{"id":32777,"date":"2010-11-04T05:00:06","date_gmt":"2010-11-04T10:00:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=32777"},"modified":"2010-11-03T21:56:43","modified_gmt":"2010-11-04T02:56:43","slug":"to-have-and-have-not-in-the-ccha","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2010\/11\/04\/to-have-and-have-not-in-the-ccha\/","title":{"rendered":"To have and have not in the CCHA"},"content":{"rendered":"
To quote the Talking Heads, same as it ever was.<\/p>\n
One glance at the CCHA standings and last week’s results show the league’s top tier populated by a familiar cast: Miami, Note Dame, Michigan. Alaska and Northern Michigan are in the mix, for now. Michigan State isn’t. Yet.<\/p>\n
The difference between this year and last season is that Notre Dame and Michigan are returning to form, poised to finish near the top after single-season anomalies. These teams — and I’d argue that MSU is a member of this fraternity — are The Haves, the teams that are now and likely will ever be pushing the top of the standings.<\/p>\n
That being said, the league appears to be tighter this season, top to bottom, than it was last year. Even if the RedHawks blow everyone else away — and they can do that — the rest of the league will exhibit the dreaded parity, and genuinely so this year. Half of the conference games so far this season have been decided by a goal or less.<\/p>\n
Don’t believe me? Maybe you’ll take Michigan coach Red Berenson’s word for it, summing here as he did after the Wolverines escaped Ferris State 3-2.<\/p>\n
“I think — we were just talking about it in the locker room — I think this is what we have to expect every night this year, in this league, with this team,” Berenson said. “Look around, all the other scores, no matter who’s playing who.”<\/p>\n
Asked if his team would have to display the kind of grit it did in that excellent contest, Berenson said, “We’re going to have to grind it out, because everyone else — they’ll make you grind it out.”<\/p>\n
Before facing once-lowly Western Michigan last weekend, Notre Dame coach Jeff Jackson warned that his team would have its collective hands full. Given that the Irish beat the Broncos, 3-2, with a late-third-period goal Friday and tied WMU the next night, 2-2, I’d say that Jackson is a good authority on parity, too.<\/p>\n
Even the RedHawks, poised to dominate again this season, lost a point to visiting Lake Superior State in a 2-2 tie Saturday night.<\/p>\n
And now the RedHawks and Irish are tied in first place for the same reason — a win on the weekend with a shootout “win” to follow — and the Wolverines are in second place because a tenacious and defensively talented Ferris State team took two of six points from them on the weekend, rather than just one.<\/p>\n
What this return to an old form may mean, however, is the demotion from top tier to middle of some very good Semi-Haves: Northern Michigan, Ferris State, Alaska — the teams that can’t compete with the top-tier teams in resources and, therefore, recruiting.<\/p>\n
With new coaches at Bowling Green, Western and Ohio State, there may be some redefining soon, too, about what it means to be on the bottom in the CCHA.<\/p>\n