In article <[log in to unmask]>, [log in to unmask] (Ken Pavelle) writes:
|> > ECAC Tournament:
|> > Omit #11-#12; then 7 vs 10 and 8 vs 9 single game;
|> > reseed then 1 vs 8, 2 vs 7, 3 vs 6, and 4 vs 5;
|> > 2 out of 3 with 5 minute overtime in 1st 2 games;
|> > reseed, then; 1 vs 4 and 2 vs 3; then consolation and final.
|>
|> Question about the 2/3 with 5 minute overtimes. Does this mean as many
|> 5 minute overtimes as needed to determine a winner?
|> If not, what happens when:
|> Game 1, tie
|> Game 2, team A wins
|> Game 3, team B wins
|>
|> Is this where the 6 tiebreaker rules come into effect, or are they for
|> determining seeds only?
|>
|> --
|> from: LTJG Kenneth A. Pavelle, NOAA
|> NOAA, National Weather Service
|> Arkansas-Red Basin River Forecast Center
|>
|> My Homepage: http://www.abrfc.noaa.gov/kap.html
|>
|> "Its hard to predict anything, especially the future" -- Yogi Berra
|>
|> HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to
|> [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.
Question about the 2/3 with 5 minute overtimes. Does this mean as many
|> 5 minute overtimes as needed to determine a winner?
|> If not, what happens when:
|> Game 1, tie
|> Game 2, team A wins
|> Game 3, team B wins
Team A moves on There is no third game. It's not 2/3 it's the
first team to 3points, at least that's the way it was last year.
Game 1, RPI HARVARD a tie
Game 2, RPI won
RPI moved on to Lake Placid.
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