{"id":27225,"date":"2005-03-10T21:21:33","date_gmt":"2005-03-11T03:21:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2005\/03\/10\/womens-hockey-east-tournament-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:11","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:11","slug":"womens-hockey-east-tournament-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2005\/03\/10\/womens-hockey-east-tournament-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"Women’s Hockey East Tournament Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Four teams. One bid. The NCAA’s first-ever eight-team field will include just one representative from Hockey East. The league’s top team currently holds the eighth and final slot in USCHO.com’s Pairwise Rankings and has no possibility of climbing higher. Consequently, Providence, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Boston College head to Walter Brown Arena this weekend with the Hockey East fight on the table as it enters its final round. In the last two years, the conference semifinals have proved little more than a formality with PC and UNH dispatching their opponents by a combined score of 18-2. This year, however, the intrigue is at an all-time high for the semifinal round after the league’s most competitive regular season in its brief history. All four teams have conceded points to each other over the course of the 2004-05 campaign and only BC (vs. UNH) does not have an outright win over the rest of the teams in the field.<\/p>\n