{"id":1772,"date":"2016-10-16T18:39:48","date_gmt":"2016-10-16T23:39:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/hockey-east-blog\/?p=1772"},"modified":"2016-10-16T18:39:48","modified_gmt":"2016-10-16T23:39:48","slug":"could-october-struggles-spell-pain-in-march-for-hockey-east","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2016\/10\/16\/could-october-struggles-spell-pain-in-march-for-hockey-east\/","title":{"rendered":"Could October struggles spell pain in March for Hockey East?"},"content":{"rendered":"
With Hockey East going a collective 7-9-3 this weekend in non-league play, the league’s early-season collective struggles continue. While March seems so far away, might the results this month rear their ugly head come March? That leads the three things I learned this weekend.<\/p>\n
1. Non-league woes could translate to thin NCAA representation come March<\/strong><\/p>\n Sure, the leaves in New England are just turning, but Hockey East teams have already painted themselves into a collective corner with struggles against non-league opponents. As a group, Hockey East teams are now 18-16-6 against the rest of the nation. While there is time to make up ground, particularly throughout the rest of this month, this ugly start has the potential to lower the overall conference RPI.<\/p>\n We’ve learned often in recent years that conference RPI almost directly aligns with the number of NCAA tournament participants from that conference.<\/p>\n I know what everyone of you might say: “Let’s worry about this in March.” But by then it may be too late.<\/p>\n