Well, that was fun!
The Gophers dominated the overmatched St. Cloud State Huskies to advance to their second Frozen Four in three years last night.
The final score of the game was 4-0, but what was more impressive than the score was the way in which the Gophers manhandled the Huskies. SCSU played deep into OT the night before so maybe they were running out of gas a little bit, but it seemed like the Gophers were the better team in all facets of the game.
Minnesota got on the board first and never looked back, scoring ugly goals (Kloos 1, Ambroz, Rau) as well as pretty ones (Kloos 2).
If the Gophers can play like they did tonight, no team in the country will beat them. Minnesota dominated the puck, forcing SCSU to the outside. Whenever they got a bad-angle shot off, Adam Wilcox was right on form, eating up every puck and rarely allowing a rebound.
The Gophers are deep this year, boasting zero players with 40+ points but nine players with more than 20 points. Those same nine players (eight of Minnesota's top nine forwards, plus defenseman Mike Reilly) each have nine or more goals on the season. This team comes at you all game, and each line is a threat to score.
The team defense is also astounding - both from the forwards and the defensemen. For a team with D-men that like to get up into the rush as much as the Gophers do, the team ranks #2 in the nation in total defense, which is as much a credit to the outstanding Adam Wilcox as it is to the forwards and defensemen playing great D in front of him, blocking shots, getting sticks in lanes, backchecking hard, playing responsible hockey. The coaches have a system that works, and the players are following it to a T.
Minnesota will face off against who else but the University of North Dakota in the National Semifinal game. UND is a similar team to Minnesota, in that it wins with its depth and relies on good goaltending and mobile defensemen to make good choices. I really like this matchup for Minnesota - UND does what Minnesota does, but I don't think they do it quite as well as the Gophers do.
We've all seen this Minnesota team lose games they shouldn't this year, but I think they beat North Dakota to advance to the National Championship game in two weekends if they play inspired hockey. Against UND, I'm pretty sure they'll come to play!
Monday, March 31, 2014
Sunday, March 30, 2014
NCAA Tournament: Sunday Morning Roundup and Sunday Viewing Guide
Another exciting day of the NCAA tournament came and went yesterday, and two teams have already punched their tickets to the Frozen Four.
North Dakota won an overtime thriller over Ferris State to win the Midwest Regional and advance to Philadelphia, while Union was the first team to advance to the Frozen Four with a 3-1 afternoon win over Providence.
In other action yesterday, Boston College trounced Denver 6-2, Minnesota eventually prevailed over Robert Morris 7-3, UMass-Lowell beat a tough Minnesota state team 2-1, and St. Cloud State scored an overtime goal to cool off sizzling Notre Dame 4-3.
Conference Records through two days:
Atlantic Hockey: 0-1, (RMU loss to Minnesota)
Big Ten: 1-1 (North Dakota over Wisconsin, Minnesota over RMU), one game today (Minnesota vs St. Cloud State)
ECAC: 2-2 (Union over Vermont, Providence over Quinnipiac, Ferris State over Colgate, Union over Providence)
Hockey East: 3-3 (Providence over Quinnipiac, Union over Vermont, Providence loss to Union, BC over Denver, Lowell over Minnesota State, Notre Dame loss to St. Cloud State), one game today (BC vs Lowell)
NCHC: 3-1 (North Dakota over Vermont, North Dakota over Ferris State, Denver loss to BC, St. Cloud State over Notre Dame), one game today (St. Cloud State vs Minnesota)
WCHA: 1-2 (Ferris State over Colgate, Ferris State loss to North Dakota, Minnesota State loss to Lowell)
I did a little better yesterday in my predictions, going 4-2 to push my record to 5-5 so far. Only two games left in the regionals to predict today, and here they are. As usual, all times Central:
4:00 PM - Northeast Regional Final: (2) Boston College vs (7) UMass-Lowell, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - A game of two different styles. Boston College brings the nation's highest scoring offense to bear against All-World goaltender Connor Hellebuyck and UMass-Lowell's nation leading defense. Prior to last night's rout of Denver I might have picked Lowell in a tight one, but I think BC's high-octane offense will just be too much for the RiverHawks to handle. The winner of this one goes on to play Union in the Frozen Four. Prediction: BC wins 4-2
6:30 PM- West Regional Final: (1) Minnesota vs (9) St. Cloud State, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Minnesota certainly didn't play their best in a 7-3 win over Robert Morris, but they did well enough to win. More importantly for a team that struggled scoring goals, they got on the scoresheet - a lot. St. Cloud State prevailed over Notre Dame in overtime, and although SCSU is a good team I think they're a good match-up for the Gophers - SCSU likes to play an uptempo offensive style that Minnesota will be more than willing to follow. When the two teams met earlier this year, the Gophers came away 4-1 victors. The winner of this game will face North Dakota in the National Semifinals. Prediction: Minnesota wins 5-3
North Dakota won an overtime thriller over Ferris State to win the Midwest Regional and advance to Philadelphia, while Union was the first team to advance to the Frozen Four with a 3-1 afternoon win over Providence.
In other action yesterday, Boston College trounced Denver 6-2, Minnesota eventually prevailed over Robert Morris 7-3, UMass-Lowell beat a tough Minnesota state team 2-1, and St. Cloud State scored an overtime goal to cool off sizzling Notre Dame 4-3.
Conference Records through two days:
Atlantic Hockey: 0-1, (RMU loss to Minnesota)
Big Ten: 1-1 (North Dakota over Wisconsin, Minnesota over RMU), one game today (Minnesota vs St. Cloud State)
ECAC: 2-2 (Union over Vermont, Providence over Quinnipiac, Ferris State over Colgate, Union over Providence)
Hockey East: 3-3 (Providence over Quinnipiac, Union over Vermont, Providence loss to Union, BC over Denver, Lowell over Minnesota State, Notre Dame loss to St. Cloud State), one game today (BC vs Lowell)
NCHC: 3-1 (North Dakota over Vermont, North Dakota over Ferris State, Denver loss to BC, St. Cloud State over Notre Dame), one game today (St. Cloud State vs Minnesota)
WCHA: 1-2 (Ferris State over Colgate, Ferris State loss to North Dakota, Minnesota State loss to Lowell)
I did a little better yesterday in my predictions, going 4-2 to push my record to 5-5 so far. Only two games left in the regionals to predict today, and here they are. As usual, all times Central:
4:00 PM - Northeast Regional Final: (2) Boston College vs (7) UMass-Lowell, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - A game of two different styles. Boston College brings the nation's highest scoring offense to bear against All-World goaltender Connor Hellebuyck and UMass-Lowell's nation leading defense. Prior to last night's rout of Denver I might have picked Lowell in a tight one, but I think BC's high-octane offense will just be too much for the RiverHawks to handle. The winner of this one goes on to play Union in the Frozen Four. Prediction: BC wins 4-2
6:30 PM- West Regional Final: (1) Minnesota vs (9) St. Cloud State, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Minnesota certainly didn't play their best in a 7-3 win over Robert Morris, but they did well enough to win. More importantly for a team that struggled scoring goals, they got on the scoresheet - a lot. St. Cloud State prevailed over Notre Dame in overtime, and although SCSU is a good team I think they're a good match-up for the Gophers - SCSU likes to play an uptempo offensive style that Minnesota will be more than willing to follow. When the two teams met earlier this year, the Gophers came away 4-1 victors. The winner of this game will face North Dakota in the National Semifinals. Prediction: Minnesota wins 5-3
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Saturday, March 29, 2014
NCAA Tournament: Saturday Morning Roundup and Saturday Viewing Guide
The NCAA Tournament always deals out its fair share of surprises, and the first day of the 2014 Tournament was no different.
Wisconsin, many people's favorite to win the whole thing, is out. They fell to #4 seed North Dakota 4-2 in the first round.
Quinnipiac, the #6 overall seed, lost to #11 Providence by a resounding 4-0 score.
Ferris State scraped by a hard-charging Colgate team 1-0.
Union held on to beat the pesky Vermont Catamounts 5-2.
Conference Records so far:
Atlantic Hockey: 0-0, one game today (RMU vs Minnesota)
Big Ten: 0-1 (North Dakota over Wisconsin), one game today (Minnesota vs RMU)
ECAC: 1-2 (Union over Vermont, Providence over Quinnipiac, Ferris State over Colgate), one game today (Union vs Providence)
Hockey East: 1-1 (Providence over Quinnipiac, Union over Vermont), four games today (Providence vs Union, BC vs Denver, Lowell vs Minnesota State, Notre Dame vs St. Cloud State)
NCHC: 1-0 (North Dakota over Vermont), three games today (North Dakota vs Ferris State, Denver vs BC, St. Cloud State vs Notre Dame)
WCHA: 1-0 (Ferris State over Colgate), two games today (Ferris State vs North Dakota, Minnesota State vs Lowell)
I, of course, only got one game right in my predictions. That goes to show just how unpredictable this tournament is. Or, of course, it could show how bad I am at making predictions. I'll leave that one up to you :)
So, that being said, here's what we're looking forward to watching today. Again, all times Central:
2:00 PM - East Regional Final: (3) Union vs (11) Providence, TV: ESPN2, Stream: WatchESPN - This will be an interesting game. Providence methodically took apart a good Quinnipiac squad yesterday, getting strong play from sophomore goaltender Jon Gillies. Although I am high on Union, I like the way Providence played yesterday, so I'll pick the upset here. Prediction: Providence wins 3-2
3:00 PM- Northeast Regional Semifinal: (2) Boston College vs (15) Denver, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another game that should be interesting. Denver has been hot lately, and although they had to win their conference tournament to get into the dance they're never a team to sleep on. I think BC has too much for Denver to handle though. If you're watching this game, look for Johnny Gaudreau - he'll more than likely be this year's Hobey Baker winner. Prediction: BC wins 5-2
4:30 PM - West Regional Semifinal: (1) Minnesota vs (16) Robert Morris, TV: ESPN2, Stream: WatchESPN - Here is where we see if the Gophers have grown or not from their disappointing performances in recent playoff history. Minnesota lost to a not-great Yale team in the first round last year (that got hot at the right time and ended up winning it all), and lost just last week to an okay Ohio State squad in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament. They'll play a Robert Morris team that is ranked #44 in the PairWise currently, but has only lost five games since the calendar switched over to January. This team went 2-12-2 in their first 14 games, but finished the year 17-5-3 in their last 25. The Gophers, on the other hand, are 13-4-4 over that same time frame. Minnesota plays a much tougher schedule and should have enough talent to win this game handily, but I think Robert Morris might pose a bit more of a challenge than most Gopher fans will expect. Prediction: Minnesota wins 4-2
5:30 PM - Midwest Regional Final: (5) Ferris State vs (13) North Dakota, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another interesting matchup. North Dakota took out Wisconsin, my favorite to advance to the championship game, 5-2 last night, while Ferris survived a tight 1-0 thriller with Colgate. Does this North Dakota squad have it in them to win three must-win games in a row? They've shown me that they're a better team than I believed they were this season already, but I just don't think they have the gas to beat a good Ferris State team this afternoon. Prediction: Ferris State wins 3-1
6:30 PM - Northeast Regional Semifinal: (7) UMass-Lowell vs (10) Minnesota State, TV: ESPNU (Tape Delayed until 10:30 PM), Stream: ESPN3 - Let me start by saying that I am really high on both of these teams. Minnesota State has been one of the hotter teams in the country in the second half of the season, recovering from a shaky 4-7-0 start to the year by going undefeated in their last 13 games coming into the Tournament (12-0-1 over that stretch). Their last loss was all the way back on January 31st. Lowell, the preseason #1 overall, followed somewhat a similar path, starting out 1-3-0 in their first four games before righting the ship, finishing the season on a 10-3-2 jaunt and winning the Hockey East Tournament. In the end, I think UML will be too much for Minnesota State to handle, and they'll ride a strong performance from goaltender Connor Hellebuyck into the regional final. Prediction: Lowell wins 3-2
8:00 PM - West Regional Semifinal: (8) Notre Dame vs (9) St. Cloud State, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another very interesting game pitting two good teams against each other. This one will also feature a clash of different styles, as SCSU's up-and-down offense matches up against Notre Dame's defensive system. I think that this game is a toss up; Notre Dame had an average regular season but has heated up recently, beating Boston College in three out of four at the end of the year before falling to Lowell in the semifinal of the Hockey East Tournament. St. Cloud State lost in the first round series of the NCHC tournament to a bad Miami team, but was good throughout the rest of the year, dropping only eight games before entering the playoffs. St. Cloud was in line for a high seed prior to the playoffs, but the losses to Miami dropped them all the way back to a #3 band seed. I think St. Cloud is a better team than Notre Dame so I'm going to pick them winning, but it's awfully close here. One big save or one soft goal could make the difference in this one. Prediction: St. Cloud State wins 4-3
Wisconsin, many people's favorite to win the whole thing, is out. They fell to #4 seed North Dakota 4-2 in the first round.
Quinnipiac, the #6 overall seed, lost to #11 Providence by a resounding 4-0 score.
Ferris State scraped by a hard-charging Colgate team 1-0.
Union held on to beat the pesky Vermont Catamounts 5-2.
Conference Records so far:
Atlantic Hockey: 0-0, one game today (RMU vs Minnesota)
Big Ten: 0-1 (North Dakota over Wisconsin), one game today (Minnesota vs RMU)
ECAC: 1-2 (Union over Vermont, Providence over Quinnipiac, Ferris State over Colgate), one game today (Union vs Providence)
Hockey East: 1-1 (Providence over Quinnipiac, Union over Vermont), four games today (Providence vs Union, BC vs Denver, Lowell vs Minnesota State, Notre Dame vs St. Cloud State)
NCHC: 1-0 (North Dakota over Vermont), three games today (North Dakota vs Ferris State, Denver vs BC, St. Cloud State vs Notre Dame)
WCHA: 1-0 (Ferris State over Colgate), two games today (Ferris State vs North Dakota, Minnesota State vs Lowell)
I, of course, only got one game right in my predictions. That goes to show just how unpredictable this tournament is. Or, of course, it could show how bad I am at making predictions. I'll leave that one up to you :)
So, that being said, here's what we're looking forward to watching today. Again, all times Central:
2:00 PM - East Regional Final: (3) Union vs (11) Providence, TV: ESPN2, Stream: WatchESPN - This will be an interesting game. Providence methodically took apart a good Quinnipiac squad yesterday, getting strong play from sophomore goaltender Jon Gillies. Although I am high on Union, I like the way Providence played yesterday, so I'll pick the upset here. Prediction: Providence wins 3-2
3:00 PM- Northeast Regional Semifinal: (2) Boston College vs (15) Denver, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another game that should be interesting. Denver has been hot lately, and although they had to win their conference tournament to get into the dance they're never a team to sleep on. I think BC has too much for Denver to handle though. If you're watching this game, look for Johnny Gaudreau - he'll more than likely be this year's Hobey Baker winner. Prediction: BC wins 5-2
4:30 PM - West Regional Semifinal: (1) Minnesota vs (16) Robert Morris, TV: ESPN2, Stream: WatchESPN - Here is where we see if the Gophers have grown or not from their disappointing performances in recent playoff history. Minnesota lost to a not-great Yale team in the first round last year (that got hot at the right time and ended up winning it all), and lost just last week to an okay Ohio State squad in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament. They'll play a Robert Morris team that is ranked #44 in the PairWise currently, but has only lost five games since the calendar switched over to January. This team went 2-12-2 in their first 14 games, but finished the year 17-5-3 in their last 25. The Gophers, on the other hand, are 13-4-4 over that same time frame. Minnesota plays a much tougher schedule and should have enough talent to win this game handily, but I think Robert Morris might pose a bit more of a challenge than most Gopher fans will expect. Prediction: Minnesota wins 4-2
5:30 PM - Midwest Regional Final: (5) Ferris State vs (13) North Dakota, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another interesting matchup. North Dakota took out Wisconsin, my favorite to advance to the championship game, 5-2 last night, while Ferris survived a tight 1-0 thriller with Colgate. Does this North Dakota squad have it in them to win three must-win games in a row? They've shown me that they're a better team than I believed they were this season already, but I just don't think they have the gas to beat a good Ferris State team this afternoon. Prediction: Ferris State wins 3-1
6:30 PM - Northeast Regional Semifinal: (7) UMass-Lowell vs (10) Minnesota State, TV: ESPNU (Tape Delayed until 10:30 PM), Stream: ESPN3 - Let me start by saying that I am really high on both of these teams. Minnesota State has been one of the hotter teams in the country in the second half of the season, recovering from a shaky 4-7-0 start to the year by going undefeated in their last 13 games coming into the Tournament (12-0-1 over that stretch). Their last loss was all the way back on January 31st. Lowell, the preseason #1 overall, followed somewhat a similar path, starting out 1-3-0 in their first four games before righting the ship, finishing the season on a 10-3-2 jaunt and winning the Hockey East Tournament. In the end, I think UML will be too much for Minnesota State to handle, and they'll ride a strong performance from goaltender Connor Hellebuyck into the regional final. Prediction: Lowell wins 3-2
8:00 PM - West Regional Semifinal: (8) Notre Dame vs (9) St. Cloud State, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Another very interesting game pitting two good teams against each other. This one will also feature a clash of different styles, as SCSU's up-and-down offense matches up against Notre Dame's defensive system. I think that this game is a toss up; Notre Dame had an average regular season but has heated up recently, beating Boston College in three out of four at the end of the year before falling to Lowell in the semifinal of the Hockey East Tournament. St. Cloud State lost in the first round series of the NCHC tournament to a bad Miami team, but was good throughout the rest of the year, dropping only eight games before entering the playoffs. St. Cloud was in line for a high seed prior to the playoffs, but the losses to Miami dropped them all the way back to a #3 band seed. I think St. Cloud is a better team than Notre Dame so I'm going to pick them winning, but it's awfully close here. One big save or one soft goal could make the difference in this one. Prediction: St. Cloud State wins 4-3
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Friday, March 28, 2014
Viewing Guide for the NCAA Tournament: Friday, March 28th
The NCAA Hockey Tournament starts TODAY!
Although the Gophers don't play until Saturday afternoon, there are four games throughout the day today. Four teams will move one win away from the Frozen Four, and four teams will end their seasons short of the ultimate prize.
Here is where and when you can catch those games. All times Central.
1:00 PM - (3) Union vs (13) Vermont, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Union is one of the hottest teams coming into the tournament, while Vermont lost in the first round of their conference tournament and squeaked into the 16-team field as the second-to-last At Large team in. Prediction: 4-1 Union.
3:30 PM - (5) Ferris State vs (12) Colgate, TV: ESPNU (Tape Delayed until 9:30 PM), Stream: ESPN3 - Ferris State has been a good team all year, rising to #2 in the nation at one point before settling in with the #5 overall seed in the tournament. The Bulldogs' year-long resume definitely impresses, but they did lose two out of three to Colgate when the two teams played earlier in the year. Both teams made it to the final game of their respective conference tournaments before losing in the championship game (Colgate to Union, Ferris State to Minnesota State). Colgate has been hotter of late, and I think the ECAC is better this year than they have been in years past. I like the upset in this game. Prediction: 3-2 Colgate, in OT
4:30 PM - (6) Quinnipiac vs (11) Providence, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - I haven't seen either of these teams play all year, but as I mentioned earlier I think the ECAC is pretty strong this year, and Quinnipiac has some impressive wins on their resume, including a sweep of a strong UMass-Lowell team early in the season. The Bobcats haven't been as strong lately, going 3-5-1 in their last 10 games, but I would attribute that to the strength of the ECAC more than anything else. Providence also has some solid wins on their schedule and has been hot of late, winning six of their last seven contests. I like Quinnipiac in this game though, setting up an all-ECAC regional final between Union and Quinnipiac. Prediction: 4-2 Quinnipiac
7:30 PM - (4) Wisconsin vs (14) North Dakota, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - If Vermont squeaked into the Tournament, North Dakota REALLY squeaked in with the last At Large bid. The team-with-no-name won the 3rd place game of the NCHC and had to wait on both UMass-Lowell to beat New Hampshire and Wisconsin to beat Ohio State on the last day of the season. Wisconsin's overtime, comeback win over Ohio State in the Big Ten Tournament got North Dakota in, so it's fitting that the two teams would meet in the first round. North Dakota has been up-and-down all season long, but Wisconsin has been pretty consistent, especially lately, leaning on a strong senior class and a great defensive scheme. I think Wisconsin is one of the "teams to beat" in this year's Tournament, and they'll have no problem dispatching North Dakota tonight. Prediction: 4-1 Wisconsin
Although the Gophers don't play until Saturday afternoon, there are four games throughout the day today. Four teams will move one win away from the Frozen Four, and four teams will end their seasons short of the ultimate prize.
Here is where and when you can catch those games. All times Central.
1:00 PM - (3) Union vs (13) Vermont, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - Union is one of the hottest teams coming into the tournament, while Vermont lost in the first round of their conference tournament and squeaked into the 16-team field as the second-to-last At Large team in. Prediction: 4-1 Union.
3:30 PM - (5) Ferris State vs (12) Colgate, TV: ESPNU (Tape Delayed until 9:30 PM), Stream: ESPN3 - Ferris State has been a good team all year, rising to #2 in the nation at one point before settling in with the #5 overall seed in the tournament. The Bulldogs' year-long resume definitely impresses, but they did lose two out of three to Colgate when the two teams played earlier in the year. Both teams made it to the final game of their respective conference tournaments before losing in the championship game (Colgate to Union, Ferris State to Minnesota State). Colgate has been hotter of late, and I think the ECAC is better this year than they have been in years past. I like the upset in this game. Prediction: 3-2 Colgate, in OT
4:30 PM - (6) Quinnipiac vs (11) Providence, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - I haven't seen either of these teams play all year, but as I mentioned earlier I think the ECAC is pretty strong this year, and Quinnipiac has some impressive wins on their resume, including a sweep of a strong UMass-Lowell team early in the season. The Bobcats haven't been as strong lately, going 3-5-1 in their last 10 games, but I would attribute that to the strength of the ECAC more than anything else. Providence also has some solid wins on their schedule and has been hot of late, winning six of their last seven contests. I like Quinnipiac in this game though, setting up an all-ECAC regional final between Union and Quinnipiac. Prediction: 4-2 Quinnipiac
7:30 PM - (4) Wisconsin vs (14) North Dakota, TV: ESPNU, Stream: WatchESPN - If Vermont squeaked into the Tournament, North Dakota REALLY squeaked in with the last At Large bid. The team-with-no-name won the 3rd place game of the NCHC and had to wait on both UMass-Lowell to beat New Hampshire and Wisconsin to beat Ohio State on the last day of the season. Wisconsin's overtime, comeback win over Ohio State in the Big Ten Tournament got North Dakota in, so it's fitting that the two teams would meet in the first round. North Dakota has been up-and-down all season long, but Wisconsin has been pretty consistent, especially lately, leaning on a strong senior class and a great defensive scheme. I think Wisconsin is one of the "teams to beat" in this year's Tournament, and they'll have no problem dispatching North Dakota tonight. Prediction: 4-1 Wisconsin
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Sunday, March 23, 2014
NCAA Tournament: Final Bracket and Predictions
Here is the Final Bracket for the 2014 NCAA tournament:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Robert Morris
8 Notre Dame vs 9 St. Cloud State
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Denver
7 UMass-Lowell vs 10 Minnesota State
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 13 Vermont
6 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
Cincinnati
4 Wisconsin vs 14 North Dakota
5 Ferris State vs 12 Colgate
The bracket turned out really nice this year, almost perfect
bracket integrity and nearly perfect as far as attendance goes. Now, some
predictions:
St. Paul - Minnesota beats
Robert Morris handily in the first game, St. Cloud State beats a hot Notre Dame
in a close one, Minnesota edges St. Cloud to advance to the
Frozen Four
Worcester - Denver gives BC a tough game but the Eagles prevail, Lowell
beats Mankato in front of a home crowd, Lowell beats BC in overtime
Bridgeport - Union handles Vermont, Providence upsets Quinnipiac, Union beats Providence
Cincinnati - Wisconsin over North Dakota, Colgate beats Ferris State in
OT, Wisconsin beats Colgate
Frozen Four - Wisconsin beats Minnesota in a low-scoring
game, Union beats Lowell. Union beats Wisconsin to win the
national championship.
Thoughts on Minnesota: I
know they've struggled lately, but Minnesota has what teams need in the
playoffs - defense and goaltending. The question is whether they've got
enough goal scoring to be able to steal wins in tight, defensive games. I
like Minnesota in games where the other team plays a more wide-open, offensive
style of hockey, but they've shown that they struggle against teams that play
the trap and clog up the middle of the rink (like Wisconsin). The Gophers
have shown that they can beat anybody in the country if they play well, and
lose to just about anybody if they don't show up. They didn't show up on
Friday and got beat by a good-enough Ohio State team - a team just as good as
any team the Gophers will play in the NCAA tournament. Will Coach Lucia have
the team ready to show up for the regional? I hope so.
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Saturday Night / Sunday Morning Bracketology: UND Made It (Barely)
Now that the dust has settled, let me tell you who is "in" and who is "out" of the NCAA Tournament.
As you remember, there were just a few teams left fighting for the remaining spots in the 16-team field. North Dakota needed a win and some help in order to reach the tournament, and they got just that, beating Western Michigan 5-0 in the NCHC 3rd Place Game before sweating out a UMass-Lowell triumph over UNH and a thrilling 5-4 overtime win for Wisconsin. The UW and UML wins gave North Dakota the last At Large bid.
Minnesota State was another team fighting for a spot, and they secured it by winning the WCHA Championship against Ferris State by a 4-1 score.
Denver bested Miami (OH) 4-3 to claim the NCHC's autobid and reach the tournament. Same for Robert Morris, who beat Canisius 7-4 to win the Atlantic Hockey championship.
So, the NCAA Tournament field is set:
So, let's go through the bracketology here. First order of business, place host teams in their own regionals. Minnesota is the only host team that made the field, so they are placed in St. Paul. Next, place the remaining 1-band seeds (teams 1-4) starting with the highest-ranked team, as close to home as possible. BC gets placed in Worcester, Union in Bridgeport, Wisconsin in Cincinnati.
Now we place the teams so that the seedings follow bracket integrity: the #1 overall seed should have #s 8, 9, and 16 in their region; #2 overall should have 7, 10, 15; #3 should have 6, 11, 14; and the #4 seed's region should contain 5, 12, and 13.
Therefore, our "preliminary" brackets look like this:
As you remember, there were just a few teams left fighting for the remaining spots in the 16-team field. North Dakota needed a win and some help in order to reach the tournament, and they got just that, beating Western Michigan 5-0 in the NCHC 3rd Place Game before sweating out a UMass-Lowell triumph over UNH and a thrilling 5-4 overtime win for Wisconsin. The UW and UML wins gave North Dakota the last At Large bid.
Minnesota State was another team fighting for a spot, and they secured it by winning the WCHA Championship against Ferris State by a 4-1 score.
Denver bested Miami (OH) 4-3 to claim the NCHC's autobid and reach the tournament. Same for Robert Morris, who beat Canisius 7-4 to win the Atlantic Hockey championship.
So, the NCAA Tournament field is set:
1 Minnesota
2 BC
3 Union
4 Wisconsin
5 Ferris State
6 Quinnipiac
7 UMass-Lowell
8 Notre Dame
9 St. Cloud State
10 Minnesota State
11 Providence
12 Colgate
13 Vermont
14 North Dakota
15 Denver
16 Robert Morris
So, let's go through the bracketology here. First order of business, place host teams in their own regionals. Minnesota is the only host team that made the field, so they are placed in St. Paul. Next, place the remaining 1-band seeds (teams 1-4) starting with the highest-ranked team, as close to home as possible. BC gets placed in Worcester, Union in Bridgeport, Wisconsin in Cincinnati.
Now we place the teams so that the seedings follow bracket integrity: the #1 overall seed should have #s 8, 9, and 16 in their region; #2 overall should have 7, 10, 15; #3 should have 6, 11, 14; and the #4 seed's region should contain 5, 12, and 13.
Therefore, our "preliminary" brackets look like this:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Robert Morris
8 Notre Dame vs 9 St. Cloud State
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Denver
7 UMass-Lowell vs 10 Minnesota State
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 North Dakota
6 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
Cincinnati
4 Wisconsin vs 13 Vermont
5 Ferris State vs 12 Colgate
At this point, we look to see if we have any first round interconference matchups - those need to be avoided as well as possible. Luckily, though, there are none.
What about attendance? Can we swap any teams around to help out attendance? One easy move would be to swap North Dakota with Vermont. We'd love to swap Minnesota State with Colgate, but that would create an all-WCHA first round matchup with Ferris State so we can't do that.
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Robert Morris
8 Notre Dame vs 9 St. Cloud State
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Denver
7 UMass-Lowell vs 10 Minnesota State
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 13 Vermont
6 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
Cincinnati
4 Wisconsin vs 14 North Dakota
5 Ferris State vs 12 Colgate
This bracket looks pretty good. This is the same thing that USCHO's Jayson Moy came up with tonight. I could foresee one more potential change, though: Denver to St. Paul and Robert Morris to Worcester. The committee has usually tried to "protect the #1 overall seed" by making sure they play the #16 overall seed, but in this case the #15 and #16 seeds are both autobid teams from outside the top 16 in the PairWise Rankings. I could see the committee maybe thinking that because both Denver and Robert Morris came from outside the top 16 that they could tweak those matchups for attendance purposes as well. I still think the above brackets are the ones we'll end up with, but if it's anything different than the above, I have to wager the only change will be DU to St. Paul and Robert Morris to Worcester.
Labels:
Bracketology,
Gopher Hockey,
NCAA Tournament,
Pairwise
Saturday, March 22, 2014
Saturday Morning PWR Roundup: Who's In, Who's Out, and Who Has a Chance
Things are starting to solidify in the PairWise Rankings (PWR) as the season winds down.
As a reminder, the PWR is the mathematical formula which picks the NCAA Tournament field in college hockey.
Here's the way it looks to me:
The following 13 teams are "locks" (as far as I can tell) to make the 16-team NCAA Tournament field:
There are three spots remaining, and there are three autobids still out there to be claimed by:
Ohio State, if they win the B1G. If they do not win tonight, they are out.
New Hampshire, if they win HE. If they do not win tonight, their season is also done.
Minnesota State, if they win the WCHA. If they do not win, they've still got a pretty good chance of earning an At Large bid (explained below).
Unless all three of the above teams win tonight, there will still be at least one more At Large bid to be determined. Things are still fluid with games left to be played, but I think these teams still have a chance to make it, in order of likelihood:
Vermont - they need one of Mankato, Ohio State or New Hampshire to lose tonight to squeak in. If all three of those teams win, it looks like they'll be the last team out.
Mankato - they are in with a win, but if they lose they'll need at least one of Ohio State or New Hampshire to lose tonight to get in with the last bid.
North Dakota - they need to win today in the NCHC third place game, and then need Ohio State and New Hampshire to lose.
Michigan - they need a North Dakota tie or loss in the NCHC third place game, and they need Ohio State and New Hampshire to lose.
That looks like all the teams left standing. Here's what some of the seeds look like:
Minnesota is guaranteed the #1 overall seed. They will be at the St. Paul regional and should play the #16 overall seed, which this year will be the winner of the Atlantic Hockey autobid - that's the winner of Canisius / Robert Morris tonight.
BC is almost guaranteed the #2 overall seed (I was able to find one scenario where Union jumps them into the #2). They will be in the Worcester regional and SHOULD play the #15 overall seed, unless that team is Miami (because Miami is the "host school" at the Cincinnati regional, they must be slotted there if they make the tournament) or New Hampshire / Vermont (those teams play in Hockey East together, and the committee avoids first round inter-conference matchups where possible). I think it's most likely that BC matches up against Denver or Ohio State if either of them wins tonight, and if neither does they'll face North Dakota, Michigan or Mankato
Union is guaranteed the #3 overall seed. They will be in the Bridgeport regional and should play the #14 overall seed, which will likely be New Hampshire or Ohio State (if they win their tourneys), and if not then probably Vermont, Michigan or North Dakota.
The #4 and #5 overall seeds (the #4 being the last #1 band seed available) will likely go to Ferris State and Wisconsin. Ferris State is guaranteed the #4 seed with a win tonight or a Wisconsin loss. Whomever it is, this seed will play at the Cincinnati regional, and will play Miami (OH) if they win tonight, and if not they'll play whichever #4 band seed is left standing - my guess is Mankato.
The #5 seed (Ferris State or Wisconsin) should also be in Cincinnati.
Quinnipiac should be the #6 seed and should get slotted in Bridgeport.
UMass-Lowell looks like the #7 seed and would go to Worcester.
Notre Dame is the #8 seed and will be in St. Paul. They'll face #9 seeded St. Cloud State in the first game.
(Note: these brackets are shaping out PERFECTLY for the committee so far. UW and Ferris in Cincinnati, Minnesota and SCSU in St. Paul, BC and Lowell in Worcester, Union and Quinnipiac in Bridgeport is just about how you'd draw it up attendance-wise).
The #10 seed looks like Colgate at this point. They would be slated to play Lowell in Worcester, all else equal. However, it looks like Mankato could move all the way up to the #10 spot with a win tonight, which would bump every other team down one spot. I think they'd probably send Mankato to Cincinnati anyways, unless Ferris State is the #2 seed there...
#11 looks like Providence to me. They'd head to Bridgeport to play Quinnipiac.
The rest is where it gets interesting, with those last teams fighting for their spots.
For what it's worth, here's how the brackets shape up so far:
Again, those question marks will be filled out by four of the following: Denver or Miami (whoever wins the NCHC), Ohio State, New Hampshire, Vermont, Mankato, North Dakota, Michigan.
Some interesting notes to consider: in the first round, BC cannot play UNH or Vermont, Ferris can't play Mankato, and Wisconsin can't play Michigan or Ohio State. If Miami wins they will have to play in Cincinnati as the host school there.
That's the way it looks to me! I'll try to throw together a final bracketology once the dust settles tonight.
NOTE: I have found some scenarios where the seeds don't 100% match what I wrote above. It looks like there are scenarios where there is a three-way tie for #5 overall between Wisconsin, Quinnipiac and Lowell that would change the seedings slightly. However, I think that the committee will likely set the brackets up like the above - the seeds are close enough and the attendance is near perfect.
As a reminder, the PWR is the mathematical formula which picks the NCAA Tournament field in college hockey.
Here's the way it looks to me:
The following 13 teams are "locks" (as far as I can tell) to make the 16-team NCAA Tournament field:
Minnesota
BC
Union
Ferris State
Wisconsin
Quinnipiac
UMass-Lowell
Notre Dame
St. Cloud State
Colgate
Providence
Denver / Miami (whoever wins the NCHC)
Robert Morris / Canisius (whoever wins AHA)
There are three spots remaining, and there are three autobids still out there to be claimed by:
Ohio State, if they win the B1G. If they do not win tonight, they are out.
New Hampshire, if they win HE. If they do not win tonight, their season is also done.
Minnesota State, if they win the WCHA. If they do not win, they've still got a pretty good chance of earning an At Large bid (explained below).
Unless all three of the above teams win tonight, there will still be at least one more At Large bid to be determined. Things are still fluid with games left to be played, but I think these teams still have a chance to make it, in order of likelihood:
Vermont - they need one of Mankato, Ohio State or New Hampshire to lose tonight to squeak in. If all three of those teams win, it looks like they'll be the last team out.
Mankato - they are in with a win, but if they lose they'll need at least one of Ohio State or New Hampshire to lose tonight to get in with the last bid.
North Dakota - they need to win today in the NCHC third place game, and then need Ohio State and New Hampshire to lose.
Michigan - they need a North Dakota tie or loss in the NCHC third place game, and they need Ohio State and New Hampshire to lose.
That looks like all the teams left standing. Here's what some of the seeds look like:
Minnesota is guaranteed the #1 overall seed. They will be at the St. Paul regional and should play the #16 overall seed, which this year will be the winner of the Atlantic Hockey autobid - that's the winner of Canisius / Robert Morris tonight.
BC is almost guaranteed the #2 overall seed (I was able to find one scenario where Union jumps them into the #2). They will be in the Worcester regional and SHOULD play the #15 overall seed, unless that team is Miami (because Miami is the "host school" at the Cincinnati regional, they must be slotted there if they make the tournament) or New Hampshire / Vermont (those teams play in Hockey East together, and the committee avoids first round inter-conference matchups where possible). I think it's most likely that BC matches up against Denver or Ohio State if either of them wins tonight, and if neither does they'll face North Dakota, Michigan or Mankato
Union is guaranteed the #3 overall seed. They will be in the Bridgeport regional and should play the #14 overall seed, which will likely be New Hampshire or Ohio State (if they win their tourneys), and if not then probably Vermont, Michigan or North Dakota.
The #4 and #5 overall seeds (the #4 being the last #1 band seed available) will likely go to Ferris State and Wisconsin. Ferris State is guaranteed the #4 seed with a win tonight or a Wisconsin loss. Whomever it is, this seed will play at the Cincinnati regional, and will play Miami (OH) if they win tonight, and if not they'll play whichever #4 band seed is left standing - my guess is Mankato.
The #5 seed (Ferris State or Wisconsin) should also be in Cincinnati.
Quinnipiac should be the #6 seed and should get slotted in Bridgeport.
UMass-Lowell looks like the #7 seed and would go to Worcester.
Notre Dame is the #8 seed and will be in St. Paul. They'll face #9 seeded St. Cloud State in the first game.
(Note: these brackets are shaping out PERFECTLY for the committee so far. UW and Ferris in Cincinnati, Minnesota and SCSU in St. Paul, BC and Lowell in Worcester, Union and Quinnipiac in Bridgeport is just about how you'd draw it up attendance-wise).
The #10 seed looks like Colgate at this point. They would be slated to play Lowell in Worcester, all else equal. However, it looks like Mankato could move all the way up to the #10 spot with a win tonight, which would bump every other team down one spot. I think they'd probably send Mankato to Cincinnati anyways, unless Ferris State is the #2 seed there...
#11 looks like Providence to me. They'd head to Bridgeport to play Quinnipiac.
The rest is where it gets interesting, with those last teams fighting for their spots.
For what it's worth, here's how the brackets shape up so far:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Robert Morris / Canisius (AHA Winner)
8 Notre Dame vs 9 St. Cloud State
Worcester
2 BC vs ??
7 Lowell vs 10 Colgate
Bridgeport
3 Union vs ??
6 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
Cincinnati
4 Ferris State / Wisconsin vs ??
5 Ferris State / Wisconsin vs ??
Again, those question marks will be filled out by four of the following: Denver or Miami (whoever wins the NCHC), Ohio State, New Hampshire, Vermont, Mankato, North Dakota, Michigan.
Some interesting notes to consider: in the first round, BC cannot play UNH or Vermont, Ferris can't play Mankato, and Wisconsin can't play Michigan or Ohio State. If Miami wins they will have to play in Cincinnati as the host school there.
That's the way it looks to me! I'll try to throw together a final bracketology once the dust settles tonight.
NOTE: I have found some scenarios where the seeds don't 100% match what I wrote above. It looks like there are scenarios where there is a three-way tie for #5 overall between Wisconsin, Quinnipiac and Lowell that would change the seedings slightly. However, I think that the committee will likely set the brackets up like the above - the seeds are close enough and the attendance is near perfect.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Buckeyes Beat Sloppy Gophers 3-1
St. Paul – One team had something to play for, the other
didn’t.
That’s how much of tonight’s B1G Semifinal matchup felt
between the Ohio State Buckeyes and the Minnesota Golden Gophers. Minnesota showed flashes of their typical
game, but the Buckeyes prevailed to advance to the B1G Championship game thanks
to a Ryan Dzingel 3rd period game winner.
Minnesota and Ohio State played a fairly even first period,
with the Gophers garnering the majority of the scoring chances. Sam Warning hit the post on a Gopher
powerplay about halfway through the period, but it was Ohio State that would
take the first lead of the game. Ohio
State took advantage of their lone full powerplay in the opening frame, as Nick
Schilkey found the back of the net on a backdoor play at 15:20. Although the Gophers led the shots 12-8 after
the first, the Buckeyes led 1-0 on the scoreboard, and Minnesota was lucky it
wasn’t 2-0, as the puck took a funny bounce off the endboards and caromed off
of Wilcox’s arm and through his legs.
The clock wound down just before Ohio State could coax the puck across
the line.
The Gophers would tie the game early in the second period on
a powerplay of their own. Kyle Rau tapped
in a Taylor Cammarata pass into a wide-open net on the backdoor at 4:47 of the
period to knot the game at 1-1. Travis
Boyd earned the first assist on the Rau goal.
Minnesota took a few more penalties in the middle of the period, but the
penalty kill held firm, and the Gophers picked up the pace as the period wore
on. Minnesota had a few quality chances
in the tail end of the period, but the second would end at that same 1-1 score.
Minnesota and Ohio State played a tight third period; Ohio
State with its season on the line, Minnesota wanting to tune up for the
upcoming NCAA Tournament. Ohio State’s
desire trumped Minnesota’s will, with the Buckeyes’ Ryan Dzingel scoring the
game winning goal at 9:08 of the third period.
The Buckeyes would add an empty netter with less than a minute left to
seal the win.
Ohio State advances to the B1G Championship Game tomorrow
night against the Wisconsin Badgers, with both teams playing for something – the
Buckeyes for a chance to extend their season and make the NCAA Tournament, the
Badgers for a likely #1 seed in the NCAAs.
The puck drops Saturday at 7:00.
The Gophers next game will be at the Xcel Energy Center next
Saturday, as the Gophers will be the #1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and
will play as the #1 seed in the West Regional.
They will have to wait until this Sunday's selection show to find out
who they'll face off against.
Notes & Quotes:
Final Shots on Goal: 31-25 Minnesota
Specialty Teams: Minnesota 1 for 3, 3 shots total. Ohio State 1-5, 6 shots total.
Kyle Rau: “Ohio State outplayed us.”
Travis Boyd: “This is the last two years that we kind of
laid an egg on a Friday. We had good
chances to win the game in the third, but we need to play that way for all
three periods.”
Don Lucia: “I told the guys in the locker room that this is
our last chance at a learning experience.”
On playoff hockey: “You have to deliver pucks to the net when you get
opportunities. You don’t get a lot of
opportunities this time of year. I
thought there were a few times when some of our freshmen didn’t quite
understand that, but we’ll go back and look at the video and have a good week
of practice.”
Ohio State Coach Steve Rohlik, on winning three games in
three nights: “I told my guys that it’s doable.
I’ve seen it happen before [as UMD’s Assistant Coach when they won the
Final Five in 2009].”
Ohio State forward Ryan Dzingel, on the NCAA Tournament: “It’s
in the back of my mind obviously, but we’re trying to take it one game at a
time and play our game.”
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Gophers Beat Michigan in OT to Clinch B1G Title!
I've gotta go to bed, but just wanted to throw a couple thoughts on tonight's 3-2 OT victory over the Wolverines:
- Nice win for the Gophers. This was against a good team that clearly had something to play for (fighting for their lives in order to make it into the tournament). I'm sure the Gophers can draw on this win going forward in those tight NCAA tournament games when everything is on the line.
- The win clinched the B1G regular season title for Minnesota. This is the first time in program history that Minnesota has won three regular season titles in a row. While the NCAA Tournament is the big prize, winning the regular season title displays a long-term measure of success that a four game one-and-done tournament cannot showcase. Hats off to the Gophers - after these last three years, it's hard to fathom that Don Lucia was on the hot seat a short time ago.
- This win, coupled with BC's loss against Notre Dame in the Hockey East tournament tonight, went a long way towards clinching the #1 overall seed in the tournament. It's looking like things would need to fall BC's way from here on out to take the top seed away from Minnesota, who holds the head to head record, the common opponents and the RPI over the Eagles.
- I staunchly believe that the Gophers and BC are head and shoulders ahead of everyone else in college hockey this season. One thing that I do have minor concerns about is that this Minnesota team does not have a big-time scorer in the lineup that can take over a game. The Gophers' top scorer, Kyle Rau, sits at 60th on the nation's scoring list. I think this team clearly has one of the best goaltenders in the country in Adam Wilcox and perhaps the best puck-moving defensive corps in the nation, but I worry a little bit about where the goals are going to come from without a solid scoring leader. From what I saw tonight, I think Justin Kloos very well could be that guy in the future, but I'm not sure if he's quite ready for that mantle as a freshman this year. The team is #6 in the nation overall in scoring offense, and that's because they score with depth. I hope that continues.
- Don Lucia moved Taylor Cammarata off of the second line tonight and put Vinni Lettieri in his place for most of the game. I have been a fan of the Cammarata-Kloos chemistry earlier in the year, but I have to say that I was really impressed with what Lettieri brought to that second line. He's quick, he agitates, he isn't afraid to shoot the puck. Cammarata is clearly a gifted offensive player, but I don't think he has quite adjusted to the speed of college game yet, especially on defense. He got beat pretty bad on Michigan's second goal tonight. I wouldn't mind sitting him down for a game before the season is out and giving Michaelson or Ryan Reilly another chance on that fourth line.
- Mike Reilly is an incredibly exciting hockey player. I'd like for him to do a little more hitting on the defensive end, but when he's got the puck on his stick he is just a joy to watch.
Okay that's all for now, gotta go to bed. Congrats to the Gophers on the B1G regular season title! One out of three banners so far! Now go get the other two!
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Gophers Lead Late, but Lose in Shootout in Columbus
Columbus – After holding a lead for all but 3 of the first
56 minutes, the Gophers all but had their hands around the first ever B1G
regular season title.
A late Buckeye goal and another poor shootout performance
later, Minnesota (24-4-6 Overall, 13-2-3-0 B1G) was a point short of clinching
a share of the B1G title, and will need at least two points in Ann Arbor next
weekend to guarantee themselves the B1G championship.
Saturday night’s game got off to another great start for the
Gophers, as Minnesota got an early powerplay and capitalized, with Kyle Rau
collecting a rebound on the short side and sliding it past OSU goalie Christian
Frey. Mike Reilly and Travis Boyd
assisted on the goal at 2:32. The
Gophers thought they had doubled their lead in the first period when Tom
Serratore dented the twine, but the goal was disallowed due to Gabe Guertler
interfering with the goaltender.
The Gophers ended the first with a 1-0 lead, and after an
uneventful second period the teams started the third at that same 1-0
score. Mike Reilly took an early penalty
and the Buckeyes capitalized, as Ohio State’s leading scorer Ryan Dzingel
scored his 18th of the year to knot the game at 1-1 just 2:31 into
the third. Minnesota responded only 24
seconds later when Gabe Guertler deflected a Ben Marshall shot from the left
point past OSU’s Frey to give the Gophers another lead.
The B1G title was in their grasp, but Ohio State had other
ideas, scoring with 3:50 left in the third period to tie the game at 2-2. Minnesota could still clinch the title with
an overtime win, but Ohio State had the better of the chances in the OT, and
Adam Wilcox had to stop a Ryan Dzingel breakaway to guarantee Minnesota a point
for surviving the five-minute overtime period.
Ohio State scored on their first shootout shot and Rau, Cammarata and
Guertler were stoned by Frey, and the Buckeyes skated away with the extra point
for the shootout victory.
The shootout loss means that the Gophers are one point away
from clinching a share of the B1G regular season title, and two away from
clinching outright. The Gophers will
need two points in Michigan next weekend (or a Wisconsin shootout loss,
regulation loss, or two shootout wins next weekend at Michigan State) to secure
the first ever B1G crown.
Minnesota faces off against the Michigan Wolverines Friday
at 5:30 PM Central.
Monday, March 3, 2014
Bracketology: Gophers Versus North Dakota in St. Paul Regional Final?
When it comes to NCAA tournament time in College Hockey, the Pairwise Rankings are king.
For the uninitiated, the Pairwise Rankings (abbreviated PWR) is a system that mimics the formula that the NCAA Committee uses to select and seed the NCAA Hockey Tournament. You can find the PWR HERE. The committee takes the 16 qualifying teams (the six teams that win their conference tournament, and then the next 10 teams in the PWR that did not already qualify) and ships them out to their regional sites with their first round matchups based on several different factors:
How does this look? For starters, we have an intraconference matchup in Cincinnati with Wisconsin/Michigan, so we need to swap something there. To keep bracket integrity as sound as possible, let's switch Providence and Michigan around. Now we've got:
What do we think here? No intra-conference matchups, but we can move things around a bit to help attendance out. Let's go back to our original brackets:
What if instead of swapping Michigan with Providence, we swapped them with Notre Dame?
This is looking a bit better, but we'd like to move Lowell out east. Let's do that by swapping them with Ferris State.
Okay, we're almost done here. That last swap resulted in an intra-conference matchup in Bridgeport which we'll need to alleviate. The options here are to switch Quinnipiac and Lowell, or to switch Providence and Michigan. I like Lowell in Worcester more than I like Providence in Worcester, I love Quinnipiac in Bridgeport, and I like the idea of making BC's region easier instead of harder (the #2 overall seed should have an easier road than #3 overall Union), so let's swap Quinnipiac and Lowell:
No intra-conference matchups here, but is there anything more we can do to help with attendance? The committee usually protects the #1 overall seed's matchup with the #16 seed, so that rules out swapping Mercyhurst for Mankato. But what about swapping Cornell and Mankato?
Above are our final brackets. Attendance looks pretty good in all of the regions, and there are no intra-conference matchups to speak of. This sets up a potential matchup between the Gophers and North Dakota in the St. Paul regional final, as well as some other interesting matchups.
For the uninitiated, the Pairwise Rankings (abbreviated PWR) is a system that mimics the formula that the NCAA Committee uses to select and seed the NCAA Hockey Tournament. You can find the PWR HERE. The committee takes the 16 qualifying teams (the six teams that win their conference tournament, and then the next 10 teams in the PWR that did not already qualify) and ships them out to their regional sites with their first round matchups based on several different factors:
- The "Host Team" of each regional is automatically placed in that region, if they make the tournament field. The regionals this year are in St. Paul (Minnesota is the host), Cincinnati (Miami-OH), Worcester (Holy Cross) and Bridgeport (Yale)
- The seedings are then placed so that the #1 overall seed plays #16, #2 plays #15, etc.
- Teams will be broken into seed "bands" and placed in the regionals so that the #1 "band" seed in the region plays the #4 "band" seed, and #2 plays #3 in the first round.
From there, the committee has a couple more rules to follow:
- Teams from the same conference cannot play against each other in the first round unless there is no way to avoid it.
- Teams can be moved around if it doesn't hurt the bracket integrity too much to try and maximize attendance (you cannot swap a #3 band seed and a #2 band seed).
So, based off of that, here's what we have (PWR taken from USCHO.com):
PWR Rankings as of 3/3/14
1. Minnesota
2. BC
3. Union
4. SCSU
5. Wisconsin
6. Ferris State
7. Quinnipiac
8. UMass-Lowell
9. North Dakota
10. Notre Dame
11. Providence
12. Michigan
13. Cornell
14. Vermont
15. Northeastern
16. Colgate
17. Mankato
AQ: Mercyhurst (AHA Winner)
For the purposes of this blog, I'm going to assume that Mankato either jumps ahead of Colgate and Northeastern to make it into the top 15 of the PWR or wins their conference tournament to qualify automatically. They've been really hot lately, and I think they'll squeak in.
From here we place the teams in regions starting with the #1 band seeds:
Minnesota is placed in the St. Paul regional, BC is placed in the Worcester regional, Union is placed in Bridgeport, and SCSU is placed in Cincinnati.
Now we place the 2-4 band seeds based on bracket integrity (perfect brackets would have 1-8-9-16, 2-7-10-15, 3-6-11-14, 4-5-12-13 seeds grouped together). When we do this, our brackets are:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
8 Lowell vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 12 Michigan
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
7 Quinnipiac vs 10 Notre Dame
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
6 Ferris St vs 11 Providence
How does this look? For starters, we have an intraconference matchup in Cincinnati with Wisconsin/Michigan, so we need to swap something there. To keep bracket integrity as sound as possible, let's switch Providence and Michigan around. Now we've got:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
8 Lowell vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 11 Providence
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
7 Quinnipiac vs 10 Notre Dame
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
6 Ferris St vs 12 Michigan
What do we think here? No intra-conference matchups, but we can move things around a bit to help attendance out. Let's go back to our original brackets:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
8 Lowell vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 12 Michigan
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
7 Quinnipiac vs 10 Notre Dame
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
6 Ferris St vs 11 Providence
What if instead of swapping Michigan with Providence, we swapped them with Notre Dame?
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
8 Lowell vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 10 Notre Dame
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
7 Quinnipiac vs 12 Michigan
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
6 Ferris St vs 11 Providence
This is looking a bit better, but we'd like to move Lowell out east. Let's do that by swapping them with Ferris State.
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
6 Ferris State vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 10 Notre Dame
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
7 Quinnipiac vs 12 Michigan
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
8 Lowell vs 11 Providence
Okay, we're almost done here. That last swap resulted in an intra-conference matchup in Bridgeport which we'll need to alleviate. The options here are to switch Quinnipiac and Lowell, or to switch Providence and Michigan. I like Lowell in Worcester more than I like Providence in Worcester, I love Quinnipiac in Bridgeport, and I like the idea of making BC's region easier instead of harder (the #2 overall seed should have an easier road than #3 overall Union), so let's swap Quinnipiac and Lowell:
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
6 Ferris State vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 13 Cornell
5 Wisconsin vs 10 Notre Dame
Worcester
2 BC vs 15 Mankato
8 Lowell vs 12 Michigan
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
7 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
No intra-conference matchups here, but is there anything more we can do to help with attendance? The committee usually protects the #1 overall seed's matchup with the #16 seed, so that rules out swapping Mercyhurst for Mankato. But what about swapping Cornell and Mankato?
St. Paul
1 Minnesota vs 16 Mercyhurst
6 Ferris State vs 9 UND
Cincinnati
4 SCSU vs 15 Mankato
5 Wisconsin vs 10 Notre Dame
Worcester
2 BC vs 13 Cornell
8 Lowell vs 12 Michigan
Bridgeport
3 Union vs 14 Vermont
7 Quinnipiac vs 11 Providence
Above are our final brackets. Attendance looks pretty good in all of the regions, and there are no intra-conference matchups to speak of. This sets up a potential matchup between the Gophers and North Dakota in the St. Paul regional final, as well as some other interesting matchups.
This post is very much inspired by the amazing Jason Moy over at USCHO. He's gotten everything exactly right in the tournament the past three years.
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