Cornell Coaching Championships

Started by jtwcornell91, February 26, 2005, 11:21:57 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

A-19

speaking of banners, maybe they'll bring back the "B4" practice jerseys

Chris 02

The idea of getting a banner for the post season tournament and an NCAA bid seems kinda silly.  If you win the post-season tournament, you're guaranteed a bid.  Why not have a banner for regular season champ instead?

Trotsky

[Q]KeithK Wrote:

 If you aren't going to award the conference championship and the auto-bid that goes with it to the tournament winner then why bother having a tournament?[/q]

Does this mean if there was no autobid you shouldn't have a conference tourny?

The NCAAs are nice and all, but I see them as totally separate from ECAC honors.

KeithK

Didn't mean that exactly.  I mean, if you treat the RS championship as the ECAC championship then there's no reason to have the tournament.  

jtwcornell91

I'd like to see us take down the NCAA tournament banners (perhaps replacing them with Frozen Four banners) and change the NCAA champion banners to make them stand out.  (Before they replaced all the banners and added the women's ones in white, all the banners were white except for the two national championship banners, which were red.  It was impressive and drew attention to them.)

I have no desire to see regular season championship banners.  The ECAC Champion is the winner of the playoffs.  That's why we have playoffs.

Al DeFlorio

[Q]jtwcornell91 Wrote:
I have no desire to see regular season championship banners.  The ECAC Champion is the winner of the playoffs.  That's why we have playoffs.[/q]
Agree wholeheartedly (while checking in from Chiang Rai).

The other issue is determining the so-called "regular season champion" historically.  For example, Greg credits Clarkson with being the 1962 regular season champ--based on their getting top seed for the tournament, I suppose.  USCHO does not credit them with this--I'm guessing because Colby finished with a better regular-season won-lost percentage.  But Colby played a relatively easier schedule, the reason why they were seeded third (IIRC) behind Clarkson and Harvard.  So who's really the regular-season champ?

So the question is:  before 1985 when the ECAC schedule became balanced, how does one really determine who the "regular-season champion" was?  Complicating this is the fact that before the NCAA awarded an auto-bid to the regular-season champions,  no one even knew they were competing for such a thing while they were playing the regular season--except perhaps in the WCHA where the McNaughton trophy--IIRC--has always been  awarded to the regular-season leader (except, that is, when Michigan Tech took it with them to the CCHA for a few years!).

Al DeFlorio '65

RichH

The Regular Season "Championship" is not a Championship, and there's nothing anyone can do or say to convince me otherwise.  It made me want to vomit when USCHO Colgate fans put "2004 ECAC CHAMPIONS" in 48 point font in their signatures. (but not as much as I actually vomited when Harvard won the real 2004 Championship)  I think Colgate's team also skated the Cleary Pisspot around as if it were the AVCO Cup.   Morons.

The old cloth banners were awesome.  Moldy, but awesome.  

I'm also glad they didn't hang the "National Figure Skating Champions" banner made from the rafters.  Even if it does hang on a wall facing Section O for all opponents to mock.  Good for the figure skaters, really, I mean that.

jtwcornell91

I was disappointed that the Cleary was on the table next to the Whitelaw at the 2003 postgame celebration.  It should have been upside down on the floor acting as a pedestal for the Whitelaw. :-}

billhoward

How many banners are hanging from Cornell's rafters? But when your team has only a handful to show off - think Princeton and, what, one 1998 postseason title plus memories of Hobey Baker 85 years ago - maybe you'd want to have a banner for the RS title or the honor of holding the Cleary Cup indicating you got more points in the RS.

Not important to us, not as important as the ECAC playoff title, but worth it to somebody in some years.

min

Taking down the NCAA tournament banners means that the classes of 1981, 1986, and 1991 would not get any recognition at all.

Min-Wei Lin

Trotsky

The '86 team won the ECAC title and would thus be recognized.  However, I believe the NCAA Tournament is special enough that the banners should stay up.

I recommend banners for NCAA Champions (larger, and/or with a distinct border -- see RPI's and Harvard's NCAA title banners), Frozen Four, and NCAA Tournament.  Since they are a subset/superset relation, only hang the deepest one from a given year.  So, 1970 gets the NCAA Champion banner, 2003 gets the Frozen Four banner, and 2002 gets the NCAA Tournament banner.

I track ECAC RS Championships by seed into the PS tourny, since that to me gives it meaning.  I agree that it's an artificial distinction and shouldn't get a banner. On the other hand, I don't see the problem with imposing a logical rule for deciding it, or even extending into the past.  This is done in other sports.  There was no ERA or K champion in baseball in the early part of major league history, yet all the record books recognize "winners" of these stats.  The rules for SB were radically different in early baseball history, yet the books still manage to declare SB champions.

The best solution is for the team to win so many Ivy, ECAC, and NCAA championships that the rafters become so crowded that the "minor" ones are crowded out. :-)

jtwcornell91

[Q]Trotsky Wrote:
I recommend banners for NCAA Champions (larger, and/or with a distinct border -- see RPI's and Harvard's NCAA title banners), Frozen Four, and NCAA Tournament.  Since they are a subset/superset relation, only hang the deepest one from a given year.  So, 1970 gets the NCAA Champion banner, 2003 gets the Frozen Four banner, and 2002 gets the NCAA Tournament banner.[/q]

Why not make them "NCAA Tournament"/"NCAA Quarterfinalist"/"NCAA Semifinalist"/"NCAA Finalist"/"NCAA Champion" in that case?

Trotsky

[Q]jtwcornell91 Wrote:

 [Q2]Trotsky Wrote:
I recommend banners for NCAA Champions (larger, and/or with a distinct border -- see RPI's and Harvard's NCAA title banners), Frozen Four, and NCAA Tournament.  Since they are a subset/superset relation, only hang the deepest one from a given year.  So, 1970 gets the NCAA Champion banner, 2003 gets the Frozen Four banner, and 2002 gets the NCAA Tournament banner.[/Q]
Why not make them "NCAA Tournament"/"NCAA Quarterfinalist"/"NCAA Semifinalist"/"NCAA Finalist"/"NCAA Champion" in that case?[/q]

Because "NCAA Quarterfinalist" = "We got our ass handed to us by North Dakota the next night."  "NCAA Tournament" celebrates the achievement, not its termination.

RichS

Why would you want to do that?  You guys insist the Cleary Cup is meaningless, sooooo....would naming it after Schaefer make it more worthwhile?

I guess maybe so.  I think it would at least stand for something more significant than an Ivy title.  :-D

ben03

his last name is spelled S-C-H-A-F-E-R ... Schafer :-D
Let's GO Red!!!