{"id":22945,"date":"2000-10-06T19:02:27","date_gmt":"2000-10-07T00:02:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2000\/10\/06\/200001-ccha-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:53:57","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:53:57","slug":"200001-ccha-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2000\/10\/06\/200001-ccha-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2000-01 CCHA Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
“We brought in nine freshmen this year, so there’s going to be a lot of competition for jobs. Our goal is to be an honest, hard-working club.”<\/p>\n
This reality was defined by:<\/p>\n
a) Rick Comley b) Bob Daniels c) Guy Gadowsky d) John Markell e) Buddy Powers?<\/p>\n
If you chose “e,” you are one sharp CCHA fan. If, however, you said, “Geez, any one of these guys could have said that,” then you may move to the head of the class.<\/p>\n
As the Central Collegiate Hockey Association celebrates its 30th anniversary this season, 95 of the 300 players on the league’s 12 rosters are newcomers–in other words, five shy of one-third.<\/p>\n
— Notre Dame head coach Dave Poulin<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
Alaska-Fairbanks (13), Ohio State (11), and Northern Michigan (10) lead the league in rookies. Bowling Green, Ferris State, and Miami each have eight; Michigan State, Nebraska-Omaha and Notre Dame have seven freshmen apiece. Lake Superior State and Western Michigan welcome six new players, while Michigan has the fewest with just four.<\/p>\n
What, exactly, does this mean for a league coming off a season that can only be described as unspectacular?<\/p>\n
A lot of competition for jobs. A lot of hard work.<\/p>\n
Last year, the CCHA–a league that prides itself on the strength of its intraconference play, on its ability to match up well in nonconference competition–lacked representation in the Frozen Four for the first time since 1991. And while the rest of Division I men’s college hockey saw that as an appropriate indictment of a league fond of parroting parity, the CCHA coaches see their conference as anything but the weak sister.<\/p>\n
“I think the teams in our league have been very competitive from year to year with nonconference opponents,” offers the always-understated Red Berenson<\/b>.<\/p>\n
Sure, Berenson’s Wolverines had a pretty good record against nonconference opponents and were distinguished by becoming the sole CCHA team to advance beyond one game in the NCAA tourney. But how did the league do as a whole?<\/p>\n
Excluding games against Wayne State, Mercyhurst, Bemidji State, and Alabama-Huntsville (and we could exclude Michigan Tech, too, if the Huskies hadn’t earned two wins against a neighbor from the Yoop), the league went 33-38-3 out of conference last season.<\/p>\n
This is Dave Poulin<\/b>‘s spin situation.<\/p>\n
“Like it or not, the CCHA schedule is so intense and so in depth, and you know so much about everybody and their teams, that there has to be some sort of looking at the other games as a tiny bit of a breather from the CCHA schedule, and I think that can cost you.<\/p>\n
“You know [nonconference games] are in the national picture, and yet there’s no way…you prepare for those teams the way you do league opponents.”<\/p>\n
Ron Mason<\/b> says it’s the number of teams in the CCHA that undermines the way individual programs measure up in that national picture.<\/p>\n
“If you look how our teams perform in the tournaments with other teams we do very well. I think the RPI will never be a true rating of our league because our lower division teams–whoever they might be–don’t have a chance to play enough games outside the league to become .500, and say Hockey East in comparison, their lower division teams don’t play as many league games so they’re able to play enough games outside the league to get up to .500, which really improves their RPI.<\/p>\n
“In our league, because there are 12 teams, it’s going to be very difficult, with the exception of maybe a team or two, to have a really high RPI. That’s a credit in certain respects to our league being so strong, and yet the outside games don’t affect us nearly as much as our league games because we play so many.”<\/p>\n