Well, well, in the last three years, two championship games go to overtime, resulting in two victories for Michigan. (3-2 this time.) This was a lot of fun to watch on TV (despite some bad camera angles and a few more "Bubbenzweig"s), and I can only imagine what it was like in person. Great for the Michigan seniors to come away with two titles in two trips for the Frozen Four, and heartbreaking for BC to fall in OT in front of their home crowd (after hitting a crossbar and a post in the extra session) at the end of an incredible run which signalled an end to the lean years. Trivia question material: Michigan and BC won the first two national championships ever. The one thing I got to experience that those in attendance didn't was the Sportscenter immediately preceding, on which co-host Jack Edwards repeatedly talked up the championship game. For example, in the middle of a bunch of "highlights" of ridiculous fights, he observed that we wouldn't be seeing any of this nonsense in the college hockey championship. If you're sending a comment to ESPN, you might want to put in a good word for Edwards. (Oh, and according to his bio at <http://ESPN.SportsZone.com/editors/studios/bios/je.html> he graduated from UNH in '79, so I'm guessing he was as surprised to hear Michigan had beaten Rhode Island in the semis as the rest of us.) The biggest reason to be dissappointed that BC didn't win it: now we can't see if the LA Times calls them Boston University. ;-) John Whelan, Cornell '91 <[log in to unmask]> <http://www.cc.utah.edu/~jtw16960/joe.html> Learn about the NCAA selection process on the web at http://www.slack.net/~whelan/cgi-bin/tbrw.cgi?pairwise HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.