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Subject:
From:
Paul Rank <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
- Hockey-L - The College Hockey Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 2 Apr 2019 20:18:51 -0700
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I was at the 1991 Michigan series.  It was the weekend that transformed 
Yost from a sleepy theater to watch a game to the raucous rink that it 
is today.  The (what seemed like thousands of) Cornell fans owned the 
arena on Friday night as Cornell earned an exciting overtime victory.  
We were totally blown away by how loud (and fun) the Cornell fans were 
in our barn.  Over the next two nights, the Michigan crowd got louder 
and louder while stealing many of the Cornell chants.
Such a great weekend....  Would be nice to have the early rounds of the 
tournament return to campus sites (while I block the next weekend from 
my memory).


On 4/2/2019 7:26 PM, William Sangrey wrote:
> As pleased as Mark may be, I must say I am not as thrilled with the 
> outcome of the weekend.
>
> While I appreciate the need to make sure that the regionals are well 
> attended and therefore having the host or nearby home school sent to a 
> specific site, I still feel a bit frustrated to see my team keep being 
> knocked out of the tournament by home or near home teams year after 
> year.  In their last 14 appearances the RED have been knocked out at 
> least 9 or 10 times by teams playing within an hour or two of their 
> home rink.
>
> 1981 @ Northern Michigan (Cornell won second game of one of those 
> dreadful total goal series)
> 1986 @ Denver (again Cornell won game two of total goal travesty)
> 1991 @ Michigan (lost series 2-1)
>
> 1996 LSSU in East Lansing
> 2002 UNH in Worchester (not sure how far away Durham is, but closer 
> than Ithaca)
> 2005 Minnesota @ Mariucci
> 2006 Wisconsin in Green Bay
> 2017 Lowell in Manchester
> 2018 BU in Worchester
> 2019 Providence in Providence
>
> Admittedly sometimes Cornell was the lower seeded team, but more than 
> a few times they were not.  Just makes me wonder when Cornell is going 
> to have a good team line up with regionals closer to Ithaca.  Of 
> course our luck would be to have regional in Rochester the year RIT 
> wins Atlantic bid!
>
> All this is just to say I can appreciate the feelings of teams like 
> Mankato who seem to repeatedly draw short straws with seeding.  The 
> system is not perfect, but I much prefer the idea of neutral regionals 
> over home games.  I would like to see, however, some sort of caveat 
> that 4th seeded teams only get to stay near home if they are the host, 
> not just because they happen to be in the neighborhood.
>
> Good luck to those going to Buffalo, and better luck to the rest of us 
> next year.
>
> William Sangrey
> Cornell '87 & '94
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Lewin <[log in to unmask]>
> To: Hockey-L <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Tue, Apr 2, 2019 12:13 pm
> Subject: regionals comments
>
> Needless to say, I am quite pleased with Providence College's success 
> yet again at the regionals held in Providence.  I am really torn in 
> the debate whether PC should have been given the home ice "advantage" 
> even though they were not the sponsor of the regional. Clearly, the 
> partisan crowd helped them tremendously this past weekend, just as 
> they were helped back in 2015.
>
> And clearly, the placement of the Friars in Providence greatly 
> enhanced the attendance. Northeastern, after many decades of poor 
> attendance, has finally developed a hockey following, no doubt helped 
> by their resurgence into the Hockey East upper eschelon (and the fact 
> it's only an hours drive from Boston to Providence.  And Cornell 
> always travels well. For years, I attended Cornell-RPI games in Troy 
> and it was always difficult to tell by the crowd noise, which team was 
> playing at home.
>
> The problem is philosophical, of course.  Do you avoid placing a 
> number 4 seed at home, giving them an advantage?  Guess you would have 
> to decide whether the goal is attendance or crowd neutrality (seems to 
> be mutually exclusive).
> As far as placing PC in Providence even though Brown was the sponsor, 
> would placing Brown at home be any different?  I know the NCAA rules 
> about sponsorship, but would placing Brown in Providence be any 
> different than placing Providence at home? Only difference is that 
> Brown paid a "bribe" to the NCAA to gain that advantage by offering to 
> sponsor.
>
> Anyone know exactly what sponsoring a regional entails?  Is it 
> organizational work?  Is it money (Brown is a much wealthier school 
> than PC)?  Is there something else?
>
> My last comment concerns the serving of alcohol at NCAA events.  I am 
> against it.  It's not that I don't enjoy a beer now and then.  I 
> thought it made the lines at the men's room much longer than in the 
> past  😁
>
> PS  I miss the old days when comments and discussions would be flying 
> back and forth in this forum during the tournament.
>
> Oh, the good old days.....
>
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