{"id":38771,"date":"2011-10-13T05:00:48","date_gmt":"2011-10-13T10:00:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=38771"},"modified":"2011-10-12T21:17:59","modified_gmt":"2011-10-13T02:17:59","slug":"scheduling-flexibility-allows-hockey-east-teams-big-game-opportunities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2011\/10\/13\/scheduling-flexibility-allows-hockey-east-teams-big-game-opportunities\/","title":{"rendered":"Scheduling flexibility allows Hockey East teams big-game opportunities"},"content":{"rendered":"
In recent years, the Hockey East schedule has opened slowly with few league games and then built to a climax. The Ice Breaker kicked off the season with a Hockey East team typically playing other elite teams from around the country, but the league schedule saved its bullets. Heavyweights like Boston College and New Hampshire faced off for the title with a home-and-home series in the final weekend. <\/p>\n
So it was a surprise to see Boston University hosting UNH last Saturday. Was this a calculated departure from the norm, presumably to kick the season off with a bang? And was that experiment a dud given the 5-0 final score?<\/p>\n
No and no. <\/p>\n
The matchup of the two perennial powers (which was, in truth, considerably closer than the final score indicated) had nothing to do with league intentions. Neither did Massachusetts at Northeastern or Merrimack at Maine or Northeastern at Maine.<\/p>\n
The way the league drew up the schedule back in June 2010, there wasn’t a single league game for last weekend. Only Boston College’s entry in the Ice Breaker was on the docket. <\/p>\n
“Our policy allows schools to move games if they have mutual consent and it doesn’t negatively affect a third party,” Hockey East commissioner Joe Bertagna says. (An example of such a negative side effect is a team moving a game and, as a result, another team plays two games on a weekend against opponents who only play one.)<\/p>\n
So why the musical chairs that resulted in not one or two league games but four? To facilitate scheduling of attractive programs outside the conference.<\/p>\n
“What happens in October and sometimes November is that [dates in those months] are the only chance to play some non-league opponent,” Bertagna says. “The schools have limited options. So they put in these requests primarily so that they can open a weekend for non-league play.<\/p>\n
“All those league games this weekend were not designed by the league. In every case, the schools moved those games to accommodate some non-league opportunities.”<\/p>\n
A look at the schedule of the three home teams involved illustrates the point. On Saturday, BU hosts third-ranked Denver, which comes to town to also play BC the night before. Was a switch necessary to make this highly desirable matchup work? Perhaps.<\/p>\n
And you don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to connect the dots between Maine’s rescheduled games against Merrimack and Northeastern and the Black Bears visiting sixth-ranked North Dakota this weekend. Or Northeastern’s trip to South Bend in early December to play second-ranked Notre Dame.<\/p>\n
All of which doesn’t mean that next year will play out the same way. Hockey East schedules go in cycles such that the second year is a mirror image of the first. For example, if Merrimack and Northeastern play a home-and-home series on a given weekend this year, next year they’ll also play a home-and-home series on the same weekend, but with the home games reversed.<\/p>\n
“Going forward next year,” Bertagna says, “the schedule that I have out for 2012-2013 is a flip flop of the original<\/i> schedule that I made. It’s not a flip flop of the current<\/i> schedule.”<\/p>\n
Schools can, and almost certainly will, make similar changes to that schedule. A few will also adjust the Friday-Saturday night splits to their liking.<\/p>\n
“[We design the schedule] so everybody gets an equal chance of playing on Friday or Saturday,” Bertagna says. “Most schools prefer Saturday, but we have some that prefer Friday. <\/p>\n
“A school like Northeastern has so many alumni and employees in Boston already on a Friday, they find that a lot of them will stay in for a Friday game in greater numbers than will come back in for a Saturday. <\/p>\n
“So they’ll go to their opponent and ask for Friday both years [of the cycle]. A lot of times the opponent will agree because they like the Saturday games.”<\/p>\n
All the talk around the rinks this past weekend was, “Who’s going to be the 12th team?” There’s considerable excitement about Notre Dame joining Hockey East and bringing the strength and allure of its program.<\/p>\n
Many observers, however, are waiting for the other shoe to drop, recalling the scheduling awkwardness of the nine-team Hockey East during the time between Massachusetts joining the league and Vermont rounding it out to 10 members. Down the stretch, a team would be off or multiple teams would play only a single contest.<\/p>\n