Does anyone know how exactly the ECAC handles the head-to-head tiebreaker among three teams? Do they a) Compare the records of the three teams in games among them? b) Only use it if there is a clear winner (team A beat teams B and C head-to-head or teams A and B beat team C head-to-head); this is the NFL method? If it is a), then Brown is eliminated from playoff contention. The best they can manage is a 3-way tie for tenth with Yale and Dartmouth. They split with both of these teams (and so a tie-breaker with either one of them would go to the record vs top 4, which is a mess, seeing as how the top four consists of Cornell, Clarkson and any two out of RPI, Vermont, Union, Princeton, and Colgate), but Yale swept Dartmouth. So using method a) on the three-way tie, we'd find Yale 6-2 (i.e., 6 points in four games) Brown 4-4 Dartmouth 2-6 and Yale would get the playoff berth. But using method b), head-to-head is a wash and we go to top 4. It's a lot easier to work out the playoff picture under method a), since it's harder for a third team to come in and mess up a perfectly good head-to-head advantage. John Whelan, Cornell '91 <[log in to unmask]> <http://www.cc.utah.edu/~jtw16960/jshock.html> Cornell Men's Ice Hockey: 1996-7 Ivy League Champions WE WANT MORE! WE WANT THE ECAC! HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.