{"id":28493,"date":"2006-10-04T09:46:00","date_gmt":"2006-10-04T14:46:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/10\/04\/200607-wcha-season-preview\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:56:38","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:56:38","slug":"200607-wcha-season-preview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2006\/10\/04\/200607-wcha-season-preview\/","title":{"rendered":"2006-07 WCHA Season Preview"},"content":{"rendered":"
Numbers don’t lie.<\/p>\n
It is no secret that NCAA men’s hockey lost a bevy of talent with the long list of players leaving college early and forgoing their last years of eligibility. But if one league was hit the most, it was the Western Collegiate Hockey Association.<\/p>\n
Try these numbers on for size:<\/p>\n
In the 16 players that left their teams early, the WCHA lost more than 30 percent of the goals scored in league games.<\/p>\n
Those 16 players had a combined 258 goals and 410 assists — a whopping 668 points — during the 2005-06 season. Again, those numbers do not even include the league’s graduated seniors.<\/p>\n
A closer look shows that, with all of the players absent from last year’s WCHA, the league will return just over 44 percent of its total scoring from league games.<\/p>\n
“We had an unusually high number of underclassman signings this year,” WCHA commissioner Bruce McLeod said at a Tuesday teleconference. “We really don’t keep records on it, but I would say it’s probably twice as many as usual.<\/p>\n
“But you know me, I kind of prefer to look at … the half-full rather than the half-empty, and we’ve got some great returnees coming back and 68 NHL draft picks in the league this year.”<\/p>\n
It is easy to dwell on the players who will no longer be in the league, but as the adage goes, the games must go on and it is more important to take a look at what the league will offer this year.<\/p>\n
Although the WCHA lost an abundance of top-end players, the teams within it surely picked up a bunch of stars in the making. Some of the nation’s top recruiting classes include a number of players from the U.S. National Team Developmental Program as well as the best players from the junior leagues.<\/p>\n
However, it is not hard to see that the jump to the college level does not come as easy as the snap of the fingers. It will be up to the coaches and upperclassmen-leaders — those who are still around — to try and help make it a quick transition.<\/p>\n