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Date: | Thu, 3 Dec 1992 12:45:58 EST |
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I'd like to inject my opinion into the debate on including margin of victory
into TCHCR, but I must take issue with including it as a measure of strength.
I believe there are several reasons which weigh against its inclusion.
1. Including margin of victory favors offensively-talented, rather than
defensive-minded teams. In other words, a team that routinely scores goals at
a rapid clip would benefit, since it would be more likely to participate in
"blow-outs". Conversely the defensive-oriented team, stressing positional
play, strong goaltending, puck control, etc. would be penalized for its dearth
of scoring--a 2-0 shutout would be subordinate to a 9-5 goal party.
2. Margin of victory penalizes conferences which include closely-talented
teams, since those teams would be more prone toward 1 or 2 goal victories. A
good team in a lackluster conference would receive an unwarranted advantage
because the rest of the conference's teams were so inept.
3. Teams that have a lot of 1 goal victories on their record are not
necessarily weaker than teams with several 4 or 5 goal margins of victory.
In fact the team that can maintain a one goal lead through the third period
may be the strongest team of all--especially at play-off time.
Since this is my first foray in submitting an article, I look forward from
hearing from all you college hockey gurus out there on the list.
Brian Morris
Albany, NY (RPI territory)
Colgate '78
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