Maine Loses? Cornell #2 in PWR?

Started by nyc94, February 21, 2003, 09:40:04 PM

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atb9

Oh Fred, of course!  But what is being said is that home ice can make a good team great and a great team unbeatable.  Look at us!

24 is the devil

DeltaOne81

Adam,

Fair enough, I'm not saying it doesn't suck. But I am saying that we have to go in there and do it. This team, simply from being in the ECAC, has had to work extra hard for every bit of recognition it got, and if the tourney ends up being the same way, then they better be prepared to do it (and I'm sure they will be). Besides, I don't think there's such a thing as unbeatable... just ask Union after last night.

If they could keep us tied in Lynah 'til 5 minutes left, then we can go in and take care of Providence in Providence. I guess what I'm saying is we knew it wouldn't be easy, and now it's a level harder, so what? I sucks, but it's the way the cards fall, and it's not worth bitching about the system over :-).

Btw, should Providence not make it, I think we'd end up in Worcester, since it's closer to us, and probably doesn't make a difference to Maine.

Now that my fear about going to Ann Arbor has been resolved, this is the seedings I came up with by the current PWR:

West (Minn):
1) CC (closest to home)
2) Minn (host)
3) OSU (to avoid WCHA matchup, requires seed-swapping)
4) MAAC champ (to pair with #1)

Midwest (Ann Arbor):
1) BC (#4 so gets sent west)
2) UNH (avoid CCHA matchup, can't move hosts BU, Minn)
3) Mich (host)
4) MSU-Mankato (flipping down to 4, but faces weakest #1)

Northeast (Wor)
1) Cornell
2) BU (7)
3) SCSU (9)
4) DU

East (Prov)
1) Maine
2) Ferris (6)
3) UND (11)
4) CHA champ (to pair w/ #2)

Finally, don't expect us to pass Maine without Maine losing significantly. Why? Because we'd need to pass them in RPI, and the team we play on Friday has the worth "RPI Strength" in all of D-I hockey. Sigh.

nyc94

I would be less annoyed at keeping the host school at home if it weren't the same cities every year (or two) - Worcester, Providence, Albany, Minneapolis, Ann Arbor, etc.  I don't pay attention to these things but when they have a regional in Providence is PC always the host?  What about Worcester?  Is BU always the host or does it rotate amongst other nearby Hockey East schools?  I know the distances in the West are greater but if they insist on the same arenas in the East then there shouldn't be an issue about host schools being at home.  If PC fans can't drive to Worcester then they don't deserve to be called fans.

Robb

I could be wrong, but I think the host schools bid for the right to host -  they find a suitable rink, rent it out, handle all kinds of details (tickets? concessions? etc), and "sell" those services to the NCAA.  Whichever schools come up with the best packages (value-wise) are selected as hosts.  Therefore, there's nothing to stop Cornell from bidding on hosting a regional.  Obviously, it's a lot easier to put together a competitive package if your hometown happens to have the right-sized arena for such purposes, but Cornell could bid to host a regional in Albany, Worcester, Providence, Buffalo, etc, if Cornell's athletic department wanted to perform the duties so required to do so.

Let's Go RED!

Greg Berge

We do not know what those duties are, but presumably there's a contract between the NC$$ and the host school/venue, and it's all in there.

It can't be *that* big a financial hit to the school, or public institutions like Minnesota and Michigan couldn't get away with it during years of state budget deficits (he said naively).  Other than keeping the team east, I don't know what Cornell would really gain from hosting a regional.  This would be an interesting USCHO article -- how does hosting work, what does it mean, and who gets the cake?

ugarte

Greg wrote:
QuoteIt can't be *that* big a financial hit to the school, or public institutions like Minnesota and Michigan couldn't get away with it during years of state budget deficits (he said naively).  

ROTFLMAO.

I don't think the athletics budget at Minnesota or Michigan has been audited by the state in decades.


nyc94

I would settle for the 2007 Frozen Four at MSG.  It would be no more out of place than the Republican convention in 2004.  That's going to be a "riot".

According to USCHO, the 2005 Northeast regional has not been awarded although who knows when that page was last updated.

Tom Pasniewski 98

I know that schools do bid to host and as far back as I can recall, which is only about 8 years, BU has always been the host in Worcester.  I did question earlier on another thread why BC with a bigger overall athletics reputation has never bid or at least never won?  Apparently the NCAA has found good bidders in North Dakota and Colorado although not sure who is host for the respective events taking place in those states in future years.  Cornell would probably have to bid on Albany.  

1.  I would probably rather see Cornell use it's money for other purposes than buying a hockey regional like for the hockey program itself
2.  The other conferences look down on the ECAC.  I wouldn't want the taunts of 'they only won because they were the hosts' which would surely be hurled at us if we hosted and won a regional.

ugarte

1. Cornell should bid on it if you think it will be profitable, and then put the money into the program (or, perish the thought, toward academic scholarships). Heck, even if it were break-even or a small loss, it seems worthwhile when the team is on top.

2. The other conferences can taunt all they want.  The taunts will sound pretty hollow if they are screaming at their televisions watching Cornell in the next round.  I don't think PC will care if they beat us in their home, and I wouldn't care either.  I don't know how much it matters, though. We can't really play at home because Ithaca doesn't have a large enough arena.  Albany just isn't Ithaca. (Anyone know if the arena in Syracuse where the minor league hockey team plays (played?) is large enough to be an attractive host site?)


jeh25

big red apple wrote:
Quote(Anyone know if the arena in Syracuse where the minor league hockey team plays (played?) is large enough to be an attractive host site?)


The Syracuse War Memorial is a friggin' armpit not worthy of a NCAA regional. (However, the tiny 1954 Syracuse Nationals NBA championship banner in the NW corner of the ceiling is neat.)

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... :(

nshapiro

Denver and Providence are tied in PWR, with USCHO breaking the tie by RPI.  Do we know for sure if the NCAA selection committee will break a tie the same way or is this a case where it is vague enough that they would use "judgement" and end up picking Provicence because they are hosting a regional?

When Section D was the place to be

nyc94

I thought about Syracuse but imagine if we didn't make the tournament.  There would be four pretty grumpy teams wondering what the hell they are doing there, skating in front of thousands of empty seats.  Of course, I wondered the same thing about North Dakota.  I gather it works though.

About a month ago there was an article about the Women's regional in 2004 (?) being moved from New Haven to Providence because the city of New Haven decided to close the Coliseum.  The decision to close the Coliseum was made last summer but there were/are protests against its demolition so any decision to move the regional was not made immediately.  I think this demonstrates that the work load isn't so heavy in arranging a regional since it was done so quickly (especially when you are a repeat customer).  But it also shows that the NCAA prefers the I-95 corridor between New Haven and Manchester, NH (site of a men's regional next year - the Verizon Wireless Arena - ugh) with an occasional jaunt to Albany.

Also, an article about New Haven said they made more money on concerts than they did on sporting events (minor league hockey) and they had been losing concerts to the Meadows, south of Hartford (Connecticut residents correct me on this one) since the Meadows opened in the 90s.

Al DeFlorio

Careful, John, in dissing the War Memorial.  Cornell won its first NCAA championship there.

Worcester wasn't such a great "home" ice for BU last year, when they lost to Maine despite having a bye.  While it's entirely possible Cornell could lose to Providence--or any of the other top 14 PWR teams--in the first round, I'm not sure the Dunk gives Providence a "home" advantage like Mariucci or (especially) Yost, where Minnesota and Michigan play their home games and where season ticket holders will snap up a high percentage of tickets not sold at the other schools.

Al DeFlorio '65

DeltaOne81

[Q]Denver and Providence are tied in PWR, with USCHO breaking the tie by RPI. Do we know for sure if the NCAA selection committee will break a tie the same way or is this a case where it is vague enough that they would use "judgement" and end up picking Provicence because they are hosting a regional?[/Q]
Hosting/close teams come into play when decided where to put/seed someone, but if it came into selecting who made the tournament at all, that'd be a downright scandal, IMNSHO. The most likely thing for the committee to use to break a tie is the head-to-head pairwise comparison, but that's just an educated guess. After that (if it's tied w/o the RPI tiebreaker), I'd say head-to-head record. After that, it's really up to them to decide what category best decides which team is better. They might consider which teams you win comparisons against, or consider record vs. TUC, or RPI - whatever they think is the best reflection, but it has to be subjective, and I'm 99% sure it has to reflect one of the excepted category. I suppose if they were perfectly tied in all those, they might look at "big wins" or something, but it should all be record-based, and not subjective. Btw, USCHO pretty much just uses RPI to break ties because it's easy.

[Q]I thought about Syracuse but imagine if we didn't make the tournament. There would be four pretty grumpy teams wondering what the hell they are doing there, skating in front of thousands of empty seats. Of course, I wondered the same thing about North Dakota. I gather it works though.[/Q]
Oh wah :`(, like Syracuse is that far. I know it's not in the heart of eastern hockey country, but it's not more than a 6 hour drive from Boston. They can fly if they want. If Colorado can host a regional next year, BU can deal with Syracuse.

jtwcornell91

Neil Shapiro '83 wrote:
QuoteDenver and Providence are tied in PWR, with USCHO breaking the tie by RPI.  Do we know for sure if the NCAA selection committee will break a tie the same way or is this a case where it is vague enough that they would use "judgement" and end up picking Provicence because they are hosting a regional?
Assuming nothing has changed, what the NCAA actually looks at is comparisons among bubble teams, so the key fact is that DU wins the comparison with Providence (see http://uscho.com/polls/pwrcomps.php?type=1m ), not that they have the higher RPI.  We've seen no indication that the committee cares who's hosting when they select the field.