Throughout the season, USCHO.com staffers Scott Brown and Jim Connelly will offer their views on the previous weeks’ action, alternating writing duties (and occasional potshots at each other) every Tuesday. Brown will focus on the West and Connelly on the East, in a regular column exclusive to USCHO Extra.<\/i><\/p>\n
Rush To Judgment<\/h4>\n
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Brett Sterling (l.) and Marty Sertich have CC at the top of the national rankings (photo: Melissa Wade).<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
After the season’s first few weeks, the muttering around the nation was about the WCHA. Just months after placing four of its teams in the national semifinals — a first not just for hockey, but for any NCAA sport — the league took its lumps in early nonconference play.<\/p>\n
There was then-No. 1 Minnesota’s 0-1-1 opening weekend at home against Alaska-Fairbanks; Minnesota State and Minnesota-Duluth both getting swept by defending CHA champion Bemidji State; Mercyhurst, out of Atlantic Hockey, taking a game from Michigan Tech; and Wisconsin splitting with St. Lawrence to open its regular season.<\/p>\n
That’s hardly the slate one expects from college hockey’s “power conference.”<\/p>\n
So is the WCHA done? Hardly.<\/p>\n
Despite some tough times, the league’s reputation hasn’t suffered much with voters in the USCHO.com\/CSTV poll — a regionally-balanced group of Division I coaches and media representatives that captures the mood of those in the know around the country.<\/p>\n
When Monday’s poll came out, the WCHA had five of the nation’s top 10 teams, headed up by Colorado College at No. 1. The combined mark of those five squads — CC, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Denver — was 22-9-3. And seven of their nine losses had come against teams currently ranked in the Top 20 themselves.<\/p>\n
With conference play now under way, the WCHA won’t get much of a chance to prove itself again until the holiday season rolls around. But it’s a little early to declare a power shift.<\/p>\n