{"id":31956,"date":"2010-10-14T05:00:01","date_gmt":"2010-10-14T10:00:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=31956"},"modified":"2010-10-14T06:04:58","modified_gmt":"2010-10-14T11:04:58","slug":"why-such-a-rush-to-start-for-hockey-east-teams","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2010\/10\/14\/why-such-a-rush-to-start-for-hockey-east-teams\/","title":{"rendered":"Why such a rush to start for Hockey East teams?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Is it only me, or has the start date for college hockey gotten a bit out of control?<\/p>\n
When a team’s first practice is actually an exhibition game, I think teams are playing too early. When a club is 0-2 in the league eight days after it takes the ice, I think teams are playing too early. When coaches are worried about fatigue in the first period of the second game of the season, I think teams are playing too early.<\/p>\n
All of these happened in Hockey East in the last two weeks.<\/p>\n
Oct. 2 may have been the first official day of practice, but Massachusetts, Boston University, New Hampshire and Northeastern all donned uniforms that evening and faced Canadian teams in exhibitions. (Not too ironic was that only BU earned a win that night … what happened to the days where these exhibitions were automatic victories?)<\/p>\n
By 10 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9, Northeastern had just 25 league games left and was already 0-2 in Hockey East. Maybe the fact the team has a handful of practices together while sporting 11 rookies in the lineup has something to do with that. Said coach Greg Cronin after Saturday’s loss to Boston College: “I looked at the roster and saw 11 new guys, which is really startling. One of the worst teams you want to face with a young team is BC.”<\/p>\n