{"id":28857,"date":"2007-01-19T14:44:07","date_gmt":"2007-01-19T20:44:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/01\/19\/this-week-in-the-ecac-east-and-nescac-jan-19-2007\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:55","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:55","slug":"this-week-in-the-ecac-east-and-nescac-jan-19-2007","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2007\/01\/19\/this-week-in-the-ecac-east-and-nescac-jan-19-2007\/","title":{"rendered":"This Week In The ECAC East and NESCAC: Jan. 19, 2007"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve toyed with the notion of a fancifully-written opening that would make the intro to any James Bond film pale in comparison but alas, my own words do fail in evoking any comparison that reflects appropriately on the level of competition seen this year in collegiate hockey in New England. The Bond-derived oxymoron of a title above is intentional and not a spoof in the vein of Austin Powers – it only represents the current state of hockey here in New England as well as the future state of the game here should some of the rumors floating around arenas today turn out to be true and we see the beginning of a new league based entirely upon conference alignments. Readers of legal age for consuming alcohol may want to consider an appropriate adult beverage at this point as we consider …<\/p>\n
The rumors are abounding and there are many people inside of school athletic departments and hockey programs alike who will speak about what could be happening, probably happening and likely happening to league alignments in New England in the very near future. That being said, no one is willing to go record at this point because there is still too much that is unknown in comparison to the baseline premise of the new league and the teams that will make up the new alignment.<\/p>\n
Based on a number of confidential sources, it is believed that a new league focused on participants from the MASCAC (Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference) and the Little East will align themselves to play ice hockey in a manner where their athletic departments currently compete in many if not all of their other intercollegiate sports. The new conference would have eight members including Fitchburg State, Framingham State, Worcester State and Salem State from the MASCAC group as well as Plymouth State, Southern Maine, UMass-Boston and UMass-Dartmouth from the Little East Conference (of which the MASCAC members are affiliated in many sports). Based on that configuration, the ECAC Northeast would be losing five schools from their current roster of twelve D-III programs (not including the arrival of Becker next season) and the ECAC East would be losing three D-III programs from their current roster of eight programs. So what does that mean — let’s take a look at some of the scenarios we could be seeing soon.<\/p>\n
The new league would have eight programs and have the opportunity to petition to the NCAA for an automatic qualifier to the national tournament. How the schedule would be configured is unknown but likely a home and away double round robin would be a possibility with teams then having the ability to schedule non-conference games beyond their fourteen league contests amongst other teams in the New England area. For the most part the birth of this conference would have minor impact on the ECAC Northeast and NESCAC but would have a significant impact on the ECAC East.<\/p>\n
In the East, there would be seven teams remaining but two of those are D-II schools who have been unable to petition the NCAA for any kind of waiver allowing them to compete in conference tournaments or D-III championships despite playing strictly by D-III rules for scheduling, starting dates and scholarships. The remaining D-III schools, which include Norwich, Babson, New England College, Skidmore and Castleton State would have to find other interested programs to fill the open spots in the league or potentially forfeit their NCAA AQ based on not having enough programs in the league. <\/p>\n
Another factor is found in the ECAC East and NESCAC schools playing an interlocking schedule with all games from the two 10-team leagues counting in the overall standings for each conference. With an imbalance in teams this may change and another scenario could find the NESCAC schools playing their own double round robin schedule with home and home games that would leave the ECAC East standing alone without any dance partner.<\/p>\n
And what about geographic considerations? Skidmore and even Castleton State to some degree could be enticed to consider play in the ECAC West based on proximity to the schools in upstate New York. Not sure how likely this scenario is but this column did ask what if, and that’s a big what if that would further complicate matters.<\/p>\n
So, enough with conjecture what do we know today? We know that it is highly probable that there will be a new conference for men’s ice hockey in two years but quite possibly one year from now. We know that the formation of the league will have a definite impact on the ECAC alignment and may result in some other domino effects from the NESCAC conference and other D-III leagues. Lastly we know that there is still a lot to sort out and when things become definitive we will have chance to speak from quoted sources on the record about the direction and timing of all related league, scheduling and program movements upcoming in the near future. Stay tuned on this one — it can only get more interesting by the minute!<\/p>\n
Following Bowdoin’s 6-2 win over Middlebury this past Saturday, head coach Terry Meagher was having fun with his young team that is keeping this veteran coach feeling quite young.<\/p>\n