{"id":40440,"date":"2011-12-22T09:00:35","date_gmt":"2011-12-22T15:00:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=40440"},"modified":"2020-08-24T21:22:31","modified_gmt":"2020-08-25T02:22:31","slug":"mercyhurst-continues-to-best-opponents-and-ncaa-records","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2011\/12\/22\/mercyhurst-continues-to-best-opponents-and-ncaa-records\/","title":{"rendered":"Mercyhurst continues to best opponents and NCAA records"},"content":{"rendered":"
When asked to identify the weakest of the four conferences, without hesitation, most fans would say the CHA. The popular answer is not always the correct answer.<\/p>\n
Thus far this season, if excluding games against independents Lindenwood and Sacred Heart, teams from the CHA are four games over .500. By comparison, Hockey East squads have compiled a collective record five games below .500 with the same exclusions, and teams out of the ECAC are 17 games under.<\/p>\n
Looked at another way, CHA representatives have advanced to the NCAA title game once, Mercyhurst in 2009. Boston University last season was Hockey East’s first foray to the championship game, and while the ECAC has several such appearances, only Cornell in 2010 played for the title in the last six years.<\/p>\n
Of course, much of the success of the CHA occurs in Erie, Penn., home of the Lakers. Mercyhurst has put together a streak of seven straight NCAA tournament berths, a mark that is shared with Minnesota-Duluth and is still active for both. Accomplishing the feat without the safety net of an automatic bid to the tournament makes the Lakers’ run all the more impressive.<\/p>\n
“The nice thing with us and our program, and it is a challenge, is the cupboard is never completely bare,” coach Mike Sisti said. “I think any quality program, you need that. I think that we’ve had so many great players here, and it has helped us in so many ways. Fortunately, as they move on, a combination of the younger players that learn from them that move into leadership roles and handle that well, and certainly the new players get thrown into the fire being able to pull their weight and perform well, has been the key to our success.”<\/p>\n
This season was one of the more challenging in that regard, given Mercyhurst’s losses last season to graduation. When the team dropped a game in each of its first two series of the season, the string of NCAA bids looked to be in jeopardy.<\/p>\n
“We knew we’d be very young; we lost about 800 or 900 points out of our lineup,” Sisti said. “Over the years, our program has done a great job of replacing great players. Each year and team are different. We’ve been able to find whatever way is necessary for a particular team to win, given their strengths or weaknesses.”<\/p>\n