{"id":285,"date":"2008-03-09T19:49:44","date_gmt":"2008-03-10T00:49:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/blogs\/d-i-womens-hockey\/david-de-remer\/20080309\/analysis-of-the-d-i-womens-selections.html"},"modified":"2008-03-09T19:49:44","modified_gmt":"2008-03-10T00:49:44","slug":"analysis-of-the-d-i-womens-selections","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2008\/03\/09\/analysis-of-the-d-i-womens-selections\/","title":{"rendered":"Analysis of the D-I women’s selections"},"content":{"rendered":"
The National Collegiate Women’s Ice Hockey committee made two controversial decisions on Sunday. One involved selecting Dartmouth over Clarkson as the last team in the tournament. The other was to abandon the practice of avoiding intraconference play in the NCAA quarterfinal round in order to save money on travel costs. I will discuss each below.<\/p>\n
Dartmouth over Clarkson<\/strong><\/p>\n This was the toughest decision an NCAA committee has ever had to make involving the last team into the field. Recall the NCAA criteria:<\/p>\n RPI (a combination of win pct. and strength of schedule), record against teams with an RPI > .500 (teams under consideration), record against common opponents, and head-to-head play.<\/p>\n Here is how the team’s stacked up in the PWR calculations of these criteria:<\/p>\n RPI: Clarkson .5600, Dartmouth .5594<\/p>\n TUC: Clarkson 5-7-2, Dartmouth 3-7-2<\/p>\n H2H: Clarkson 0-1-1, Dartmouth 1-0-1<\/p>\n COP: Clarkson 18-7-3, Dartmouth 16-7-3<\/p>\n Clearly the committee felt that Dartmouth’s clear head-to-head advantage was decisive, while Clarkson’s three advantages were not large enough for the committee to respect them.<\/p>\n Some fans surely feel any form of discretion in the hands of the committee is a negative — comments like “opening up a can of worms” or “returning us to the era of smoke-filled rooms” come to mind.<\/p>\n