and for the coveted Commander E.M. Potter Trophy that is awarded to the winner of the prestigious event. Playing their best squash of the year the underdog Western Mustangs stunned the packed galleries that thronged the expansive Ringe Squash Complex at the University of Pennsylvania by wrestling from the squash powers of Princeton, Harvard, and Yale, the most aspired-after title in the intercollegiate squash competition. Western's win kept their unbeaten 1979-80 tournament record intact having previously won the Ontario Open Team Championship, the Ontario Open Singles, the OUAA Championship and the Canadian Open Singles.
The record of the Mustangs in the U.S. Intercollegiates is an enviable one. In addition to this year's title victory, the Mustangs were second in 1976, champions in 1977 and third in 1978 and 1979. The 1980 Mustang Championship Team was comprised of John Lennard, Gajendra Singh, Murray Shaw, Fred Reid, Dennis Hisey and Dave Cox....
In an interview with The Gazette, Coach Fairs saw the victory this way: The win was one of the most gratifying of my coaching career. It was an uphill struggle all the way. Our personnel entered the tournament with a high resoluteness which resulted in a very energetic brand of attacking play. This helped to lower the stress that is so prominent in such a national championship. Particularly high demands were made on the two freshman members of the team, Fred Reid and Murray Shaw -- and they more than rose to the occasion. In addition, it was particularly rewarding that John Lennard was the first recipient of the John Skillman Sportsmanship Award. The victory is a major landmark in Western squash history. Traditions live on. The outstanding victory will undoubtedly influence the further course of Western squash in a positive way.
Post Script:
Unfortunately things did not develop in a positive way. The squash team did not have courts on campus on which to play and the financial support was limited. In 2002, this letter is found in the London Free Press, June 1, 2002.
“Squash at Western Deserves Better Fate.”
"In reading the stories on Western’s restructuring of its men’s
And women’s athletic teams, I was shocked to see one item.
Men’s squash –Category 3, (self-funded, limited services.)
Category 3 – not even second-class citizens!
Certainly coach Jack Fairs and the young men who have represented
Western so well, both in Canada and the U.S., deserve a much
better fate. A look at the records would explain why.
Of the last 32 OUA squash championships, the Mustangs have won
28 of them, including the last 19 in a row.
The Mustangs have twice won the U.S. intercollegiate squash
championships (1977,1980).
Two of the Mustangs, Phil Mohtadi in 1976 and Scott Dulmage in 1989,
were crowned singles champion at the U.S. intercollegiate championships.
A four-time All-American, Mohtadi was inducted into the U.S. intercollegiate
squash hall of fame in 1999.
Retired from Western’s faculty of kinesiology in 1989, Fairs has continued as
the Mustang’s highly successful squash coach. It’s an impressive record, one
that will be difficult to match and one that should not be ignored."
Bob Gage London
(Bob "Scoop" Gage was a London journalist who died in 2009. For a profile, see this Western
essay.)
Even with limited resources, the team plays on and after winning the OUA championship, travelled to the U.S. one in Philadelphia last week. The current coach, Chris Hanebury, was named OUA "Coach of the Year." Congratulations to the coach and the team.
The 1994 Globe and Mail article is this one: “Western Thrives Without Fanfare: SQUASH DYNASTY / One Canadian University Consistently Succeeds Against the Best U.S. Schools,” Mark Kearney, The Globe and Mail, Dec. 29, 1994, P.C7
Jack Fairs - much has been written about him.
"In Memoriam - Jack Fairs,"
Squash Canada, Sept. 1, 2021.
In it you will find links to the Canadian Squash Hall of Fame and the Ontario Squash Hall of Fame and a few others.