{"id":29393,"date":"2007-10-23T14:00:40","date_gmt":"2007-10-23T19:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/23\/tuesday-morning-quarterback-oct-23\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:57:05","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:57:05","slug":"tuesday-morning-quarterback-oct-23","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2007\/10\/23\/tuesday-morning-quarterback-oct-23\/","title":{"rendered":"Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Oct. 23"},"content":{"rendered":"
Welcome to <\/i>Tuesday Morning Quarterback, USCHO.com’s freeform debate about the week that was in college hockey. Every Tuesday in this space, Jim Connelly, representing the East, and Scott Brown, representing the West, will discuss the issues of the day, trade barbs, make indefensible claims about their teams and leagues and generally rant about the things that make college hockey great.<\/i><\/p>\n
Jim:<\/b> Well, Scott, some of the top teams notched their first losses of the season this weekend, but none really came as a major surprise. Denver and Notre Dame split their series, which Ohio State followed script with a loss to No. 2 Miami. If there really were any surprises among the top teams this weekend it was Boston College, which followed up Friday’s fog-abbreviated tie with No. 1 North Dakota with another stalemate against Vermont. I guess looking over the entire slate of games, the one that really raises my eyebrow is Air Force’s sweep of Quinnipiac. Which leads me to the question: Is Air Force that good or did Quinnipiac really nosedive from last season’s runner-up finish at the ECACHL tournament?<\/p>\n
Scott:<\/b> Jim, I agree on last weekend’s results. I have to confess to being a bit of a fan of both Quinnipiac and Air Force (heresy coming from the West guy, I know). I always liked the Bobcats in their Atlantic Hockey days, and their accession to the ECACHL was a plus for that league. And I always like the service academies, and Air Force in particular earned a lot of respect last year in its NCAA regional against Minnesota. QU’s biggest loss during the offseason was Reid Cashman, but the Bobcats still looked to be set going into 2007-08, so this is definitely a surprise — but we might have to wait for more evidence to be sure how big an upset these games were. I still like Quinnipiac, and I think the team will be okay. Speaking of Atlantic Hockey, how about Holy Cross beating Providence in a 6-4 slugfest? Is the AHA making a move on the rest of college hockey?<\/p>\n