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2005-06 Schedule

Posted by Jim Hyla 
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2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jim Hyla (---.twcny.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2004 09:42PM

For anyone, like me, who needs to plan ahead, this is from the SID office. Obviously subject to change, and additions. I expect it's proably quite accurate.
The	2005-6	CU Schedule (as of 11/1)

Fri	 Oct-21	US Nat (Ex)
Fri	 Oct-29	Mich St
Sat	 Oct-29	Mich St
Fri	 Nov-04	 @Brown
Sat	 Nov-05	 @Yale
Fri	 Nov-11	 @Dartmouth
Sat	 Nov-12	 @Harvard
Fri	 Nov-18	RPI
Sat	 Nov-19	Union
Fri	 Nov-25	Niagara
Sat	 Nov-26	Niagara @Roch or HSBC
Fri	 Dec-2	Princeton
Sat	 Dec-3	Quinnipiac
Fri	 Dec-30	Florida
Sat	 Dec-31	Florida
Fri	 Jan-6	TBA
Sat	 Jan-7	TBA
Fri	 Jan-13	 @Princeton
Sat	 Jan-14	 @Quinnipiac
Fri	 Jan-20	Clarkson
Sat	 Jan-21	St. Lawrence
Fri	 Jan-27	Brown
Sat	 Jan-28	Yale
Fri	 Feb-3	Colgate
Sat	 Feb-4	 @Colgate
Fri	 Feb-10	 @Clarkson
Sat	 Feb-11	 @St. Lawrence
Fri	 Feb-17	Dartmouth
Sat	 Feb-18	Harvard
Fri	 Feb-24	 @RPI
Sat	 Feb-25	 @Union
Fri	 Mar-3	ECAC
Sat	 Mar-4	ECAC
Fri	 Mar-10	ECAC
Sat	 Mar-11	ECAC
Fri	 Mar-17	ECAC
Sat	 Mar-18	ECAC
Fri	 Mar-24	NCAA
Sun	 Mar-26	NCAA
Thur	 Apr-6	NCAA
Sat	 Apr-8	NCAA

 
___________________________
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jtwcornell91 (---.no.no.cox.net)
Date: November 19, 2004 10:03PM

Anyone know what BU is doing January 6-7, 2006?


 
___________________________
JTW

Enjoy the latest hockey geek tools at [www.elynah.com]
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: pfibiger (---.we.client2.attbi.com)
Date: November 19, 2004 11:49PM

Michigan State as our first two games, when they'll have a bunch under their belts. That'll be a tough weekend.

 
___________________________
Phil Fibiger '01
[www.fibiger.org]
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.rr.com)
Date: November 20, 2004 01:44AM

Games Friday *and* Saturday of Thanksgiving weekend, one in Rochester or Buffalo? Yuck.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ursusminor (---.ipt.aol.com)
Date: November 20, 2004 03:17AM

Not counting the exhibition game, there are thirty games or TBA's listed. Have the Ivies raised their limit?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jeff Hopkins '82 (---.mis.prserv.net)
Date: November 20, 2004 12:23PM

That looks like a tough schedule. Not only MSU right off the bat and the Florida tourney, but Niagara is probably the toughest of the CHA and AHA teams.

Could be a challenge.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Robb (---.169.137.235.ts46v-07.otnc1.ftwrth.tx.charter.co)
Date: November 20, 2004 04:14PM

MSU and then 4 ECAC road games - definitely character building. Fortunuately, it doesn't look like Brown, Yale, Dartmouth, and Havard will be world-beaters next year.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Bio '04 (---.nrockv01.md.comcast.net)
Date: November 20, 2004 04:37PM

Wow- the home game against Harvard is going to coincide with Senior Night? That's going to be pretty intense.

 
___________________________
"Milhouse, knock him down if he's in your way. Jimbo, Jimbo, go for the face. Ralph Wiggum lost his shin guard. Hack the bone. Hack the bone!" ~Lisa Simpson
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jy3 (161.136.210.---)
Date: March 24, 2005 03:22AM

some updates...
unsure where RIT would fit but *maybe* January? - a home and home would be interesting. Also the Estero tourney as mentioned has these teams. Cornell, Maine, Minnesota-Duluth, and Northeastern

The 2005-6 CU Schedule (as of 11/1)

Fri Oct-21 US Nat (Ex)
Fri Oct-29 Mich St
Sat Oct-29 Mich St
Fri Nov-04 @Brown
Sat Nov-05 @Yale
Fri Nov-11 @Dartmouth
Sat Nov-12 @Harvard
Fri Nov-18 RPI
Sat Nov-19 Union
Fri Nov-25 Niagara
Sat Nov-26 Niagara @Roch or HSBC
Fri Dec-2 Princeton
Sat Dec-3 Quinnipiac
Fri Dec-30 Florida (northeastern, umd or maine?)
Sat Dec-31 Florida (northeastern, umd or maine? less first round game)
Fri Jan-6 TBA (RIT?)
Sat Jan-7 TBA (RIT?) (6 or 7)
Fri Jan-13 @Princeton
Sat Jan-14 @Quinnipiac
Fri Jan-20 Clarkson
Sat Jan-21 St. Lawrence
Fri Jan-27 Brown
Sat Jan-28 Yale
Fri Feb-3 Colgate
Sat Feb-4 @Colgate
Fri Feb-10 @Clarkson
Sat Feb-11 @St. Lawrence
Fri Feb-17 Dartmouth
Sat Feb-18 Harvard
Fri Feb-24 @RPI
Sat Feb-25 @Union
----post season as needed----
Fri Mar-3 ECAC
Sat Mar-4 ECAC
Fri Mar-10 ECAC
Sat Mar-11 ECAC
Fri Mar-17 ECAC
Sat Mar-18 ECAC
Fri Mar-24 NCAA
Sun Mar-26 NCAA
Thur Apr-6 NCAA
Sat Apr-8 NCAA


 
___________________________
LGR!!!!!!!!!!
jy3 '00

Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/24/2005 07:14AM by jy3.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Trotsky (---.frdrmd.adelphia.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 04:25AM

Assuming the 29-game schedule is still in effect, then the 1/6-7 is actually a 1/6 or 7, and it's RIT.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jy3 (161.136.210.---)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:15AM

good point, i didnt count b/c i was tired :)

 
___________________________
LGR!!!!!!!!!!
jy3 '00
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: dargason (---.155.212.219.conversent.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 09:42AM

I was wondering how the Vermont/Quinni switch would affect the travel partners. Now we have Harvard/D'mouth and Brown/Yale and Princeton/Quinni weekends.

Kinda weird. Gonna miss going doing Providence/Cambridge back to back.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jacob '06 (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 10:27AM

So what are all the people on USCHO that whine about how our OOC schedule is too easy going to say next year. Niagara and RIT sure aren't going to impress them.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Will (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 10:34AM

[Q]dargason Wrote:

Kinda weird. Gonna miss going doing Providence/Cambridge back to back.[/q]

I believe back in the day, Harvard and Dartmouth were travel partners, so if anything, we're really restoring one classic travel partnership.

 
___________________________
Is next year here yet?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jordan 04 (12.42.45.---)
Date: March 24, 2005 10:35AM

Please excuse the stupid question, but isn't RIT D-III?? Did they just move up this year? Moving up next year?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Will (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 10:38AM

[Q]Jordan 04 Wrote:

Please excuse the stupid question, but isn't RIT D-III?? Did they just move up this year? Moving up next year?[/q]

RIT hockey is moving up to D-I starting next year. They will be a part of Atlantic Hockey. [www.uscho.com]

 
___________________________
Is next year here yet?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: calgARI '07 (---.nys.biz.rr.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 10:52AM

To elaborate on what Will said, RIT will be an Independent DI next season and in Atlantic Hockey in 05-06.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: dadeo (---.eatntn01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:07AM

yea - it doesnt look like our SOS is going to be going in the right direction.
No No.1 seeds for us
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Will (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:07AM

[Q]calgARI '07 Wrote:

To elaborate on what Will said, RIT will be an Independent DI next season and in Atlantic Hockey in 05-06.[/q]

To correct Ari's elaboration, RIT will be D-I independent next year and a part of Atlantic Hockey in 2006-07, actually.

 
___________________________
Is next year here yet?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: calgARI '07 (---.nys.biz.rr.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:11AM

[Q]dadeo Wrote:

yea - it doesnt look like our SOS is going to be going in the right direction.
No No.1 seeds for us
[/q]

I'm not a PWR wiz, but Cornell's SOS isn't why they weren't a #1 seed, but because they didn't do all that well in those games. More favorable results with MSU and/or BC would have yielded a #1 I think.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:21AM

[Q]calgARI '07 Wrote:

dadeo Wrote:

yea - it doesnt look like our SOS is going to be going in the right direction.
No No.1 seeds for us
[/Q]
I'm not a PWR wiz, but Cornell's SOS isn't why they weren't a #1 seed, but because they didn't do all that well in those games. More favorable results with MSU and/or BC would have yielded a #1 I think.[/q]

Indeed. The lose and tie to MSU and loss to BC hurt far more than SOS.

[elf.elynah.com]



 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:26AM

[q]More favorable results with MSU and/or BC would have yielded a #1 I think.[/q]Or a Colgate win against Army... Or a Brown win against Princeton... or any other really minor things that would've made Brown a TUC. We were really only a hair behind Minnesota - we won the RPI handily and lost the TUC comparison by a very small amount.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: CowbellGuy (Moderator)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:44AM

The weak SOS meant all our eggs were in one basket. Again, next year, if we don't do well in the 3 or 4 games against good OOC teams, we'll be hosed again. Look at the team ahead of us. They lost 10 games, but because of their SOS they're a #1 seed. Plus, opening the season with 2 of those games is a double-whammy.

 
___________________________
"[Hugh] Jessiman turned out to be a huge specimen of something alright." --Puck Daddy
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:48AM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:

More favorable results with MSU and/or BC would have yielded a #1 I think.[/Q]
Or a Colgate win against Army... Or a Brown win against Princeton... or any other really minor things that would've made Brown a TUC. We were really only a hair behind Minnesota - we won the RPI handily and lost the TUC comparison by a very small amount.[/q]

True enough. But we couldn't "just win" in those cases, whereas we controlled our destiny in the MSU and BC games. Thus, removing the RPI cliff in the TUC comparison would certainly have helped, since Brown would have counted for something.



 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: RatushnyFan (---.royalusa.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 12:05PM

While MSU and the holiday tourney are nice, I wish we could get some OOC games better than RIT and Niagara on the schedule. Blah!! Those games do nothing to get us ready for the NCAA's, putting aside whether it's good/bad from a PWR perspective.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 12:25PM

[Q]True enough. But we couldn't "just win" in those cases, whereas we controlled our destiny in the MSU and BC games. Thus, removing the RPI cliff in the TUC comparison would certainly have helped, since Brown would have counted for something.[/q]Yes. I wasn't just whining here (though I suppose it sounds like it). My point is that we were extremely close to a #1 seed anyway, even with the MSU and BC losses and the overall low SoS. The margin for error is small but it can certainly be overcome.

FWIW - Niagara is quite a bit stronger than Army and Sacred Heart. Then again, RIT is likely to be near the bottom in RPI and Quinnipiac is a step down from Vermont.

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: cbuckser (134.186.177.---)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:16PM

The RIT game might have no impact on Cornell's RPI. If RIT schedules fewer than 20 games against Division I opponents, it would be ineligible for the NCAA tournament and teams' games against it would not count in their RPIs.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: nyc94 (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:23PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:
My point is that we were extremely close to a #1 seed anyway, even with the MSU and BC losses and the overall low SoS. The margin for error is small but it can certainly be overcome. [/q]

Looking at the '02-'03 PWR, we beat Colorado College and Minnesota 2-1. We lost the common opponent category in each case and won TUC and RPI as we had the highest RPI at the end of the league tournaments. This year we tied the common opponent category with Denver and Colorado College and lost to Minnesota. In each case we had only one opponent in common. While we would have had the top RPI (and the same record as '02-'03, 28-4-1) with two fewer ties and two more wins, an alternative to winning nearly every game would be to get more comparisons against the WCHA.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:28PM

[Q]nyc94 Wrote:

an alternative to winning nearly every game would be to get more comparisons against the WCHA. [/q]

hence tUMD in Florida?




 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: nyc94 (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:49PM

[Q]jeh25 Wrote:
hence tUMD in Florida?[/q]

Well, that's one - assuming we actually get to play them.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Big Red Colonel (---.direcpc.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:51PM

Disappointing OOC schedule for all of the reasons cited above. I would hope that we are TRYING to schedule better OOC games - perhaps renew the BU series and try and get a WCHA opponent. I imagine that this is the best we can do given our limitation on games played. I think playing a better OOC schedule is even more important than ever given that we are replacing UVM with Quinny and the poor quality of the bottom third (or half) of our league.

So, does anyone know if we are actually trying to do better than this?

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KenP (192.133.17.---)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:56PM

[Q]nyc94 Wrote:

jeh25 Wrote:
hence tUMD in Florida?[/Q]
Well, that's one - assuming we actually get to play them.[/q]

Good point -- SCSU in Florida could have helped us this season had we played.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Trotsky (---.frdrmd.adelphia.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 01:59PM

Among the amelioratives:

+ Raise the GP restriction. If Cornell adds 4 games and plays Canisius 3 times and BC once, it's a net gain.

+ Push the CCHA home-and-home to later in the season. Play the weaker NC games up front, then play the stronger teams when Cornell has played more games.

+ Win every night. :-)
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: GaryP (---.dyn.optonline.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 02:01PM

Message to Schafer: Scheduling RIT and Niagara is unacceptable for a team that has a prime shot at making the Frozen Four this year. Add in the fact that QU is joining the ECAC, and this schedule is headed in the wrong direction.

I doubt BU wants to travel out to Lynah after what happened in 2002, but rekindling that home-and-home series from 01-02/02-03 would be a worthy goal.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 02:05PM

[Q]GaryP Wrote:
Add in the fact that QU is joining the ECAC, and this schedule is headed in the wrong direction.
[/q]

Not so long ago we thought UVM was a doormat too.

With a new rink and 18 scholarships, the Fighting Deerticks may not be a cellar dweller for very long.


 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 02:16PM

Also remember that HE is losing non-conference games with the addition of Vermont to the league. This makes it harder to schedule BU or BC.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: nyc94 (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 02:33PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:

Also remember that HE is losing non-conference games with the addition of Vermont to the league. This makes it harder to schedule BU or BC.[/q]

True, but we pick up common opponents with Hockey East through other ECAC teams more than we do for the WCHA. I believe our one common opponent with Colorado College was Union. With Denver it was BC and for Minnesota it was Michigan State. CC swept Union twice as did Cornell and Denver lost to BC as did Cornell. If we can't get games with the WCHA then we should play more with the CCHA or at least play two different opponents instead of twice with the same team.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 02:50PM

My point was simply that it will be harder to schedule quality non-conference games because there will be fewer to go around.

Actually, the most cynical effective way to improve our schedule for PWR would be to schedule games with Michigan Tech (use the connection with former Cornell assistant Jamie Russell). Even better, work with Don Vaughan get the Huskies to come to Central New York and play one against us and one against Colgate. MTU is down right now so a win would be more likely than a win against a Denver or Minnesota. A one win series against a WCHA team would make it likely that we'd win or at leats tie Common Opponents with any WCHA team.

Of course, Michigan Tech's non-conf schedule is pretty rigid. They play in the GLI yearly and then play four games (!) with ancient rival Northern Michigan. That leaves just one non-conf game (against Notre Dame).

BTW - notice that MTU has the same number of non-conf games as Cornell and the Ivies. WCHA teams appear to have 7 or 8, probably dependant on exemptions (e.g. Alaska). CCHA is the same. HE has 10 but will drop to 7 next year. The problem with Cornell's strength of schedule is NOT the games limit. It's certainly possible to get a plenty tough schedule with 7 non-conf games. In fact, iraising the games limit might actually hurt Cornell's schedule - it might be necessary to fill the extra games with low end teams. The problem I see is the start time restriction - Cornell can't schedule non-conference games in October like other schools can.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jim Hyla (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 03:17PM

[Q]GaryP Wrote: Message to Schafer: Scheduling RIT and Niagara is unacceptable for a team that has a prime shot at making the Frozen Four this year. Add in the fact that QU is joining the ECAC, and this schedule is headed in the wrong direction.

I doubt BU wants to travel out to Lynah after what happened in 2002, but rekindling that home-and-home series from 01-02/02-03 would be a worthy goal.[/q]Not that I think that he cares about what we think, but I sort of think he seems to know what he is doing. Until he shows otherwise, I'd cut him alot of slack. Those of you who are new to CU hockey the last 10 years need to understand that this is proably the second best time in CU hockey history and although it hasn't reached the height that Coach Harkness did (and I doubt that anyone ever will), it is still the best that we could ever expect.

Sit back and enjoy this time and this coach; for if he stays with us we are fortunate and if he leaves we will be the loser.

 
___________________________
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jtwcornell91 (---.ligo-la.caltech.edu)
Date: March 24, 2005 03:52PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:

Actually, the most cynical effective way to improve our schedule for PWR would be to schedule games with Michigan Tech (use the connection with former Cornell assistant Jamie Russell). Even better, work with Don Vaughan get the Huskies to come to Central New York and play one against us and one against Colgate. MTU is down right now so a win would be more likely than a win against a Denver or Minnesota. A one win series against a WCHA team would make it likely that we'd win or at leats tie Common Opponents with any WCHA team.[/q]

Or it could add one win to our COp record and four wins to theirs.
help

 
___________________________
JTW

Enjoy the latest hockey geek tools at [www.elynah.com]
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 04:10PM

[q]Or it could add one win to our COp record and four wins to theirs. [/q]If ithere is no other connection to a WCHA team then that is a tie. Having a tied COp would give us the comparison win with Minny this year. That was my point. Guarantee? No.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: nyc94 (---.ny325.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 04:11PM

[Q]jtwcornell91 Wrote:
Or it could add one win to our COp record and four wins to theirs.[/q]

But if you have only one team in common then 1-0-0 is equal to 4-0-0 for PWR. The point is that if you have only one team in common, you had better win that game(s). With respect to Minnesota this year, we needed a sweep of MSU.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Jeff Hopkins '82 (---.airproducts.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 04:14PM

The other way to look at it is if we go 1-0, and they slip up and go 3-0-1, we win the comparison. But it's still up to our guys to win the 1.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Trotsky (---.frdrmd.adelphia.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:09PM

[Q]GaryP Wrote:

Message to Schafer: Scheduling RIT and Niagara is unacceptable for a team that has a prime shot at making the Frozen Four this year.[/q]

Um, right. How about you just deliver your demands about what's acceptable for the hockey program to Mike in person, eh son?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Kyle Rose (---.akamai.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:32PM

[Q]Trotsky Wrote:
Um, right. How about you just deliver your demands about what's acceptable for the hockey program to Mike in person, eh son?[/q]
I'm sure Mike would take it with good nature and aplomb. :)

Kyle
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:35PM

Besides, Niagara has won more NCAA games this century than a bunch of WCHA, CCHA and HE teams. Not to mention every ECAC team besides Cornell and SLU, I think.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.yw.yu.edu)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:38PM

[Q]Jim Hyla Wrote:
Not that I think that he cares about what we think, but I sort of think he seems to know what he is doing. Until he shows otherwise, I'd cut him alot of slack. Those of you who are new to CU hockey the last 10 years need to understand that this is proably the second best time in CU hockey history and although it hasn't reached the height that Coach Harkness did (and I doubt that anyone ever will), it is still the best that we could ever expect.

Sit back and enjoy this time and this coach; for if he stays with us we are fortunate and if he leaves we will be the loser.[/q]Well said. :-)
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: oceanst41 (---.housing.hawaii.edu)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:40PM

and since Quinnipiac is joining the ECAC won't their schedule look remarkably better in the PWR therefore making them no worse than UVM was for us last year...it's not like the PWR will treat QU as an AHA team again next year.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: CrazyLarry (---.caltech.edu)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:44PM

Amen to that. Some of us remember listening to road play-in games on the radio and watching dump-and-chase all season long. And by chase, I mean road-runner/coyote chase, as in, not get.

I suppose I didn't watch too many years of futility, but it should be noted, my Cornell hockey fandom began with at least 5 months before I actually saw a win.

Still, I must say, it'd be nice to play a regular season game against a WCHA team more than once a decade. And RIT doesn't exactly excite me, either.

Of course, hosting the Spartans is good. Very good.

Now, when do we schedule a trip to Alaska... I'm still waiting for that one.

Larry
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: dadeo (---.eatntn01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:47PM

ok - but a team isnt going to go undefeated in a season.
(well, we did 30something years ago). So, the only way we're gonna get a #1 seed is to go practically undefeated.

Yes, beating MSU and BC woulda helped. But look at Minnesota, they lost a sh!tload of games,a dn are a #1 seed because of theyre SOS. Period.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:52PM

[Q]dadeo Wrote:

Yes, beating MSU and BC woulda helped. But look at Minnesota, they lost a sh!tload of games,a dn are a #1 seed because of theyre SOS. Period.[/q]

Umm. No. Your statement is just flat out wrong. It isn't some SOS artifact. Minnesota IS the #4 team in the country.

[www.uscho.com]

(Yes, I know that the committee doesn't use KRACH, but it nicely illustrates that MN *is* correctly placed as the 4th number one seed. )




 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Robb (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:52PM

[Q]CrazyLarry Wrote:

Amen to that. Some of us remember listening to road play-in games on the radio and watching dump-and-chase all season long. And by chase, I mean road-runner/coyote chase, as in, not get.

I suppose I didn't watch too many years of futility, but it should be noted, my Cornell hockey fandom began with at least 5 months before I actually saw a win.

Still, I must say, it'd be nice to play a regular season game against a WCHA team more than once a decade. And RIT doesn't exactly excite me, either.

Of course, hosting the Spartans is good. Very good.

Now, when do we schedule a trip to Alaska... I'm still waiting for that one.

Larry[/q]
IIRC, the Ivy League does not honor the exemption for games played in Alaska, so don't hold your breath waiting for any of us to go out there. Why bother to endure the travel if you don't get more games out of the deal?

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: DeltaOne81 (---.bos.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:53PM

Unless you argue that due to imperfect data, KRACH also overweights SOS. A perfectly makeable argument that has been made many times.
 
A Bit of Hope
Posted by: Big Red Colonel (---.direcpc.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 06:58PM

ECAC teams played very well this year. Perhaps we can all hope that the overall quality of our own league improves, then it really won't matter what else is going on.

Is this likely? I don't know, someone that has followed the ECAC since the HE split should tell us whether they think the overall quality of the league has rebounded. I am hopeful, based on the continued excellence of the Harvard program and the recent strength of the Colgate and Dartmouth programs, coupled with the historical quality and tradition of RPI, StL and Clarkson that it could be a top notch league again. I just can't see how come these schools aren't excellent year in and year out. Are they losing recruits to us? Are more kids playing juniors? Are they losing kids to the CCHA and WCHA, and if so, what is the major reason why? Facilities, fan base, academics ... probably a bit of everything.

I understand Jim's point from up above (about this being a great time for CU hockey) and I agree whole heartedly, but I am sure I am not alone when I say that we all really want this to continue. It has been an awesome ride and it is absolutely thrilling watching our teams mature and play well. We don't expect NCAA titles every year, like a Denver or Minny, but why can't we hope to have a shot at it every year - Maine does, BC does, UNH does, OSU does, - you know, if things break our way it can happen for us just like it can happen for any one of them ... you catch my drift.

LGR! Can't wait for the weekend. And even if we cannot pull it out, it will be fun watching anyway (my wife probably will disagree with this statement as she sees how nervous I get watching the games).

-Mike
 
Re: A Bit of Hope
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:12PM

[q]We don't expect NCAA titles every year, like a Denver or Minny[/q]For the record, before last season Denver hadn't won the national title since 1969 and spent a lot of that time as a middle of the pack WCHA team. For that matter, even Minnesota hadn't won in 20 years before their back to back titles in '02 and '03.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:15PM

[Q]DeltaOne81 Wrote:

Unless you argue that due to imperfect data, KRACH also overweights SOS. A perfectly makeable argument that has been made many times.[/q]

I just don't buy it. KRACH uses itself to generate the SOS. It's an recursive algorithm that reaches it's final result via iteration. Even if you could feed in an overestimated SOS at the beginning, the SOS would be corrected as the process iterated to completion.

I'll let JTW defend the actual math - I'm merely an *applied* statistics guy - but I'd suggest this "prefectly makeable argument" is made by hockey fans that don't have any friggin' clue what they are talking about.

Let me put it another way, why can you pick up an Advanced stats textbook or a copy of Matlab or SAS today and find info on the Bradley-Terry method? The model is 53 years old and it's still being used today. If it were so fatally flawed as the hockey naysayers would like us to believe, then why didn't the professional mathemeticians and statisticians abandoned it years ago.

[ftp.sas.com]

[www.stat.psu.edu]





 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ithacat (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:20PM

[Q]RatushnyFan Wrote:

While MSU and the holiday tourney are nice, I wish we could get some OOC games better than RIT and Niagara on the schedule. Blah!! Those games do nothing to get us ready for the NCAA's, putting aside whether it's good/bad from a PWR perspective. [/q]

It's unfortunate that the Ivies are penalized 5 games, at least I think it's unfortunate. Putting Cornell 2 weeks behind the rest of the hockey-playing country would almost seem to require they schedule teams from the CHA & AH to begin their season. Playing Michigan State right out of the gate when they will have had 4 or more games almost seems to negate home ice advantage. Such is life.

On another note, I think scheduling RIT is great for central/western NY hockey fans. Playing a home-and-home annually would be a blast. One game in Lynah and one game in Blue Cross Arena would be beautiful. They might be able to sell out BCA & it wouldn't hurt Cornell to build a strong recruiting base in Rochester. Boston College has 2 players from Rochester on their roster and are getting a goalie next year from the Flower City, as is Michigan. There's also a kid from Rochester on the national team that played in the junior worlds this year. Of course there was Sam Paolini, and NHLers Brian Gionta and Jason Bonsignore as well. Not too bad for the last 10 years from a small city.

RIT could be competitive next year. They struggled this year with a pretty young team and still beat the US under-18 team 7-4 (H****** beat the USNDT by the same score, Michigan State lost to them, and Michigan beat them 6-5). 9 of their top 12 scorers return next year. Both goalies return (including IHS alum, David Wrisley), and they redshirted a goalie who was second team BCHL. I'm not saying they'll make an NCAA run, but they probably won't embarass themselves next year. Of course, I married into an RIT family & for the sake of domestic tranquility...nut ...I must keep the peace.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: DeltaOne81 (---.bos.east.verizon.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:31PM

jeh,

I don't disagree that Bradley-Terry is a sound method, although I have to take that on faith. While I understand that concepts I don't have a great enough grasp to fully, deeply understand everything. But my point is that the calculations are only as good as the data their based on. With the low number of interconference games, relatively (something like a 4:1 ratio), I would think that its just not really sufficient to do a completely good comparison.

As for the line "I just don't buy it. KRACH uses itself to generate the SOS. It's an recursive algorithm that reaches it's final result via iteration. Even if you could feed in an overestimated SOS at the beginning, the SOS would be corrected as the process iterated to completion."

Its fair, but it kinda also seems like a cop out. I'm not anywhere close to expert enough to delve too deeply into it, but just because something defines something itself, doesn't mean it can't be wrong, or exagerrated. Just because I pick something myself and then use it... well, the logic seems circular. KRACH can't be wrong because the S.O.S. can't be wrong because its determined by KRACH which is determined by the S.O.S. which can't be wrong because...

I don't think KRACH, or really many other rankings for that matter, fairly take into account how difficult it can be to put up a good schedule against poor teams. A team that goes 33-1 (or 32-2 or some such)

Sure, going 17-17 against the top 5 reasonably proves that you're probably in the top 5 (or, um, 6 including yourself, I guess). But going 33-1 (again, or 32-2, whatever) against the lower half of the league may very well be something that only a #1 in the country could do, but KRACH has no proof to put you up there, so you could very well end up lesser. Without a signficant mixing of Common Opponents (or at lesat common opponent's opponent's), you really can't compare with too much certainly, and the collegiate environment may be insufficient to provide decent certainty.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/24/2005 07:34PM by DeltaOne81.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: dadeo (---.eatntn01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:32PM

technically, MN and CU are tied for 4th, and MN wins the tie-breaker.
We lost in TUC and COp, because we only played one team that MN played (MSU), and they played alot more TUCs, so one loss to a TUC doesnt effect them as much. (and they only won the TUC line by .6875 to .6563).
If we played better opponents, our RPI would be higher, and one loss to a TUC wouldnt kill us as much as it did against BC.

(Plus if Alaska-Anchorage managed to keep their RPI above .500, then the TUC woulda turned our way)
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/24/2005 07:34PM by dadeo.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: March 24, 2005 07:43PM

I agree that some folks try to argue that KRACH is wrong without having any frickin' clue what they're talking about. However, there are others who aren't convinced that it does everything "perfectly" (probably based on intuition) who do have a good idea of what it does and try to make reasonable arguments about it. There was a long thread on USCHO recently on which several hypotheticals were discussed in an effort to understand whether KRACH over-weights SoS. I don't think we proved anything ether way but it was an intelligent discussion. OTOH you come off like you believe Bradley Terry is the word of god.

No one here is claiming that KRACH is "fatally flawed". It's not. It just may not be perfect. The fact that KRACH numbers can reproduce a team's Win% is very elegant and argues in it's favor. But it isn't proof that it is perfect.

We don't have objective proof that Minnesota is categorically the 4th best team in the country. We have a statistically based ranking system that puts Minnesota there. The reason they are ranked #4 by KRACH has a lot to do with their schedule strength (though I wouldn't characterize it as an artifact). For that matter, their #1 seed in the tournament has a lot to do with SoS, because the committee uses SoS in an explicit fashion via RPI (unlike KRACH). So to say that "Minnesota is a #1 seed based on SoS" is a flat out wrong statement is incorrect. Maybe they deserve it - that's a worthy argument. But it is a fact that SoS is a factor in their seeding.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 08:37PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:

However, there are others who aren't convinced that it does everything "perfectly" (probably based on intuition) who do have a good idea of what it does and try to make reasonable arguments about it. ... I don't think we proved anything ether way but it was an intelligent discussion. [/q]
Unfortunately, I haven't had the time to hang out on USCHO this season. :(

[q]OTOH you come off like you believe Bradley Terry is the word of god. [/q]
Not my intent. Sorry if it came across that way.

[q] We don't have objective proof that Minnesota is categorically the 4th best team in the country. We have a statistically based ranking system that puts Minnesota there. [/q]

Given my inability to peak into the mind of god, I'll take a statistically based method over an crufty ad hoc method or partisan internet assblather since it is the best we've got. But yes, you're absolutely right that it isn't perfect. Again, I'm sorry my hasty post above suggested that.

But the fact remains that the "statistically based ranking system" says MN is the #4 team in the country. Thus, complaints that MN is way overrated and doesn't deserve a no.1 seed sound like sour grapes to me, not a complaint about the statistical merits of the KRACH.

[q] For that matter, their #1 seed in the tournament has a lot to do with SoS, because the committee uses SoS in an explicit fashion via RPI (unlike KRACH). ... But it is a fact that SoS is a factor in their seeding.[/q]

Certainly. I don't dispute that SOS is making an key contribution to their seeding but the original quote was:
they lost a sh!tload of games,a dn are a #1 seed because of theyre SOS. Period.
[/q2]
Way I read it, that statement strongly implies that SOS is the only factor in MN being a #1 seed. That's the part I have a problem with. It reads a little more like a rant and less like reasoned critique of SOS being overweighted in PWR. I was trying, unsucessfully apparently, to point out that the best system we currently have *also* places MN as the #4 team.

In summary, do I think the PWR has serious issues? Yes. Do I think it is still better than the smokey room BS still used by basketball and lacrosse? Absolutely. Is KRACH perfect? No, but it's still better than anything else we've got to date and thus provides the closest thing we have to a golden standard.

Too bad the epic "objective vs. subjective, truth vs. deterministic" thread over at laxpower has disappeared into the ether. That covered a lot of the philosophical issues surrounding this problem. Alas, I suspect only Al and Hillel remember it.











 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: dadeo (---.eatntn01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 08:59PM

so that leads back to my original assertion

Why cant we get teams like BU and Michigan on our schedule? I mean, yea, it would suck that that time would need to be at the beginning of the season. As a fan, I would much rather see a good team play and make it a close (or even win) rather than see us play Army and win by some staggering amount.
Bottom line is that Cornell needs to play more TUCs.
dave '02
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: jeh25 (---.ri.ri.cox.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 09:09PM

[Q]dadeo Wrote:

technically, MN and CU are tied for 4th, and MN wins the tie-breaker.[/q]

No. Cornell and MN are tied in the PWR.

I linked to the KRACH which has MN in #4 and Cornell in #6. Not the same thing. KRACH is a better (not perfect*) measure than PWR.


But even if you ignore all that, your logic STILL doesn't make any sense.

[q]If we played better opponents, our RPI would be higher, and one loss to a TUC wouldn't kill us as much as it did against BC. [/q]

We won the RPI comparision, but if we played better teams, our RPI would have been higher so we would have won that by more? HUH?

[q]and one loss to a TUC wouldnt kill us as much as it did against BC.[/q]

Actually our TUC record isn't the problem. It's what, the 3rd or 4th best TUC record in the country? You're complaining that we have an awesome TUC and that someone else has one that's just a little better? Anyway, playing better teams can't improve our TUC record - if anything, we're more likely to lose to better teams.

The problem is with our COp comparision. We don't play enough WCHA and CCHA teams, so when we tank a couple of games to western teams, our COp comparision goes to shit. You CANNOT fix that by playing better opponents. You fix that by a) winning key NC games b) playing more western teams, good or bad. This year, sweeping the LAST place WCHA team (MTU) would have flipped the cOP comparison with MN. With a small number of games, quality has little to do with it.

As far as the number games we play, we're an Ivy and have a limited number of NC games. That's just the way it is.








*disclaimer for Keith :

 
___________________________
Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: JasonN95 (---.nrp4.mon.ny.frontiernet.net)
Date: March 24, 2005 11:11PM

Am I in Bizarro World? Are we really questioning the actions of a coach who has gotten Cornell an at-large bid three of the last four seasons? (Yes, we had two automatic bids, but Cornell had at-large bids "in its pocket" if it hadn't won the 2003 and 2005 ECACs.) And very likely would have been four of four if not for that inexplicable quarterfinal series loss to Clarkson (I may be remembering this part wrong, but I think Cornell was, or was very close to, the last team not to make the NCAAs last year.) What I've read and heard has lead me to believe that Schafer would like to schedule somewhat stiffer competition, but he can't because:
a) He insists on reciprocity.
b) Most established teams don't want anything to do with Lynah.

I agree with "a". We fans get upset when we perceive that Cornell isn't getting its due respect as a top tier program --and we should given what the team has accomplished the last few seasons. So how is Cornell supposed to find that respect if it agrees to dance to the tune of the Michigans and Minnesotas of the sport? But the interaction of "a" and "b" means it's going to be *very* difficult to fill our nc schedule with heavy weights. Would BU host Cornell at its flashy new arena for a game? Most likely. Would they do it when it means returning to Lynah? Nope. We should all accept that BU isn't coming back any time soon.

And I disagree with RatushnyFan's argument. I don't think one or two more tough opponents before Xmas break is going to have you more prepared for the NCAAs. Its the season as a whole that is important and is dominated, especially down the final stretch, by conference games and there's nothing Cornell can do to alter that scheduling.

It seems like Cornell's scheduling is working just fine: they are putting up staggering stats and W-L records that get them noticed and talked about in the media and qualifying for the NCAAs.

What has happened these last seasons was unfathomable during my particular four years in Lynah (Class of '95 --go to TBRW and look at those seasons *shiver*); I don't take any of it for granted and I'm loath to question the course Schafer and his staff are following. I'm just afraid that I'll wake up and find that it's all a dream: Cornell hockey is mired in mediocrity (or worse) and instead of TBRW and eLF we have something akin to Clarkson's forum (come on, RichS, let me have it).
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.chcgil.ameritech.net)
Date: March 25, 2005 01:45AM

Everyone's turning all whiny about an out-of-conference schedule that isn't that bad.

1) As has been mentioned above, it's far better to play Niagara, an often dangerous CHA team, than anybody in Atlantic Hockey.
2) Quinnipiac will not be last place in the league next year, since that's reserved for Yale for some time yet. At the same time, one of the historic powers, probably Clarkson but maybe St. Lawrence, will return to the top 4 and start kicking some out-of-conference butt; the other will be a top 6 team. Teams looking up for next year: Brown, Clarkson, Princeton, (St. Lawrence), Union; stay the same: us, Dartmouth, RPI, (St. Lawrence), Yale; on the way down: Harvard, Colgate. Harvard and Colgate will only be down for a year, though. The ECAC(HL) as a whole will be just as good next season as it was this season. After that, watch out: the ECAC will be moving up in the world at, probably, the CCHA's expense. Harvard and Colgate will come back and both North Country teams will be at full strength. Count the strong teams: Brown, Clarkson, Colgate, Cornell, Harvard, St. Lawrence, and (ta-da) Quinnipiac. (Take a look at how heavily freshman-laden Quinnipiac is some time. With those scholarships, they're chomping at the bit.)
3) We're still playing Michigan State twice. We'll also play two of Northeastern (improved without Crowder), Maine (who will be a top 5 team next year), and tUMD (a WCHA that we should beat but who will create some problems in league).
4) RIT is a local program and it's good to get our name in the press outside of Ithaca. When they go D-I with scholarships and such, which has been talked about, I see RIT as a potential repacement for Union, who, after a couple of years of mild success, will soon take a nose dive in the much more competitive ECAC(HL). Union will leave for the AHA and we'll take RIT.

We'll be fine. Even a worse performance than this year will wrap up an at-large, though it might be a #3 seed. A similar performance to this year will have us challenging for a #1 seed again. After next year, things are going to get a lot tougher in league, but I think Schafer is already prepared for that. In fact, if the next couple seasons of recruits work out, we're going to be a defensive powerhouse with some scary offensive capabilities.

As far as BU, Michigan, and the others go? Parker will be back. He just doesn't want to come back until he has a team that can handle us. 2003 was too embarrassing. ("I think it was men playing with boys, both nights.";) BC will never come, due to their delusions of grandeur, and the rest of Hockey East is, well, scared.

We're unfortunate that the smaller CCHA schools aren't doing very well right now. Those Ferris State and Western Michigan games were nice matchups when their teams were good. I wish we'd get a two-year home and home with Nebraska-Omaha. Good fans who'd be happy to see us.

Perhaps we could entice CC into a home and home? A small school with a relatively small rink. Might work, but they already have an established relationship with the North Country schools.

The others? They're too money-grubbing and scared to come to Lynah. F' em. Let's just kick their asses in the tournament.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: calgARI '07 (204.73.177.---)
Date: March 25, 2005 02:24AM

I'm definitely picking Quinnipiac to finish in dead last next year. Yale will be better. The only other team that could contend for 12th in my opinion is Union.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: abmarks (---.ne.client2.attbi.com)
Date: March 25, 2005 02:32AM

1) Amen to all of Scersk's post...


2)

[Q]Why cant we get teams like BU and Michigan on our schedule? I mean, yea, it would suck that that time would need to be at the beginning of the season. As a fan, I would much rather see a good team play and make it a close (or even win) rather than see us play Army and win by some staggering amount.
Bottom line is that Cornell needs to play more TUCs.
dave '02[/Q]

-BU may never come back. Parker was quoted after the last visit as saying that the rivalry would not be renewed. Also, the only way they *mightt* play us is at their brand new 6000 seat arena.

-Michigan won't ever come east either. Berenson has made it plain and clear (there was an early season USCHO article on NC scheduling this year if you can find it...) he said that they'll play NC foes, but at their home rink. They make money and give the opposition the experience of playing at Michigan. Not to mention their home-court advantage.

-And re: MSU, take it when you can get it- those are home games at least.

-Finally, we can't play only top teams for NC games. Like any other team we need some easier games as well. Assuming RIT is a home game, we make money, get a win, and do the hockey world a favor. There is a tradition of this in hockey. That's why UAF and UAA exist at all - WCHA and CCHA took them in for the good of the game.

Two with Niagra, home and home? That covers our CHA/AHA games for the year.

Then we get two with some combo of UMD/Maine/Northeastern.

Totals:
2 CCHA at home
1-2 HE neutral ice at the tourney
0-1 WCHA if we play UMD in the tourney
2 CHA vs. Niagra, one home, one away.
and then the RIT game.

That sounds pretty balanced to me.

And for you guys screaming for more games, it ain't gonna happen. First off, there's an advantage to playing fewer games - a lot less wear and tear. And then the obvious: you went to an Ivy league school. And Cornell isn't going to go changing things just because all of a sudden we have some sustained success. If you want guaranteed NCAA appearances everyyear, go to Michigan. Things are what they are. If you win, that's all tha matters. Go undefeated all year and you win the NCAA title, even if you are from the CHA.

Arik

p.s. It wouldn't be nearly as much fun to root for if we had a Michigan type situation. Having gone to grad school at UM (Scersk lets see if you agree with this) it's just not as much fun when the suspense isnt there. There's something to being the underdog that adds to the experience. I was at Michigan from 97-99 and was in Boston to watch UM beat BC in OT for the NCAA title. It was fantastic. But nothing like what it would be to see Cornell win the title. In 2005, would you rather be a Red Sox or a Yankee fan? Sure the Yanks won a bunch of titles. But do you think that Yankee fans enjoyed any single one of them as much as Red Sox fams enjoyed this year's series victory?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: RichH (---.stny.res.rr.com)
Date: March 25, 2005 04:08AM

[Q]abmarks Wrote:
But do you think that Yankee fans enjoyed any single one of them as much as Red Sox fams enjoyed this year's series victory?[/q]

Before I give you my answer, let me say that the last thing we need right now is another Yankees-Red Sox pissing match. So I'll give you my answer to this very arrogant question and try to bring it into context of your argument.

Yes. Yes, I most certainly do.

My point is that somewhere there's are Angel fans whose enjoyment of 2002 matched the thrill of many Red Sox or Yankee fans in their years. Or fans of the 1970s Cincinatti Reds. Or the 1990s Bulls. Or the NE Patriots of this decade. There exist fans who don't care about expectations or dynasty dominance. And I'm sure there were UMich fans who were elated for every minute of those less-fun-for-you championships in the late '90s.

Compare the feeling at the ECAC finals of 1996 and 1997 with the Final in 2005. Also 2003. Did you have more or less fun? Why? I know I had a blast, and was about equally hoarse for all of 'em. The only difference this year (for me) was that the tension was eased before the clock hit 0:00. Yeah, we were favored to win this year, and didn't disappoint. I'm still buying my Championship gear just as I did in previous years. Maybe some fans felt more relief than jubilation, and there are those who were too concerned with our PWR to take a swig out of the Whitelaw, but that's what makes us different. There are those of us who think we should blast away at the Hirsch situation, and some think it's wrong.

It's also interesting to see your definition of "underdog." It seems to be "someone who hasn't won in a long time." We were the #1 overall seed in 2003...even the media had tagged us as the favorites, and I can guarantee every damn one of us wearing Red would've gone Ape-sh*t had we won it all. So say Schafer leads us to 4 straight National Titles. Won't that suck? That would not be fun, by your arguments.

Disclaimer...yeah, I know I put words in your mouth, Arik, and I rambled a lot way past the point of your post...I apologize. Just a little pre-roadtrip giddiness. But I did take exeption to your suggestion that once a team becomes successful, no fans enjoy winning anymore.

As far as strength of OOC games: Look everyone wants a shot at the "good" schools. Not everyone can play them. Demanding that "we're good now, why are we even bothering with these crappy teams" is showing a bit of elitism. Keep going, and you'll pull out arguments to form 1-A and 1-AA divisions, and while you're at it you'll take away the CHA and AHA auto-bids. Remember that Michigan, Ohio St., and Cornell all went through HORRIBLE stretches.

 
Re: A Bit of Hope
Posted by: Big Red Colonel (---.direcpc.com)
Date: March 25, 2005 09:04AM

That doesn't mean that these schools were not expecting to win all that time - you can bet that Minny certainly did.

I think you get the point anyway.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ithacat (128.253.193.---)
Date: March 25, 2005 01:19PM

[Q]abmarks Wrote:

And for you guys screaming for more games, it ain't gonna happen. First off, there's an advantage to playing fewer games - a lot less wear and tear. And then the obvious: you went to an Ivy league school. And Cornell isn't going to go changing things just because all of a sudden we have some sustained success. If you want guaranteed NCAA appearances everyyear, go to Michigan. Things are what they are. If you win, that's all tha matters. Go undefeated all year and you win the NCAA title, even if you are from the CHA.

In 2005, would you rather be a Red Sox or a Yankee fan? Sure the Yanks won a bunch of titles. But do you think that Yankee fans enjoyed any single one of them as much as Red Sox fams enjoyed this year's series victory?[/q]

Less wear and tear vs more playing opportunites? I think only the players & coaches could answer that one. Maybe they have since there doesn't seem to be any public campaigning by the coaches and players to add the games to their schedule.

It's interesting looking at a few other sports (based on a nano-sample): Cornell's wrestling NC, Travis Lee, wrestled 38 matches this year. Oklahoma's NC, Teyon Ware, wrestled 35 matches, and Michigan's NC, Ryan Bertin, wrestled 32 matches. The men's basketball team played their first game on Nov. 12th, 4 days before Elite 8 Arizona's first game and a week before the Big East's Seton Hall played their first game. Factoring out pre-season tournaments (which can be found on almost any big-time program's schedule) and post-season conference tournaments, Cornell played 26 games while Arizona & Seton Hall each played 27 games. Then, in the fall, there's football, where the Big Red play fewer games than most good high school teams. In the end, it doesn't matter. Coach will do what he has to do to get his team ready, and the players will play, and the schedule will be what the schedule will be.

Red Sox...Yankees? I'm not going to touch that one.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: abmarks (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: March 25, 2005 01:42PM

[Q]But I did take exeption to your suggestion that once a team becomes successful, no fans enjoy winning anymore.[/Q]

That's a bit too much hyperbole. Rather, the first in a string is likely the *most* enjoyable.

And while we were favored in 03, maybe underdog isn't the right word. We had something to prove. Like it or not we were still the EZAC in the eyes of many until we won something, so to me that adds a bit of *underdog* status.

[Q]As far as strength of OOC games: Look everyone wants a shot at the "good" schools. Not everyone can play them. Demanding that "we're good now, why are we even bothering with these crappy teams" is showing a bit of elitism. Keep going, and you'll pull out arguments to form 1-A and 1-AA divisions, and while you're at it you'll take away the CHA and AHA auto-bids. Remember that Michigan, Ohio St., and Cornell all went through HORRIBLE stretches.[/Q]

That was basically my point.

And re the whole Sox-Yanks reference, I'm not taking sides here on who's better etc...just that I think it would be hard to dispute that winning for the first time in 86 years was more exciting/memorable/whatever then winning say for the third year in a row.

This year's pat's championship was a blast, but it certainly wasn't as much fun as the first of the three, when we were not expected to win and hadn't seen a title of any sort around here in ages. This year we just expected to win. SO it was fun to live up to that, but just not as much of an emotional high. I'm sure the players themselves would disagree, but I'm speaking from a fan's perspective.

[Q]Less wear and tear vs more playing opportunites?[/Q]

Just pointing out the flip-side. Absoluteley something to be learned from more playing experience....but there should be less opportunity to get injured/beat up etc.

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.chcgil.ameritech.net)
Date: March 25, 2005 02:50PM

[Q]abmarks Wrote:
p.s. It wouldn't be nearly as much fun to root for if we had a Michigan type situation. Having gone to grad school at UM (Scersk lets see if you agree with this) it's just not as much fun when the suspense isnt there. There's something to being the underdog that adds to the experience. I was at Michigan from 97-99 and was in Boston to watch UM beat BC in OT for the NCAA title. It was fantastic.[/q]

Well, I think my perspective on the situation is a little different:

I went to three or four Michigan hockey games during seven years in Ann Arbor.

I don't know. For a long time there, I just couldn't stand anything to do with "Go Blue" and Michigan athletics. Everything felt so, well, corporate. As far as I'm concerned, the only things Michigan has going for it are Yost and a reasonably loud student section. The latter is, while loud, horrendously uncreative. Don't even get me started on the Pep Band. For as much praise as gets ladeled all over their Pep Band, you would think they'd be good. They're not: their arrangements suck, since they're the same as the Marching Band's patented "lack o' soul" arrangements; they don't travel; they're not student run; and their enthusiasm during games leaves a lot to be desired. What cinched it, for me, were the Bizarro Lynah cheers. Everything I was familiar with was roboticized or Midwestern-ized. "One, two, three, four! We want *moooooooooooooorrrrreeeeee* goals! Sieve, sieve, sieve, sieve, sieve, sieve, sieve! It's all your fault! It's all your fault! It's all your fault! [Cowbell]"

I can't begin to intimate how much it has disturbed me to hear Lynah's goal cheer mutate into a similarly regimented number of "sieves" and "faults." I was worried for a while, but now I don't think Lynah can ever go truly corporate. We should all thank our lucky stars for our tradition of liberal education, our tradition of contrariness, and the tradition of student run organizations at Cornell.

If Michigan hadn't been so corporate feeling, I probably would've gone to more games. I could imagine myself going to grad school at, say, oh, I don't know, Northern Michigan--though I would never have gone there--and watching hockey. Still, the feelings you develop for your grad school never compare to those for your alma mater. The lack of enthusiasm you described, Arik, is not due to your expectations but due to the mental work of substitution: I'm sure that, while watching Michigan winning that championship, more than once you wished those sweaters would turn from maize and blue to carnelian and white.

After a while, I loosened up a bit. It was easier to cheer for Michigan football since Cornell will never play them. There was also a lot of drinking involved. I even grew to like Ann Arbor and now feel somewhat nostalgic for my old stomping grounds. But Ann Arbor will never compare to Ithaca, and Michigan will never compare to Cornell.

So, I guess my answer is this: if by a "Michigan situation" you mean constantly being a top team and periodically winning national champoinships, even as a so-called "favorite," I think I could get used to that; if by a "Michigan situation" you mean becoming a virtually soulless corporate machine while constantly being a top team and winning national championships, I could never get used to that. I don't think that "Red Sox-Yankees" obtains. Certain factors, as I mentioned above, affect Cornell hockey fandom that would transform the idea of a dynasty. Look back at those articles I mined out of the Crimson: I believe that our fans, during the late 60s dynasty period, were as generally respected, or envied, as we are now.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/25/2005 02:59PM by Scersk '97.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: abmarks (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: March 25, 2005 04:34PM

Scersk-

Ann Arbor will never compare to Ithaca, nor Michigan to Cornell, you're right. I think I should have taken more careful time to make clear what I meant.

I grow up in Burlington VT and attended almost every UVM game from the time I was 5 until I got out of high school. THen on to Ithaca, and later on to UM. I was lucky to have been able to go to what have been widely considered three of the best barns in the country. (I won't try and rank them against each other.) ANd yes, I wish it had been CU (or UVM) winning the title rather than UM.

I never meant to say I had any lack of enthusiasm for Michigan games though. I loved Michigan hockey. I flew from Ann Arbor to Boston, skipped clasees and interviews just to see them in teh Frozen Four. I went bananas when we won the final in OT. On a scale of 1 to 10, call it a 9. If Cornell had done the same it would be a 12 on the 10 scale. Part of my post also came from observing closely people who had been UM hockey fans for years. SUre they relished every title, but they expected it. ANd that takes a bit of the edge off IMHO.

And yes, I meant *michigan situation* as being a perennial national contender. I was not getting into your soulless corporate version of things. (And by the way, just as there are CU chants used at Michigan, we stole some of theirs too, search the archives on ELF - I've posted long details of that since I was there for the theft). Sure I'd love it if Cornell was a perennial contender. But in reality that's unlikely unless we leave the Ivy League. All I was pointing out was that each title we might win would have more meaning as things stand now. Win once every thirty years and it's a huge victory. Win every four or five and it's not quite so new and exciting. Not unexciting, just a bit less so.

That's all a long way of saying that since we are at a competitive disadvantage with no scholarships, arena size, location, game schedule etc. and I don't think any of that will change anytime soon, realize that getting to the top against this adversity is all the sweeter for it.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.chcgil.ameritech.net)
Date: March 25, 2005 05:58PM

Arik,

First of all, I have a distaste for the "corporateness" of Michigan athletics, not for the fans, the teams, and such. But there are a couple of exceptions:

1) I think their Pep Band and Marching Band are completely soulless and not worthy of the praise ladeled on them. I see them as walking, breathing extensions of the Michigan athletic department's cold, clammy, money-grubbing hands. Boring, boring, boring and without an ounce of spirit. I have no idea why a student would want to join other than a misguided idea that it's the cool thing to do.

2) I think Berenson could be a much more articulate member of the college hockey community. I think, in general, he does what he has to do. Maybe he wishes he could do something else? Who knows. The man is tight lipped. At least he's come out very strongly against players leaving without finishing their educations.

Now, I think it's great that you could "get into" Michigan hockey while you were out there. I remind you that I myself have cheered very strongly for the Michigan football team, an arguably even more corporate arm of the machine. I had very little in my experience which compares to Ann Arbor on a football Saturday. I enjoyed it immensely. I plan to see some games in the future, and I'll always cheer for the maize and blue on the field. I can't rationally explain the dissonance between that statement and what I'm about to write.

Regarding hockey, there was just too much experience with Cornell hockey that comes to bear. You grew up in Burlington; I grew up in Lansing... NY. My family has had season tickets since 1988. That's 18 years of association, more than half my life. (Same as you, I believe. You graduated in '91, no? You're hanging around half your life yourself.) I saw my first game in 1985, a 5-4 win over Western Ontario, from the middle of section A. I saw Schafer and Nieuwendyk play, though I don't remember it. Cornell hockey is an ingredient in the glue (or grout, "Grout it out loud!";) that binds together my memories of my childhood, my teenage years, my college years, and whatever the hell years I'm in now.

I have always seen Michigan as a rival, not an alternative. (Remember that we played them my junior year, '96, and it was a turning point in that season.) Michigan won the national championship my junior year and made the final four my sophomore and senior years. As far as I was concerned, they were the evil empire. I desperately wanted us to play and beat them. I still do.

Now, I didn't mean to suggest that you're some traitor for being able to enjoy a Michigan hockey game. That's just stupid. I know where your loyalties lie, and I know for whom you would cheer should the two teams meet in the future. My inability to enjoy Michigan hockey was simply part of an overall anhedonia that characterizes my first few years in Ann Arbor. Your ability to enjoy Michigan hockey just means that you were in a much better "place" during your years than I was. During those first years, I was incredibly homesick. Going to a hockey game would've just made it worse. Eventually, I found my way out.

But there is something to this "corporateness." I think it's what encourages fans to "expect" titles and such. If we ever become a perennial contender, which I think we are precariously close to becoming right now, I will never expect it. Every title will be a gift from hockey heaven. I hope that Cornell fans will always feel that way.

As far as I'm concerned, Cornell hockey is on a crusade. Look at squeakball: other than Duke, a basketball program with striking similarities (except for those pesky scholarships) to what Schafer is trying to do at Cornell, you have to go back to Villanova in '85 to find a non-city/state school. Now look at hockey: LSSU in 1994 and then only BC and Denver since. Harvard was the last non-scholarship win in 1989. If we win a few national championships, it will be incredibly good for the sport, reminding all the smaller schools out there that they still have a chance vs. the tendrils of "corporatism" in college athletics. The Clarksons, CCs, RPIs, and Mercyhursts of the world will be buoyed by our success. Talk of the Big Ten Hockey Conference will cease. There will be peace in the Middle East. Famine will be eradicated. Etc.

Once we win a championship (or five), or if Michigan goes through a down period, I'll let up on Michigan hockey a bit. Until then, I just can't. And it'll only be a bit.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/25/2005 06:00PM by Scersk '97.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: abmarks (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: March 26, 2005 03:00PM

[Q]But there is something to this "corporateness." I think it's what encourages fans to "expect" titles and such. If we ever become a perennial contender, which I think we are precariously close to becoming right now, I will never expect it. Every title will be a gift from hockey heaven. I hope that Cornell fans will always feel that way. [/Q]

That's what I was trying to say in a nutshell!


Also, for whoever disputed the notion of Cornell as an underdog there's this quote from the Ithaca Journal yesterday...

[Q] "Even though we were in first place in our league and we won the ECAC title, we've kind of been underdogs the whole time. People look at our league and say we've beaten weaker teams, and stuff like that. So I think we have something to prove no matter who we play..." - Matt Moulson [/Q]


[www.theithacajournal.com]
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: RatushnyFan (---.royalusa.com)
Date: March 28, 2005 04:42PM

[Q]JasonN95 Wrote:
And I disagree with RatushnyFan's argument. I don't think one or two more tough opponents before Xmas break is going to have you more prepared for the NCAAs. Its the season as a whole that is important and is dominated, especially down the final stretch, by conference games and there's nothing Cornell can do to alter that scheduling.

It seems like Cornell's scheduling is working just fine: they are putting up staggering stats and W-L records that get them noticed and talked about in the media and qualifying for the NCAAs.
[/q]
I will believe this until the day I die. Having a new Union in the conference (QU) is going to exacerbate the schedule strength issue in my view. I'm sure that Schafer wants to play the best and that logistics and economics get in the way. I wish that he'd relax the reciprocity line to get a tougher schedule but I know that a lot of you will disagree. I enjoyed watching Cornell play Michigan in '97 at Yost even though I don't think they got a home game the following year.

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: RatushnyFan (---.royalusa.com)
Date: March 28, 2005 04:58PM

[Q]Scersk '97 Wrote:
2) I think Berenson could be a much more articulate member of the college hockey community. I think, in general, he does what he has to do. Maybe he wishes he could do something else? Who knows. The man is tight lipped. At least he's come out very strongly against players leaving without finishing their educations.
[/q]
I'm not sure I agree. I went to Michigan for grad school from '95-'97 and have closely followed them since. Red tells it like it is. He could probably be coaching in the NHL if he wanted to (already has) or be retired. He simply has a passion for college hockey and Michigan. He's good for a quote and he's honest about his players in the press. Really cares about academics over hockey goals as you've said - witness his consistent comments about players leaving early, the value of an education, and benching players who aren't getting it done in the classroom (Bobby Hayes, Mike Legg, etc.). I'm not sure where your view comes from ........... seems to me he is the epitome of what a college hockey coach should be.

Michigan/Ann Arbor will never be Cornell/Ithaca, but it certainly doesn't suck. Yost is great, Red always has them playing well come tournament time (what happened against CC is unprecedented), and the atmosphere is the second best in the country in my view. I've been to a lot of rinks in my day. And there's nothing like winning a national championship. Nothing. Most of you wouldn't know unless you're old timers or have also gone to another school. I can't get that excited about conference tournaments. Can't wait for Cornell to break through and win one. It will come.

Eric H. '92
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ninian '72 (---.ed.gov)
Date: March 29, 2005 04:10PM

As the third member of this list who went this route, let me jump in. Michigan hockey wasn't always like this. I was there in 72-78 and the fall I arrived was persuaded by a friend who'd gone to Brown to go halves on a season ticket. I'd been warned not to expect much, but I had no idea... This was hockey purgatory. Games were played in a small, scuzzy, out-of-the way rink, play was uninspired, and the coaching staff seemed as if they were mailing it in. They had a small, but loyal fan base. Hockey was clearly an also-ran sport at U-M that no one knew much about except for people who loved the game. Going from the last of the Harkness years to watching a team that won all of 6 games that year was a hard landing.

Things changed for the better next year. Michigan hired a young, bright coach in Dan Farrell - who had spent time observing the Soviets and their training methods - and they moved the program to Yost. The first three of Farrell's teams had records of about .500, but this was such a huge improvement that it made Michigan hockey fans delirious and brought new fans into the building. Michigan couldn't skate with the likes of Herb Brooks' Minnesota or Bob Johnson's Wisconsin teams, but Farrell adopted a style of play - aggressive defense and a simple dump and chase offense - that allowed them to compete. They were almost always an underdog but were able to get it together often enough to pull off some impressive wins. I went to a Wisconsin game in 74 that they won 8-1 and that was regarded as a breakthrough game for the program. The Wisconsin goalie reportedly broke down as he left the ice, and Yost rocked.

In 76-77, when the team had four of Farrell's recruiting classes on board, they went 28-17 and made it to the NCAA finals, where they lost to Wisconsin in OT. The Frozen Four was in Detroit that year, and I went to the semis to see U-M - again an underdog - beat a BU team with Davie Silk and Jim Craig in goal 6-4. If I couldn't see Cornell do this, watching Michigan do it was the next best thing. However, at the beginning of the game, I had some bad flashbacks. I hadn't seen a Cornell game in five years, and watching a fast eastern team in red and white competing against Michigan's blue-collar game reminded me of how much I missed eastern hockey. I had to remember that this was BU on the ice, and that I really did want to see them lose.

So, Scersk, this was a very different experience from yours. It was hugely fun and different from the Berenson years. I've continued to follow the Michigan program and enjoy their successes, remembering where they had started, but was confronted with my ultimate nightmare two years ago when both Michigan and Cornell got to the Frozen Four. What if... It didn't take long to decide what color I bleed, and I've never been able to muster quite as much enthusiasm for Michigan hockey since then. I'm even looking forward to the day when Schafer is able to corner Berenson.

Edited 3 time(s). Last edit at 03/31/2005 01:08PM by ninian '72.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Chris 02 (---.aere.iastate.edu)
Date: April 07, 2005 12:57PM

1 day until the Hobey announcement.

191 days until the Red-White game
198 days until the CU-Nat game
204 days until the Michigan State game

It's a LOOONG summer.

[www.twissbrooks.org]
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.res.rr.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 03:19PM

[Q]Scersk '97 Wrote:
As far as I'm concerned, Cornell hockey is on a crusade. Look at squeakball: other than Duke, a basketball program with striking similarities (except for those pesky scholarships) to what Schafer is trying to do at Cornell, you have to go back to Villanova in '85 to find a non-city/state school. Now look at hockey: LSSU in 1994 and then only BC and Denver since. Harvard was the last non-scholarship win in 1989. If we win a few national championships, it will be incredibly good for the sport, reminding all the smaller schools out there that they still have a chance vs. the tendrils of "corporatism" in college athletics. The Clarksons, CCs, RPIs, and Mercyhursts of the world will be buoyed by our success. Talk of the Big Ten Hockey Conference will cease. There will be peace in the Middle East. Famine will be eradicated. Etc.[/q]I agree with what you said, Scott, but I'm confused by the part I underlined. Are BC and Denver not city/state schools?
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:02PM

[q]Are BC and Denver not city/state schools?[/q]They are both private. JSo is the University of Pennsylvannia if you were wondering.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:27PM

Well, in order to clear things up, I'll just go through the last few champs and say who I think is a "good guy" and who I think is part of the problem:
2004  Denver             Good
2003  Minnesota          Bad
2002  Minnesota          Bad
2001  Boston College     Bad?
2000  North Dakota       Bad
1999  Maine              Bad
1998  Michigan           Bad
1997  North Dakota       Bad 
1996  Michigan           Bad  
1995  Boston University  Good?
1994  Lake Superior      Good
1993  Maine              Bad
1992  Lake Superior      Good
1991  Northern Michigan  Good
1990  Wisconsin          Bad
1989  Harvard            Good (crap!)
In general, I think that I tend to harbor ill feelings towards large public universities that dominate their respective states. (Gee... I wonder why...) (Obviously, I have fewer ill feelings for public/privates, but I digress.) The financial advantages these schools build up through, often, their football and basketball teams allow their hockey programs to operate in relative autonomy from financial worries. Coupled with the almost robotic allegiances held by many of the states' citizens, this advantage creates an extremely favorable recruiting environment that makes it very hard for smaller, less-fortuitously located schools (LSSU, Cornell, Clarkson, etc.) to compete for recruits.

I don't like the attitude that says, "Well, I'm a gifted Minnesota hockey player, so, obviously, I'll go play for the Gophers, since they're abso-bleepin'-wonderful! You betcha! Plus they pay well." Similarly, I don't like the attitude that says, "I'm athletically gifted and pretty far from brain dead, obviously I'll go to Harvard because it's the best! Go Cantabs!" Neither do I like the attitude that says, "I'm catholic and smart, so I'll go to BC." I feel there's a lot of brainwashing going on in academia these days that a large, research-oriented university setting is what's right for everyone. If you're not going to Harvard, Michigan, or State U (or Cornell, for that matter) you're dropping out of society. Suffice it to say, that, having been on the inside of two of that type of institution, I have seen some of the disadvantages.

Anyway, that was all a bit beside the point. To address my list again: Denver is "good" because they are an old power returned, but not yet returned to being the biggest show in Colorado quite obviously (UofC and CSU), or even in Denver; BC and BU are toughies--BC athletics is the big show in the Boston collegiate scene, hands down, while BU is a question mark since, even though they are a traditional power, titles haven't exactly been dropping in Jackie-boy's lap; UND tips to the bad because they exert similar power over North Dakota circles as a Minnesota or Michigan, and I have an eastern bias; and LSSU and Northern Michigan, though state schools, are not the dominant state schools in Michigan by a pretty long stretch. However much it pains me to say it, and however much I would root against them at any juncture, I have to admit that another Harvard national championship would be one for the "good" guys. It's the non-scholarship thing. In fact, I think that I would actually root for Harvard against one of the "bad" guys.

So, that was a long way around to cover my feelings about rooting for Harvard. And, oh, by the way, one has to cheer for CC in the frozen four this year--longest drought without a championship of all the teams and a small private to boot!

But, now that I see they're going to lose today, I think you have a very tough choice between UND and Denver. I like the idea of a Denver win only because we all know what happened the last time Denver won two in a row...

(Hmmm... that would make this analogy--'67:'03::'69:'05::'70:'06. You see, in a more closely competitive collegiate hockey environment, one could well translate the '67 team's only slightly less than dominant championship performance into a 30-5-1 season and a semifinal loss. Similarly, the '69 team's crushing finals loss in hostile territory could translate into a crushing quarterfinal loss in hostile territory. How does one translate an undefeated team, though? I leave that up to the imagination.)
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/07/2005 04:38PM by Scersk '97.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.yw.yu.edu)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:30PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:
Are BC and Denver not city/state schools?[/Q]
They are both private. So is the University of Pennsylvannia if you were wondering.[/q]Heh, yes, I knew Penn was private. I never can really say for sure about some schools though. Aren't BU and Michigan also private? (And LSSU not, given that they're a "State University"?)
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:36PM

[q]Heh, yes, I knew Penn was private. I never can really say for sure about some schools though. Aren't BU and Michigan also private? (And LSSU not, given that they're a "State University"?)[/q]I forgot to put the :-P after Penn. BU is private. Michigan is most certainly not.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.yw.yu.edu)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:38PM

[Q]KeithK Wrote:
I forgot to put the after Penn. BU is private. Michigan is most certainly not.[/q]I'm confused, then. I thought that usually "University of X" was private and "X State University" was public.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ursusminor (---.ipt.aol.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:40PM

[Q]jmh30 Wrote:

KeithK Wrote:
Are BC and Denver not city/state schools?[/Q]
They are both private. So is the University of Pennsylvannia if you were wondering.[/Q]
Heh, yes, I knew Penn was private. I never can really say for sure about some schools though. Aren't BU and Michigan also private? (And LSSU not, given that they're a "State University"?)[/q]
BU is private. Michigan is a state school.


Edit: I guess I was a bit late.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/07/2005 04:42PM by ursaminor.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:41PM

In most cases, both University of X and X State will be public. Penn is very much the exception. Can anyone think of another?
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/07/2005 04:42PM by Scersk '97.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Beeeej (---.bc.yu.edu)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:44PM

[Q]jmh30 Wrote:
I'm confused, then. I thought that usually "University of X" was private and "X State University" was public.[/q]

There is no such artificial distinction.

Beeeej

 
___________________________
Beeeej, Esq.

"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ursusminor (---.ipt.aol.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:45PM

NYU and Penn are the only ones I think.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:47PM

[Q]Scersk '97 Wrote:
Look at squeakball: other than Duke, a basketball program with striking similarities (except for those pesky scholarships) to what Schafer is trying to do at Cornell, you have to go back to Villanova in '85 to find a non-city/state school.
[/Q]
To clear this up, I probably should have written "city-state" in the classic sense. So, DU and BC would be "city-state" schools and UofM and MSU would be "state" schools.

That would make us a "non-city-state, half-state" school. Sounds like I'm ordering coffee.

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: KeithK (---.external.lmco.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:51PM

[q] NYU and Penn are the only ones I think.[/q]While it doesn't precisely fit the State-U rule, USC is a private school that could easily be mistaken due to it's name.

There are plenty of City-U private schools (we've mentioned a few. You could even count NYU as one of them.

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Scersk '97 (---.dsl.emhril.ameritech.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 04:57PM

[Q]ursaminor Wrote:

NYU and Penn are the only ones I think.[/q]

I always thought of NYU as a "city-state" school, i.e., that the NY refers to the New York City. While Columbia, as one of the "colonial colleges" [en.wikipedia.org], more closely mimics Penn's situation, NYU was originally the "University of the City of New York" [en.wikipedia.org] .
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ursusminor (---.ipt.aol.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 05:11PM

[Q]Scersk '97 Wrote:

ursaminor Wrote:

NYU and Penn are the only ones I think.[/Q]
I always thought of NYU as a "city-state" school, i.e., that the NY refers to the New York City. While Columbia, as one of the "colonial colleges" , more closely mimics Penn's situation, NYU was originally the "University of the City of New York" .
[/q] I never knew that NYU used to have "city" in its name despite the fact that I am from New York and was admitted to NYU.

Is Rutgers the only primary state university to have a name which makes it appear to be private? (I know that it is now called "Rugers, the State University of New Jersey".)

 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 06:41PM

The University of San Francisco (think Bill Russell and K.C. Jones), like BC, is Jesuit. The University of Chicago is private. Also the University of Miami. And probably many other schools with city names. The University of Phoenix is not only private, but for-profit.

Temple is another state--make that commonwealth--school with a private-sounding name.

 
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Trotsky (---.frdrmd.adelphia.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 06:48PM

[Q]ursaminor Wrote:
I always thought of NYU as a "city-state" school, i.e., that the NY refers to the New York City. While Columbia, as one of the "colonial colleges" , more closely mimics Penn's situation, NYU was originally the "University of the City of New York" .
[/Q]
Is that different from "CUNY."
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: April 07, 2005 07:04PM

[Q]Trotsky Wrote:

ursaminor Wrote:
I always thought of NYU as a "city-state" school, i.e., that the NY refers to the New York City. While Columbia, as one of the "colonial colleges" , more closely mimics Penn's situation, NYU was originally the "University of the City of New York" .
[/Q]
Is that different from "CUNY."[/q]
CUNY is very different from NYU.

The City University of New York is made up of a bunch of public colleges, community colleges, and the CUNY Graduate Center, which draws top faculty from all of the CUNY campuses and awards PhD degrees. Among the CUNY colleges are City College (the old CCNY, of Colin Powell fame), Queens College, Brooklyn College, Hunter College, John Jay (criminal justice, fire science), Baruch College (business), and the College of Staten Island. Despite its name, most of the public funding for CUNY comes from the state, not the city. The campuses named above give undergraduate and masters level degrees.



 
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ithacat (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: April 07, 2005 10:10PM

[Q]Al DeFlorio Wrote:

The University of San Francisco (think Bill Russell and K.C. Jones), like BC, is Jesuit. The University of Chicago is private. Also the University of Miami. And probably many other schools with city names. The University of Phoenix is not only private, but for-profit.[/q]

Add the University of Rochester, and for much of it's history the University of Buffalo was private (I believe).
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 08:01AM

[Q]ithacat Wrote:

Al DeFlorio Wrote:

The University of San Francisco (think Bill Russell and K.C. Jones), like BC, is Jesuit. The University of Chicago is private. Also the University of Miami. And probably many other schools with city names. The University of Phoenix is not only private, but for-profit.[/Q]
Add the University of Rochester, and for much of it's history the University of Buffalo was private (I believe).
[/q]
Even closer to "home"--Syracuse.



 
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: ninian '72 (---.ed.gov)
Date: April 08, 2005 10:58AM

Also, the College of William & Mary in Virginia, which received some public support when it was founded in the 17th century and for awhile thereafter, then was governed privately, and finally affiliated with the state/commonwealth in 1906. Although I haven't looked this carefully, I would guess that a number of other "colonial colleges" had a variety of public and private sources of support during their early years.
 
Re: 2005-06 Schedule
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: April 08, 2005 11:13AM

[Q]ninian '72 Wrote:

Also, the College of William & Mary in Virginia, which received some public support when it was founded in the 17th century and for awhile thereafter, then was governed privately, and finally affiliated with the state/commonwealth in 1906. Although I haven't looked this carefully, I would guess that a number of other "colonial colleges" had a variety of public and private sources of support during their early years.[/q]
Harvard, certainly. A very early "promotional pamphlet" lists John Harvard's contributions (half his estate, or about 1700 pounds) and goes on to say "and the public hand of the State added the rest."



 
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
 
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